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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68163 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68163)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of An Outline Of Humor, by Carolyn Wells
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: An Outline Of Humor
- Being a True Chronicle From Prehistoric Ages to the Twentieth
- Century
-
-Editor: Carolyn Wells
-
-Release Date: May 24, 2022 [eBook #68163]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Charlene Taylor, Karin Spence and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN OUTLINE OF HUMOR ***
-
-
-
-
-
- An
- Outline of Humor
-
- Being a True Chronicle From
- Prehistoric Ages to the
- Twentieth Century
-
-
- Edited by
-
- Carolyn Wells
-
- Editor of
- “The Book of Humorous Verse,”
- “A Nonsense Anthology,” etc.
-
-
- G. P. Putnam’s Sons
- New York & London
- The Knickerbocker Press
- 1923
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1923
- by
- Carolyn Wells Houghton
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
- Made in the United States of America
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATED
-
- WITH
-
- HIGHEST REGARD
-
- TO
-
- DOCTOR HUBER GRAY BUEHLER
-
-
-
-
- FOREWORD
-
-
-Outlining is a modern art. For centuries we have collected and
-selected, compiled and compended, but only of late have we outlined.
-
-And an Outline is a result differing in kind from the other work
-mentioned, and presenting different conditions and contingencies.
-
-An Outline, owing to its sweep of magnificent distances, can touch
-only the high spots, and can but skim those. Not in its province is
-criticism or exhaustive commentary. Not in its scope are long effusions
-or lengthy extracts.
-
-Nor may it include everybody or everything that logically belongs to it.
-
-An Outline is at best an irregular proposition, and the Outliner must
-follow his irregular path as best he may. But one thing is imperative,
-the Outliner must be conscientious. He must weigh to the best of his
-knowledge and belief the claims to inclusion that his opportunities
-present. He must pick and choose with all the discernment of which he
-is capable and while following his best principles of taste he must
-sink his personal preferences in his regard for his Outline as a whole.
-
-Nor can he pick and choose his audience. To one reader,--or critic,--a
-hackneyed selection is tiresome, while to another it is a novelty and
-a revelation. And it must be remembered that a hackneyed poem is a
-favorite one and a favorite is one adjudged best, by a consensus of
-human opinion, and is therefore a high spot to be touched upon.
-
-While the Outline is generally chronological, it is not a history and
-dates are not given. Also, when it seemed advisable to desert the
-chronological path for the topographical one, that was done.
-
-Yet Foreign Literatures cannot be adequately treated in an Outline
-printed in English. Translations are at best misleading. If the
-translation is a poor one, the pith and moment of the original is
-partly, or wholly lost. And if the translation be of great merit, the
-work may show the merit of the new rendition rather than the original.
-
-And aside from all that, few translations of Humor are to be found.
-
-The translators of foreign tongues choose first the philosophy, the
-fiction or the serious poetry of the other nations, leaving the humor,
-if any there be, to hang unplucked on the tree of knowledge.
-
-So the foreign material is scant, but the high spots are touched as far
-as could be found convenient.
-
-The Outline stops at the year 1900. Humor since then is too close to be
-viewed in proper perspective.
-
-But the present Outliner mainly hopes to show how, with steady
-footstep, from the Caveman to the current comics Humor has followed the
-Flag.
-
- C. W.
- NEW YORK,
- _April, 1923_.
-
-
-
-
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
-
-
-All rights on poems and prose in this volume are reserved by the
-authorized publisher, the author, or the holder of copyright, with whom
-special arrangements have been made for including such material in this
-work. The editor expresses thanks for such permission as indicated
-below.
-
-D. APPLETON & COMPANY: For “To a Mosquito” by William Cullen Bryant;
-“Tushmaker’s Tooth-Puller” by G. H. Derby; and for “The Sad End of Brer
-Wolf” by Joel C. Harris, from _Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings_.
-
-THE CENTURY CO.: For an extract from the “Chimmie Fadden” stories; and
-for the poem “What’s in a Name?” by R. K. Munkittrick.
-
-DAVID MCKAY COMPANY: For “Ballad of the Noble Ritter Hugo” by Charles
-G. Leland.
-
-DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY: For “At the Sign of the Cock” by Owen Seaman;
-“Here Is the Tale” by Anthony C. Deane; and “On a Fan” and “The
-Rondeau” by Austin Dobson.
-
-FORBES & COMPANY: For “If I Should Die To-Night” and “The Pessimist” by
-Ben King.
-
-HARPER & BROTHERS: For “Elegy” and “Mavrone” by Arthur Guiterman. With
-the permission of the Estate of Samuel L. Clemens, the Mark Twain
-Company, and Harper & Brothers, publishers, with a full reservation of
-all copyright privileges is included an extract from the “Jumping Frog”
-by Mark Twain.
-
-HURST & COMPANY: For an extract from “Bill Nye.”
-
-HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY: With their permission and by special
-arrangement with them as authorized publishers of the following
-authors’ works, are used selections from: Charles E. Carryl, Guy
-Wetmore Carryl, Ralph Waldo Emerson, James T. Fields, Bret Harte, John
-Hay, Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, John G. Saxe, E. R.
-Sill, Bayard Taylor.
-
-LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY: For five limericks and “The Two Old Bachelors”
-from _Nonsense Books_.
-
-LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO.: For “A Philosopher” by Sam Walter Foss from
-_Dreams in Homespun_; also for an extract from “The Partington Papers”
-by B. P. Shillaber.
-
-THE MACMILLAN COMPANY: For verses from _Through the Looking-Glass_ by
-Lewis Carroll.
-
-CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS: For “Two Men” and “Miniver Cheevy” by E. A.
-Robinson from _The Children of the Night_ and _The Town Down the River_.
-
-SMALL, MAYNARD & COMPANY: For an extract from Finley Peter Dunne (Mr.
-Dooley).
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- INTRODUCTION 3
-
- ANCIENT HUMOR 21
-
- MIDDLE DIVISION 43
-
- PART I. GREECE 43
-
- PART II. ROME 86
-
- PART III. MEDIÆVAL AGES 120
-
- MODERN HUMOR 253
-
- ENGLISH WIT AND HUMOR 253
-
- FRENCH WIT AND HUMOR 312
-
- GERMAN WIT AND HUMOR 337
-
- ITALIAN WIT AND HUMOR 343
-
- SPANISH WIT AND HUMOR 359
-
- THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY 364
-
- ENGLISH HUMOR 364
-
- FRENCH HUMOR 390
-
- GERMAN HUMOR 412
-
- THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY 415
-
- THE NINETEENTH CENTURY 445
-
- ENGLISH HUMOR 446
-
- FRENCH HUMOR 560
-
- GERMAN HUMOR 586
-
- ITALIAN HUMOR 616
-
- SPANISH HUMOR 626
-
- RUSSIAN HUMOR 631
-
- AMERICAN HUMOR 643
-
- INDEX 761
-
-
-
-
- An Outline of Humor
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-
-Speaking exactly, an Outline of the World’s Humor is an impossibility.
-
-For surely the adjectives most applicable to humor are elusive,
-evasive, evanescent, ephemeral, intangible, imponderable, and other
-terms expressing unavailability.
-
-To outline such a thing is like trying to trap a sunbeam or bound an
-ocean.
-
-Yet an Outline of the History of the World’s recorded humor as evolved
-by the Human Race, seems within the possibilities.
-
-First of all, it must be understood that the term humor is here used in
-its broadest, most comprehensive sense. Including both wit and humor;
-including the comic, fun, mirth, laughter, gayety, repartee,--all types
-and classes of jests and jokes.
-
-The earliest reference to this mental element is that of Aristotle, and
-the word he uses to represent it is translated the Ridiculous.
-
-His definition states that the Ridiculous is that which is in itself
-incongruous, without involving the notion of danger or pai
-
-Coleridge thus refers to Aristotle’s definition:
-
- “Where the laughable is its own end, and neither inference nor
- moral is intended, or where at least the writer would wish it
- so to appear, there arises what we call drollery. The pure,
- unmixed, ludicrous or laughable belongs exclusively to the
- understanding, and must be presented under the form of the
- senses; it lies within the spheres of the eye and the ear, and
- hence is allied to the fancy. It does not appertain to the
- reason or the moral sense, and accordingly is alien to the
- imagination. I think Aristotle has already excellently defined
- the laughable, τò γελοíον, as consisting of, or depending
- on, what is out of its proper time and place, yet without
- danger or pain. Here the _impropriety_--τò ἄτοπον--is the
- positive qualification; the _dangerlessness_--τò ἀχίνδυνον--the
- negative. The true ludicrous is its own end. When serious satire
- commences, or satire that is felt as serious, however comically
- drest, free and genuine laughter ceases; it becomes sardonic.
- This you experience in reading Young, and also not unfrequently
- in Butler. The true comic is the blossom of the nettle.”
-
-Yet, notwithstanding Coleridge’s scientific views on the subject, Humor
-is not an exact science. It is, more truly, an art, whose principles
-are based on several accepted theories, and some other theories, not so
-readily accepted or admitted only in part by these who have thought and
-written on the subject.
-
-A true solution of the mystery of why a joke makes us laugh, has yet to
-be found. To the mind of the average human being, anything that makes
-him laugh is a joke. Why it does so, there are very few to know and
-fewer still to care.
-
-Nor are the Cognoscenti in much better plight. A definition of humor
-has been attempted by many great and wise minds. Like squaring the
-circle, it has been argued about repeatedly, it has been written about
-voluminously. It has been settled in as many different ways as there
-have been commentators on the subject. And yet no definition, no
-formula has ever been evolved that is entirely satisfactory.
-
-Aristotle’s theory of the element of the incongruous has come to be
-known as the Disappointment theory, or Frustrated Expectation.
-
-But Aristotle voiced another theory, which he, in turn, derived from
-Plato.
-
-Plato said, though a bit indefinitely, that the pleasure we derive in
-laughing at the comic is an enjoyment of other people’s misfortune,
-due to a feeling of superiority or gratified vanity that we ourselves
-are not in like plight.
-
-This is called the Derision theory, and as assimilated and expressed
-by Aristotle comes near to impinging on and coinciding with his own
-Disappointment theory.
-
-Moreover, he attempted to combine the two.
-
-For, he said, we always laugh at someone, but in the case, where
-laughter arises from a deceived expectation, our mistake makes us laugh
-at ourselves.
-
-In fact, Plato held, in his vague and indefinite statements that there
-is a disappointment element, a satisfaction element, and sometimes a
-combination of the two in the make-up of the thing we are calling Humor.
-
-All of which is not very enlightening, but it is to be remembered that
-those were the first fluttering flights of imagination that sought to
-pin down the whole matter; yet among the scores that have followed,
-diverging in many directions, we must admit few, if any, are much more
-succinct or satisfactory.
-
-The Derision or Discomfiture Theory holds that all pleasure in laughing
-at a comic scene is an enjoyment of another’s discomfiture. Yet it must
-be only discomfiture, not grave misfortune or sorrow.
-
-If a man’s hat blows off and he runs out into the street after it, we
-laugh; but if he is hit by a passing motor car, we do not laugh. If a
-fat man slips on a banana peel and lands in a mud puddle, we laugh; but
-if he breaks his leg we do not laugh.
-
-It is the ridiculous discomfiture of another that makes a joke, not the
-serious accident, and though there are other types and other theories
-of the cause of humor, doubtless the majority of jokes are based on
-this principle.
-
-From the Circus Clown to Charlie Chaplin, episodes of discomfiture
-make us laugh. Every newspaper cartoon or comic series hinges on the
-discomfiture of somebody. The fly on the bald head, the collar button
-under the bureau, the henpecked husband, all depend for their humor on
-the trifling misfortune that makes its victim ridiculous.
-
-An enjoyment of this discomfiture of a fellow man is inherent in human
-nature, and though there are subtler jests, yet this type has a grip on
-the risibilities that can never be loosened.
-
-Can we doubt that it was the Serpent’s laughing at the discomfiture of
-Adam and Eve, caught in _deshabille_, that caused them to rush for
-the nearest fig tree? Or perhaps, their eyes being opened, they laughed
-at one another. Anyway, they were decidedly discomfited, and did their
-best to remedy matters.
-
-This Derision Theory includes also the jests at the ignorance or
-stupidity of another. The enormous vogue of the Noodle jokes, some
-centuries ago, hinged on the delight felt in the superiority of the
-hearer over the subject of the jest. All laughable blunders, every
-social _faux pas_, all funny stories of children’s sayings and
-doings are based on the consciousness of superiority. Practical jokes
-represent the simplest form of this theory, as in them the discomfiture
-of the other person is the prime element, with no subtle byplay to
-relieve it.
-
-A mild example is the polite rejoinder of the street car conductor when
-a lady asked at which end of the car she should get off.
-
-“Either end, madame,” he responded, “both ends stop.”
-
-An extreme specimen is the man who told the story of a burning
-house--“I saw a fellow up on the roof,” he related, “and I called to
-him, ‘Jump, and I’ll catch you in a blanket!’ Well, I had to laugh,--he
-jumped,--and I didn’t have no blanket!”
-
-Implied discomfiture is in the story of the agnostic, who was buried
-in his evening clothes. “Poor Jim,” said a funeral guest; “he didn’t
-believe in Heaven and he didn’t believe in Hell; and there he lies, all
-dressed up and no place to go!”
-
-Almost a practical joke is the man who, reading a newspaper, suddenly
-exclaimed, “Why, here’s a list of people who won’t eat onions any
-more!” And when his hearer asked to see the list, he handed over the
-obituary column.
-
-The Disappointment Theory, though overlapping the Derision Theory at
-times, is based on the idea that the essence of the laughable is the
-incongruous.
-
-Hazlitt says:
-
- “We laugh at absurdity; we laugh at deformity. We laugh at
- a bottle-nose in a caricature; at a stuffed figure of an
- alderman in a pantomime, and at the tale of Slaukenbergius.
- A dwarf standing by a giant makes a contemptible figure
- enough. Rosinante and Dapple are laughable from contrast, as
- their masters from the same principle make two for a pair.
- We laugh at the dress of foreigners, and they at ours. Three
- chimney-sweepers meeting three Chinese in Lincoln’s Inn Fields,
- they laughed at one another till they were ready to drop down.
- Country people laugh at a person because they never saw him
- before. Any one dressed in the height of the fashion, or quite
- out of it, is equally an object of ridicule. One rich source of
- the ludicrous is distress with which we cannot sympathize from
- its absurdity or insignificance. It is hard to hinder children
- from laughing at a stammerer, at a negro, at a drunken man,
- or even at a madman. We laugh at mischief. We laugh at what
- we do not believe. We say that an argument or an assertion
- that is very absurd, is quite ludicrous. We laugh to show our
- satisfaction with ourselves, or our contempt for those about
- us, or to conceal our envy or our ignorance. We laugh at fools,
- and at those who pretend to be wise--at extreme simplicity,
- awkwardness, hypocrisy, and affectation.”
-
-A beautiful definition of the Disappointment Theory is Max Eastman’s,
-“The experience of a forward motion of interest sufficiently definite
-so that its ‘coming to nothing’ can be felt.”
-
-Mr. Eastman says further:
-
- “It is more like a reflex action than a mental result. It
- arises in the very act of perception, when that act is brought
- to nothing by two conflicting qualities of fact or feeling. It
- arises when some numb habitual activity, suddenly obstructed,
- first appears in consciousness with an announcement of its
- own failure. The blockage of an instinct, a collision between
- two instincts, the interruption of a habit, a ‘conflict of
- habit systems,’ a disturbed or misapplied reflex--all these
- catastrophes, as well as the coming to nothing of an effort
- at conceptual thought, must enter into the meaning of the
- word _disappointment_, if it is to explain the whole field of
- practical humor. The ‘strain’ in that expectation is what makes
- it capable of humorous collapse. It is an active expectation.
- The feelings are involved.”
-
-The point of the Disappointment Theory, that of frustrating a carefully
-built up expectation is exemplified in jests like these.
-
-“Is your wife entertaining this winter?” asks one society man of
-another. “Not very,” is the reply.
-
-“I have to go to Brooklyn--” says a perplexed-looking old lady to a
-traffic policeman. “Are you asking directions, ma’am, or just telling
-me your troubles?”
-
-The incongruity may be merely a collocution of words.
-
-Mark Twain described Turner’s Slave Ship as “A tortoise-shell cat
-having a fit in a platter of tomatoes.”
-
-In a newspaper cartoon, a wife says to her husband, “Even if it is
-Sunday morning and a terribly hot day, that’s no reason you should go
-around looking like the dog’s breakfast!”
-
-So we see the element of surprise must be combined with the element of
-appropriate inappropriateness to gain the desired result.
-
-In this story expectation is aroused for a human tragedy. The
-incongruity and disappointment make its humor.
-
-As Mr. Caveman was gnawing at a bone in his cave one morning, Mrs.
-Caveman rushed in, exclaiming, “Quick! get your club! Oh, quick!”
-
-“What’s the matter?” growled Mr. Caveman.
-
-“A sabre-toothed tiger is chasing mother!” gasped his wife.
-
-Mr. Caveman uttered an expression of annoyance.
-
-“And what the deuce do I care,” he said, “what happens to a
-sabre-toothed tiger?”
-
-It must be admitted that a hard and fast line cannot be drawn between
-the two theories given us by the Greek philosophers.
-
-Cicero subscribed to the Derision theory, and said the ridiculous
-rested on a certain meanness and deformity, and a joke to be pleasing
-must be _on_ somebody. But he declared, also, that the most
-eminent kind of the ridiculous is that in which we expect to hear one
-thing and hear another said.
-
-Several other Greek and Roman philosophers tackled the subject without
-adding anything of importance, and some of them, as well as later
-writers declared that the comic could never be defined, but is to be
-appreciated only by taste and natural discernment; while many moderns
-agree that all theories are inadequate and contradictory, however
-useful they may be for convenience in discussion.
-
-Perhaps the trouble may be that only serious-minded people attempt a
-definition of humor, and they are not the ones best fitted for the work.
-
-For the discussion goes on still, and is as fascinating to some types
-of mentality as is the question of perpetual motion or the Fountain of
-Immortal Youth.
-
-A useful commentary on the matter, and one appropriate at this juncture
-is the following extract from the works of the celebrated theologian,
-Dr. Isaac Barrow, an Englishman of the Seventeenth century.
-
- “It may be demanded,” says he, “what the thing we speak of is,
- and what this facetiousness doth import; to which question I
- might reply, as Democritus did to him that asked the definition
- of a man--_’Tis that which we all see and know!_ and one better
- apprehends what it is by acquaintance, than I can inform him by
- description. It is indeed a thing so versatile and multiform,
- appearing in so many shapes, so many postures, so many garbs,
- so variously apprehended by several eyes and judgments, that
- it seemeth no less hard to settle a clear and certain notice
- thereof, than to make a portrait of Proteus, or to define the
- figure of fleeting air. Sometimes it lieth in pat allusion to a
- known story, or in seasonable application of a trivial saying,
- or in forging an apposite tale; sometimes it playeth in words
- and phrases, taking advantage from the ambiguity of their sense,
- or the affinity of their sound; sometimes it is wrapped in a
- dress of luminous expression; sometimes it lurketh under an
- odd similitude. Sometimes it is lodged in a sly question; in
- a smart answer; in a quirkish reason; in a shrewd intimation;
- in cunningly diverting or cleverly restoring an objection;
- sometimes it is couched in a bold scheme of speech; in a tart
- irony; in a lusty hyperbole; in a startling metaphor; in a
- plausible reconciling of contradictions; or in acute nonsense.
- Sometimes a scenical representation of persons or things, a
- counterfeit speech, a mimical look or gesture, passeth for it.
- Sometimes an affected simplicity, sometimes a presumptuous
- bluntness, gives it being. Sometimes it riseth only from a
- lucky hitting upon what is strange; sometimes from a crafty
- wresting obvious matter to the purpose. Often it consisteth in
- one knows not what, and springeth up one can hardly tell how.
- Its ways are unaccountable and inexplicable, being answerable
- to the numberless rovings of fancy and windings of language. It
- is, in short, a manner of speaking out of the simple and plain
- way (such as reason teacheth and knoweth things by), which
- by a pretty surprising uncouthness in conceit or expression
- doth affect and amuse the fancy, showing in it some wonder,
- and breathing some delight thereto. It raiseth admiration, as
- signifying a nimble sagacity of apprehension, a special felicity
- of invention, a vivacity of spirit, and reach of wit more than
- vulgar; it seeming to argue a rare quickness of parts, that
- one can fetch in remote conceits applicable; a notable skill
- that he can dexterously accommodate them to a purpose before
- him; together with a lively briskness of humour not apt to damp
- those sportful flashes of imagination. Whence in Aristotle such
- persons are termed επιδéξιοι, dexterous men, and ευτροποι, men
- of facile and versatile manners, who can easily turn themselves
- to all things, or turn all things to themselves. It also
- procureth delight, by gratifying curiosity with its rareness or
- semblance of difficulty (as monsters, not for their beauty but
- their rarity--as juggling tricks, not for their use but their
- abstruseness--are beheld with pleasure); by diverting the mind
- from its road of serious thoughts; by instilling gaiety and
- airiness of spirit; by provoking to such dispositions of spirit
- in way of emulation or compliance; and by seasoning matter,
- otherwise distasteful or insipid, with an unusual and thence
- grateful tang.”--_Barrow’s Works_, Sermon 14.
-
-Also in the Seventeenth century there sprang into being a definition
-that has lived, possibly because of the apt wording of its phrase.
-
-It is by Thomas Hobbes, who declared for the Derision Theory, but with
-less sweetness and light than it had hitherto enjoyed.
-
- “_Sudden glory_ is the passion which maketh those _Grimaces_
- called LAUGHTER,” said Hobbes in the “Leviathan,” “and is
- caused either by some sudden act of their own, that pleaseth
- them; or by the apprehension of some deformed thing in another,
- by comparison whereof they suddenly applaud themselves. And
- it is incident most to them, that are conscious of the fewest
- abilities in themselves; who are forced to keep themselves in
- their own favour, by observing the imperfections of other men.
- And therefore much laughter at the defects of others, is a signe
- of Pusillanimity. For of great minds, one of the proper workes
- is, to help and free others from scorn; and compare themselves
- onely with the most able.”
-
-and, also from Hobbes:
-
- “The passion of laughter is nothing else but _sudden glory_
- arising from a sudden conception of some _eminency in ourselves_
- by comparison with the infirmity of others, or with our own
- formerly: for men laugh at the _follies_ of themselves past,
- when they come suddenly to remembrance, except they bring with
- them any present dishonour.”--_Treatise on Human Nature_, chap.
- ix.
-
-There is small doubt that the vogue of Hobbes’ definition of this
-theory rests on the delightfully expressive, “Sudden Glory,” for those
-two words beautifully picture the emotion caused by the unexpected
-opportunity to laugh at the discomfiture of another.
-
-Locke followed with a dry and meaningless dissertation, and Coleridge
-wrote his discerning but all too brief remarks.
-
-Many German writers gave profound if unimportant opinions.
-
-Addison wrote pleasantly about it, and George Meredith, while accepting
-the Derision Theory, modified its harshness thus:
-
- “If you believe that our civilization is founded in common-sense
- (and it is the first condition of sanity to believe it), you
- will, when contemplating men, discern a Spirit overhead;
- not more heavenly than the light flashed upward from glassy
- surfaces, but luminous and watchful; never shooting beyond
- them, nor lagging in the rear; so closely attached to them that
- it may be taken for a slavish reflex, until its features are
- studied. It has the sage’s brows, and the sunny malice of a faun
- lurks at the corners of the half-closed lips drawn in an idle
- wariness of half tension. That slim feasting smile, shaped like
- the long-bow, was once a big round satyr’s laugh, that flung up
- the brows like a fortress lifted by gunpowder. The laugh will
- come again, but it will be of the order of the smile, finely
- tempered, showing sunlight of the mind, mental richness rather
- than noisy enormity. Its common aspect is one of unsolicitous
- observation, as if surveying a full field and having leisure to
- dart on its chosen morsels without any fluttering eagerness.
- Men’s future upon earth does not attract it; their honesty and
- shapeliness in the present does; and whenever they wax out of
- proportion, overblown, affected, pretentious, bombastical,
- hypocritical, pedantic, fantastically delicate; whenever it
- sees them self-deceived or hoodwinked, given to run riot in
- idolatries, drifting into vanities, congregating in absurdities,
- planning shortsightedly, plotting dementedly; whenever they are
- at variance with their professions, and violate the unwritten
- but perceptible laws binding them in consideration one to
- another; whenever they offend sound reason, fair justice; are
- false in humility or mined with conceit, individually, or in the
- bulk--the Spirit overhead will look humanely malign and cast an
- oblique light on them, followed by volleys of silvery laughter.
- That is the Comic Spirit.”
-
-
-With Kant, however, the other theory of Aristotle came into notice.
-Kant declared, “Laughter is the affection arising from the sudden
-transformation of a strained expectation into nothing.”
-
-This was dubbed by Emerson, “Frustrated Expectation,” and describes the
-Disappointment Theory as Sudden Glory describes the Derision Theory.
-
-On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets of the
-World of Humor.
-
-There are many other theories and sub-theories, there are long and
-prosy books written about them, but are outside our Outline.
-
-A general understanding of the humorous element is all we are after and
-that has now been set forth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A question closely akin to What is Humor? is What is a Sense of Humor?
-
-The phrase seems self-explanatory, and is by no means identical with
-the thing itself. Nor are the two inseparable. Humor and the sense of
-humor need not necessarily lie in the same brain.
-
-Two erudite writers on this subject have chosen to consider the phrase
-as a unique bit of terminology.
-
-Mr. Max Eastman says; “The creation of that name is the most original
-and the most profound contribution of modern thought to the problem of
-the comic.”
-
-While Professor Brander Matthews says; “Ample as the English vocabulary
-is today, it is sometimes strangely deficient in needful terms. Thus it
-is that we have nothing but the inadequate phrase _sense of humor_
-to denominate a quality which is often confounded with humor itself,
-and which should always be sharply discriminated from it.”
-
-Now it would seem that the phrase was simply a matter of evolution,
-coming along when the time was ripe. Surely it is no stroke of genius,
-nor yet is it hopelessly inadequate.
-
-It must be granted that a sense of the humorous is as logical a thought
-as a sensitive ear for music, or, to be more strictly analogous, a
-sense of moderation or that very definite thing, card sense.
-
-Sense, used thus, is almost synonymous with taste, and a taste for
-literature or for the Fine Arts in no way implies a productive faculty
-in those fields. A taste for humor would mean precisely the same thing
-as a sense of humor, and the taste or the sense may be more or less
-natural and more or less cultivated, as in the matter of books or
-pictures.
-
-A taste for music is a sense of music, and one may appreciate and enjoy
-music and its rendition to the utmost without being able to sing a note
-or play upon any instrument whatever.
-
-One may be a music critic or an art critic, or even a critic of
-literature, without being able to create any of these things.
-
-Why, then, put forth as a discovery that one may have a sense of humor
-without being humorous and _vice versa_?
-
-Humor is creative, while the sense of humor is merely receptive and
-appreciative.
-
-Many great humorists have little or no sense of humor. Try to tell
-a joke to an accredited joker and note his blank expression of
-uncomprehension. It is because he has no sense of humor that he takes
-himself seriously.
-
-Such was the case with Dickens, with Carlyle, with many renowned wits.
-The humorist without the sense of humor is a bore. He tells long,
-detailed yarns, proud of himself, and not seeing his hearers’ lack of
-interest.
-
-The man with a sense of humor is a joy to know and to be with.
-
-The man who possesses both is already an immortal.
-
-Now as the sense of humor is negative, recipient, while humor is
-positive and creative, it follows that a sense of humor alone cannot
-produce humorous literature.
-
-These mute, inglorious Miltons, therefore, have no place in our
-Outline, but they deserve a passing word of recognition for the
-assistance they have been to the humorists, by way of being applauding
-audiences.
-
-For humor, like beauty is in the eye of the beholder. One with an
-acute sense of humor will see comic in stones, wit in the running
-brooks,--while a dull or absent sense of humor can see no fun save in
-the obvious jest.
-
-The lines,
-
- “A jest’s prosperity lies in the ear
- Of him who hears it. Never in the tongue
- Of him who makes it.”
-
-in _Love’s Labour’s Lost_ proves that Shakespeare understood the
-meaning and value of a sense of humor.
-
-Although it was at a much later date that the word humor came to be
-used as now, to mean a gentle, good-natured sort of fun.
-
-All types of humor are universal and of all time. But the first
-definitions were arrived at by the men of Greece and Rome, who were
-scholarly and analytical, hence the hair-splitting and meticulous
-efforts to treat it metaphysically.
-
-Humor today rarely is used in a caustic or biting sense,--that is
-reserved for wit.
-
-Which brings us to another great and futile question,--the distinction
-between wit and humor.
-
-There is not time or space to take up this subject fully here. But we
-can sum up the decisions and opinions of some few of the thinking minds
-that have been bent upon it.
-
-As the best and most comprehensive is the dissertation by William
-Hazlitt, most of this is here given.
-
- “Humour is the describing the ludicrous as it is in itself;
- wit is the exposing it, by comparing or contrasting it with
- something else. Humour is, as it were, the growth of nature
- and accident; wit is the product of art and fancy. Humour,
- as it is shown in books, is an imitation of the natural or
- acquired absurdities of mankind, or of the ludicrous in
- accident, situation, and character; wit is the illustrating
- and heightening the sense of that absurdity by some sudden and
- unexpected likeness or opposition of one thing to another, which
- sets off the quality we laugh at or despise in a still more
- contemptible or striking point of view. Wit, as distinguished
- from poetry, is the imagination or fancy inverted and so applied
- to given objects, as to make the little look less, the mean
- more light and worthless; or to divert our admiration or wean
- our affections from that which is lofty and impressive, instead
- of producing a more intense admiration and exalted passion, as
- poetry does. Wit may sometimes, indeed, be shown in compliments
- as well as satire; as in the common epigram--
-
- “‘Accept a miracle, instead of wit: See two dull lines with
- Stanhope’s pencil writ.’
-
- But then the mode of paying it is playful and ironical, and
- contradicts itself in the very act of making its own performance
- an humble foil to another’s. Wit hovers round the borders of
- the light and trifling, whether in matters of pleasure or pain;
- for as soon as it describes the serious seriously, it ceases
- to be wit, and passes into a different form. Wit is, in fact,
- the eloquence of indifference, or an ingenious and striking
- exposition of those evanescent and glancing impressions of
- objects which affect us more from surprise or contrast to the
- train of our ordinary and literal preconceptions, than from
- anything in the objects themselves exciting our necessary
- sympathy or lasting hatred.
-
- “That wit is the most refined and effectual, which is founded on
- the detection of unexpected likeness or distinction in things,
- rather than in words.
-
- “Wit is, in fact, a voluntary act of the mind, or exercise of
- the invention, showing the absurd and ludicrous consciously,
- whether in ourselves or another. Cross-readings, where the
- blunders are designed, are wit; but if any one were to light
- upon them through ignorance or accident, they would be merely
- ludicrous.
-
- “Lastly, there is a wit of sense and observation, which consists
- in the acute illustration of good sense and practical wisdom by
- means of some far-fetched conceit or quaint imagery. The matter
- is sense, but the form is wit. Thus the lines in Pope--
-
- “’Tis with our judgments as our watches, none Go just alike; yet
- each believes his own--’
-
- are witty rather than poetical; because the truth they convey
- is a mere dry observation on human life, without elevation or
- enthusiasm, and the illustration of it is of that quaint and
- familiar kind that is merely curious and fanciful.”
-
-Thus Hazlitt: yet it is not necessary to be so verbose in the matter of
-discriminating wit from humor.
-
-They are intrinsically different though often outwardly alike.
-
-Wit is intensive or incisive, while humor is expansive. Wit is rapid,
-humor is slow. Wit is sharp, humor is gentle. Wit is intentional, humor
-is fortuitous.
-
-But to my mind the great difference lies in the fact that wit is
-subjective while humor is objective.
-
-Wit is the invention of the mind of its creator; humor lies in the
-object that he observes. Wit originates in one’s self, humor outside
-one’s self.
-
-Again, wit is art, humor is nature. Wit is creative fancy, more or
-less educated and skilled. Humor is found in a simple object, and is
-unintentional.
-
-Yet in these, as in all definitions, we must stretch a point when
-necessary; we must make allowances for viewpoints and opinions, and we
-must agree that the question is not one that may be answered by the
-card.
-
-Nor is it necessary in the present undertaking.
-
-_An Outline of Humor_ is planned to include all sorts and
-conditions of fun, all types and distinctions of wit and humor from the
-earliest available records, or deductions from records, down to the
-dawn of the Twentieth Century.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Man has been defined as the animal capable of laughter. Although this
-definition has been attacked by lovers of quadrupeds, it has held
-in the minds of thinkers and students. Aristotle, Milton, Hazlitt,
-Voltaire, Schopenhauer, Bergson and many other distinguished scholars
-hold that the playfulness seen in animals is in no way an indication of
-their sense of humor.
-
-The Laughing Hyena and the Laughing Jackass are so called only because
-their cry has a likeness to the sound of raucous human laughter, but it
-is no result of mirthful feeling.
-
-Hazlitt says man is the only animal that laughs and weeps, for he is
-the only animal that is struck with the difference between what things
-are and what they ought to be.
-
-The playfulness of dogs or kittens is often assumed to be humor, when
-it is mere imitative sagacity. The stolid, imperturbable gravity of
-animals’ faces shows no appreciation of mirth.
-
-Oliver Wendell Holmes speaks of the large brown eyes of oxen as
-imperfect organisms, because they may show no sign of fun.
-
-Yet it is, in a way, a matter of opinion, for the instinct of humor was
-among the latest to evolve in the human race, and rudimentary hints of
-it may be present in other animals as in our own children. A monkey
-or a baby will show amusement when tickled, but this is mere physical
-reflex action, and cannot be called a true sense of humor.
-
-Many animal lovers assume intelligences in their pets that are mere
-reflections of their own mental processes or are thoughts fathered by
-their own wishes.
-
-It is, however, of little importance, for however appreciative of fun
-an animal may be, it cannot create or impart wit or humor, and most
-certainly it cannot laugh.
-
-Bergson goes even farther. He declares the comic does not exist outside
-the pale of what is strictly human.
-
-He states: You may laugh at an animal, but only because you have
-detected in it some human attitude or expression.
-
-This is easily proved by the recollection of the fun of Puss In Boots
-or The Three Bears, and the gravity of a Natural History.
-
-Therefore, Bergson argues, man is not only the only animal that laughs,
-he is the only animal which is laughed at, for if any other animal
-or any lifeless object provokes mirth, it is only because of some
-resemblance to man in appearance or intent.
-
-So, with such minor exceptions as to be doubtful or negligible, we must
-accept man as the only exponent or possessor of humor.
-
-And it is one of the latest achievements of humanity.
-
-First, we assent, was the survival of the fittest. Followed a sense
-of hunger, a sense of safety, a sense of warfare, a sense of Tribal
-Rights,--through all these stages there was no time or need for humor.
-
-Among the earliest fossilized remains no funny bone has been found.
-
-Doubtless, too, a sense of sorrow came before the sense of humor
-dawned. Death came, and early man wept long before it occurred to him
-to laugh and have the world laugh with him. Gregariousness and leisure
-were necessary before mirth could ensue. All life was subjective;
-dawning intelligence learned first to look out for Number One.
-
-Yet it was early in the game that our primordial ancestors began to see
-a lighter side of life.
-
-Indeed, as Mr. Wells tells us, they mimicked very cleverly, gestured,
-danced and laughed before they could talk!
-
-And the consideration of the development of this almost innate human
-sense is our present undertaking.
-
-The matter falls easily,--almost too easily,--into three divisions.
-
-Let us call them, Ancient, Middle and Modern.
-
-This is perhaps not an original idea of division, but it is certainly
-the best for a preliminary arrangement. And it may not be convenient to
-stick religiously to consecutive dates; our progress may become logical
-rather than chronological.
-
-As to a general division, then, let us consider Ancient Humor as a
-period from the very beginning down to the time of the Greeks. The
-Middle Division to continue until about the time of Chaucer. And the
-Modern Period from that time to the present.
-
-
-
-
- ANCIENT HUMOR
-
-After careful consideration of all available facts and theories of the
-earliest mental processes of our race, we must come to the conclusion
-that mirth had its origin in sorrow; that laughter was the direct
-product of tears.
-
-Nor are they even yet completely dissevered. Who has not laughed till
-he cried? Who has not cried herself into hysterical laughter? All
-theories of humor include an element of unhappiness; all joy has its
-hint of pain.
-
-And so, when our archæologists hold the mirror up to prehistoric
-nature, we see among the earliest reflected pictures, a procession
-or group of evolving humanity about to sacrifice human victims to
-their monstrous superstitions and, withal, showing a certain festival
-cheerfulness. Moreover, we note that they are fantastically dressed,
-and wear horns and painted masks. Surely, the first glimmerings of a
-horrid mirth are indubitably the adjunct of such celebrations.
-
-Since we have reason to believe that man mimicked before he could
-talk,--and, observing a baby, we have no difficulty in believing
-this,--we readily believe that his earliest mimicries aroused a feeling
-of amusement in his auditors, and as their applause stimulated him to
-fresh effort, the ball was set rolling and the fun began.
-
-From mimicry was born exaggeration and the horns and painted masks were
-grotesque and mirth-provoking.
-
-Yet were they also used to inculcate fear, and moreover had
-significance as expressions of sorrow and woe.
-
-Thus the emotions, at first, were rather inextricably intermingled, nor
-are they yet entirely untangled and straightened out.
-
-Not to inquire too closely into the vague stories of these prehistoric
-men, not to differentiate too exactly between Cro-Magnards and
-Grimaldis, we at least know a few things about the late Palæolithic
-people, and one indicative fact is that they had a leaning toward paint.
-
-They buried their dead after painting the body, and they also painted
-the weapons and ornaments that were interred with him.
-
-It is owing to this addiction to paint that scientists have been
-enabled to learn so much of primordial life, for the pigments of black,
-brown, red, yellow and white still endure in the caves of France and
-Spain.
-
-And, since it is known that they painted their own faces and bodies we
-can scarce help deducing that they presented grotesque appearances and
-moved their fellows to laughter.
-
-But any earnest thinker or student is very likely to get out of his
-subject what he brings to it, at least, in kind. And so, archæologists
-and antiquarians, being of grave and serious nature, have found no fun
-or humor in these early peoples,--perhaps, because they brought none to
-their search.
-
-It remains, therefore, for us to sift their findings, and see, if by a
-good chance we may discover some traces of mirth among the evidential
-remains of prehistoric man.
-
-It would not be, of course, creative or even intentional humor, but
-since we know he was a clever mimic, we must assume the appreciation of
-his mimicry by his fellows.
-
-Moreover, he was deeply impressed by his dreams, and it must have been
-that some of those dreams were of a humorous nature.
-
-We are told his mentality was similar to that of a bright little
-contemporary boy of five. This theory would give him the power of
-laughter at simple things and it seems only fair to assume that he
-possessed it.
-
-In the beginnings of humanity there was very close connection between
-man and the animals. Not only did man kill and eat the other animals,
-but he cultivated and bred them, he watched them and studied their
-habits.
-
-It is, therefore, not surprising that man’s earliest efforts at drawing
-should represent animals.
-
-The earliest known drawings, those of the Palæolithic men show the
-bison, horse, ibex, cave bear and reindeer. The drawing at first was
-primitive, but later it became astonishingly clever and life-like.
-
-Also, among these primitive peoples, there was some attempt at
-sculpture, in the way of little stone or ivory statuettes. These
-incline to caricature, and are probably the first dawning of that
-tendency of the human brain.
-
-Yet the accounts of these earliest men show little that can be
-definitely styled humorous, and while we cannot doubt they possessed
-a sense of mirth, they have left us scant traces of it, or else the
-solemn archæologists have overlooked such.
-
-The latter may be the case, for a scholar with a sense of humor, Thomas
-Wright, declares as follows:
-
- “A tendency to burlesque and caricature appears, indeed, to be
- a feeling deeply implanted in human nature, and it is one of
- the earliest talents displayed by people in a rude state of
- society. An appreciation of, and sensitiveness to, ridicule, and
- a love of that which is humorous, are found even among savages,
- and enter largely into their relations with their fellow men.
- When, before people cultivated either literature or art, the
- chieftain sat in his rude hall surrounded by his warriors,
- they amused themselves by turning their enemies and opponents
- into mockery, by laughing at their weaknesses, joking on their
- defects, whether physical or mental, and giving them nicknames
- in accordance therewith,--in fact, caricaturing them in words,
- or by telling stories which were calculated to excite laughter.
- When the agricultural slaves (for the tillers of the land were
- then slaves) were indulged with a day of relief from their
- labours, they spent it in unrestrained mirth. And when these
- same people began to erect permanent buildings, and to ornament
- them, the favourite subjects of their ornamentation were such
- as presented ludicrous ideas. The warrior, too, who caricatured
- his enemy in his speeches over the festive board, soon sought
- to give a more permanent form to his ridicule, which he
- endeavoured to do by rude delineations on the bare rock, or on
- any other convenient surface which presented itself to his hand.
- Thus originated caricature and the grotesque in art. In fact,
- art itself, in its earliest forms, is caricature; for it is only
- by that exaggeration of features which belongs to caricature,
- that unskilful draughtsmen could make themselves understood.”
-
-An early development of humor was seen in the recognition of the fool
-or buffoon.
-
-It is not impossible that this arose because of the discovery or
-invention of intoxicating drinks.
-
-This important date is set, not very definitely, somewhere between
-10,000 B.C. and 2,000 B.C. Its noticeable results were merriment and
-feast-making. At these feasts the fool, who was not yet a wit, won the
-laughter of the guests by his idiocy, or, often by his deformity. The
-wise fool is a later development.
-
-But at these feasts also appeared the bards or rhapsodists, who
-entertained the company by chanting or reciting stories and jokes.
-
-These are called the artists of the ear as the rock painters are
-called the artists of the eye. And with them language grew in beauty
-and power. They were living books, the only books then extant. For
-writing came slowly and was a clumsy affair at best for a long period.
-The Bards sang and recited and so kept alive folk-tales and jests that
-remain to this day.
-
-Writing, like most of the inventions of man served every other purpose
-before that of humor.
-
-At first it was only for accounts and matters of fact. In Egypt it was
-used for medical recipes and magic formulas. Accounts, letters, name
-lists and itineraries followed; but for the preservation of humorous
-thought writing was not used. That was left to the bards, and of
-course, to the caricaturists.
-
-Therefore, Egyptian art usually presents itself in solemn and dignified
-effects with no lightness or gayety implied.
-
-Yet we are told by Sir Gardner Wilkinson, the early Egyptian artists
-cannot always conceal their natural tendency to the humorous, which
-creeps out in a variety of little incidents. Thus, in a series of grave
-historical pictures on one of the great monuments at Thebes, we find
-a representation of a wine party, where the company consists of both
-sexes, and which evidently shows that the ladies were not restricted
-in the use of the juice of the grape in their entertainments; and,
-as he adds, “the painters, in illustrating this fact, have sometimes
-sacrificed their gallantry to a love of caricature.” Among the females,
-evidently of rank, represented in this scene, “some call the servants
-to support them as they sit, others with difficulty prevent themselves
-from falling on those behind them, and the faded flower, which is ready
-to drop from their heated hands, is intended to be characteristic of
-their own sensations.” Sir Gardner observes that “many instances of
-a talent for caricature, are observable in the compositions of the
-Egyptian artists, who executed the paintings of the tombs at Thebes,
-which belong to a very early period of the Egyptian annals. Nor is the
-application of this talent restricted always to secular subjects, but
-we see it at times intruding into the most sacred mysteries of their
-religion.”
-
-A class of caricatures which dates from a very remote period, shows
-comparisons between men and the particular animals whose qualities they
-possess.
-
-As brave as a lion, as faithful as a dog, as sly as a fox or as
-swinish as a pig,--these things are all represented in these ancient
-caricatures.
-
-More than a thousand years B.C. there was drawn on an Egyptian
-papyrus a cat carrying a shepherd’s crook and driving a flock of geese.
-This is but one section of a long picture, in which the animals are
-often shown treating their human tyrants in the manner they are usually
-treated by them.
-
-All sorts of animals are shown, in odd contortions and grotesque
-attitudes, and not infrequently the scene or episode depicted refers to
-the state or condition of the human soul after death.
-
-It is deduced that from these animal pictures arose the class
-of stories called fables, in which animals are endued with human
-attributes.
-
-And also connected with them is the belief in metempsychosis or the
-transmission of the human soul into the body of an animal after death,
-which is a strong factor in the primitive religions.
-
-Indeed, the intermingling of humans and animals is inherent in all art
-and literature, as, instance the calling of Our Lord a Lamb, or the
-Holy Ghost, a Dove.
-
-Or, as to this day we call our children lambs or kittens, or, slangily,
-kids. As we still call a man an ass or a puppy; or a woman, a cat.
-
-An argument for evolution can perhaps be seen in the inevitable turning
-back to the animals for a description or representation of human types.
-
-At any rate, early man used this sort of humor almost exclusively, and
-so combined it with his serious thought, even his religions, that it
-was a permanently interwoven thread.
-
-And the exaggeration of this mimicry of animals resulted in the
-grotesque and from that to the monstrous, as the mind grew with what it
-fed on, and caricature developed and progressed.
-
-Also, a subtler demonstration of dawning wit and humor is seen in the
-deliberate and intentional burlesque of one picture by another.
-
-In the British Museum is an Egyptian papyrus showing a lion and a
-unicorn playing chess, which is a caricature of a picture frequently
-seen on ancient monuments. And in the Egyptian collection of the New
-York Historical Society there is a slab of limestone, dating back three
-thousand years, which depicts a lion, seated upon a throne as king. To
-him, a fox, caricaturing a High Priest, offers a goose and a fan. This,
-too, is a burlesque of a serious picture.
-
-Again, a lion is engaged in laying out the dead body of another animal,
-and a hippopotamus is washing his hands in a water jar.
-
-One of these burlesque pictures shows a soul doomed to return to its
-earthly home in the form of a pig. This picture, of such antiquity
-that it deeply impressed the Greeks and Romans, is part of the
-decoration of a king’s tomb.
-
-The ancient Egyptians, it may be gathered from their humorous pictures,
-were not averse to looking on the wine when it was red. Several
-delineations of Egyptian servants carrying home their masters after a
-carouse, are graphic and convincing; while others, equally so, show
-the convivial ones dancing, standing on their heads or belligerently
-wrestling.
-
-The tombs of the ancient Egyptians abound in these representations of
-over-merry occasions, and it all goes to prove the close connection in
-the primitive mind of the emotions of grief and mirth.
-
-Yet, _The Book of the Dead_ that monument of Egyptian literature,
-and the oldest in the world, contains only records of conquests and
-a few stories and moral sayings,--not a trace of humor. That, in
-ancient Egypt is represented solely by the ready and deft pencil of the
-caricaturist.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Though humor came to them later, the earliest records of the Eastern
-and Oriental countries show little or no traces of the comic.
-
-Indeed eminent authorities state that there is not a single element of
-the amusing in the art or literature of the Babylonians or Assyrians.
-It may be that the eminent authorities hadn’t a nose for nonsense, or
-the statement may be true. We never shall know.
-
-But both these peoples had great skill in drawing and sculpture, and
-though their records are chiefly historical or religious, we cannot
-help feeling there may have been some jesting at somebody’s expense.
-
-However, there are no existing records of any sort, and we fear
-the ancient Assyrians and Babylonians must go down in history as
-serious-minded folk.
-
-The Hebrews show up much better.
-
-In recent years Renan and Carlyle both declared the Jewish race
-possessed no sense of humor, but their opinions probably reflected
-their own viewpoint.
-
-For the early examples of Hebrew Satire and Parody are distinctly
-humorous both in intent and in effect.
-
-Parody is, of course, the direct outcome of the primeval passion for
-mimicry. The first laugh-provoker was no doubt an exaggerated imitation
-of some defect or peculiarity of another. And the development of the
-art of amusement took centuries to get past that preliminary thought.
-
-The tendency to imitation was the impetus that turned the religious
-hymns into ribaldry and wine-songs, and the religious or funeral
-festivals into orgies of grotesque masquerading.
-
-And Hebrew literature is renowned for its parodies of serious matters
-both of church and state.
-
-With this race, satire sprang from parody and grew and thrived rapidly.
-
-To quote from the learned Professor Chotzner:
-
- “Since the birth of Hebrew literature, many centuries ago,
- satire has been one of its many characteristics. It is directed
- against the foibles and follies of the miser, the hypocrite,
- the profligate, the snob. The dull sermonizer, who puts his
- congregation to sleep, fares badly, and even the pretty
- wickednesses of the fair sex do not escape the hawk-eye of the
- Hebrew satirist. The luxury and extravagance of the ‘Daughters
- of Zion’ were attacked by no less a person than Isaiah himself;
- but human nature, especially that of a feminine kind, was too
- strong even for so eminent a prophet as he was, and there is no
- reason to suppose that the lady of those days wore one trinket
- the less in deference to his invective.
-
- “There are, in fact, several incidents mentioned here and there
- in the pages of the Bible, which are decidedly of a satirical
- nature. Most prominent among them are the two that refer
- respectively to Bileam, who was sermonized by his ass, and to
- Haman who, as the Prime Minister of Persia, had to do homage
- publicly to Mordecai, the very man whom he greatly hated and
- despised. Nay, we are told, that, by the irony of fate, Haman
- himself ended his life on the exceptionally huge gallows which,
- while in a humorous turn of mind, he had ordered to be erected
- for the purpose of having executed thereon the object of his
- intense hatred.
-
- “And again, there are two excellent satires to be found
- respectively in the 14th chapter of Isaiah, and in the 18th
- chapter of the 1st Book of Kings. In the first, one of the
- mighty Babylonian potentates is held up to derision, on account
- of the ignominious defeat he had sustained in his own dominions,
- after he had been for a long time a great terror to contemporary
- nations, living in various parts of the ancient world. Even the
- trees of the forests are represented there as having mocked at
- his fall, saying: ‘Since thou art laid down, no feller is come
- up against us.’ In the second satire, the false prophets of Baal
- are ridiculed by Elijah for having maimed their bodies, in order
- to do thereby honour to a deity which is sometimes sarcastically
- referred to in the Bible as being ‘the god of flies.’
-
- “Delightfully satirical are also the two fables quoted in the
- Bible in connection with _Jotham_ and _Nathan_, the Prophet.
- These are commonly well-known, and no extracts from them need be
- given here.
-
- “The satirical turn of mind manifested by Hebrew writers living
- in Biblical times, has been transmitted by them as a legacy to
- their descendants, who flourished in subsequent ages down to
- the present day. The first among them was Ben Sira who, in 180
- B.C., wrote a book, some of the contents of which are satirical,
- for there the vanity of contemporary women, and the arrogance
- of some of the rich in the community are ridiculed with mild
- sarcasm.
-
- “But much more keen was the sense of the satirical that was
- possessed by some of the ancient Rabbis, who were among those
- that brought into existence the vast and interesting Talmudical
- literature. One of their satires, called ‘Tithes,’ runs as
- follows:--
-
- “In Palestine there once lived a widow with her two daughters,
- whose only worldly possessions consisted of a little field. When
- she began to plough it, a Jewish official quoted to her the
- words of the lawgiver Moses: ‘Thou shalt not plough with ox and
- ass together.’ When she began to sow, she was admonished in the
- words of the same lawgiver not to sow the fields with two kinds
- of seed. When she began to reap and pile up the stacks, she was
- told that she must leave ‘gleanings,’ the poor man’s sheaf, and
- the ‘corner.’
-
- “When the harvest time came, she was informed that it was her
- duty to give the priest’s share, consisting of the first and
- second ‘tithes.’ She quietly submitted, and gave what was
- demanded of her. Then she sold the field, and bought two young
- ewes, in order that she might use their wool, and profit by
- their offspring. But, as soon as the ewes gave birth to their
- young, a priest came, and quoted to her the words of Moses:
- ‘Give _me_ the first-born, for so the Lord hath ordained.’ Again
- she submitted, and gave him the young.
-
- “When the time of shearing came, the priest again made his
- appearance, and said to her that, according to the Law, she was
- obliged to give him ‘the shoulder, the two cheeks, and the maw.’
-
- “In a moment of despair, the widow said: ‘Let all the animals
- be consecrated to the Lord!’ ‘In that case,’ answered the
- priest, ‘they belong altogether to me; for the Lord hath said:
- “Everything consecrated in Israel shall be thine.”’ So, he took
- the sheep, and went his way, leaving the widow and her two
- daughters in great distress, and bathed in tears!”
-
-
- _A WIFE’S RUSE_
-
- (A Rabbinical Tale)
-
- “There is a Rabbinical law which makes it obligatory upon every
- Jewish husband to divorce his wife, if after ten years of
- married life she shall remain childless. Now, there once lived
- in an Oriental town a man and his wife who were greatly attached
- to each other, but who had, unfortunately, no children, though
- they had been married for a considerable time.
-
- “When the end of the tenth year of their marriage was
- approaching, they both went to the Rabbi, and asked him for his
- advice. The Rabbi listened with great sympathy, but declared
- his inability to alter or modify the law in their favour. The
- only suggestion, he said, that he could make, was, that on the
- last night before their final separation, they should celebrate
- a little feast together, and that the wife should take some
- keepsake from her husband which would be a permanent token of
- her husband’s unchangeable affection for her.
-
- “Thus, on the last night, the wife prepared a sumptuous meal
- for the two of them, and, amidst much merriment and laughter,
- she filled and refilled her husband’s goblet with sparkling
- wine. Under its influence, he fell into a heavy sleep, and while
- in this condition, he was carried by his wife’s orders to her
- father’s abode, where he continued to sleep till the following
- morning. When he awoke, and was wondering at his strange
- surroundings, his cunning wife came smilingly into the room,
- and said: ‘Of, my dear husband, I have actually carried out the
- Rabbi’s suggestion, inasmuch as I have taken away from home a
- most precious keepsake. This is your own dear self, without whom
- it would be impossible for me to live.’
-
- “The husband, moved to tears, embraced her most affectionately,
- and promised that they should live together to the end.
- Thereupon they joyfully returned home, and, going again to the
- Rabbi, they told him what had happened, and asked him for his
- forgiveness and blessing, which he readily accorded them. And,
- indeed, the Rabbi’s blessing had an excellent result. For after
- the lapse of some time, they both enjoyed the happiness of
- fondling a bright little child of their own.”
-
-Arabian and Turkish thought and speech seem to be tinged with the sense
-of the bizarre and strange rather than the grotesque. Their earliest
-folk tales and pleasant stories, from which later grew the _Arabian
-Nights_, form a cumulative, though broken chain from ancient to
-modern times.
-
-Persian humor leans toward the romantic and sentimental, but no ancient
-fragments are available. From the later writers, as Omar and Sadi, we
-feel convinced there was an early literature but we can find none to
-quote.
-
-India shows the oldest and most definite signs of early folk lore and
-retold tales.
-
-Buddha’s _Jatakas_ produced the stories that later proved the
-germs of merry tales by Boccaccio and Chaucer. That these later writers
-put in all the fun is not entirely probable.
-
-Some antiquarians claim to find humor in the hymns of the Rig Vedas,
-whose date is indefinitely put at between 2,000 and 1,500 B.C.
-while others of different temperament deny it.
-
-From this example the reader may judge for himself.
-
-
- _THE HYMN OF THE FROGS_
-
- “When the first shower of the rainy season
- Has fallen on them, parched with thirst and longing,
- In glee each wet and dripping frog jumps upward;
- The green one and the speckled join their voices.
-
- “They shout aloud like Brahmans drunk with soma,
- When they perform their annual devotions:
- Like priests at service sweating o’er the kettle,
- They issue forth; not one remains in hiding.
-
- “The frogs that bleat like goats, that low like cattle,
- The green one and the speckled give us riches;
- Whole herds of cows may they bestow upon us,
- And grant us length of days through sacrificing.”
-
-The _Jatakas_ of Buddha, though religious writings, and teachings
-by parables, are not without humor. The one about the silly son who
-killed the mosquito on his father’s bald head with a heavy blow of an
-ax, has its funny side. Or the old monarch who had reigned 252,000
-years and still had 84,000 years more ahead of him, and went into
-solitary retirement because he discovered a gray hair in his head.
-Another shrewd fellow made an enormous fortune out of the sale of a
-dead mouse.
-
-Of course, the animals figure largely. There is the tale of the monkeys
-who watered a garden and then pulled up the plants to see if their
-roots were wet, and the angry crows who tried to drink up the sea.
-
-Riddles, too, must be remembered.
-
-Though not many specimens have been preserved, yet we remember Samson’s
-riddle, so disastrous to the Philistines.
-
-“Out of the eater came forth meat; and out of the strong came forth
-sweetness.”
-
-And when his susceptibility to cajolery led him to tell his wife the
-answer, and she tattled, his comment was the pithy; “If ye had not
-plowed with my heifer, ye had not found out my riddle.”
-
-The Sphinx’s riddle is well known. “What animal goes on four legs in
-the morning, on two at noon, and on three at night?”
-
-The answer being: Man, who goes on all-fours in infancy, walks upright
-in middle life, and adds a staff in old age.
-
-An ancient riddle is ascribed to the problematical personality of
-Homer, though it was doubtless originated before his time,--if he had a
-time.
-
-Homer, the tale goes, met some boys coming home from a fishing trip. On
-his asking them of their luck, they replied, “What we caught we threw
-away; what we didn’t catch, we have.”
-
-It seems they referred to fleas, not fish, and his inability to guess
-this so enraged Homer, that he killed himself.
-
-And here is a free translation of an ancient Arabian riddle.
-
- “The loftiest cedars I can eat,
- Yet neither paunch nor mouth have I.
- I storm whene’er you give me meat,
- Whene’er you give me drink, I die.”
-
-The answer is Fire, and as may be seen, the type of riddle is precisely
-such as are found in the puzzle columns of today’s papers.
-
-Riddles are frequently mentioned in Ancient Literature,-- every
-country or race indulging in them. Josephus tells us that Solomon and
-Hiram of Tyre were in the habit of exchanging riddles.
-
-So we find that a love of fun or playfulness was inherent in our early
-ancestors, yet it did not reach a height to be called genuine creative
-humor.
-
-But there is always the feeling that if more of the translators
-themselves possessed more humor, they might find more in the originals.
-
-As a rule, translators and antiquarian researchers are so engaged in
-serious seeking that they would probably pass over humor if they ran
-across it.
-
-When a man is prospecting for iron or coal, he may easily be blind to
-indications of wells of natural oil.
-
-More wit and humor of Ancient India has come down to us through the
-caricatures and grotesque drawings than in words.
-
-The innumerable pictures of the God Krishna are the most humorous of
-these.
-
-Krishna appears to have been a veritable Don Juan, and his multitude of
-lady friends numbered up to many thousands.
-
-It is narrated that a friend of his, who had no wife, begged for just
-one from Krishna’s multiplicity.
-
-“Court any one you wish,” said the light-hearted god, pleasantly.
-
-So the friend went from house to house of Krishna’s various wives, but
-one and all, they declared themselves quite satisfied with husband,
-Krishna, and moreover each one was convinced that he was hers alone.
-The seeker visited sixteen thousand and eight houses, and then gave it
-up.
-
-The endless pictures of Krishna represent him surrounded by lovely
-ladies, and a curious detail of these drawings is that in many
-instances the group of girls is wreathed and twisted into the shape
-or semblance of a bird or a horse or an elephant, presenting an
-interesting and not unpleasing effect.
-
-Now, all we have given so far, seems indeed a meager grist for the
-first division of our Outline. But one may not find what does not exist.
-
-There is no doubt that humor was known and loved from the dawning
-of independent thought, but as it was not recorded, save for a few
-drawings, on the enduring rocks, it died with its originators.
-
-Humor was the last need of a self-providing race, and even when found
-it was a luxury rather than a necessity.
-
-As a fair example of the earliest tales that have lived in various
-forms ever since their first recital, is appended the bit of ancient
-Hindoo folk-lore, called
-
-
- _THE GOOD WIFE AND THE BAD HUSBAND_
-
-In a secluded village there lived a rich man, who was very miserly,
-and his wife, who was very kind-hearted and charitable, but a stupid
-little woman that believed everything she heard. And there lived in
-the same village a clever rogue, who had for some time watched for an
-opportunity for getting something from this simple woman during her
-husband’s absence. So one day, when he had seen the old miser ride
-out to inspect his lands, this rogue of the first water came to the
-house, and fell down at the threshold as if overcome by fatigue. The
-woman ran up to him at once and inquired whence he came. “I am come
-from Kailása,” said he; “having been sent down by an old couple living
-there, for news of their son and his wife.” “Who are those fortunate
-dwellers in Siva’s mountain?” she asked. And the rogue gave the names
-of her husband’s deceased parents, which he had taken good care, of
-course, to learn from the neighbours. “Do you really come from them?”
-said the simple woman. “Are they doing well there? Dear old people!
-How glad my husband would be to see you, were he here! Sit down,
-please, and rest until he returns. How do they live there? Have they
-enough to eat and dress themselves withal?” These and a hundred other
-questions she put to the rogue, who, for his part, wished to get away
-as soon as possible, knowing full well how he would be treated if
-the miser should return while he was there. So he replied, “Mother,
-language has no words to describe the miseries they are undergoing in
-the other world. They have not a rag of clothing, and for the last six
-days they have eaten nothing, and have lived on water only. It would
-break your heart to see them.” The rogue’s pathetic words deceived the
-good woman, who firmly believed that he had come down from Kailása, a
-messenger from the old couple to herself! “Why should they so suffer,”
-said she, “when their son has plenty to eat and clothe himself withal,
-and when their daughter-in-law wears all sorts of costly garments?”
-So saying, she went into the house, and soon came out again with two
-boxes containing all her own and her husband’s clothes, which she
-handed to the rogue, desiring him to deliver them to the poor old
-couple in Kailása. She also gave him her jewel-box, to be presented to
-her mother-in-law. “But dress and jewels will not fill their hungry
-stomachs,” said the rogue. “Very true; I had forgot: wait a moment,”
-said the simple woman, going into the house once more. Presently
-returning with her husband’s cash chest, she emptied its glittering
-contents into the rogue’s skirt, who now took his leave in haste,
-promising to give everything to the good old couple in Kailása; and
-having secured all the booty in his upper garment, he made off at the
-top of his speed as soon as the silly woman had gone indoors.
-
-Shortly after this the husband returned home, and his wife’s pleasure
-at what she had done was so great that she ran to meet him at the door,
-and told him all about the arrival of the messenger from Kailása, how
-his parents were without clothes and food, and how she had sent them
-clothes and jewels and store of money. On hearing this, the anger of
-the husband was great; but he checked himself, and inquired which road
-the messenger from Kailása had taken, saying that he wished to follow
-him with a further message for his parents. So she very readily pointed
-out the direction in which the rogue had gone. With rage in his heart
-at the trick played upon his stupid wife, he rode off in hot haste,
-and after having proceeded a considerable distance, he caught sight
-of the flying rogue, who, finding escape hopeless, climbed up into a
-_pipal_ tree. The husband soon reached the foot of the tree, when
-he shouted to the rogue to come down. “No, I cannot,” said he; “this
-is the way to Kailása,” and then climbed to the very top of the tree.
-Seeing there was no chance of the rogue coming down, and there being
-no one near to whom he could call for help, the old miser tied his
-horse to a neighbouring tree, and began to climb up the _pipal_
-himself. When the rogue observed this, he thanked all his gods most
-fervently, and having waited until his enemy had climbed nearly up to
-him, he threw down his bundle of booty, and then leapt nimbly from
-branch to branch till he reached the ground in safety, when he mounted
-the miser’s horse and with his bundle rode into a thick forest, where
-he was not likely to be discovered. Being thus balked the miser came
-down the _pipal_ tree slowly, cursing his own stupidity in having
-risked his horse to recover the things which his wife had given the
-rogue, and returned home at leisure. His wife, who was waiting his
-return, welcomed him with a joyous countenance, and cried, “I thought
-as much: you have sent away your horse to Kailása, to be used by your
-old father.” Vexed at his wife’s words, as he was, he replied in the
-affirmative, to conceal his own folly.
-
-
-
-
- MIDDLE DIVISION
-
-
- PART I
-
- GREECE
-
-In essaying an Outline of the World’s Humor, the greatest obstacle to
-our work is the insufficiency of data.
-
-While we are sure there was humor in the early days, we cannot get much
-of it for publication. The Fables and Folk Tales that come down to us
-are of uncertain origin and date. Traditions have been traced to their
-inception but the tracery is of vague and shadowy lines.
-
-Wherefore it is well nigh impossible to formulate or systematize our
-chronology.
-
-The simple division of Ancient, Middle and Modern must serve for a main
-arrangement, with the subdivision of the Middle into Greece, Rome, and
-the Mediæval Ages.
-
-Greece will include generally the time from 500 B.C. to 500 A.D.,
-although its traditions reach farther back into antiquity.
-
-The whole Middle Division must include all from 500 B.C. to about 1300
-A.D.
-
-So, we see the boundaries are inevitable if not entirely satisfactory.
-
-Greece was the primeval European civilization, and in the year 500
-B.C. it already had its own literature and the Iliad and
-Odyssey were even then antique.
-
-These, at this time, were traditionally ascribed to Homer as they have
-ever since remained. But Homer’s individual existence is a matter of
-doubt, and his history and personality are as unknown as those of the
-ancient patriarchs of the Old Testament.
-
-Even from this distant viewpoint the humor of antiquity is, like
-beauty, in the eye of the beholder.
-
-Coleridge says definitely, “Amongst the classic ancients there was
-little or no humor.” But, on the other hand, that eminent antiquarian,
-William Hayes Ward says, “The Greeks were the maddest, jolliest race of
-men that ever inhabited our planet. As they loved games and play, they
-loved the joke.”
-
-So, as more than any other human emotion, humor is a matter of
-opinion, we must dig up whatever nuggets we can and not assay them too
-meticulously.
-
-Like Homer, Æsop, is wrapped in mystery. Like Homer, too, various
-cities claimed the honor of being his birthplace. The truth is not
-known.
-
-Tradition places Æsop in the sixth century, B.C. and makes him
-a dwarf and, originally, a slave.
-
-Though probably not a historic personage, his name is inseparably
-connected with the Fables that have been known to us for centuries;
-and, according to scholars, some of them were known a thousand years
-earlier to the Egyptians.
-
-Of these things we cannot speak positively, but _Æsop’s Fables_
-certainly come at or near the beginnings of Greek Literature, and their
-place is here.
-
-
- ÆSOP’S FABLES
-
- _THE LION, THE BEAR, THE MONKEY, AND THE FOX_
-
-The Tyrant of the forest issued a proclamation, commanding all his
-subjects to repair immediately to his royal den. Among the rest, the
-Bear made his appearance; but pretending to be offended with the steams
-which issued from the Monarch’s apartments, he was imprudent enough
-to hold his nose in his Majesty’s presence. This insolence was so
-highly resented, that the Lion in a rage laid him dead at his feet.
-The Monkey, observing what had passed, trembled for his carcass; and
-attempted to conciliate favor by the most abject flattery. He began
-with protesting, that for his part he thought the apartments were
-perfumed with Arabian spices; and exclaiming against the rudeness of
-the Bear, admired the beauty of his Majesty’s paws, so happily formed,
-he said, to correct the insolence of clowns. This fulsome adulation,
-instead of being received as he expected, proved no less offensive
-than the rudeness of the Bear; and the courtly Monkey was in like
-manner extended by the side of Sir Bruin. And now his Majesty cast his
-eye upon the Fox. “Well, Reynard,” said he, “and what scent do you
-discover here?” “Great Prince,” replied the cautious Fox, “my nose was
-never esteemed my most distinguishing sense; and at present I would
-by no means venture to give my opinion, as I have unfortunately got a
-terrible cold.”
-
-
- _Reflection_
-
-It is often more prudent to suppress our sentiments, than either to
-flatter or to rail.
-
-
- _THE PARTIAL JUDGE_
-
-A Farmer came to a neighbouring Lawyer, expressing great concern for an
-accident which he said had just happened. “One of your oxen,” continued
-he, “has been gored by an unlucky bull of mine, and I shall be glad
-to know how I am to make you a reparation.” “Thou art a very honest
-fellow,” replied the Lawyer, “and wilt not think it unreasonable that
-I expect one of thy oxen in return.” “It is no more than justice,”
-quoth the Farmer, “to be sure: but what did I say!--I mistake--It is
-your bull that has killed one of my oxen.” “Indeed,” says the Lawyer,
-“that alters the case: I must inquire into the affair; and if”--“And
-_if_!” said the Farmer, “the business I find would have been
-concluded without an _if_, had you been as ready to do justice to
-others as to exact it from them.”
-
-
- _Reflection_
-
-The injuries we do, and those we suffer, are seldom weighed in the same
-scales.
-
-It is all very well for some wiseacres to say, “Humor came in with
-civilization,” for others to say, “Humor took its rise in the Middle
-Ages,” or to set any other arbitrary time.
-
-The truth is that Humor, is an innate emotion, and in a general sense,
-it is the child of religion.
-
-The primitive religions were conducted with Festival Ceremonies, whose
-celebrations were of such symbolic nature, and later, such burlesque of
-symbolism that gaiety ensued and then ribaldry.
-
-The worship of the god Dionysus,--later mixed up in tradition with
-Bacchus,--was responsible for much reckless license that was the
-earliest form of comedy.
-
-Dionysus, being deity of the vineyard, as well as of phallic worship,
-lent himself readily to the grotesque representations and hysterical
-orgies of his followers and Greek Comedy was probably the outcome of
-this.
-
-In these Dionysiac festivals the processions and parades represented
-everything imaginable that was bizarre or ridiculous.
-
-As in all ages, before and since, the mummers clothed themselves in the
-likeness of animals, and invented horrible masks.
-
-Comedy came to be abuse, ridicule and parody of sacred things.
-
-Notwithstanding Coleridge’s comment, laughter was universal in Greece
-and Plato declared the _agelastoi_ or non-laughers to be the least
-respectable of mortals.
-
-Small wonder then that their mirth exhibited itself in drawings and
-paintings. These mediums were easier to come by than writings, and the
-early grotesques and caricatures of the Greeks are drawings on Greek
-vases which show the playfulness as well as the serious purpose of
-the artist-potter. The first and greatest of Greek poets adds strokes
-of wit to his stories of the Trojan war. When Ulysses returns from
-the siege of Ilium he stops at the island of Sicily, and he and his
-companions are caught by the one-eyed giant Polyphemus and imprisoned
-in his cave. Then comes the story of the crafty leader’s escape, after
-some of his companions had been slain and eaten by the monster. It
-is a most amusing story, told with all Greek humor, how the giant
-was blinded with the burnt stick which gouged out his eye while in a
-drunken sleep; how the Greeks escaped through the entrance by clinging
-under the bodies of his sheep, while he felt of them one by one to see
-that not a Greek escaped. Then comes the giant’s howling call to his
-distant companions, and in answer to their question, who had blinded
-him, his telling them that “Outis” (Nobody) had done it, _Outis_
-(_Nobody_) being the name Ulysses had given the giant as his own.
-“If nobody has done it”, replied his companions, “then it is the act of
-the gods”, and they left him to endure his loss. Thus the Greeks escape
-to their ships and taunt the monster as they flee away, followed by his
-vain pursuit. Homer relieves the wisdom of Ulysses and the dignity of
-Agamemnon with the gibes of Thersites or the rude humor of the suitors
-of Penelope, the trick of whose embroidery is itself an amusing story.
-
-Greece, of course, was the cradle of all that we now call art.
-Landscape painters, painters of animals and portrait limners, as well
-as still life artists and sculptors and workers in mosaics reached a
-high state of perfection.
-
-Then naturally the caricaturists and comic artists could not be wanting
-there. Burlesque affected their pencils and brushes as it had their
-speech and caricature and parody were rampant.
-
-A marvelous example is the parody or caricature of the Oracle of
-Apollo at Delphi. It is taken from an oxybaphon which was brought from
-the Continent to England, where it passed into the collection of Mr.
-William Hope. The _oxybaphon_, or, as it was called by the Romans,
-_acetabulum_, was a large vessel for holding vinegar, which formed
-one of the important ornaments of the table, and was therefore very
-susceptible of pictorial embellishment of this description. It is
-one of the most remarkable Greek caricatures of this kind yet known,
-and represents a parody on one of the most interesting stories of
-the Grecian mythology, that of the arrival of Apollo at Delphi. The
-artist, in his love of burlesque, has spared none of the personages who
-belonged to the story. The Hyperborean Apollo himself appears in the
-character of a quack doctor, on his temporary stage, covered by a sort
-of roof, and approached by wooden steps. On the stage lies Apollo’s
-luggage, consisting of a bag, a bow, and his Scythian cap. Chron is
-represented as labouring under the effects of age and blindness, and
-supporting himself by the aid of a crooked staff, as he repairs to the
-Delphian quack doctor for relief. The figure of the centaur is made to
-ascend by the aid of a companion, both being furnished with the masks
-and other attributes of the comic performers. Above are the mountains,
-and on them the nymphs of Parnassus, who, like all the other actors
-in the scene, are disguised with masks, and those of a very grotesque
-character. On the right-hand side stands a figure which is considered
-as representing the _epoptes_, the inspector or overseer of
-the performance, who alone wears no mask. Even a pun is employed to
-heighten the drollery of the scene, for instead of ΠΥΘΙΑΣ, the Pythian,
-placed over the head of the burlesque Apollo, it seems evident that the
-artist had written ΠΕΙΘΙΑΣ, the consoler in allusion, perhaps, to the
-consolation which the quack-doctor is administering to his blind and
-aged visitor.
-
-The comic and grotesque led on to the representation of the monstrous,
-and queer, strange figures became part of their art and architecture.
-Out of these, perhaps, grew the hideous masks and strange distortions
-of the human figure.
-
-Perhaps this is why Æsop was represented as a dwarf and a hunchback.
-
-But the whole trend of the grotesque and monstrous in religious
-ornamentation grew and flourished on into the Middle Ages and later,
-and the gargoyles of our latest churches show the persisting influence.
-
-The old comedy of Greece has been called the comedy of caricature, and
-hand in hand, verbal and pictorial parody have come to us down the
-centuries.
-
-Pictorial burlesque, however, was not placed on the public monuments,
-but lent itself more readily to objects of common usage or individual
-belongings. It is found abundantly on the pottery of Greece and Rome
-and abounded in the wall paintings of Herculaneum and Pompeii.
-
-This is not the place to discuss the identity of Homer. Whether a real
-man, a group of men or a myth, the works of Homer are immortal and, for
-the most part serious.
-
-Our task is to find anything humorous in the Greek epics.
-
-It is not easy, indeed, it is almost impossible. But we subjoin an
-extract which, we may say, comes the nearest to humor in Homer.
-
-
- _THE BEATING OF THERSITES_
-
- Ulysses’ ruling thus restrained
- The host from flight; and then again the Council was maintained
- With such a concourse that the shore rang with the tumult made;
- As when the far-resounding sea doth in its rage invade
- His sandy confines, whose sides groan with his involved wave,
- And make his own breast echo sighs. All sate, and audience gave.
- Thersites only would speak all. A most disordered store
- Of words he foolishly poured out, of which his mind held more
- Than it could manage; anything with which he could procure
- Laughter, he never could contain. He should have yet been sure
- To touch no kings; t’oppose their states becomes not jesters’
- parts.
- But he the filthiest fellow was of all that had deserts
- In Troy’s brave siege. He was squint-eyed, and lame of either foot;
- So crookbacked that he had no breast; sharp-headed, where did shoot
- (Here and there ’spersed) thin, mossy hair. He most of all envied
- Ulysses and Æacides, whom still his spleen would chide.
- Nor could the sacred king himself avoid his saucy vein;
- Against whom since he knew the Greeks did vehement hates sustain,
- Being angry for Achilles’ wrong, he cried out, railing thus:
- “Atrides, why complain’st thou now? What wouldst thou more of us?
- Thy tents are full of brass; and dames, the choice of all, are
- thine,
- With whom we must present thee first, when any towns resign
- To our invasion. Want’st thou, then, besides all this, more gold
- From Troy’s knights to redeem their sons, whom to be dearly sold
- I or some other Greek must take? Or wouldst thou yet again
- Force from some other lord his prize, to soothe the lusts that
- reign
- In thy encroaching appetite? It fits no prince to be
- A prince of ill, and govern us, or lead our progeny
- By rape to ruin. Oh, base Greeks, deserving infamy,
- And ills eternal, Greekish girls, not Greeks, ye are! Come, flee
- Home with our ships; leave this man here to perish with his preys,
- And try if we helped him or not. He wronged a man that weighs
- Far more than he himself in worth. He forced from Thetis’ son,
- And keeps his prize still. Nor think I that mighty man hath won
- The style of wrathful worthily; he’s soft, he’s too remiss;
- Or else, Atrides, his had been thy last of injuries.”
- Thus he the people’s pastor chid; but straight stood up to him
- Divine Ulysses, who, with looks exceeding grave and grim,
- This bitter check gave: “Cease, vain fool, to vent thy railing vein
- On kings thus, though it serve thee well; nor think thou canst
- restrain,
- With that thy railing faculty, their wills in least degree;
- For not a worse, of all this host, came with our king than thee,
- To Troy’s great siege; then do not take into that mouth of thine
- The names of kings, much less revile the dignities that shine
- In their supreme states, wresting thus this motion for our home,
- To soothe thy cowardice; since ourselves yet know not what will
- come
- Of these designments, if it be our good to stay, or go.
- Nor is it that thou stand’st on; thou revil’st our general so,
- Only because he hath so much, not given by such as thou,
- But our heroes. Therefore this thy rude vein makes me vow,
- Which shall be curiously observed, if ever I shall hear
- This madness from thy mouth again, let not Ulysses bear
- This head, nor be the father called of young Telemachus,
- If to thy nakedness I take and strip thee not, and thus
- Whip thee to fleet from council; send, with sharp stripes, weeping
- hence
- This glory thou affect’st to rail.” This said, his insolence
- He settled with his scepter; struck his back and shoulders so
- That bloody wales rose. He shrunk round, and from his eyes did flow
- Moist tears, and, looking filthily, he sate, feared, smarted, dried
- His blubbered cheeks; and all the press, though grieved to be denied
- Their wished retreat for home, yet laughed delightsomely, and spake
- Either to other: “Oh, ye gods, how infinitely take
- Ulysses’ virtues in our good! Author of counsels, great
- In ordering armies, how most well this act became his heat,
- To beat from council this rude fool. I think his saucy spirit
- Hereafter will not let his tongue abuse the sovereign merit,
- Exempt from such base tongues as his.”
- --_The Iliad._
-
-Attributed to Homer by many, and stoutly denied by others, is a comedy
-called _The Battle of the Frogs and Mice_.
-
-Again we note the device of animals masquerading as human beings.
-
-Samuel Wesley, himself a humorist, calls this the oldest burlesque in
-the world, and he also dubs it, _The Iliad in a Nutshell_. He
-holds that Homer wrote it as a parody of his own masterpiece, while,
-conversely, Statius contends that it is a work of youth, written by
-Homer before he wrote _The Iliad_. Chapman deems it the work of
-the poet’s old age, and as none may decide when doctors disagree, many
-scholars deny a Homeric authorship to it at all. Plutarch asserts the
-real author was Pigres of Halicarnassus, who flourished during the
-Persian war.
-
-This first burlesque known to literature has the following plot.
-
-A mouse, while slaking his thirst on the margin of a pond, after a
-hot pursuit by a weasel, enters into conversation with a frog on the
-merits of their respective modes of life. The frog invites the mouse
-to a nearer inspection of the abode and habits of his own nation, and
-for this purpose offers him a sail on his back. When the party are at
-some distance from land, the head of an otter suddenly appears on the
-surface. The terrified frog at once dives to the bottom, disengaging
-himself from his rider, who, with many a struggle and bitter
-imprecations on his betrayer, is involved in a watery grave. Another
-mouse, who from the shore had witnessed the fate of his unfortunate
-comrade, reports it to his fellow-citizens. A council is held, and war
-declared against the nation of the offender.
-
-“Jupiter and the gods deliberate in Olympus on the issue of the
-contest. Mars and Minerva decline personal interference, as well from
-the awe inspired by such mighty combatants as from previous ill-will
-towards both contending powers, in consequence of injuries inflicted by
-each on their divine persons or properties. A band of mosquitoes sound
-the war-alarum with their trumpets, and, after a bloody engagement,
-the frogs are defeated with great slaughter. Jupiter, sympathising
-with their fate, endeavours in vain by his thunders to intimidate the
-victors from further pursuit. The rescue of the frogs, however, is
-effected by an army of land-crabs, who appear as their allies, and
-before whom the mice, in their turn, are speedily put to flight.”
-
-_The Battle of the Frogs and Mice_, then, is well described as the
-earliest and most successful extant specimen of the “mock-heroic,” the
-double object of which is, according to Barrow’s famous definition, to
-debase things pompous and elevate things mean. An amusing version of
-this Homeric _jeu d’esprit_ was published in 1851 by an author
-who gave himself out as the “Singing Mouse,” “the last minstrel of his
-race.” “The theme,” he says, “belongs to that heroic age of which
-history has recorded that the very mountains laboured when a mouse was
-born.” The metre of this translation has been altered from the stately
-elegance of the original to one which is perhaps better fitted to the
-subject in itself than to its special object as a travestie on the
-epic style of the _Iliad_. The names of the heroes are happily
-rendered; but it will be seen that some difference exists between this
-author and the one just cited as to certain of the zoological terms in
-the poem.
-
-
- _THE MEETING_
-
-
- I
-
- It fell on a day that a mouse, travel-spent,
- To the side of a river did wearily win;
- Of the good house-cat he had baffled the scent,
- And he thirstily dipt his whiskered chin;
- When, crouched in the sedge by the water’s brink,
- A clamorous frog beheld him drink.
- “And tell me, fair sir, thy title and birth,
- For of high degree thou art surely come;
- I have room by my hearth for a stranger of worth,
- And a welcome to boot to my royal home.
- For, sooth to speak, my name is _Puffcheek_,
- And I come of _Bullfrog’s_ lordly line;
- I govern the bogs, the realm of the frogs,
- A sceptred king by right divine.”
-
-
- II
-
- Then up and spake the mighty mouse:
- “And, courteous stranger, ask’st thou, then,
- What’s known alike to gods and men,
- The lineage of _Crumplunderer’s_ house?
- Me Princess _Lickfarina_ bare,
- Daughter of good King _Nibble-the-flitch_,
- And she weaned me on many a dainty rare,
- As became great _Pie-devourer’s_ heir,
- With filberts and figs and sweetmeats rich.
-
-
- III
-
- “Never mortal mouse, I ween,
- Better versed in man’s cuisine;
- Not a bun or tartlet, graced
- With sweeping petticoat of paste,
- Not an oily rasher or creamy cheese,
- Or liver so gay in its silver chemise;
- Not a dish by artiste for alderman made,
- Ever escaped my foraging raid
- For when the mice pour on pantry and store,
- In foray or fight, I am aye to the fore.
-
-
- IV
-
- “I fear not man’s unwieldy size,
- To his very bedside I merrily go;
- At his lubberly length the ogre lies,
- And sleep never leaves his heavy-sealed eyes
- Though I pinch his heel and nibble his toe.
- But enemies twain do work my bane,
- And both from my inmost soul I hate,
- The cat and the kite, who bear me spite;
- And, third, the mouse-trap’s fatal bait;
- And the ferret foul I abhor from my soul,
- The robber! he follows me into my hole!”
-
-Wesley’s rendering of the _dénouement_ is a thoroughly good specimen of
-the mock-heroic style which runs through the original:
-
- The Muses knowing all things list not show
- The Wailings for the Dead and Funeral Rites,
- To blameless Æthiopians must they go
- To feast with Jove for twelve succeeding nights.
- Therefore abrupt thus end they. Let suffice
- The gods’ august assembly to relate,
- Heroic Frogs and Demigods of Mice,
- Troxartes’ vengeance and Pelides’ fate.
- Hosts routed, lakes of gore, and hills of slain,
- An Iliad, work divine! raised from a day’s campaign.
-
-By this time Greece was ready for definite mirth and laughter. What has
-come to be known as the Old Comedy was to the Athenians, we are told,
-what is now shown in the influences of the newspaper, the review, the
-Broadside, the satire, the caricature of the times and manners.
-
-Nor were cartoons missing, for the grotesque pictures were as important
-a factor as the verbal or written words.
-
-The Old Comedy is marked by political satire of a virulent personality.
-This is prohibited in the Middle Comedy, and replaced by literary and
-philosophical criticism of the ways of the citizens. The New Comedy,
-more repressed still, is the comedy of manners, and its influence
-continued to the Roman stage and further.
-
-Of the Old Comedy, save for a few lesser lights, Aristophanes is the
-sole representative.
-
-At the festivals of the god Dionysus, two elements were present. One
-the solemn rites, which developed into tragedy, and the other the
-grotesque and ribald orgies which were equally in evidence and which
-culminated in the idea of comedy.
-
-The license of these symbolic representations was unbridled and all
-rules of decorum and decency were violated in the frenzied antics.
-
-Doubtless many writings now lost to us were filled with the broad humor
-of the day, but we have only the plays of Aristophanes left.
-
-Of the life of this Athenian not much is known. He was born after 450
-B.C. and it was after the Peloponnesian War that he wrote his
-plays.
-
-The principal and best known of his eleven extant plays is _The
-Frogs_.
-
-Of this, two clever translations are given.
-
-One, is thus introduced by a writer in _The Quarterly Review_:
-
- “One of the temples or theatres appropriated to the service
- of Bacchus in Athens, and in which the scenic performances
- of the old Greeks took place, was situated near a part of
- that metropolis usually called ‘The Marshes,’ and those who
- know by experience what tenants such places commonly harbour
- in more southern climates will think it not impossible that
- the representatives of the stage, and more particularly in
- theatres which were generally without a roof, were occasionally
- disturbed, to the great annoyance of the dramatists, by the
- noisy vociferations of these more ancient and legitimate Lords
- of the Marshes. One of them was not a man to be offended with
- impunity by biped or quadruped; and wherever the foes of
- Aristophanes were to be found, on land or in water, he had
- shafts both able and willing to reach them.
-
- “In his descent to the lower world, the patron of the stage is
- accordingly made to encounter a band of most pertinacious and
- invincible frogs; and the gradations through which the mind
- of Bacchus runs, after the first moments of irritation have
- subsided, from coaxing to bullying, from affected indifference
- to downright force, are probably a mere transcript of the poet’s
- own feelings under similar circumstances.”
-
-SCENE.--_The Acherusian Lake_--BACCHUS _at the oar in_ CHARON’S _Boat_
---CHARON--_Chorus of Frogs--In the background a view of Bacchus’s Temple
-or Theatre, from which are heard the sounds of a Scenic Entertainment._
-
- _Semich._ 1. Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Semich._ 2. Croak! croak! croak!
-
- [_In answer, with music 8ve lower._
-
- _Full Chorus._ Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Leader of the Chorus._ When flagons were foaming,
- And roysterers roaming,
- And bards flung about them their gibe and their joke;
- The holiest song
- Still was found to belong
- To the Sons of the Marsh with their--
-
- _Full Chorus._ Croak! croak!
-
- _Leader._ Shall we pause in our strain,
- Now the months bring again
- The pipe and the minstrel to gladden the folk?
- Rather strike on the ear,
- With a note sharp and clear,
- A chant corresponding of--
-
- _Chorus._ Croak! croak!
-
- _Bacchus_ (_mimicking_). Croak! croak! By the Gods, I shall choke
- If you pester and bore my ears any more
- With your croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Leader._ Rude companion and vain,
- Thus to carp at my strain,
- But keep in the vein,
- And attack him again
- With a croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Chorus_ (_crescendo_). Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Bacchus_ (_mimicking_). Croak! croak! Vapour and smoke!
- Never think it, old huff,
- That I care for such stuff
- As your croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Chorus_ (_fortissimo_). Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Bacchus._ Now fires light on thee
- And waters soak,
- And March winds catch thee
- Without any cloak.
- For within and without,
- From the tail to the snout,
- Thou’rt nothing but--
- Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Leader._ And what else, captious newcomer, say, should I be?
- But you know not to whom you are talking, I see.
-
- [_With dignity_.
-
- I’m the friend of the Muses, and Pan with his pipe
- Loves me better by far than a cherry that’s ripe:
- Who gives them their tone and their moisture but I?
- And therefore for ever I’ll utter my cry
- Of--
-
- _Chorus._ Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Bacchus._ I’m blistered, I’m flustered, I’m sick, I’m ill.
-
- _Chorus._ Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Bacchus._ My dear little bull-frog, do prithee keep still.
-
- _Chorus._ Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Bacchus._ ’Tis a sorry vocation, that reiteration;
- I speak on my honour, most musical nation
- Of croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Leader_ (_maestoso_). When the sun rides in glory and makes a
- light day
- ’Mid lilies and plants of the water I stray;
- Or when the sky darkens with tempest and rain,
- I sink like a pearl in my watery domain.
- But sinking or swimming I lift up my song,
- Or drive a gay dance with my eloquent throng.
- Then hey, bubble, bubble,
- For a knave’s petty trouble
- Shall I my high charter and birthright revoke?
- Nay, my efforts I’ll double
- And drive him like stubble
- Before me with--
-
- _Chorus._ Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Bacchus._ I’m ribs of steel, I’m heart of oak,
- Let us see if a note
- Can be found in this throat,
- To answer their (_croaks loudly_) croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Leader._ Poor vanity’s son!
- And dost think me undone
- With a clamour no bigger
- Than a maiden’s first snigger?
- But strike up a tune
-
- [_To Chorus._
-
- He’ll not forget soon
- Of our croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Chorus_ (_with discordant crash of music_). Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Bacchus._ I’m cinder, I’m coke!
- I have got my death-stroke.
- O that ever I woke
- To be galled by the yoke
- Of this croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Leader._ Friend, friend, I may not be still,
- My destinies high I must needs fulfil.
- And the march of creation, despite reprobation,
- Must proceed with--,
-
- [_To Chorus._
-
- My lads, may I make application
- For a--
-
- _Chorus._ Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Bacchus_ (_in a minor key_). Nay, nay! Take your own way,
- I’ve said out my say,
- And care nought by my fai’
- For your croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Leader._ Care or care not, ’tis the same thing to me;
- My voice is my own, and my actions are free.
- I have but one note, and I chant it with glee,
- And from morning to night that note it shall be
-
- _Chorus._ Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Bacchus._ Nay then, old rebel,
- I’ll stop your treble
- With a poke! poke! poke!
-
- [_Dashing at the Frogs._
-
- Take this from my rudder, and that from my oar,
- And now let us see if you’ll trouble us more
- With your croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Leader._ You may batter and bore,
- You may thunder and roar,
- Yet I’ll never give o’er
- Till I’m hard at death’s door--
- This rib, by the way, is confoundedly sore).
-
- _Semich. 1._ With my croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Semich. 2_ (_dim._). Croak! croak! croak!
-
- _Full Chorus_ (_in a dying cadence_). Croak! croak! croak!
-
- [_The Frogs disappear._
-
- _Bacchus_ (_looking over the boat’s edge_). Spoke! spoke! spoke!
-
- [_To_ CHARON.
-
- Pull away, my old friend,
- For at last there’s an end
- To their croak! croak! croak!
-
- [BACCHUS _pays his two oboli and is landed._
-
-
- _THE PASSAGE OF THE STYX_
-
- CHARON, BACCHUS, _and_ XANTHIAS
-
- _Charon._ Hoy! Bear a hand there! Heave ashore!
-
- _Bacchus._ What’s this?
-
- _Xanthias._ The lake it is--the place he told us of.
- By Jove! and there’s the boat--and here’s old Charon!
-
- _Bacchus._ Well, Charon! Welcome, Charon! Welcome kindly!
-
- _Charon._ Who wants the ferryman? Anybody waiting
- To leave the pangs of life? A passage, anybody?
- To Lethe’s wharf? To Cerberus’ reach?
- To Tartarus? To Tænarus? To Perdition?
-
- _Bacchus._ Yes, I.
-
- _Charon._ Get in then.
-
- _Bacchus._ Tell me, where are you going?
- To perdition, really?
-
- _Charon._ Yes, to oblige you, I will--
- With all my heart. Step in there.
-
- _Bacchus._ Have a care!
- Take care, good Charon! Charon, have a care!
-
- (_Getting into the boat._)
-
- Come, Xanthias, come!
-
- _Charon._ I take no slaves aboard,
- Except they’ve volunteer’d for the naval victory.
-
- _Xanthias._ I could not; I was suffering with sore eyes.
-
- _Charon._ Off with you, round by the end of the lake.
-
- _Xanthias._ And whereabouts shall I wait?
-
- _Charon._ At the Stone of Repentance,
- By the Slough of Despond, beyond the Tribulations.
- You understand me?
-
- _Xanthias._ Yes, I understand you--
- A lucky, promising direction, truly.
-
- _Charon_ (_to_ BACCHUS). Sit down at the oar. Come, quick,
- if there are more coming!--
- Hullo! what’s that you’re doing?
-
- (BACCHUS _is seated in a buffoonish attitude in the side
- of the boat where the oar was fastened._)
-
- _Bacchus._ What you told me.
- I’m sitting at the oar.
-
- _Charon._ Sit _there_, I tell you,
- You fatguts; that’s your place.
-
- _Bacchus_ (_changes his place_). Well, so I do.
-
- _Charon._ Now ply your hands and arms.
-
- _Bacchus_ (_makes a silly motion with his arms_). Well, so I do.
-
- _Charon._ You’d best leave off your fooling. Take to the oar,
- And pull away.
-
- _Bacchus._ But how shall I contrive?
- I’ve never served on board; I’m only a landsman;
- I’m quite unused to it.
-
- _Charon._ We can manage it.
- As soon as you begin you shall have some music;
- That will teach you to keep time.
-
- _Bacchus._ What music’s that?
-
- _Charon._ A chorus of frogs--uncommon musical frogs.
-
- _Bacchus._ Well, give me the word and the time.
-
- _Charon._ Whooh, up, up! Whooh, up, up!
-
-
- CHORUS OF FROGS
-
- Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
- Shall the choral quiristers of the marsh
- Be censured and rejected as hoarse and harsh,
- And their chromatic essays
- Deprived of praise?
- No; let us raise afresh
- Our obstreperous brekeke-kesh!
- The customary croak and cry
- Of the creatures
- At the theaters
- In their yearly revelry.
- Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
-
- _Bacchus_ (_rowing in great misery_).
- How I’m maul’d!
- How I’m gall’d!
- Worn and mangled to a mash--
- There they go! Koash, koash!
-
- _Frogs._ Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
-
- _Bacchus._ Oh, beshrew,
- All your crew!
- You don’t consider how I smart.
-
- _Frogs._ Now for a sample of the art!
- Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
-
- _Bacchus._ I wish you hanged, with all my heart!
- Have you nothing else to say?
- Brekeke-kesh, koash, all day!
-
- _Frogs._ We’ve a right,
- We’ve a right,
- And we croak at ye for spite.
- We’ve a right,
- We’ve a right,
- Day and night,
- Day and night,
- Night and day,
- Still to creak and croak away.
- Phœbus and every Grace
- Admire and approve of the croaking race;
- And the egregious guttural notes
- That are gargled and warbled in their lyrical throats.
- In reproof
- Of your scorn,
- Mighty Pan
- Nods his horn;
- Beating time
- To the rime
- With his hoof,
- With his hoof.
- Persisting in our plan,
- We proceed as we began.
- Brekeke-kesh, brekeke-kesh,
- Koash, koash!
-
- _Bacchus._ Oh, the frogs, consume and rot ’em!
- I’ve a blister on my bottom!
- Hold your tongues, you noisy creatures!
-
- _Frogs._ Cease with your profane entreaties,
- All in vain forever striving;
- Silence is against our natures;
- With the vernal heat reviving,
- Our aquatic crew repair
- From their periodic sleep,
- In the dark and chilly deep,
- To the cheerful upper air.
- Then we frolic here and there
- All amid the meadows fair;
- Shady plants of asphodel
- Are the lodges where we dwell;
- Chanting in the leafy bowers
- All the livelong summer hours,
- Till the sudden gusty showers
- Send us headlong, helter-skelter,
- To the pool to seek for shelter.
- Meager, eager, leaping, lunging,
- From the sedgy wharfage plunging
- To the tranquil depth below,
- There we muster all a-row;
- Where, secure from toil and trouble,
- With a tuneful hubble-bubble,
- Our symphonious accents flow.
- Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
-
- _Bacchus._ I forbid you to proceed.
-
- _Frogs._ That would be severe, indeed,
- Arbitrary, bold, and rash--
- Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
-
- _Bacchus._ I command you to desist--
- Oh, my back, there! Oh, my wrist
- What a twist!
- What a sprain!
-
- _Frogs._ Once again
- We renew the tuneful strain--
- Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
-
- _Bacchus._ I disdain--hang the pain!--
- All your nonsense, noise, and trash.
- Oh, my blister! Oh, my sprain!
-
- _Frogs._ Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
- Friends and frogs, we must display
- All our powers of voice to-day.
- Suffer not this stranger here,
- With fastidious, foreign ear,
- To confound us and abash
- Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
-
- _Bacchus._ Well, my spirit is not broke;
- If it’s only for the joke,
- I’ll outdo you with a croak.
- Here it goes--(_very loud_) “Koash, koash!”
-
- _Frogs._ Now for a glorious croaking crash,
- (still louder)
- Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
-
- _Bacchus_ (_splashing with his oar_).
- I’ll disperse you with a splash.
-
- _Frogs._ Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
-
- _Bacchus._ I’ll subdue
- Your rebellious, noisy crew--
- Have among you there, slap-dash!
- (_Strikes at them._)
-
- _Frogs._ Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!
- We defy your oar, and you.
-
- _Charon._ Hold! We’re ashore. Now shift your oar.
- Get out. Now pay your fare.
-
- _Bacchus._ There--there it is--the twopence.
-
- --_The Frogs._
-
-Another play of Aristophanes is _The Birds_.
-
-The plot of this is simply that two Athenians, disgusted with the state
-of things in their native city, form the idea of building a city where
-the birds shall regain their old traditional supremacy.
-
-The proposal is happily received by the birds and the city of
-Nephelococyggia, or Cloud-cuckoo-town is the result.
-
-It was merely a burlesque on the Athenians who were given to building
-castles in the air.
-
-Lack of space forbids further quotation from Aristophanes, but his
-comedies are available to all who wish to read them.
-
-Among the predecessors of Aristophanes was Cratinus, who was an enemy
-of water drinkers, and expressed the dictum that no verses written by
-abstainers could ever please or live!
-
-Another, whose fragmentary lines have a certain modern ring, is
-Simonides, who left us a poem of the ladies, which, it has been said,
-gave the tone to all the Greek pasquinades of the same class. He
-compares the different types of ladies to various members of the lower
-orders in creation; and the “Fine Lady” is represented by a high-bred
-steed.
-
-
- _THE FINE LADY. BY SIMONIDES._
-
- Next in the lot a gallant dame we see,
- Sprung from a mare of noble pedigree;
- No servile work her spirit proud can brook,
- Her hands were never taught to bake or cook;
- The vapour of the oven makes her ill,
- She scorns to empty slops or turn the mill.
- To wash or scour would make her soft hands rough,
- Her own ablutions give pursuit enough;
- Three baths a day, with balms and perfumes rare,
- Refresh her tender limbs. Her long rich hair
- Each time she combs and decks with blooming flowers.
- No spouse more fit than she the idle hours
- Of wealthy lords or kings to recreate,
- And grace the splendour of their courtly state;
- For men of humbler sort no better guide
- Heaven in its wrath to ruin can provide.
-
-Two more examples of the wit of Cratinus follow:
-
- “Apollo, of fine verses here’s a gush!
- They come, like springs and fountains, with a rush.
- A river’s in his windpipe! Turn the tap;
- This spouting, if not stopped, will cause some dire mishap.”
-
- “How can one stop him from this thirst for drink?
- How _can_ one? Well, I’ve found a way, I think.
- For every cup and every mug I’ll smash,
- His flasks and pitchers into fragments dash,
- Shiver all kinds of pots that come to table,
- And not one crock to keep shall he be able.”
-
-Plato Comicus (as distinguished from the philosopher), who carried on a
-poetic contest with Aristophanes, ranks among the best of the poets of
-the Old Comedy, but only a few fragments of his work remain.
-
-Here are two of them:
-
- “Henceforth no four-legged creature should be slain,
- Except the pig; of this the reason’s plain.
- Its use--unless for food--man vainly seeks;
- It only gives him bristles, dirt, and squeaks.”
-
- “We’re swamped with ‘public men’; for one scamp dead,
- Two louder talkers, greater scamps, instead
- Spring up like Hydra’s heads: the more’s the pity
- We have no Iolaus in the city
- To singe the necks from which these pests arise,
- In whom foul lives alone secure the prize.”
-
-As students of the Classics themselves find great difficulty in drawing
-strict boundaries between the Old and Middle Comedy, we need not pay
-careful attention to exact dates, but accept the general idea that one
-passed into the other at about the time the Peloponnesian War ended.
-
-This was 404 B.C. and Middle Comedy may be said to extend from
-that date until the overthrow of the Athenians by Philip of Macedon in
-338 B.C.
-
-The most distinguished poet of the Middle Comedy was Antiphanes, who
-lived in the Fourth Century, B.C.
-
-His lines are epigrammatic and frequently refer to the prevailing theme
-of drunkenness.
-
- “No trade more pleasant is, no art,
- Than ours who play the flatterer’s part.
- The painter overworked gets cross,
- Your farmer learns his risk by loss;
- While care and pains each workman takes,
- “Laugh and get fat” _our_ motto makes.
- Fun, laughter, banter, drink, I hold
- Are life’s chief pleasures--next to gold.”
-
- “I have a vintner near who keeps a shop,
- The only man who, when I want a drop,
- Mixes my grog to suit my special taste;
- Not neat,--nor letting water run to waste.”
-
- “Wives are bad property, I’d have you know,--
- Except in countries where grapes do not grow.”
-
- “’Tis life in paradise to find a host
- To dine with, where you’ve not to count the cost.
- And so new shifts to try I shall not pause,
- To get a bite that’s toothsome for my jaws.”
-
- “One single thing I trust a woman saying,
- To other statements no attention paying:
- ‘When I am dead, I won’t return to grieve you.’
- Till death takes place, in naught else I’ll believe you.”
-
- “What! when you court concealment, will you tell
- The matter to a woman? Just as well
- Tell all the criers in the public squares!
- ’Tis hard to say which of them louder blares.”
-
- “Married? He’s done for! Ah! I had misgiving.
- And yet I only lately left him living.”
-
- “Two states there are that we can always prove,--
- If one’s in liquor, and if one’s in love.
- Both words and looks these two conditions show;
- By these if the denial’s false we know.”
-
-Another epigrammatist was
-
-
- ANAXANDRIADES
-
- He who composed the ditty, “Health is best,
- Good looks come next, then money,” and the rest,
- Right in the first, in the other two was wrong.
- None but a madman could have made that song!
- Next after “health” comes “wealth”; your handsome face,
- When pinched by famine, loses all its grace.
-
- A man who doubts if he should marry,
- Or thinks he has good cause to tarry,
- Is foolish if he takes a wife,
- The source of half the plagues in life!
- A poor man to a rich wife sold
- Exchanges liberty for gold.
- If she has nothing, then, ’tis true,
- There is a different ill to rue;
-
- For now he has, with all his need,
- Two mouths instead of one to feed.
- Perhaps she’s ugly; married life
- Thenceforth is never-ending strife!
- Perhaps she’s pretty; then _your_ boast
- Is made by all your friends their toast.
- Does ugly, handsome, poor, or rich,
- Bring most ill luck?--I know not which.
-
- One course in life there is that’s hard to roam,
- Back from a husband’s to a father’s home;
- And every decent wife should fear to tread it;
- The “homing heat” wins nothing but discredit.
-
-Other Greek wits offer these:
-
-
- EUBULUS
-
- He who first drew or modelled Love with wings
- Might paint a swallow; but how many things
- In Love are different from a bird! Not light
- To him who bears the weight, nor quick in flight,
- Unmoved the imp upon his shoulders sits.
- How can a thing have _wings_ that never flits?
-
- For sober folk three bowls alone I mix,
- For health, cheer, sleep; the order thus I fix.
- The first they toss off; _that’s_ for stomach’s sake.
- The next, for love and pleasure, all may take.
- The third, the few who are with wisdom blessed;
- It sends them home to bed, to take their rest.
- The fourth’s no longer _mine_! ’tis “drinkers’ bowl.”
- A fifth they call for; then they shout and howl.
- The sixth sends forth the party for a lark.
- The seventh to fight and bear the drunkard’s mark.
- Lawsuits the eighth. The ninth breeds furious talking;
- The tenth, to rave and lose the power of walking.
- Small though the bowl, much wine, if poured in neat,
- The head at first affects, and last the feet.
-
-
- ARISTOPHON
-
- Bad luck to him who _second_ came to wed!
- The first I blame not; home a wife he led
- Not knowing what a curse a wife might prove,
- What deadly feuds oft spring from miscalled love.
- But he who married next, in haste unwise
- Rushed to his fate with fully opened eyes.
-
-
- ALEXIS
-
- Your Sophists say, it is not Love almighty
- That roams on wings, but _lovers_ that are flighty.
- Love wrongly bears the blame; ’twas one who knew
- Nought of his ways who first winged Cupids drew.
- A drunken party coming up! To evade them I must try.
- My sole chance now to keep my cloak is having wings to fly.
-
- Old Chaerephon some trick is always trying,
- As now, to dine without his share supplying,
- Early he goes to shops which cooks beset,
- To whom by contract crockery is let,
- And when he sees one choosing dishes, “Say,”
- He cries, “what house do _you_ cook for to-day?”
- So, when the door’s left gaping, he contrives
- To slip in as the first guest that arrives.
-
- In wine and man this difference appears:
- The old man bores you, but the old wine cheers.
- Men do not, like your wine, improve by age;
- The more their years, the less their ways engage.
-
-Aristotle, though the first to put into words the definition of the
-ridiculous, can furnish no extracts which come within our present scope.
-
-Indeed the great teacher considered comedy from its dramatic side
-rather than as mere humor.
-
-One of his pupils, Theophrastus, left us some fragments, especially a
-short collection of character sketches which show both wit and humor.
-
-
- _OF SLOVENLINESS_
-
-This vice is a lazy and beastly negligence of a man’s person, whereby
-he becomes so filthy as to be offensive to those who are about him.
-You’ll see him come into a company when he is covered all over with a
-leprosy or scurf, or with very long nails, and he says those distempers
-are hereditary, that his father and grandfather had them before him.
-He will speak with his mouth full, and gurgle at his cup in drinking.
-He will intrude into the best company in ragged clothes. If he goes
-with his mother to the soothsayers, he cannot even then refrain from
-coarse and profane expressions. When he is making his oblations at
-the temple, he will let the dish fall out of his hand, and laugh as at
-some jocular exploit. At the finest concert of music he cannot forbear
-clapping his hands and making a rude noise. He will pretend to sing
-along with the singers, and rail at them when they leave off.
- --_The Characters._
-
-
- _OF LOQUACITY_
-
-If we would define loquacity, it is an excessive affluence of words.
-The prater will not suffer any person in company to tell his own story,
-but, let it be what it will, tells you you mistake the matter, that
-he takes the thing right, and that if you will listen, he will make
-it clear to you. If you make any reply, he suddenly interrupts you,
-saying, “Why, sir, you forget what you were talking about; it’s very
-well you should begin to remember, since it is most beneficial for
-people to inform one another.” Then presently he says, “But what was I
-going to say? Why, truly, you very soon apprehend a thing, and I was
-waiting to see if you would be of my sentiment in this matter.” And
-thus he always takes such occasions as these to prevent the person
-he talks with the liberty of breathing. After he has thus tormented
-all who will hear him, he is so rude as to break into the company of
-persons met to discuss important affairs, and drives them away by his
-troublesome impertinence. Thence he goes into the public schools and
-places of exercise, where he interrupts the masters by his foolish
-prating, and hinders the scholars from improving by their instruction.
-If any person shows an inclination to go away, he will follow him, and
-will not part from him till he comes to his own door. If he hears of
-anything transacted in the public assembly of the citizens, he runs
-up and down to tell it to everybody. He gives you a long account of
-the famous battle that was fought when Aristophanes the orator was
-governor, or when the Lacedæmonians were under the command of Lysander;
-then tells you with what general applause he made a speech in public,
-repeating a great deal of it, with invectives against the common
-people, which are so tiresome to those that hear him that some forget
-what he says as soon as it is out of his mouth, others fall asleep,
-and others leave him in the midst of his harangue. If this talker be
-sitting on the bench, the judge will be unable to determine matters.
-If he’s at the theater, he’ll neither let you hear nor see anything;
-nor will he even permit him that sits next to him at the table to eat
-his meat. He declares it very hard for him to be silent, his tongue
-being so very well hung that he’d rather be accounted as garrulous as
-a swallow than be silent, and patiently bears all ridicule, even that
-of his own children, who, when they want to go to rest, request him to
-talk to them that they may the sooner fall asleep.
-
- --_The Characters._
-
-One of the Characters described by Theophrastus is _The Stupid Man_,
-and runs thus:
-
-“The stupid man is one who, after doing a sum and setting down the
-total, will ask the person next him, ‘What does it come to?’”
-
-It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that this is the beginning
-or at least the popularizing of the class of jests known as Noodles or
-Noodle Stories.
-
-For all nations and races have folk-lore that details the sayings and
-doings of the witless or silly.
-
-The Literature of the Orient abounds in these tales and European
-stories of the same sort are equally abundant.
-
-The collection of jokes ascribed to Hierocles, may or may not have
-been gathered by that Alexandrian philosopher. The only form in which
-we may read them is said to have been made not earlier than the Ninth
-Century, but the stories themselves are among the very earliest of the
-traditional jests of all time.
-
-Some of these old jokemongers’ witticisms are capital--so good, in
-fact, that the parentage of many of them has been claimed by modern
-wits. No doubt we shall recognise some old friends as we read:
-
-I. A pedant (for so we must probably translate, in conventional
-phrase, the pervading Scholastichus of the old jokemonger) wishing to
-teach his horse not to eat much, gave him no food. Eventually the horse
-died of starvation; and he complained to his friends, “I have suffered
-a great loss, for just when I had taught my horse to live upon nothing
-he died.”
-
-II. A pedant having bought a cask of wine, sealed it. But his slave
-bored a hole and stole the wine. The master was amazed to find that,
-though his seals were unbroken, the wine gradually diminished. Someone
-suggested that he should examine whether it had been taken out from the
-bottom. “Fool,” he replied, “it isn’t the lower part that’s gone. It’s
-the upper.”
-
-III. A pedant suffered shipwreck in a tempest, and seeing the
-passengers tie themselves to different articles on board, fastened
-himself to one of the anchors.
-
-IV. Another had to cross a river, and went on board the ferry-boat on
-horseback. Somebody asked him why he did so, and he replied because he
-was in a hurry.
-
-V. Yet another, anxious to know whether he looked well when he was
-asleep, stood before a looking-glass with his eyes shut to see.
-
-VI. A landlord, who had a house to sell, went about amongst his
-friends, carrying a brick as a specimen.
-
-In connection with these stories may be cited the following, from a
-Persian jest-book: A poor wrestler, who had passed all his life in
-forests, resolved to try his fortune in a great city, and as he drew
-near it he observed with wonder the crowds on the road, and thought,
-“I shall certainly not be able to know myself among so many people if
-I have not something about me that the others have not.” So he tied a
-pumpkin to his right leg and, thus decorated, entered the town. A young
-wag, perceiving the simpleton, made friends with him, and induced him
-to spend the night at his house. While he was asleep, the joker removed
-the pumpkin from his leg and tied it to his own, and then lay down
-again. In the morning, when the poor fellow awoke and found the pumpkin
-on his companion’s leg, he called to him, “Hey! get up, for I am
-perplexed in my mind. Who am I, and who are you? If I am myself, why
-is the pumpkin on your leg? And if you are yourself, why is the pumpkin
-not on my leg?”
-
-Modern counterparts of the following jest are not far to seek: Quoth
-a man to a pedant, “The slave I bought of you has died.” Rejoined the
-other, “By the gods, I do assure you that he never once played me such
-a trick while I had him.” The old Greek pedant is transformed into an
-Irishman, in our collections of facetiæ, who applied to a farmer for
-work. “I’ll have nothing to do with you,” said the farmer, “for the
-last five Irishmen I had all died on my hands.” Quoth Pat, “Sure, sir,
-I can bring you characters from half a dozen gentlemen I’ve worked for
-that I never did such a thing.” And the jest is thus told in an old
-translation of _Les Contes Facetieux de Sieur Gaulard_: “Speaking
-of one of his Horses which broake his Neck at the descent of a Rock, he
-said, Truly it was one of the handsomest and best Curtalls in all the
-Country; he neuer shewed me such a trick before in all his life.”
-
-Equally familiar is the jest of the pedant who was looking out for a
-place to prepare a tomb for himself, and on a friend indicating what he
-thought to be a suitable spot, “Very true,” said the pedant, “but it is
-unhealthy.” And we have the prototype of a modern “Irish” story in the
-following: A pedant sealed a jar of wine, and his slaves perforated it
-below and drew off some of the liquor. He was astonished to find his
-wine disappear while the seal remained intact. A friend, to whom he
-had communicated the affair, advised him to look and ascertain if the
-liquor had not been drawn off from below. “Why, you fool,” said he, “it
-is not the lower, but the upper, portion that is going off.”
-
-It was a Greek pedant who stood before a mirror and shut his eyes
-that he might know how he looked when asleep--a jest which reappears
-in Taylor’s _Wit and Mirth_ in this form: “A wealthy monsieur in
-France (hauing profound reuenues and a shallow braine) was told by his
-man that he did continually gape in his sleepe, at which he was angry
-with his man, saying he would not belieue it. His man verified it to
-be true; his master said that he would neuer belieue any that told
-him so, except (quoth hee) I chance to see it with mine owne eyes; and
-therefore I will have a great Looking glasse at my bed’s feet for the
-purpose to try whether thou art a lying knaue or not.”
-
-Not unlike some of our “Joe Millers” is the following: A citizen
-of Cumæ, on an ass, passed by an orchard, and seeing a branch of a
-fig-tree loaded with delicious fruit, he laid hold of it, but the
-ass went on, leaving him suspended. Just then the gardener came up,
-and asked him what he did there. The man replied, “I fell off the
-ass.”--An analogue to this drollery is found in an Indian story-book,
-entitled _Kathȧ Manjari_: One day a thief climbed up a cocoanut
-tree in a garden to steal the fruit. The gardener heard the noise,
-and while he was running from his house, giving the alarm, the thief
-hastily descended from the tree. “Why were you up that tree?” asked the
-gardener. The thief replied, “My brother, I went up to gather grass for
-my calf.” “Ha! ha! is there grass, then, on a cocoanut tree?” said the
-gardener. “No,” quoth the thief; “but I did not know; therefore I came
-down again.”--And we have a variant of this in the Turkish jest of the
-fellow who went into a garden and pulled up carrots, turnips, and other
-kinds of vegetables, some of which he put into a sack, and some into
-his bosom. The gardener, coming suddenly on the spot, laid hold of him,
-and said, “What are you seeking here?” The simpleton replied, “For some
-days past a great wind has been blowing, and that wind blew me hither.”
-“But who pulled up these vegetables?” “As the wind blew very violently,
-it cast me here and there; and whatever I laid hold of in the hope of
-saving myself remained in my hands.” “Ah,” said the gardener, “but who
-filled this sack with them?” “Well, that is the very question I was
-about to ask myself when you came up.”
-
-The Greek Anthology brings together short poems and epigrams written
-during the thousand years between Simonides’ time and the sixth century
-A.D.
-
-Collected shortly before the beginning of the Christian Era and added
-to later, they comprise about four thousand five hundred specimens, by
-three hundred authors. Few of these are witty, as, indeed, few are
-epigrammatic, but of them we quote some which seem most appurtenant.
-
-
- FROM THE GREEK ANTHOLOGY
-
-
- LUCIAN
-
- _DARKNESS_
-
- “A blockhead bit by fleas put out the light,
- And, chuckling, cried, ‘Now you can’t see to bite!’”
-
-
- CRATES
-
- _CURES FOR LOVE_
-
- “Hunger, perhaps, may cure your love,
- Or time your passion greatly alter;
- If both should unsuccessful prove,
- I strongly recommend a halter.”
-
-
- JULIAN
-
- _BEER_
-
- “What! whence this, Bacchus? For, by Bacchus’ self,
- The son of Jove, I know not this strange elf.
- The other smells like nectar; but thou here
- Like the he-goat. Those wretched Celts, I fear,
- For want of grapes, made thee of ears of corn.
- Demetrius art thou, of Demeter born,
- Not Bacchus, Dionysus, nor yet wine--
- Those names but fit the products of the vine;
- Beer thou mayst be from barley; or, that failing,
- We’ll call thee ale, for thou wilt keep us ailing.”
-
-
- AGATHIAS
-
- _GRAMMAR AND MEDICINE_
-
- “A thriving doctor sent his son to school
- To gain some knowledge, should he prove no fool;
- But took him soon away with little warning,
- On finding out the lesson he was learning--
- How great Pelides’s wrath, in Homer’s rime,
- Sent many souls to Hades ere their time.
- ‘No need for this my boy should hither come;
- That lesson he can better learn at home;
- For I myself, now, I make bold to say,
- Sent many souls to Hades ere their day,
- Nor e’er found want of grammar stop my way.’”
-
-
- NEARCHUS
-
- _A SINGER_
-
- “Men die when the night-raven sings or cries;
- But when Dick sings, e’en the night-raven dies.”
-
-
- AMMIANUS
-
- _AN EPITAPH_
-
- “Light lie the earth, Nearchus, on thy clay,
- That so the dogs may easier find their prey.”
-
-
- LUCILIUS
-
- _ENVY_
-
- “Poor Diophon of envy died,
- His brother thief to see
- Nailed next to him and crucified
- Upon a higher tree.”
-
-
- _A PROFESSOR WITH A SMALL CLASS_
-
- “Hail, Aristides, rhetoric’s great professor!
- Of wondrous words we own thee the possessor.
- Hail ye, his pupils seven, that mutely hear him--
- His room’s four walls, and the three benches near him.”
-
-
- _FALSE CHARMS_
-
- “Chloe, those locks of raven hair,
- Some people say you dye with black;
- But that’s a libel, I can swear,
- For I know where you buy them black.”
-
-
- _A SCHOOLMASTER WITH A GAY WIFE_
-
- “You in your school forever flog and flay us,
- Teaching what Paris did to Menelaus;
- But all the while, within your private dwelling,
- There’s many a Paris courting of your Helen.”
-
-
- _BOARD OR LODGING_
-
- “Asclepiades, the miser, in his house
- Espied one day, to his surprise, a mouse.
- ‘Tell me, dear mouse,’ he cried, ‘to what cause is it
- I owe this pleasant but unlooked-for visit?’
- The mouse said, smiling, ‘Fear not for your hoard;
- I come, my friend, to lodge, and not to board.’”
-
-
- ANON
-
- _CONVENIENT PARTNERSHIP_
-
- “Damon, who plied the undertaker’s trade,
- With Doctor Crateas an agreement made.
- What linens Damon from the dead could seize,
- He to the doctor sent for bandages;
- While the good doctor, here no promise-breaker,
- Sent all his patients to the undertaker.”
-
-
- ANON
-
- _LONG AND SHORT_
-
- “Dick cannot blow his nose whene’er he pleases
- His nose so long is, and his arm so short;
- Nor ever cries, ‘God bless me!’ when he sneezes--
- He cannot hear so distant a report.”
-
-
- ANON
-
- _THE LERNEANS_
-
- “Lerneans are bad: not some bad and some not
- But all; there’s not a Lernean in the lot,
- Save Procles, that you could a good man call.
- But Procles--is a Lernean, after all.”
-
-
- ANON
-
- _PERPLEXITY_
-
- “Sad Heraclitus, with thy tears return;
- Life more than ever gives us cause to mourn.
- Democritus, dear droll, revisit earth;
- Life more than ever gives us cause for mirth.
- Between you both I stand in thoughtful pother,
- How I should weep with one, how laugh with t’other.”
-
-Beside his short poems, we quote a little of the prose of
-
-
- LUCIAN
-
- _A QUESTION OF PRECEDENCE_
-
- ZEUS, ÆSCULAPIUS, _and_ HERACLES
-
-“_Zeus._ Do, Æsculapius and Heracles, stop your wrangling, in
-which you indulge as if you were a couple of mortals; for this sort of
-behavior is unseemly, and quite strange to the banquets of the gods.
-
-“_Heracles._ But, Zeus, would you have that quack drug-dealer
-there take his place at table above me?
-
-“_Æsculapius._ By Zeus, yes, for I am certainly the better man.
-
-“_Heracles._ How, you thunderstruck fellow, is it, pray, because
-Zeus knocked you on the head with his bolt for your unlawful actions,
-and because now, out of mere pity, by way of compensation, you have got
-a share of immortality?
-
-“_Æsculapius._ What! have you, for your part, Heracles, altogether
-forgotten your having been burned to ashes on Mount Œta, that you throw
-in my teeth this fire you talk of?
-
-“_Heracles._ We have not lived at all an equal or similar sort of
-life--I, who am the son of Zeus, and have undergone so many and great
-labors, purifying human life, contending against and conquering wild
-beasts, and punishing insolent and injurious men; whereas you are a
-paltry herb-doctor and mountebank, skilful, possibly, in palming off
-your miserable drugs upon sick fools, but who have never given proof of
-any noble, manly disposition.
-
-“_Æsculapius._ You say well, seeing I healed your burns when you
-came up but now half-burned, with your body all marred and destroyed by
-the double cause of your death--the poisoned shirt, and afterward the
-fire. Now I, if I have done nothing else, at least have neither worked
-like a slave, as you have, nor have I carded wool in Lydia, dressed in
-a fine purple gown; nor have I been beaten by that Omphale of yours,
-with her golden slipper. No, nor did I, in a mad fit, kill my children
-and my wife!
-
-“_Heracles._ If you don’t stop your ribald abuse of me at once,
-you shall very speedily learn your immortality will not avail you much;
-for I will take and pitch you head first out of heaven, so that not
-even the wonderful Pæon himself shall cure you and your broken skull.
-
-“_Zeus._ Have done, I say, and don’t disturb the harmony of the
-company, or I will pack both of you off from the supper-room; although,
-to speak the truth, Heracles, it is fair and reasonable Æsculapius
-should have precedence of you at table, inasmuch as he even took
-precedence of you in death.”
-
- --“_Dialogues of the Gods._”
-
-
- _ODYSSEUS’S TRICK ON POLYPHEMUS_
-
- POSEIDON _and_ POLYPHEMUS
-
-“_Polyphemus._ Oh, father, what have I endured at the hands of the
-cursed stranger, who made me drunk and put out my eye, assaulting me
-when I was lulled to sleep!
-
-“_Poseidon._ Who dared to do this, my poor Polyphemus?
-
-“_Polyphemus._ In the first instance, he called himself Outis; but
-when he had got clear away, and was out of reach of my arrow, he said
-that his name was Odysseus.
-
-“_Poseidon._ I know whom you speak of--him of Ithaca, and he was
-on his return voyage from Ilium. But how did he do it, for he is by no
-means a man of too much courage?
-
-“_Polyphemus._ Returning from my accustomed attending of my flock,
-I caught a number of fellows in my cave, evidently having designs on
-my herds; for when I placed the stone block against the door--the rock
-is of huge size--and had lighted the fire by igniting the tree which
-I brought from the mountain, evidently they appeared to be trying
-to conceal themselves. Well, when I had got hold of some of them I
-devoured them for a pack of thieves, as was reasonable. Hereupon that
-most villainous rascal, whether he was Outis or Odysseus, pours out a
-sort of drug and gives me to drink--sweet, indeed, and of delicious
-smell, but most insidious, and which caused great disorder in my head;
-for, immediately upon my drinking, everything seemed to me to be in a
-whirl, and the cave itself was turned upside down, and I was no longer
-at all in my senses; and at last I was dragged down into sleep. Then
-sharpening the bar, and igniting it besides, he blinded me as I slept,
-and from that time I am a blind man, at your service, Poseidon.
-
-“_Poseidon._ How soundly you slept, my son, that you did not
-jump up while you were being blinded! But as for this Odysseus, then,
-how did he escape? For he could not--I am well assured that he could
-not--move away the rock from the door.
-
-“_Polyphemus._ Yes, but it was I who removed it, that I might the
-better catch him as he was going out; and, sitting down close to the
-door, I groped for him with extended hands, letting only my sheep go
-out to pasture, after having given instructions to the ram what he was
-to do in my place.
-
-“_Poseidon._ I perceive: they slipped away unnoticed, under the
-sheep. But you ought to have shouted, and called the rest of the
-Cyclopes to your aid.
-
-“_Polyphemus._ I did summon them, father, and they came. But
-when they asked the sneaking rascal’s name, and I said it was Outis,
-thinking I was in a mad fit, they took themselves off at once. Thus the
-cursed fellow tricked me with his name; and what especially vexes me
-is, that he actually threw my misfortune in my teeth. ‘Not even,’ said
-he, ‘will your father Poseidon cure you.’
-
-“_Poseidon._ Never mind, my child, for I will revenge myself upon
-him; he shall learn that, even if it is not possible for me to heal the
-mutilation of people’s eyes, at all events the fate of voyagers is in
-my hands. And he is still at sea.”
-
- --_Dialogues of the Sea-Gods._
-
-Remembering that the dividing lines may not be too strictly drawn, we
-close our survey of Greek Humor with some of the fragments of Menander.
-
-Menander, who was to the Middle or New Comedy what Aristophanes was
-to the Old Comedy, left only fragments. One bit, rather longer than
-the others, shows, with the inevitable animal element not lacking, a
-surprisingly modern spirit of satire.
-
- “Suppose some god should say: Die when thou wilt,
- Mortal, expect another life on earth;
- And for that life make choice of all creation
- What thou wilt be--dog, sheep, goat, man, or horse;
- For live again thou must; it is thy fate;
- Choose only in what form; there thou art free.
- So help me, Crato, I would fairly answer
- Let me be all things, anything but man.
- He only of all creatures feels afflictions.
- The generous horse is valued for his worth.
- And dog by merit is preferred to dog,
- And warrior cock is pampered for his courage,
- And awes the baser brood. But what is man?
- Truth, virtue, valour, how do they avail him?
- Of this world’s good the first and greatest share
- Is flattery’s prize. The informer takes the next.
- And barefaced knavery garbles what is left.
- I’d rather be an ass than what I am
- And see these villains lord it o’er their betters.”
-
-Other Fragments of Menander follow.
-
- “Be off! these shams of golden tresses spare;
- No honest woman ever dyes her hair.”
-
- “Better to have, if good you rightly measure,
- Little with joy than much that brings not pleasure,
- Scant means with peace than piles of anxious treasure.”
-
- “Marriage, if truth be told (of this be sure),
- An evil is--but one we must endure.”
-
- “Wretched is he that has one son; or, rather,
- More wretched he who of more sons is father.”
-
- “Think this, on marriage when your mind is set:
- If the harm is small, ’tis the chief good you’ll get.”
-
- “Slave not for one who has been himself a slave;
- Steers, loosed from ploughs, of toil small memory have.”
-
- “A handsome person, with perverted will,
- Is a fine craft that’s handled without skill.”
-
- “Let not a friend your cherished secrets hear;
- Then, if you quarrel, you’ve no cause for fear.”
-
- “More love a mother than a father shows:
- He _thinks_ this is his son; she only _knows_.”
-
- “Fathers’ and lovers’ threats no truth have got.
- They swear dire vengeance,--but they mean it not.”
-
- “Your petty tyrant’s insolence I hate;
- If wrong is done me, be it from the great.”
-
- “A lie has often, I have known before,
- More weight than truth, and people trust it more.”
-
- “Don’t talk of birth and family; all of those
- Who have no natural worth on that repose.
- Blue blood, grand pedigree, illustrious sires
- He boasts of, who to nothing more aspires.
- What use long ancestry your _pride_ to call?
- One must have had them to be born at all!
- And those who have no pedigree to show,
- Or who their grandsires were but scantly know.”
-
- “From change of homes or lack of friends at need,
- And so have lost all record of their breed,
- Are not more “low-born” than your men of blood;
- A nigger’s well-born, if he makes for good!”
-
-The following are a few more epigrammatic bits from the writings of
-less noted contemporaries.
-
-
- PHILIPPIDES
-
- ’Tis easy, while at meals you take your fill,
- To say to sickly people, Don’t be ill!
- Easy to blame bad boxing at a fight,
- But not so for oneself to do it right.
- Action is one thing, talk another quite.
-
- Your fortune differs as to bed and board;
- Your wife--if ugly--can good fare afford.
-
-
- DIPHILUS
-
- Learn, mortal, learn thy natural ills to bear:
- These, these alone thou _must_ endure; but spare
- A heavier load upon thyself to bring
- By burdens that from thine own follies spring.
-
- When I am asked by some rich man to dine,
- I mark not if the walls and roofs are fine,
- Nor if the vases such as Corinth prizes,--
- But _solely_ how the smoke from cooking rises.
- If dense it runs up in a column straight,
- With fluttering heart the dinner-hour I wait.
- If, thin and scant, the smoke-puffs sideway steal,
- Then I forebode a thin and scanty meal.
-
- So plain is she, her father shuns the sight:
- She holds out bread; no dog will take a bite.
- So dark is she, that entering a room
- Night seems to follow her, and all is gloom.
-
-
- APOLLODORUS
-
- Sweet is a life apart from toil and care;
- Blessed lot, with others such repose to share!
- But if with beasts and apes you have to do,
- Why, _you_ must play the brute and monkey too!
-
- In youth I felt for the untimely doom
- Of offspring carried to an early tomb.
- But now I weep when old men’s death I see;
- That moved my pity; this comes home to _me_.
-
- Seek not, my son, an old man’s ways to spurn;
- To these in old age you yourself will turn.
- Herein we fathers lose a point you gain;
- When you of “father’s cruelty” complain,
- “_You_ once were young,” we tauntingly are told.
- We can’t retort, “My son, you once were old.”
-
-
- PART II
-
-
- ROME
-
-The Roman Juvenal observed, “All Greece is a comedian.” But he could
-not say the same of his own country.
-
-Though there was Roman Comedy and Roman Satire, the real and
-spontaneous spirit of fun was conspicuously lacking in the tastes and
-tendencies of the Romans.
-
-Glory is attributed to Greece and grandeur to Rome, and it may be the
-“sudden glory” of humor was an integral part of the Grecian nature.
-
-Yet we must not differentiate too carefully between the two, for the
-literature of Greece and Rome is so fused and intermingled that only a
-historian may take up the chronological tabulation.
-
-For our purpose it is well to let the literature of the two countries
-merge and continue the consideration of classic comedy without over
-cautious regard for dates.
-
-The Greek influence on literature of all ages will never disappear, but
-the Greek spirit of pure joy and gaiety will, probably never reappear.
-
-From the beginnings of Greece, on through the existence of Rome,
-and down through the Mediæval Ages, the world of letters was
-self-contained, a single proposition. From 500 B.C. to 1300
-A.D. the traditions of primal Greece and Rome continued to be
-the common possession of all Europe.
-
-After that, literature became diverse and divergent among the
-countries. It was independent as well as interdependent, but this
-condition makes an inevitable division of time.
-
-Greece, Rome, Mediæval Times,--these are the three sections of the
-Middle portion of this book.
-
-Rome, then, considered by herself, brought forth little quotable
-humorous literature, and what we have to choose from is ponderous and
-heavy.
-
-Like Greece, the first germs of Roman comic literature may be traced to
-the religious festivals, which were marked by an admixture of religious
-rites and riotous Bacchanalian orgies, where as the crowds danced and
-sang and feasted, they became first hilarious and then abusive and
-indecent.
-
-Like the Greeks, the Romans used grotesque masks, large enough to
-represent face and hair, too, the duplicates of which we see decorating
-our theater proscenium arches and drop curtains to this day.
-
-It would seem these masks were universally made use of in their
-dramatic performances, for all caricatures and grotesque drawings show
-them.
-
-In the burlesque entertainments there was a Buffoon, corresponding to
-our clown, called a Sannio, from the Greek word meaning a fool.
-
-Later, undoubtedly, the Court Fool and the King’s Jester were the
-natural successors of this character.
-
-In all these masks the features were exaggerated and made monstrous of
-form and size. But one reason for the greatly enlarged mouth is that
-it was so shaped in order to form a sort of speaking trumpet, that the
-actors’ voices might be heard at greater distance.
-
-In contrast to the grotesquerie of enlargement, there was also a branch
-of caricature which depicted the pigmies.
-
-The legend of the pigmies and cranes is as ancient, at least, as Homer,
-and many examples are found in the buried cities of Herculaneum and
-Pompeii.
-
-Comic Literature was not plentiful in the days of Early Rome. Up to the
-second century B.C. we can glean but the two names, Plautus
-and Terence.
-
-These two, nearly contemporary, founded their plays on the comedies of
-Menander and a few other earlier dramatic writers.
-
-Perhaps twenty plays are left us from the hands of these two Romans,
-and these, though pronounced amusing by scholars who can read the
-original text, are not what the modern layman deems very humorous.
-
-A few examples of them will suffice.
-
-
- PLAUTUS
-
- _MILITARY SWAGGER_
-
- PYRGOPOLINICES, ARTOTROGUS, _and_ SOLDIERS
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ Take care that the luster of my shield is more
-bright than the rays of the sun when the sky is clear, that, when
-occasion comes, the battle being joined, ’mid the fierce ranks right
-opposite it may dazzle the eyesight of the enemy. But I must console
-this saber of mine, that it may not lament nor be downcast in spirits,
-because I have thus long been wearing it keeping holiday, though it so
-dreadfully longs to make havoc of the enemy. But where is Artotrogus?
-
-_Artotrogus._ Here he is; he stands close by the hero, valiant and
-successful, and of princely form. Mars could not dare to style himself
-so great a warrior, nor compare his prowess with yours.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ Him you mean whom I spared on the Gorgonidonian
-plains, where Bumbomachides Clytomestoridysarchides, the grandson of
-Neptune, was the chief commander?
-
-_Artotrogus._ I remember him; him, I suppose you mean, with the
-golden armor, whose legions you puffed away with your breath, just as
-the wind blows away leaves or the reed-thatched roof.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ That, by my troth, was really nothing at all.
-
-_Artotrogus._ Faith, that really was nothing at all in comparison
-with other things I could mention (_aside_) which you never did.
-If any person ever beheld a more perjured fellow than this, or one more
-full in vain boasting, let him have me for himself: I’ll become his
-slave.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ What are you saying?
-
-_Artotrogus._ Why, that I remember in what fashion you broke the
-foreleg of an elephant, in India, with your fist.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ How--the foreleg?
-
-_Artotrogus._ I meant to say the thigh.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ I struck the blow without an effort.
-
-_Artotrogus._ Troth, if, indeed, you had put forth your strength,
-your arm would have passed right through the hide, the entrails, and
-the frontispiece of the elephant.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ I don’t care to talk about these things just now.
-
-_Artotrogus._ I’ faith, ’tis really not worth while for you to
-tell me of it, who know your prowess well. (_Aside._) My appetite
-creates all these tales. I must hear him right out with my ears, that
-my teeth mayn’t have time to grow, and whatever lie he shall tell I
-must agree to it.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ What was it I was saying?
-
-_Artotrogus._ Oh, I know what you were going to say just now. I’
-faith ’twas bravely done; I remember its being done.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ What was that?
-
-_Artotrogus._ Whatever it was you were going to say.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ Have you got your tablets?
-
-_Artotrogus._ Are you intending to enlist some one? I have them,
-and a pen as well.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ How quickly you guess my thoughts!
-
-_Artotrogus._ ’Tis fit that I should study your inclinations, so
-that whatever you wish should first occur to me.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ What do you remember?
-
-_Artotrogus._ I do remember this: In Cilicia there were a hundred
-and fifty men, a hundred in Cryphiolathronia, thirty at Sardis, sixty
-men of Macedon, whom you slaughtered altogether in one day.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ What is the sum total of those men?
-
-_Artotrogus._ Seven thousand.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ It must be as much; you keep the reckoning well.
-
-_Artotrogus._ Yet I have none of them written down; still, I
-remember it was so.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ By my troth, you have a right good memory.
-
-_Artotrogus_ (_aside_). ’Tis the flesh-pots give it a fillip.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ So long as you shall do as you have done
-hitherto, you shall always have something to eat; I will always make
-you a partaker at my table.
-
-_Artotrogus._ Besides, in Cappadocia you would have killed five
-hundred men altogether at one blow, had not your saber been blunt.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ I let them live, because I was quite sick of
-fighting.
-
-_Artotrogus._ Why should I tell you what all mortals know, that
-you, Pyrgopolinices, live upon the earth with your valor, beauty, and
-achievements unsurpassed? All the women are in love with you, and that
-not without reason, since you are so handsome. Witness those girls that
-pulled me by my mantle yesterday.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ What was it they said to you?
-
-_Artotrogus._ They questioned me about you. “Is Achilles here?”
-says one to me. “No,” says I, “his brother is.” Then says the other to
-me, “By my troth, but he is a handsome and a noble man. See how his
-long hair becomes him! Certainly the women are lucky who share his
-favors.”
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ And pray, did they really say so?
-
-_Artotrogus._ They both entreated me to bring you past today, so
-that they might see you.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ ’Tis really a very great plague to a man to be
-too handsome!
-
-_Artotrogus._ They are quite a nuisance to me; they are praying,
-entreating, beseeching me to let them see you; sending for me for that
-purpose, so that I can’t give my attention to your business.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ It seems that it is time for us to go to the
-Forum, that I may count out their pay to those soldiers whom I lately
-enlisted; for King Seleucus entreated me with most earnest suit that
-I would raise and enlist recruits for him. To that business I have
-resolved to devote my attention this day.
-
-_Artotrogus._ Come, let’s be going, then.
-
-_Pyrgopolinices._ Guards, follow me.
-
- --_The Braggart Captain._
-
-
- _THE SUSPICIOUS MISER_
-
- MEGADORUS _and_ EUNOMIA
-
-_Eunomia._ Tell me pray, who is she whom you would like to take
-for a wife?
-
-_Megadorus._ I’ll tell you. Do you know that Euclio, the poor old
-man close by?
-
-_Eunomia._ I know him; not a bad sort of man.
-
-_Megadorus._ I’d like his maiden daughter to be promised me in
-marriage. Don’t make any words about it, sister; I know what you are
-going to say--that she’s poor. This poor girl pleases me.
-
-_Eunomia._ May the gods prosper it!
-
-_Megadorus._ I hope the same.
-
-_Eunomia._ Do you wish me to stay for anything else?
-
-_Megadorus._ No; farewell.
-
-_Eunomia._ And to you the same, brother.
-
- (_Goes into the house._)
-
-_Megadorus._ I’ll go to see Euclio, if he’s at home. But, ah! here
-comes the very man toward his own house!
-
- _Enter_ EUCLIO
-
-_Euclio_ (_to himself_). I had a presentiment that I was
-going out to no purpose when I left my house, and therefore I went
-unwillingly; for neither did any one of the wardsmen come, nor yet
-the master of the ward, who ought to have distributed the money. Now
-I’m making all haste to hasten home; for, though I myself am here, my
-mind’s at home.
-
-_Megadorus._ May you be well, and ever fortunate, Euclio!
-
-_Euclio._ May the gods bless you, Megadorus!
-
-_Megadorus._ How are you? Are you quite well and contented?
-
-_Euclio_ (_aside_). It isn’t for nothing when a rich man
-accosts a poor man courteously. Now, this fellow knows that I’ve got
-some gold; for that reason he salutes me more courteously.
-
-_Megadorus._ Do you say that you are well?
-
-_Euclio._ Oh, I’m not very well in the money line.
-
-_Megadorus._ But if you’ve a contented mind, you have enough for
-passing a happy life with.
-
-_Euclio_ (_aside_). By my faith, the old woman has made a
-discovery to him about the gold; it is clear she has told him. I’ll cut
-off her tongue, and tear out her eyes, when I get home.
-
-_Megadorus._ Why are you talking to yourself?
-
-_Euclio._ I’m lamenting my poverty. I’ve a grown-up girl without a
-portion, and one that can’t be disposed of in marriage; nor am I able
-to marry her to anybody.
-
-_Megadorus._ Hold your peace; be of good courage, Euclio; she
-shall have a husband; you shall be assisted by myself. If you have need
-of help, command me.
-
-_Euclio_ (_aside_). Now he is aiming at my property, while
-he’s making promises. He’s gaping for my gold, that he may devour it;
-in the one hand he is carrying a stone, while he shows the bread in the
-other. I trust no person who, rich himself, is exceedingly courteous
-to a poor man; when he extends his hand with a kind air, then is he
-loading you with some damage. I know these polyps, who, when they’ve
-touched a thing, hold it fast.
-
-_Megadorus._ Give me your attention, Euclio, for a little while;
-I wish to speak a few words to you about a common concern of yours and
-mine.
-
-_Euclio_ (_aside_). Alas! wo is me! My gold has been carried
-off from my house. Now he’s wishing for this thing, I’m sure, to come
-to a compromise with me; but I’ll look in my house first.
-
- (_He goes toward his door._)
-
-_Megadorus._ Where are you going?
-
-_Euclio._ I’ll return to you directly, for there’s something I
-must go and see to at home.
-
- (_Goes into his house._)
-
-_Megadorus._ I verily believe that when I make mention of his
-daughter, for him to promise her to me, he’ll suppose that I am
-laughing at him; for I do not know of any man poorer than he.
-
- EUCLIO _returns from his house_
-
-_Euclio_ (_aside_). The gods favor me; my property’s all
-safe. If nothing’s lost, it’s safe. I was dreadfully afraid before I
-went indoors. I was almost dead. (_Aloud._) I’m come back to you,
-Megadorus, if you wish to say anything to me.
-
-_Megadorus._ I thank you. I beg that as to what I shall inquire of
-you, you’ll not hesitate to speak out boldly.
-
-_Euclio._ So long, indeed, as you inquire nothing that I mayn’t
-choose to speak out upon.
-
-_Megadorus._ Tell me, of what sort of family do you consider me to
-be sprung?
-
-_Euclio._ Of a good one.
-
-_Megadorus._ What do you think about my character?
-
-_Euclio._ It’s a good one.
-
-_Megadorus._ What of my conduct?
-
-_Euclio._ Neither bad nor dishonest.
-
-_Megadorus._ Do you know my age?
-
-_Euclio._ I know that you are as rich in years as in pocket.
-
-_Megadorus._ I surely did always take you to be a citizen without
-evil guile, and now I am convinced.
-
-Euclio (_aside_). He smells the gold. (_Aloud._) What do you
-want with me now?
-
-_Megadorus._ Since you know me, and I know you, what sort of
-person you are, may it bring a blessing on myself, and you and your
-daughter, if I now ask your daughter as my wife. Promise me that it
-shall be so.
-
-_Euclio._ Heyday! Megadorus, you are doing a deed that’s not
-becoming to your usual actions, in laughing at me, a poor man, and
-guiltless toward yourself and toward your family. For neither in act,
-nor in words, have I ever deserved it of you that you should do what
-you are doing now.
-
-_Megadorus._ I vow that I neither came to laugh at you nor am I
-laughing at you, nor do I think you deserving of it.
-
-_Euclio._ Why, then, do you ask my daughter for yourself?
-
-_Megadorus._ Because I believe that the match would be a good
-thing for all of us.
-
-_Euclio._ It suggests itself to my mind, Megadorus, that you are a
-wealthy man, a man of rank, and that I am the poorest of the poor. Now,
-if I should give my daughter in marriage to you, it suggests itself to
-my mind that you are the ox, and that I am the ass; when I’m yoked to
-you, and when I’m not able to bear the burden equally with yourself,
-I, the ass, must lie down in the mire; you, the ox, would regard me no
-more than if I had never been born. I should then feel aggrieved, and
-my own class would laugh at me. In neither direction should I have a
-fixed stall, if there should be a divorce; the asses would tear me with
-their teeth, the oxen would butt at me with their horns. This is the
-great risk, in my passing over from the asses to the oxen.
-
-_Megadorus._ The nearer you can unite yourself in alliance with
-honorable people the better. Do you receive this proposal, listen to
-me, and promise her to me.
-
-_Euclio._ But there is no marriage portion, I tell you.
-
-_Megadorus._ You are to give none; so long as she comes with good
-principles, she is sufficiently portioned.
-
-_Euclio._ I say so for this reason, that you mayn’t be supposing
-that I have found any treasures.
-
-_Megadorus._ I know that; don’t enlarge upon it. Promise her to me.
-
-_Euclio._ So be it. (_Starts and looks about._) But, oh,
-Jupiter, am I not utterly undone?
-
-_Megadorus._ What’s the matter with you?
-
-_Euclio._ What was it sounded just now as though it were iron?
-
-_Megadorus._ I ordered them to dig up the garden at my place. (EUCLIO
-_runs off into his house._) But where has this man gone? He’s off, and
-he hasn’t fully answered me; he treats me with contempt. Because he
-sees that I wish for his friendship, he acts after the usual manner
-of mankind. For if a wealthy person goes to ask a favor of a poorer
-one, the poor man is afraid to treat with him; through suspicion he
-hurts his own interest. The same person, when this opportunity is lost,
-afterward wishes for it too late.
-
-_Euclio_ (_coming out of the house, addressing servant within_). By
-the powers, if I don’t give you up to have your tongue cut out by the
-roots, I order and I authorize you to hand me over to any one you
-please, to be mutilated.
-
-_Megadorus._ By my troth, Euclio, I perceive that you consider me
-a fit man for you to make sport of in my old age, for no fault of my
-own.
-
-_Euclio._ I’ faith, Megadorus, I am not doing so, nor should I
-desire it were I able to.
-
-_Megadorus._ Well, then, do you betroth your daughter to me?
-
-_Euclio._ On those terms, and with that portion which I mentioned
-to you.
-
-_Megadorus._ Do you promise her, then?
-
-_Euclio._ I do promise her.
-
-_Megadorus._ May the gods bestow their blessings on it!
-
-_Euclio._ May the gods do so! Observe and remember that we’ve
-agreed, that my daughter is not to bring you any portion.
-
-_Megadorus._ I remember it.
-
-_Euclio._ But I understand in what fashion people are wont
-to equivocate; an agreement is no agreement, no agreement is an
-agreement--just as it pleases you.
-
-_Megadorus._ I’ll have no misunderstanding with you. But what
-reason is there why we shouldn’t have the nuptials this day?
-
-_Euclio._ Why, by my troth, there is very good reason why we
-should.
-
-_Megadorus._ I’ll go, then, and prepare matters. Do you want me
-for anything more?
-
-_Euclio._ All is settled. Farewell.
-
-_Megadorus_ (_going to the door of his house and calling
-out_). Hullo! Strobilus, follow me quickly to the meat-market.
-
- (_Exit_ MEGADORUS.)
-
-_Euclio._ He has gone. Immortal gods, I do beseech you! How
-powerful is gold! I do believe, now, that he has had some intimation
-that I’ve got a treasure at home. He’s gaping for that; for the sake of
-that has he persisted in this alliance!
-
- --_The Pot of Gold._
-
-
- TERENCE
-
- _PARASITES AND GNATHONITES_
-
-_Gnathonites_ (_soliloquizing_). Immortal gods! how far does one man
-excel another! What a difference there is between a wise person and a
-fool! This came strongly into my mind from the following circumstance.
-As I was walking along to-day I met a certain individual of this place,
-of my own rank and station--no mean fellow--one who, like myself, had
-guttled away his paternal estate. I saw him, shabby, dirty, sickly,
-beset with rags and years. “What’s the meaning of this garb?” said I.
-He answered, “Wretch that I am, I’ve lost what I possessed; see to
-what I am reduced; all my acquaintances and friends have forsaken me.”
-On this I felt contempt for him as in comparison with myself. “What!”
-said I, “you pitiful sluggard, have you so managed matters as to have
-no hope left? Have you lost your wits together with your estate? Don’t
-you see me, who have risen from the same condition? What a complexion
-I have, how spruce and well dressed, what portliness of person? I have
-everything, yet have nothing; and although I possess nothing, still I
-am in want of nothing.” “But I,” said he, “unhappily, can no longer
-find anybody who will feed me in exchange for making me the butt of
-his jokes.” “What!” said I, “do you suppose it is managed by those
-means? You are quite mistaken. Once upon a time, in the early ages,
-there was a calling of that sort; but I will tell you a new mode of
-coney-catching; I, in fact, have been the first to strike into this
-path. There is a class of men who strive to be the first in everything,
-but are not; to these I pay my court. I do not offer myself to them
-to be laughed at, but I am the first to laugh with them, and at the
-same time to admire their parts. Whatever they say, I commend; if
-they contradict that selfsame thing, I commend again. Does any one
-deny? I deny; does he affirm? I affirm. In fine, I have so trained
-myself as to humor them in everything. This calling is now by far
-the most productive.” While we were thus talking, we arrived at the
-market-place. Overjoyed, all the confectioners ran at once to meet
-me; fishmongers, butchers, cooks, sausage-makers, fishermen, whom,
-both when my fortunes were flourishing and when they were ruined, I
-had served, and often serve still; they complimented me, asked me to
-dinner, and gave me a hearty welcome. When this poor hungry wretch
-saw that I was in such great esteem, and that I obtained a living so
-easily, then the fellow began to entreat me that I would allow him
-to learn this method of me. So I bade him become my follower--if he
-could. As the disciples of the philosophers take their names from the
-philosophers themselves, so, too, the Parasites ought to be called
-Gnathonites.--_Eunuchus._
-
-At the beginning of the Christian Era, Roman Literature writers had
-begun to come into their own, and the first century A.D. saw
-many of the greatest Romans of them all in the paths of Literature.
-
-Catullus, the blithe poet who left us some hundred or so of his poems,
-frequently wrote lines more lyrical than chaste. Yet he himself bids
-us remember that if a poet’s life be chaste, his lines need not
-necessarily be so, too.
-
-As Herrick later put it, “Jocund his muse was, but his life was chaste.”
-
-But the self-revelations of Catullus are probably no more improper to
-read than those of many later and lesser poets.
-
-
- CATULLUS
-
- _THE ROMAN COCKNEY_
-
- _Stipends_ Anius even on opportunity _shtipends_,
- _Ambush_ as _hambush_ still Anius used to declaim;
- Then, hoped fondly the words were a marvel of articulation,
- While with an _h_ immense _hambush_ arose from his heart.
- So his mother of old, so e’en spoke Liber his uncle,
- Credibly; so grandsire, grandam, alike did agree.
-
- Syria took him away; all ears had rest for a moment;
- Lightly the lips those words, slightly could utter again.
- None was afraid any more of a sound so clumsy returning;
- Sudden a solemn fright seized us: a message arrives.
- “News from Sonia country; the sea, since Anius entered,
- Changed; ’twas _Ionian_ once, now ’twas _Hionian_ all.”
-
-
- _A FIXED SMILE_
-
- Egnatius, spruce owner of superb white teeth,
- Smiles sweetly, smiles forever. Is the bench in view,
- Where stands the pleader just prepared to rouse our tears,
- Egnatius smiles sweetly. Near the pyre they mourn,
- Where weeps a mother o’er the lost, the kind, one son;
- Egnatius smiles sweetly--what the time, or place,
- Or thing soe’er, smiles sweetly. Such a rare complaint
- Is his, not handsome, scarce to please the town, say I.
-
- So take a warning for the nonce my friend; town-bred
- Were you, a Sabine hale, a pearly Tiburtine,
- A frugal Umbrian body, Tuscan, huge of paunch,
- A grim Samnian, black of hue, prodigious-tooth’d,
- A Transpadane, my country not to pass untaxed--
- In short, whoever cleanly cares to rinse foul teeth;
- Yet sweetly smiling ever I would have you not:
- For silly laughter, it’s a silly thing indeed.
-
-Of Horace it is difficult to say anything without saying too much.
-
-In this Outline there is no space for discussion, informative or
-discursive, of the writers, it is our province but to name them and to
-give examples of their humor.
-
-Horace was not a comedian but in his Satires, as well as in some of his
-other works, the comic muse is discernible.
-
-
- HORACE
-
- _OBTRUSIVE COMPANY ON THE SACRED WAY_
-
- Along the Sacred Road I strolled one day,
- Deep in some bagatelle (you know my way),
- When up comes one whose name I scarcely knew:
- “Ah, dearest of dear fellows, how d’ye do?”
- He grasped my hand: “Well, thanks; the same to you.”
- Then, as he still kept walking by my side,
- To cut things short, “You’ve no commands?” I cried.
- “Nay, you should know me; I’m a man of lore.”
- “Sir, I’m your humble servant all the more.”
- All in a fret to make him let me go,
- I now walk fast, now loiter and walk slow,
- Now whisper to my servant, while the sweat
- Ran down so fast my very feet were wet.
- “Oh, had I but a temper worth the name,
- Like yours, Bolanus!” inly I exclaim,
- While he keeps running on at a hand-trot
- About the town, the streets, I know not what.
- Finding I made no answer, “Ah, I see
- You’re at a strait to rid yourself of me;
- But ’tis no use; I’m a tenacious friend,
- And mean to hold you till your journey’s end.”
- “No need to take you such a round; I go
- To visit an acquaintance you don’t know.
- Poor man, he’s ailing at his lodging, far
- Beyond the bridge, where Cæsar’s gardens are.”
- “Oh, never mind; I’ve nothing else to do,
- And want a walk, so I’ll step on with you.”
- Down go my ears in donkey-fashion, straight;
- You’ve seen them do it, when their load’s too great.
- “If I mistake not,” he begins, “you’ll find
- Viscus not more, nor Varius, to your mind;
- There’s not a man can turn a verse so soon,
- Or dance so nimbly when he hears a tune;
- While, as for singing--ah, my forte is there;
- Tigellius’ self might envy me, I’ll swear.”
- He paused for breath. I falteringly strike in:
- “Have you a mother? Have you kith or kin
- To whom your life is precious?” “Not a soul;
- My line’s extinct; I have interred the whole.”
- Oh, happy they! (so into thought I fell)
- After life’s endless babble they sleep well.
- My turn is next: despatch me, for the weird
- Has come to pass which I so long have feared,
- The fatal weird a Sabine beldame sung
- All in my nursery days, when life was young:
- “No sword nor poison e’er shall take him off,
- Nor gout, nor pleurisy, nor racking cough;
- A babbling tongue shall kill him; let him fly
- All talkers, as he wishes not to die.”
- We got to Vesta’s temple, and the sun
- Told us a quarter of the day was done.
- It chanced he had a suit, and was bound fast
- Either to make appearance or be cast.
- “Step here a moment, if you love me.” “Nay,
- I know no law; ’twould hurt my health to stay.
- And then, my call.” “I’m doubting what to do,
- Whether to give my lawsuit up, or you.”
- “Me, pray!” “I will not.” On he strides again.
- I follow, unresisting, in his train.
- “How stand you with Mæcenas?” he began;
- “He picks his friends with care--a shrewd, wise man.
- In fact, I take it, one could hardly name
- A head so cool in life’s exciting game.
- ’Twould be a good deed done, if you could throw
- Your servant in his way; I mean, you know.
- Just to play second. In a month, I’ll swear,
- You’d make an end of every rival there.”
- “Oh, you mistake; we don’t live there in league;
- I know no house more sacred from intrigue;
- I’m never distanced in my friend’s good grace
- By wealth or talent; each man finds his place.”
- “A miracle! If ’twere not told by you,
- I scarce should credit it.” “And yet ’tis true.”
- “Ah, well, you double my desire to rise
- To special favor with a man so wise.”
- “You’ve but to wish it; ’twill be your own fault,
- If, with your nerve, you win not by assault.
- He can be won; that puts him on his guard,
- And so the first approach is always hard.”
- “No fear of me, sir. A judicious bribe
- Will work a wonder with the menial tribe.
- Say I’m refused admittance for to-day,
- I’ll watch my time; I’ll meet him in the way,
- Escort him, dog him. In this world of ours
- The path to what we want ne’er runs on flowers.”
- ’Mid all this prating met me, as it fell,
- Aristius, my good friend, who knew him well.
- We stop. Inquiries and replies go round:
- “Where do you hail from?” “Whither are you bound?”
- There as he stood, impassive like a clod,
- I pull at his limp arms, frown, wink, and nod,
- To urge him to release me. With a smile
- He feigns stupidity. I burn with bile.
- “Something there was you said you wished to tell
- To me in private.” “Aye, I mind it well;
- But not just now. ’Tis a Jews’ fast to-day:
- Affront a sect so touchy? Nay, friend, nay!”
- “Faith, I’ve no scruples.” “Ah, but I’ve a few!
- I’m weak, you know, and do as others do.
- Some other time--excuse me.” Wretched me,
- That ever man so black a sun should see!
- Off goes the rogue, and leaves me in despair,
- Tied to the altar, with the knife in air,
- When, by rare chance, the plaintiff in the suit
- Knocks up against us: “Whither now, you brute?”
- He roars like thunder. Then to me: “You’ll stand
- My witness, sir?” “My ear’s at your command.”
- Off to the court he drags him; shouts succeed;
- A mob collects--thank Phœbus, I am freed!
- --_Satires._
-
-The humorist feels a sense of personal grievance against the Roman
-writers for that they wrote so wisely and so well, yet gave us so
-little that can be used as Humor for Humor’s sake.
-
-Petronius wrote engagingly, but with such indecency that he can scarce
-be quoted for polite society.
-
-His Trimalchio’s Dinner offers this:
-
-
- _AN INGENIOUS COOK_
-
-We little thought, as the saying is, that after so many dainties we had
-another hill to climb; for the table being uncovered to a flourish of
-music, three muzzled white hogs were brought in, with bells hanging on
-their necks. The man leading them said one was two years old, the other
-three, and the last full grown. For my part, I took them for acrobats,
-and imagined the hogs were to perform some of the surprising feats
-practised at the circus. But Trimalchio broke in upon our expectation
-by asking us, “Which of these will you have dressed for supper? Cocks
-and pheasants are country fare, but my cooks have pans in which a
-calf can be roasted whole.” And immediately commanding a cook to be
-called, Trimalchio, without waiting for our choice, bade him kill the
-largest. He then inquired of the cook how he came by him saying, “Were
-you bought, or were you born in my house?” “Neither,” replied the
-cook, “but left you by Pansa’s testament.” “Then see to it,” answered
-Trimalchio, “that this beast is prepared quickly, or I shall make you
-serve my footmen.” ...
-
-While our host was talking on, an overgrown hog was brought to table.
-We all wondered at the expedition which had been used, swearing a
-capon could not have been dressed in that time; and what increased
-our surprise was that this hog seemed larger than the boar which
-had been set before us. Trimalchio, after gazing steadfastly upon
-him, exclaimed, “What! have his entrails not been taken out? No, by
-Hercules, they have not! Bring in that rogue of a cook!” The cook,
-being dragged in before us, hung his head, excusing himself that he
-had forgotten. “Forgotten!” roared his master. “Strip the rascal!
-Strip him!” The poor man was stripped forthwith, and placed between
-two tormentors. We all interceded for him, alleging that such an error
-might occasionally happen, and therefore desired his pardon, protesting
-we would never speak for him if he repeated the same offense.
-
-I thought he richly deserved his fate, and could not forbear whispering
-to Agamemnon, “This must certainly be a most careless rascal. How could
-any one forget to disembowel a hog? I would not have forgiven him,
-by Hercules, had he thus served up a dish for me!” Our host, resuming
-a pleasant look, said, “Come, now, you with the short memory, let us
-see if you can disembowel the animal before us.” Upon which the cook,
-having put his garments on again, took his knife, and with a trembling
-hand slashed the hog on both sides of the belly, when out tumbled a
-load of hog’s-puddings and sausages....
-
-The dessert consisted of a blackbird pie, dried grapes, and candied
-nuts. There were also quinces, stuck so full of spices that they looked
-like so many hedgehogs. Yet all this might have been endured, had not
-the next dish been so monstrous and disgusting that we would rather
-have perished of hunger than touched it; for, it being placed upon
-the table, and, as we imagined, a good fat goose, with fish and all
-kinds of fowl round it, Trimalchio cried, “Whatever you see here is
-all made out of one body!” I, being a cunning spark, took a guess at
-what it might really be, and, turning to Agamemnon, “I wonder,” said
-I, “whether all this is not made of loam? I once remember seeing such
-an imaginary dish in the Saturnalia at Rome.” Scarce had I ended, when
-Trimalchio began to praise his cook:
-
-“There is no cleverer fellow in the world. Out of the belly he’ll make
-you a dish of fish; a plover out of a piece of fat bacon; a turtle out
-of leg of pork; and a hen out of the intestines. And therefore, in my
-opinion, he has a very suitable name, for we call him Dædalus. Because
-he is such an ingenious fellow, a friend of his brought him a present
-of knives from Rome, of German steel; and immediately he called for
-them, and, turning them over, gave us the liberty to try the edges on
-his cheeks.”
-
-Just then in rushed two servants in high dispute, as if they were
-quarreling about a yoke, from which hung two earthen jars. And when
-Trimalchio had judged between them, neither of them stood to the
-sentence, but each fell to club law, and broke the other’s jar. Amazed
-at the insolence of these drunken rascals, all our eyes were fixed on
-their conflict, when we perceived oysters and other shell-fish to fall
-from the broken jars, a boy collecting them in a charger and handing
-them about among the guests.
-
-Nor was the cook’s ingenuity in the least unworthy of this
-extraordinary magnificence; for he brought us snails upon a silver
-gridiron, and with a shrill, unpleasant voice sang us a song.... We
-were almost pushed off our couches by the crowd of servants who rushed
-into the hall; and who should be seated above me but the ingenious
-cook, that had made a goose from a piece of pork, all reeking of
-pickles and kitchen slops. Not content with being seated at table,
-he began to act Thespis the Tragedian; and soon after he challenged
-his master to contend with him for the laurel wreath at the next
-chariot-races.
-
- --_Trimalchio’s Banquet._
-
-Persius, who died at twenty-eight, left us six satires. Though an
-imperfect imitator of Horace, his work is characterized by earnestness
-and a true sense of satire.
-
-
- _POETIC FAME_
-
- Immured within our studies, we compose;
- Some, shackled meter; some, freefooted prose;
- But all, bombast--stuff, which the breast may strain,
- And the huge lungs puff forth with awkward pain.
- ’Tis done! And now the bard, elate and proud,
- Prepares a grand rehearsal for the crowd.
- Lo! he steps forth in birthday splendor bright,
- Combed and perfumed, and robed in dazzling white,
- And mounts the desk; his pliant throat he clears,
- And deals, insidious, round his wanton leers;
- While Rome’s first nobles, by the prelude wrought,
- Watch, with indecent glee, each prurient thought,
- And squeal with rapture, as the luscious line
- Thrills through the marrow and inflames the chine.
- Vile dotard! Canst thou thus consent to please,
- To pander for such itching fools as these?
- Fools, whose applause must shoot beyond thy aim,
- And tinge thy cheek, bronzed as it is, with shame!
- But wherefore have I learned, if, thus represt,
- The leaven still must swell within my breast;
- If the wild fig-tree, deeply rooted there,
- Must never burst its bounds and shoot in air?
- Are these the fruits of study, these of age?
- Oh, times, oh, manners! Thou misjudging sage,
- Is science only useful as ’tis shown,
- And is thy knowledge nothing if not known?
- But, sure, ’tis pleasant, as we walk, to see
- The pointed finger, hear the loud “That’s he!”
- On every side. And seems it, in your sight,
- So poor a trifle, that whate’er we write
- Is introduced to every school of note
- And taught the youth of quality by rote?
- Nay, more! Our nobles, gorged, and swilled with wine,
- Call, o’er the banquet, for a lay divine.
- Here one, on whom the princely purple glows.
- Snuffles some musty legend through his nose,
- Slowly distils Hypsipyle’s sad fate,
- And love-lorn Phyllis dying for her mate,
- With what of woful else is said or sung,
- And trips up every word with lisping tongue.
- The maudlin audience, from the couches round,
- Hum their assent, responsive to the sound.
- And are not now the poet’s ashes blest?
- Now lies the turf not lightly on his breast?
- They pause a moment, and again the room
- Rings with his praise. Now will not roses bloom,
- Now, from his relics, will not violets spring,
- And o’er his hallowed urn their fragrance fling?
- You laugh (’tis answered), and too freely here
- Indulge that vile propensity to sneer.
- Lives there, who would not at applause rejoice,
- And merit, if he could the public voice?
- Who would not leave posterity such rimes,
- As cedar oil might keep to latest times--
- Rimes which should fear no desperate grocer’s hand,
- Nor fly with fish and spices through the land?
- Thou, my kind monitor, whoe’er thou art,
- Whom I suppose to play the opponent’s part,
- Know, when I write, if chance some happier strain
- (And chance it needs must be) rewards my pain,
- Know, I can relish praise with genuine zest;
- Not mine the torpid, mine the unfeeling breast.
- But that I merely toil for this acclaim,
- And make these eulogies my end and aim,
- I must not, cannot grant. For--sift them all,
- Mark well their value, and on what they fall--
- Are they not showered (to pass these trifles o’er)
- On Labeo’s Iliad, drunk with hellebore,
- On princely love-lays driveled without thought,
- And the crude trash on citron couches wrought?
- You spread the table, ’tis a master-stroke,
- And give the shivering guest a threadbare cloak;
- Then, while his heart with gratitude dilates
- At the glad vest and the delicious cates,
- “Tell me,” you cry, “for truth is my delight,
- What says the town of me, and what I write?”
- He cannot; he has neither ears nor eyes.
- But shall I tell you who your bribes despise?
- Bald trifler! cease at once your thriftless trade;
- That mountain paunch for verse was never made.
- --_Satires._
-
-In Martial we find a humorist after our own heart. As Homer was the
-father of poetry and Herodotus the father of prose, so to Martial must
-be ascribed the paternity of the epigram.
-
-Epigrams, so-called, had been made before, but in Martial’s work they
-rose to a new height, took on a new meaning.
-
-Before Martial, epigram meant merely inscription,--any short poem that
-might conveniently be cut on stone.
-
-Martial’s epigrams have keen wit and sharp point, such as appeal to the
-mind and appreciation of the reader.
-
-Fourteen hundred and fifty is his legacy of epigrams to us, and most of
-them properly short, as an epigram should be.
-
-
- _TO SABIDIUS_
-
- I love thee not, Sabidius. But why?
- I love thee not--that’s all I can reply.
-
-
- _PLAY’S THE THING_
-
- Aper pierced his wife’s heart with an arrow:
- While playing, friends say.
- The wife was exceedingly wealthy:
- He knows how to play.
-
-
- _TO CATULLUS_
-
- My name’s in your will as your heir,
- So you’ve said.
- I’ll continue to doubt till the day--
- When it’s read.
-
-
- _BETWEEN THE LINES_
-
- The man who sends you presents, Gaurus,--
- You so rich and gray--
- Remarks, if you’ve got sense and insight,
- “Kindly pass away.”
-
-
- _TO AULUS_
-
- Though my readers sincerely admire me,
- A poet finds fault with my books.
- What’s the odds? When I’m giving a dinner
- I’d rather please guests than the cooks.
-
-
- _TO POSTUMUS_
-
- When you kiss me you use only half of your mouth.
- I approve. Half that half, though, will do.
- Will you grant me a greater, ineffable boon?
- Keep the rest of that latter half, too.
-
-
- _ROUNDED WITH A SLEEP_
-
- Though he bathed with us yesterday, dined with us, too,
- And was quite in the pink of condition,
- Ancus died this A.M.--of a dream that he’d asked
- Hermocrates to be his physician.
-
-
- _VENDETTA_
-
- Though it’s true, Theodorus, you frequently pray
- For my book in a flattering tone,
- No wonder I’m slow; I’ve good cause for delay
- In my fear you’d then send me your own.
-
-
- _A MERE SUGGESTION_
-
- You read us your verse with your throat wrapped in wool.
- The reason we’re anxious to know,
- For to us it appears
- That some wool in our ears
- Would really be more apropos.
-
-
- _WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN_
-
- I hear that Lycoris has buried
- Every friend that she’s had in her life.
- I sincerely regret, Fabianus,
- She’s not introduced to my wife.
-
-
- _A TOTAL ABSTAINER_
-
- Though you serve richest wines,
- Paulus, Rumor opines
- That they poisoned your four wives, I think.
- It’s of course all a lie;
- None believes less than I--
- No, I really don’t care for a drink.
-
-
- _MUTE MILLIONS_
-
- In the verse Cinna writes
- I am slandered, it’s said.
- But the man doesn’t write
- Whose verses aren’t read.
-
-
- _MAN AND SUPERMAN_
-
- “Quintus loves Thais.” What Thais is that?
- “Why, Thais the one-eyed, who--” Who?
- Well, I was aware
- She’d lost one of her pair,
- But I didn’t know he had lost two.
-
-
- _TO LINUS_
-
- You ask what I grow on my Sabine estate.
- A reliable answer is due.
- I grow on that soil--
- Far from urban turmoil--
- Very happy at not seeing you.
-
-
- _CREDE EXPERTO_
-
- Diaulus left his doctoring
- To practise undertaking.
- His training as a medic, though,
- Has really been his making.
-
-
- _NUMBERS SWEET_
-
- Two of your teeth were blown out by a cough,
- And a subsequent cough blew out two.
- You can now cough away, Delia, all night and day--
- There’s nothing a third cough can do.
-
-
- _MILLIONS IN IT_
-
- Just _give_ Linus half what he asks as a loan;
- Then console
- Yourself with the thought that you’d rather lose half
- Than the whole.
-
-
- _TO MAMERCUS_
-
- Though you never have read us a line of your verse,
- You insist on our thinking you write.
- Yes, yes, be a poet; be anything else--
- If you’ll only forbear to recite.
-
-About the last of the great Latin Satirists is Juvenal, a contemporary
-of Martial.
-
-His lines in translation, have a modern ring, but that may be merely
-because the fundamental sources and themes of wit are universal.
-
-
- JUVENAL
-
- _COSMETIC DISGUISE_
-
- A woman stops at nothing when she wears
- Rich emeralds round her neck, and in her ears
- Pearls of enormous size; these justify
- Her faults, and make all lawful in her eye.
- Sure, of all ills with which mankind are cursed,
- A wife who brings you money is the worst.
- Behold! her face a spectacle appears,
- Bloated, and foul, and plastered to the ears
- With viscous paste. The husband looks askew,
- And sticks his lips in this detested glue.
- She meets the adulterer bathed, perfumed, and dressed,
- But rots in filth at home, a very pest!
- For him she breathes of nard; for him alone
- She makes the sweets of Araby her own;
- For him, at length, she ventures to uncase,
- Scales the first layer of roughcast from her face,
- And, while the maids to know her now begin,
- Clears, with that precious milk, her muddy skin
- For which, though exiled to the frozen main,
- She’d lead a drove of asses in her train!
- But tell me now: this thing, thus daubed and oiled,
- Thus poulticed, plastered, baked by turns and boiled,
- Thus with pomatums, ointments, lacquered o’er--
- Is it a face, pray tell me, or a sore?
- --_Satires._
-
-
- _ON DOMINEERING WIVES_
-
- Now tell me, if thou canst not love a wife,
- Made thine by every tie, and thine for life,
- Why wed at all? Why waste the wine and cakes
- The queasy-stomached guest at parting takes,
- And the rich present, which the bridal right
- Claims for the favors of the happy night,
- The charger, where, triumphantly inscrolled,
- The Dacian Hero shines in current gold?
- If thou canst love, and thy besotted mind
- Is so uxoriously to _one_ inclined,
- Then bow thy neck, and with submissive air
- Receive the yoke thou must forever wear.
- To a fond spouse a wife no mercy shows;
- Though warmed with equal fires, she mocks his wos,
- And triumphs in his spoils; her wayward will
- Defeats his bliss, and turns his good to ill.
- Naught must be given, if she opposes; naught,
- If she opposes, must be sold or bought;
- She tells him where to love, and where to hate;
- Shuts out the ancient friend, whose beard his gate
- Knew from its downy to its hoary state;
- And when pimps, parasites, of all degrees,
- Have power to will their fortunes as they please,
- She dictates his, and impudently dares
- To name his very rivals for his heirs.
- “Go, crucify that slave!” “For what offense?
- Who the accuser? Where the evidence?
- For when the life of man is in debate,
- No time can be too long, no care too great.
- Hear all, weigh all with caution, I advise--”
- “Thou sniveler! Is a slave a man?” she cries.
- “He’s innocent!” “Be’t so; ’tis my command,
- My will. Let that, sir, for a reason stand.”
- Thus the virago triumphs, thus she reigns.
- Anon she sickens of her first domains,
- And seeks for new; husband on husband takes,
- Till of her bridal veil one rent she makes.
- Again she tires, again for change she burns,
- And to the bed she lately left returns,
- While the fresh garlands and unfaded boughs
- Yet deck the portal of her wondering spouse.
- “EIGHT HUSBANDS TO HERSELF SHE GAVE”--
- A rare inscription for her grave!
- --_Satires._
-
-Apuleius was the skilful teller of a long and fantastic tale called
-Metamorphoses, commonly known as the Golden Ass.
-
-But a small extract may be given.
-
-
- APULEIUS
-
- _METAMORPHOSES_
-
-Fotis came running to me one day in great excitement and trepidation,
-and informed me that her mistress, having hitherto made no proficiency
-by other means in her present amour, intended to assume feathers like
-a bird, and so take flight to the object of her love, and that I must
-prepare myself with all due care for the sight of such a wonderful
-proceeding. And now, about the first watch of the night, she escorted
-me, on tiptoe and with noiseless steps, to that same upper chamber, and
-bade me peep through a chink in the door, which I did accordingly.
-
-In the first place, Pamphile divested herself of all her garments,
-and having unlocked a certain cabinet, took out of it several little
-boxes. Taking the lid off one of them, and pouring some ointment
-therefrom, she rubbed herself for a considerable time with her hands,
-smearing herself all over from the tips of her toes to the crown of
-her head. Then, after she had muttered a long while in a low voice
-over a lamp, she shook her limbs with tremulous jerks, then gently
-waved them to and fro, until soft feathers burst forth, strong wings
-displayed themselves, the nose was hardened and curved into a beak,
-the nails were compressed and made crooked. Thus did Pamphile become an
-owl. Then, uttering a querulous scream, she made trial of her powers,
-leaping little by little from the ground; and presently, raising
-herself aloft, on full wing, she flew out-of-doors. And thus was she,
-of her own will, changed, by her own magic arts.
-
-But I, though not enchanted by any magic spell, still, riveted to
-the spot by astonishment at this performance, seemed to myself to be
-anything else rather than Lucius. Thus deprived of my senses, and
-astounded even to insanity, I was in a waking dream, and rubbed my eyes
-for some time to ascertain whether or not I was awake at all. At last,
-however, returning to consciousness of the reality of things, I took
-hold of the right hand of Fotis, and putting it to my eyes, “Suffer
-me,” said I, “I beg of you, to enjoy a great and singular proof of your
-affection, while the opportunity offers, and give me a little ointment
-from the same box. Grant this, my sweetest, I entreat you by these
-breasts of yours, and thus, by conferring on me an obligation that can
-never be repaid, bind me to you forever as your slave. Be you my Venus,
-and let me stand by you a winged Cupid.”
-
-“And are you, then, sweetheart, for playing me a fox’s trick, and for
-causing me, of my own accord, to let fall the ax upon my legs? Must
-I run such risk of having my Lucius torn from me by the wolves of
-Thessaly? Where am I to look for him when he is changed into a bird?
-When shall I see him again?”
-
-“May the celestial powers,” said I, “avert from me such a crime! Though
-borne aloft on the wings of the eagle itself, soaring through the
-midst of the heavens, as the trusty messenger, or joyous arm-bearer,
-of supreme Jove, would I not, after I had obtained this dignity of
-wing, still fly back every now and then to my nest? I swear to you,
-by that lovely little knot of hair with which you have enchanted my
-spirit, that I would prefer no other to my Fotis. And then, besides, I
-bethink me that as soon as I am rubbed with that ointment, and shall
-have been changed into a bird of this kind, I shall be bound to keep
-at a distance from all human habitations; for what a beautiful and
-agreeable lover will the ladies gain in an owl! Why, do we not see that
-these birds of night, when they have got into any house, are eagerly
-seized and nailed to the doors, in order that they may atone, by
-their torments, for the evil destiny which they portend to the family
-by their inauspicious flight? But one thing I had almost forgot to
-inquire: what must I say, or do, in order to get rid of my wings and
-return to my own form as Lucius?”
-
-“Be in no anxiety,” she said, “about all that matter; for my mistress
-has made me acquainted with everything that can again change such forms
-into the human shape. But do not suppose that this was done through any
-kind feeling toward me, but in order that I might assist her with the
-requisite remedies when she returns home. Only think with what simple
-and trifling herbs such a mighty result is brought about: for instance,
-a little anise, with some leaves of laurel infused in spring water, and
-used as a lotion and a draft.”
-
-Having assured me of this over and over again, she stole into her
-mistress’s chamber with the greatest trepidation, and took a little
-box out of the casket. Having first hugged and kissed it, and offered
-up a prayer that it would favor me with a prosperous flight, I hastily
-divested myself of all my garments, then greedily dipping my fingers
-into the box, and taking thence a considerable quantity of the
-ointment, I rubbed it all over my body and limbs. And now, flapping my
-arms up and down, I anxiously awaited my change into a bird. But no
-down, no shooting wings appeared. Instead, my hairs became thickened
-into bristles, and my tender skin was hardened into a hide; my hands
-and feet, too, no longer furnished with distinct fingers and toes,
-formed into massive hoofs, and a long tail projected from the extremity
-of my spine. My face was now enormous, my mouth wide, my nostrils
-gaping, and my lips hanging down. In like manner my ears grew hairy
-and of immoderate length, and I found in every respect I had become
-enlarged. Thus, hopelessly surveying all parts of my body, I beheld
-myself changed--not into a bird, but an ass.
-
-I wished to upbraid Fotis for the deed she had done; but, now deprived
-both of the gesture and voice of man, I could only expostulate with her
-silently with my under-lip hanging down, and looking sidewise at her
-with tearful eyes. As for her, as soon as she beheld me thus changed
-she beat her face with her hands, and cried aloud, “Wretch that I am,
-I am undone! In my haste and flurry I mistook one box for the other,
-deceived by their similarity. It is fortunate, however, that a remedy
-for this transformation is easily to be obtained; for, by only chewing
-roses, you will put off the form of an ass, and in an instant will
-become my Lucius once again. I only wish that I had prepared as usual
-some garlands of roses for us last evening; for then you would not have
-had to suffer the delay even of a single night. But at the break of
-dawn the remedy shall be provided for you.”
-
-Thus did she lament; and as for me, though I was a perfect ass, and
-instead of Lucius, a beast of burden, I still retained human sense.
-Long and deeply, in fact, did I consider with myself whether I ought
-not to bite and kick that most wicked woman to death. However, better
-thoughts recalled me from such rash designs, lest, by inflicting on
-Fotis the punishment of death, I should at once put an end to all
-chances of efficient assistance. So, bending my head low, and shaking
-my ears, I silently swallowed my wrongs for a time, and submitting
-to my most dreadful misfortune, I betook myself to the stable to the
-good horse which had carried me so well, and there I found another
-ass also, which belonged to my former host, Milo. Now it occurred to
-me that, if there are in dumb animals any silent and natural ties of
-sympathy, this horse of mine, being influenced by a certain feeling
-of recognition and compassion, would afford me room for a lodging and
-the rights of hospitality. But, oh, Jupiter Hospitalis, and all you
-the guardian divinities of Faith! this very excellent nag of mine and
-the ass put their heads together and immediately plotted schemes for
-my destruction; and as soon as they beheld me approaching the manger,
-laying back their ears and quite frantic with rage, they furiously
-attacked me with their heels, fearing I had design upon their food.
-Consequently, I was driven away into the farthest corner from that
-very barley which the evening before I had placed, with my own hands,
-before that most grateful servant of mine.
-
-Thus harshly treated and sent into banishment, I betook myself to a
-corner of the stable. And while I reflected on the insolence of my
-companions, and formed plans of vengeance against the perfidious steed,
-for the next day, when I should have become Lucius once more by the
-aid of the roses, I beheld against the central square pillar which
-supported the beams of the stable, a statue of the goddess Hippona,
-standing within a shrine, and nicely adorned with garlands of roses,
-and those, too, recently gathered. Inspired with hope, the moment I
-espied the salutary remedy I boldly mounted as far as ever my forelegs
-could stretch; and then, with neck at full length, and extending my
-lips as much as I possibly could, I endeavored to catch hold of the
-garlands. But by a most unlucky chance, just as I was endeavoring to
-accomplish this, my servant lad, who had the constant charge of my
-horse, suddenly espied me, sprang to his feet in a great rage, and
-exclaimed, “How long are we to put up with this vile hack, which but a
-few moments ago was for making an attack upon the food of the cattle,
-and is now doing the same even to the statues of the gods? But if I
-don’t this very instant cause this sacrilegious beast to be both sore
-and crippled”--and searching for something with which to strike me, he
-stumbled upon a bundle of sticks that lay there, and, picking out a
-knotted cudgel, the largest he could find among them all, he did not
-cease to belabor my poor sides, until a loud thumping and banging at
-the outer gates, and an uproar of the neighbors shouting “Thieves!”
-struck him with terror, and he took to his heels.
-
- --_The Golden Ass._
-
-
- _VICISSITUDES OF A DONKEY_
-
-When the keeper of the horses had taken me to the country, I found
-there none of the pleasure or the liberty I expected; for his wife,
-an avaricious, bad woman, immediately yoked me to the mill, and
-frequently striking me with a green stick, prepared bread for herself
-and her family at the expense of my hide. And not content to make me
-drudge for her own food only, she also ground corn for her neighbors,
-and so made money by my toil. Nor, after all my weary labors, did she
-even afford me the food which had been ordered for me; for she sold my
-barley to the neighboring husbandmen, after it had been bruised and
-ground in that very mill by my own roundabout drudgery; but to me,
-who had worked during the whole of the day at that laborious machine,
-she only gave, toward evening, some dirty, unsifted, and very gritty
-bran. I was brought low enough by these miseries; but cruel fortune
-exposed me to fresh torments, in order, I suppose, that I might boast
-of my brave deeds, both in peace and war, as the saying is. For that
-excellent equerry, complying, rather late, indeed, with his master’s
-orders, for a short time permitted me to associate with the herds of
-horses.
-
-At length a free ass, I capered for joy, and softly ambling up to
-the mares, chose out such as I thought would be the fittest for my
-concubines. But here my joyful hopes gave place to extreme danger. For
-the stallions, who were terribly strong creatures, more than a match
-for any ass, regarding me with suspicion, furiously pursued me as
-their rival, without respect for the laws of hospitable Jupiter. One
-of them, with his head and neck and ample chest aloft, struck at me
-like a pugilist with his forefeet; another, turning his brawny back,
-let fly at me with his hind feet; and another, with a vicious neigh,
-his ears thrown back, and showing his white teeth, sharp as spears,
-bit me all over. It was like what I have read in history of the King
-of Thrace, who exposed his unhappy guests to be lacerated and devoured
-by wild horses; for so sparing was that powerful tyrant of his barley,
-that he appeased the hunger of his voracious horses by casting human
-bodies to them for food. In fact, I was so worried and distracted by
-the continual attacks of the horses, that I wished myself back again at
-the mill-round.
-
-Fortune, however, would not be satisfied with my torments, and soon
-after visited me with another calamity; for I was employed to bring
-home wood from a mountain, and a boy, the most villainous of all boys,
-was appointed to drive me. It was not only that I was wearied by
-toiling up and down the steep and lofty mountain, nor that I wore away
-my hoofs by running on sharp stones, but I was cudgeled without end, so
-that all my bones ached to the very marrow. Moreover, by continually
-striking me on the off-haunch, and always in the same place, till
-the skin was broken, he occasioned a great ulcerous cavity, gaping
-like a trench or a window; yet he never ceased to hit me on the raw.
-He likewise laid such a load of wood on my back that you might have
-thought it was a burden prepared for an elephant, and not for a donkey.
-And whenever the ill-balanced load inclined to one side, instead of
-taking away some of the fagots from the heavier side, and thus easing
-me by somewhat lightening, or at least equalizing the pressure, he
-always remedied the inequality of the weight by the addition of stones.
-Nor yet, after so many miseries which I had endured, was he content
-with the immoderate weight of my burden; but when it happened that we
-had to pass over a river, he would leap on my back in order to keep his
-feet dry, as if his weight was but a trifling addition to the heavy
-mass. And if by any accident I happened to fall, through the weight of
-my burden and the slipperiness of the muddy bank, instead of giving
-me a helping hand, as he ought to have done, and pulling me up by the
-head-stall, or by my tail, or removing a part of my load, till at least
-I had got up again, this paragon of ass-drivers gave me no help at all,
-however weary I might be, but beginning from my head, or rather from my
-ears, he thrashed all the hair off my hide with a huge stick.
-
-Another piece of cruelty he practised on me was this: he twisted
-together a bundle of the sharpest and most venomous thorns, and tied
-them to my tail as a pendulous torment; so that, jerking against me
-when I walked, they pricked and stabbed me intolerably. Hence, I
-was in a sore dilemma; for when I ran away from him, to escape his
-unmerciful drubbings, I was hurt by the more vehement pricking of
-the thorns; and if I stood still for a short time, in order to avoid
-that pain, I was compelled by blows to go on. In fact, the rascally
-boy seemed to think of nothing else than how he might be the death
-of me by some means or other; and that he sometimes threatened with
-oaths to accomplish. And, indeed, there happened a thing by which his
-detestable malice was stimulated to more baneful efforts. On a certain
-day, when his excessive insolence had overcome my patience, I lifted
-up my powerful heels against him; and for this he retaliated by the
-following atrocity: he brought me into the road heavily laden with a
-bundle of coarse flax, securely bound together with cords, and placed
-in the middle of the burden a burning coal, which he had stolen from
-the neighboring village. Presently the fire spread through the slender
-fibers, flames burst forth, and I was ablaze all over. There appeared
-no refuge from immediate destruction, no hope of safety, and such a
-conflagration did not admit of delay or afford time for deliberation.
-Fortune, however, shone upon me in these cruel circumstances--perhaps
-for the purpose of reserving me for future dangers, but, at all events,
-liberating me from present and decreed death. By chance perceiving a
-neighboring pool muddy with the rain of the preceding day, I threw
-myself headlong into it; and the flame being immediately extinguished,
-I came out, lightened of my burden and liberated from destruction. But
-that audacious young rascal cast the blame of this most wicked deed of
-his on me, and affirmed to all the shepherds that as I was passing near
-the neighbors’ fires, I stumbled on purpose, and threw my load into the
-blaze. And he added, laughing at me, “How long shall we waste food on
-this fiery monster?”
-
- --_The Golden Ass._
-
-
-
-
- PART III
-
- MEDIÆVAL AGES
-
-
-SHAKESPEARE’S line,
-
- “In the vast deep and middle of the night,”
-
-gives no stronger or more absolute effect of darkness and blankness
-than the state of humorous literature during the vast deep and middle
-of the Mediæval Ages.
-
-It is not possible to catalogue it with reference to time or place, for
-the mass of it came from the mouths of Tale-tellers or Song-singers,
-supplemented by the pencils or chisels of the caricaturists.
-
-In the East, Folk Tales were abundant and they were brought to Europe
-as the wind scatters the seeds of vegetation.
-
-Fables, Fairy Tales, Mother Goose Jingles, Collections of Anecdotes,
-all hark back to these jesting stories of the ancient Orientals.
-
-Probably the oldest and most important link in the tracing of
-Indo-European Folk Lore is found in the Fables of Pilpay, or Bidpai.
-
-This is the Arabic translation of the Pahlavi translation of the
-Sanscrit original of the Panchatantra.
-
-The scope of the work is advice for the conduct of princes, offered in
-the guise of beast fables, and perhaps containing much of the material
-commonly attributed to Æsop.
-
-Little or nothing is known of Pilpay, and his era has been variously
-placed at different dates between 100 B.C. and 300 B.C.
-
-Others, indeed, declare that Pilpay was not an individual but the name
-is that of a bidbah, the court scholar of an Indian prince.
-
-The fables, as may be seen from the following selections, inculcate
-the moral teachings by means of stories about animals, to whom are
-attributed the thoughts and impulses of men.
-
-Kalidasa, called the greatest poet and dramatist of India, is also
-of uncertain origin and birth date. He probably lived early in the
-Christian Era, and his writings, though not strictly humorous are
-instinct with the spirit of satire.
-
-
- KALIDASA
-
- _HUNTING WITH A KING_
-
- MATHAVYA, _a Jester_
-
-_Mathavya._ Heigh-ho, what an unfortunate fellow I am, worn to a
-shadow by my royal friend’s sporting propensities! “Here’s a deer!”
-“There goes a boar!” “Yonder’s a tiger!” This is the constant subject
-of his remarks, while we tramp about in the heat of the day from jungle
-to jungle on paths where the trees give us no shade. If we are thirsty,
-we can get nothing to drink but some dirty water from a mountain stream
-full of dry leaves, tasting vilely bitter. If we are hungry, we are
-obliged to eat tough, flavorless game, and have to gulp it down at
-odd times as best we can. Even at night I have no peace. Sleeping is
-out of the question, with my bones all aching from trotting after my
-sporting friend; or, if I do contrive to doze, I am awakened at early
-dawn by the horrible din of a lot of rascally beaters and huntsmen,
-who must needs begin their deafening operations before sunrise. But
-these are not my only troubles; for here’s a fresh grievance, like
-a new boil rising upon an old one: Yesterday, while some of us were
-lagging behind, my royal friend went into a hermit’s enclosure after a
-deer, and there--worse luck--he caught sight of a beautiful girl called
-Sakuntala, the hermit’s daughter. From that moment not a single thought
-did he have of returning to town; and all night long not a wink of
-sleep did he get for his thoughts of the girl. But see--here he comes!
-I will pretend to stand in the easiest attitude for resting my bruised
-and crippled limbs.
-
- _Enter_ KING DUSHYANTA
-
-_Mathavya._ Ah, my friend, my hands cannot move to greet you with
-the accustomed salutation! I can do no more than command my lips to
-wish your Majesty success.
-
-_King._ Why, what has paralyzed your limbs?
-
-_Mathavya._ You might as well ask me how it is my eye waters after
-you have poked your finger into it!
-
-_King._ I don’t understand what you mean. Explain yourself.
-
-_Mathavya._ My dear friend, is that straight reed you see yonder
-bent crooked by its own act, or by the force of the current?
-
-_King._ The current of the river is the cause, I suppose.
-
-_Mathavya._ Yes, just as you are the cause of my crippled limbs.
-
-_King._ How so?
-
-_Mathavya._ Here you are, living the life of a savage in a
-desolate, forlorn region, while the government of the country is taking
-care of itself. And poor I am no longer master of my own legs, but have
-to follow you about day after day in your hunting for wild beasts, till
-all my bones ache and get out of joint. Please, my dear friend, do let
-us have one day’s rest!--“_Sakuntala._”
-
-
- UNKNOWN AUTHOR
-
- _THE CREATION OF WOMAN_
-
-In the beginning, when Twashtri came to the creation of women, he found
-that he had exhausted his materials in the making of man, and that no
-solid elements were left. In this dilemma, after profound meditation,
-he did as follows:
-
-He took the rotundity of the moon, and the curves of creepers and the
-clinging of tendrils, and the trembling of grass, and the slenderness
-of the reed, and the bloom of flowers, and the lightness of leaves,
-and the tapering of the elephant’s trunk, and the glances of deer,
-and the joyous gaiety of sunbeams, and the weeping of clouds, and
-the fickleness of the winds, and the timidity of the hare, and the
-vanity of the peacock, and the softness of the parrot’s bosom, and the
-hardness of adamant, and the cruelty of the tiger, and the hot glow of
-fire, and the coldness of snow, and the chattering of jays, and the
-cooing of the dove, and the hypocrisy of the crane, and the fidelity of
-the drake. Compounding all these together, he made woman, and gave her
-to man.
-
-But after a week man came to him, and said:
-
-“Lord, this creature that you have given me makes my life miserable.
-She chatters incessantly, and teases me beyond endurance, never leaving
-me alone. She requires attention every moment, takes up all my time,
-weeps about nothing, and is always idle. So I have come to give her
-back again, as I cannot live with her.”
-
-Then Twashtri said, “Very well,” and took her back.
-
-After another week man came to him again, saying:
-
-“Lord, I find that my life is lonely since I surrendered that creature.
-I remember how she used to dance and sing to me, and look at me out of
-the corner of her eye, and play with me, and cling to me. Her laughter
-was music; she was beautiful to look at, and soft to touch. Pray give
-her back to me again.”
-
-And Twashtri said, “Very well,” and returned woman to man.
-
-But after only three days had passed, man appeared once more before the
-Creator, to whom he said:
-
-“Lord, I know not how it is, but, after all, I have come to the
-conclusion that she is more trouble than pleasure to me. Therefore I
-beg that you take her back again.”
-
-Twashtri, however, replied:
-
-“Out upon you! Be off! I will have no more of this. You must manage how
-you can.”
-
-Then quoth man:
-
-“But I cannot live with her!”
-
-To which Twashtri answered:
-
-“Neither could you live without her.” And he turned his back on man,
-and went on with his work.
-
-Then said man:
-
-“Alas, what is to be done? For I cannot live either with or without
-her!”--_The Churning of the Ocean of Time_ (_Sansara-sagara-manthanam_).
-
-The Talmud is far from a humorous work, but it embodies many bits of
-wise wit, and is the original source of many present day proverbs.
-
-In its twelve folio volumes it contains the work of the ancient
-Jews for nearly a thousand years, and among its fine parables and
-interesting legends gleams of rare wit frequently occur.
-
-
- _EXTRACTS FROM THE TALMUD_
-
-The forest trees once asked the fruit trees: “Why is the rustling of
-your leaves not heard in the distance?” The fruit trees replied: “We
-can dispense with the rustling to manifest our presence, our fruits
-testify for us.” The fruit trees then inquired of the forest trees:
-“Why do your leaves rustle almost continually?” “We are forced to call
-the attention of man to our existence.”
-
-Too many captains sink the ship.
-
-Birds of a feather flock together; and so with men--like to like.
-
-He laid his money on the horns of a deer.
-
-Keep partners with him whom the hour favors.
-
-Attend no auctions if thou hast no money.
-
-Poverty comes from God, but not dirt.
-
-Ignorance and conceit go hand in hand.
-
-Better eat onions all thy life than dine upon geese and chickens once
-and then long in vain for more ever after.
-
-Go to sleep without supper, but rise without debt.
-
-Do not live near a pious fool.
-
-If thy friends agree in calling thee an ass, go and get a halter around
-thee.
-
-Love your wife truly and faithfully, and do not compel her to hard work.
-
-When our conjugal love was strong, the width of the threshold offered
-sufficient accommodation for both of us; but now that it has cooled
-down, a couch sixty yards wide is too narrow.
-
-Man is generally led the way which he is inclined to go.
-
-If the thief has no opportunity, he thinks himself honorable.
-
-Were it not for the existence of passions, no one would build a house,
-marry a wife, beget children, or do any work.
-
-What should man do in order to live? Deaden his passions. What should
-man do in order to die? Give himself entirely to life.
-
-He who hardens his heart with pride softens his brain with the same.
-
-Do not reveal thy secret to the apes.
-
- Keep shut the doors of thy mouth
- Even from the wife of thy bosom.
-
-Use thy best vase to-day, for to-morrow it may, perchance, be broken.
-
-The world is only saved by the breath of the school-children.
-
-“Repeat,” “repeat,” that is the best medicine for memory.
-
-A woman schemes while plying the spindle.
-
-Alas! for one thing that goes and never returns. What is it? Youth.
-
-Rab Safra had a jewel for which he asked the price of ten pieces of
-gold. Several dealers saw the jewel and offered five gold pieces.
-Rab Safra declined, and the merchants left him. After a second
-consideration, he, however, resolved upon selling the jewel for five
-pieces. The next day, just as Rab Safra was at prayers, the merchants
-unexpectedly returned: “Sir,” said they to him, “we come to you again
-to do business after all. Do you wish to part with the jewel for the
-price we offered you?” But Rab Safra made no reply. “Well, well; be
-not angered; we will add another two pieces.” Rab Safra still remained
-silent. “Well, then, be it as you say; we will give you ten pieces,
-the price you asked.” By this time Rab Safra had ended his prayer,
-and said: “Sirs, I was at prayers, and could not hear you. As for the
-jewel, I have already resolved upon selling it at the price you offered
-me yesterday. If you then pay me five pieces of gold, I shall be
-satisfied.”
-
-Chief of the Arabian collections of tales is, of course, The Arabian
-Nights’ Entertainment, or The Thousand And One Nights.
-
-Many of these tales are of very ancient origin, others have been added
-as the centuries went by.
-
-Though the stories show their Persian, Indian and Arabian origin, the
-collection as it stands at present was compiled in Egypt not more than
-five or six centuries ago.
-
-As is well known, the stories were told night after night, by
-Scheherazade, to preserve her life so long as the king’s interest might
-be held. Most of the tales show little or no humor, many are long and
-wearisome, many more too broad to quote, but several are given that may
-be considered as representative of Oriental wit.
-
-
- _THE SIMPLETON AND THE SHARPER_
-
-A certain simple fellow was once going along, haling his ass after
-him by the halter, when a couple of sharpers saw him and one said to
-his fellow, “I will take that ass from yonder man.” “How wilt thou do
-that?” asked the other. “Follow me and I will show thee,” replied the
-first. So he went up to the ass and loosing it from the halter, gave
-the beast to his fellow; then clapped the halter on his own head and
-followed the simpleton, till he knew that the other had got clean off
-with the ass when he stood still. The man pulled at the halter, but the
-thief stirred not; so he turned and seeing the halter on a man’s neck,
-said to him, “Who art thou?” Quoth the sharper, “I am thine ass and my
-story is a strange one. Know that I have a pious old mother and came
-in to her one day, drunk; and she said to me, “O my son, repent to God
-the Most High of these thy transgressions.” But I took the cudgel and
-beat her, whereupon she cursed me and God the Most High changed me into
-an ass and caused me fall into thy hands, where I have remained till
-now. However, today, my mother called me to mind and her heart relented
-towards me; so she prayed for me, and God restored me to my former
-shape of a man.” “There is no power and no virtue but in God the Most
-High, the Supreme!” cried the simpleton. “O my brother, I conjure thee
-by Allah acquit me of what I have done with thee in the way of riding
-and so forth.”
-
-Then he let the sharper go and returned home, drunken with chagrin and
-concern. His wife asked him, “What ails thee and where is the ass?”
-And he answered, “Thou knowest not what was this ass; but I will tell
-thee.” So he told her the story, and she exclaimed, “Woe worth us
-for God the Most High! How could we have used a man as a beast of
-burden, all this while?” And she gave alms and asked pardon of God.
-Then the man abode awhile at home, idle, till she said to him, “How
-long wilt thou sit at home, idle? Go to the market and buy us an ass
-and do thy business with it.” Accordingly, he went to the market and
-stopping by the ass-stand, saw his own ass for sale. So he went up to
-it and clapping his mouth to its ear, said to it, “Out on thee, thou
-good-for-nought! Doubtless thou hast been getting drunk again and
-beating thy mother! But, by Allah, I will never buy thee more!” And he
-left it and went away.
-
-
- _THE THIEF TURNED MERCHANT AND THE OTHER THIEF_
-
-There was once a thief who repented to God the Most High and making
-good his repentance, opened himself a shop for the sale of stuffs,
-where he continued to trade awhile. One day, he locked his shop and
-went home; and in the night there came to the bazaar a cunning thief
-disguised in the habit of the merchant, and pulling out keys from his
-sleeve, said to the watchman of the market, “Light me this candle.”
-So the watchman took the candle and went to get a light, whilst the
-thief opened the shop and lit another candle he had with him. When
-the watchman came back, he found him seated in the shop, looking over
-the account books and reckoning with his fingers; nor did he leave
-to do thus till point of day, when he said to the man, “Fetch me a
-camel-driver and his camel, to carry some goods for me.” So the man
-fetched him a camel, and the thief took four bales of stuffs and gave
-them to the camel-driver, who loaded them on his beast. Then he gave
-the watchman two dirhems and went away after the camel-driver, the
-watchman the while believing him to be the owner of the shop.
-
-Next morning, the merchant came and the watchman greeted him with
-blessings, because of the two dirhems, much to the surprise of the
-former, who knew not what he meant. When he opened his shop, he saw
-the droppings of the wax and the account-book lying on the floor, and
-looking round, found four bales of stuffs missing. So he asked the
-watchman what had happened and he told him what had passed in the
-night, whereupon the merchant bade him fetch the camel-driver and
-said to the latter, “Whither didst thou carry the stuffs?” “To such
-a wharf,” answered the driver; “and I stowed them on board such a
-vessel.” “Come with me thither,” said the merchant. So the camel-driver
-carried him to the wharf and showed him the barque and her owner. Quoth
-the merchant to the latter, “Whither didst thou carry the merchant and
-the stuff?” “To such a place,” answered the master, “where he fetched
-a camel-driver and setting the bales on the camel, went I know not
-whither.” “Fetch me the camel-driver,” said the merchant; so he fetched
-him and the merchant said to him, “Whither didst thou carry the bales
-of stuffs from the ship?” “To such a khan,” answered he. “Come thither
-with me and show it to me,” said the merchant.
-
-So the camel-driver went with him to a khan at a distance from the
-shore, where he had set down the stuffs, and showed him the mock
-merchant’s magazine, which he opened and found therein his four bales
-untouched and unopened. The thief had laid his mantle over them; so
-the merchant took the bales and the cloak and delivered them to the
-camel-driver, who laid them on his camel; after which the merchant
-locked the magazine and went away with the camel-driver. On the way, he
-met the thief who followed him, till he had shipped the bales, when he
-said to him “O my brother (God have thee in His keeping!), thou hast
-recovered thy goods, and nought of them is lost; so give me back my
-cloak.” The merchant laughed and giving him back his cloak, let him go
-unhindered.
-
-
- _THE IGNORANT MAN WHO SET UP FOR A SCHOOLMASTER_
-
-There was once, among the hangers-on of the collegiate mosque, a man
-who knew not how to read and write and got his bread by gulling the
-folk. One day, he bethought him to open a school and teach children;
-so he got him tablets and written scrolls and hung them up in a
-conspicuous place. Then he enlarged his turban and sat down at the door
-of the school. The people, who passed by and saw his turban and the
-tablets and scrolls, thought he must be a very learned doctor; so they
-brought him their children; and he would say to this, “Write,” and to
-that, “Read”; and thus they taught one another.
-
-One day, as he sat, as of wont, at the door of the school, he saw a
-woman coming up, with a letter in her hand, and said to himself, “This
-woman doubtless seeks me, that I may read her the letter she has in her
-hand. How shall I do with her seeing I cannot read writing?” And he
-would fain have gone down and fled from her; but, before he could do
-this, she overtook him and said to him, “Whither away?” Quoth he, “I
-purpose to pray the noontide-prayer and return.” “Noon is yet distant,”
-said she; “so read me this letter.” He took the letter and turning
-it upside down, fell to looking at it, now shaking his head and anon
-knitting his eyebrows and showing concern. Now the letter came from
-the woman’s husband, who was absent; and when she saw the schoolmaster
-do thus, she said, “Doubtless my husband is dead, and this learned man
-is ashamed to tell me so.” So she said to him, “O my lord, if he be
-dead, tell me.” But he shook his head and held his peace. Then said
-she, “Shall I tear my clothes?” “Tear,” answered he. “Shall I buffet my
-face,” asked she; and he said, “Buffet.” So she took the letter from
-his hand and returning home, fell a-weeping, she and her children.
-
-One of her neighbours heard her weeping and asking what ailed her, was
-answered, “She hath gotten a letter, telling her that her husband is
-dead.” Quoth the man, “This is a lying saying; for I had a letter from
-him but yesterday, advising me that he is in good health and case and
-will be with her after ten days.” So he rose forthright and going in
-to her, said, “Where is the letter thou hast received?” She brought
-it to him, and he took it and read it; and it ran as follows, after
-the usual salutation, “I am well and in good health and case and will
-be with thee after ten days. Meanwhile, I send thee a quilt and an
-extinguisher.”[1] So she took the letter and returning with it to the
-schoolmaster, said to him, “What moved thee to deal thus with me?” And
-she repeated to him what her neighbour had told her of his having sent
-her a quilt and an extinguisher. “Thou art in the right,” answered
-he. “But excuse me, good woman; for I was, at the time, troubled and
-absent-minded and seeing the extinguisher wrapped in the quilt, thought
-that he was dead and they had shrouded him.” The woman, not smoking the
-cheat, said, “Thou art excused,” and taking the letter, went away.
-
-
- _THE HUSBAND AND THE PARROT_
-
-There lived once a good man who had a beautiful wife, of whom he was
-so passionately fond that he could scarcely bear to have her out of
-his sight. One day, when some particular business obliged him to leave
-her, he went to a place where they sold all sorts of birds. Here he
-purchased a parrot, which was not only highly accomplished in the art
-of talking, but also possessed the rare gift of telling everything that
-was done in its presence. The husband took it home in a cage to his
-wife, and begged of her to keep it in her chamber, and take great care
-of it during his absence. After this he set out on his journey.
-
-On his return he did not fail to interrogate the parrot on what had
-passed while he was away; and the bird very expertly related a few
-circumstances which occasioned the husband to reprimand his wife.
-She supposed that some of her slaves had betrayed her, but they all
-assured her they were faithful, and agreed in charging the parrot with
-the crime. Desirous of being convinced of the truth of this matter,
-the wife devised a method of quieting the suspicions of her husband,
-and at the same time of revenging herself on the parrot, if he were
-the culprit. The next time the husband was absent she ordered one
-of her slaves during the night to turn a handmill under the bird’s
-cage, another to throw water over it like rain, and a third to wave a
-looking-glass before the parrot by the light of a candle. The slaves
-were employed the greater part of the night in doing what their
-mistress had ordered them, and succeeded to her satisfaction.
-
-The following day, when the husband returned, he again applied to the
-parrot to be informed of what had taken place. The bird replied, “My
-dear master, the lightning, the thunder, and the rain have so disturbed
-me the whole night, that, I cannot tell you how much I have suffered.”
-
-The husband, who knew there had been no storm that night, became
-convinced that the parrot did not always relate facts, and that having
-told an untruth in this particular, he had also deceived him with
-respect to his wife. Being therefore extremely enraged with it, he took
-the bird out of the cage and, dashing it on the floor, killed it. He,
-however, afterward learned from his neighbors that the poor parrot had
-told no falsehood in reference to his wife’s conduct, which made him
-repent of having destroyed it.
-
-
- _BAKBARAH’S VISIT TO THE HAREM_
-
-Bakbarah the Toothless, my second brother, walking one day through the
-city, met an old woman in a retired street. She thus accosted him: “I
-have,” said she, “a word to say to you, if you will stay a moment.” He
-immediately stopped, and asked her what she wished. “If you have time
-to go with me,” she replied, “I will take you to a most magnificent
-palace, where you shall see a lady more beautiful than the day. She
-will receive you with a great deal of pleasure, and will treat you with
-a collation and excellent wine. I have no occasion, I believe, to say
-any more.” “But is what you tell me,” replied my brother, “true?” “I
-am not given to lying,” replied the old woman; “I propose nothing to
-you but what is the fact. You must, however, pay attention to what I
-require of you. You must be prudent, speak little, and must comply with
-everything.”
-
-Bakbarah having agreed to the conditions, she walked on before, and he
-followed her. They arrived at the gate of a large palace, where there
-were a great number of officers and servants. Some of them wished to
-stop my brother, but the old woman no sooner spoke to them, than they
-let him pass. She then turned to my brother, and said, “Remember that
-the young lady to whose house I have brought you is fond of mildness
-and modesty; nor does she like being contradicted. If you satisfy her
-in this, there is no doubt you will obtain whatever you wish.” Bakbarah
-thanked her for this advice, and promised to profit by it.
-
-She then took him into a very beautiful apartment, which formed part of
-a square building. It corresponded with the magnificence of the palace;
-there was a gallery all round it, and in the midst of it a very fine
-garden. The old woman made him sit down on a sofa that was handsomely
-furnished, and desired him to wait there a moment, till she went to
-inform the young lady of his arrival.
-
-As my brother had never before been in so superb a place, he
-immediately began to observe all the beautiful things that were in
-sight; and judging of his good fortune by the magnificence he beheld,
-he could hardly contain his joy. He almost immediately heard a great
-noise, which came from a long troop of slaves who were enjoying
-themselves, and came toward him, bursting out at the same time into
-violent fits of laughter. In the midst of them he perceived a young
-lady of most extraordinary beauty, whom he easily discovered to be
-their mistress, by the attention they paid her. Bakbarah, who expected
-merely a private conversation with the lady, was very much surprised at
-the arrival of so large a company. In the meantime the slaves, putting
-on a serious air, approached him; and when the young lady was near the
-sofa, my brother, who had risen up, made a most profound reverence.
-She took the seat of honor, and then, having requested him to resume
-his, she said to him, in a smiling manner, “I am delighted to see you,
-and wish you everything you can yourself desire.” “Madam,” replied
-Bakbarah, “I cannot wish a greater honor than that of appearing before
-you.” “You seem to me,” she replied, “of so good-humored a disposition,
-that we shall pass our time very agreeably together.”
-
-She immediately ordered a collation to be served up, and they covered
-the table with baskets of various fruits and sweetmeats. She then sat
-down at the table along with my brother and the slaves. As it happened
-that he was placed directly opposite to her, she observed, as soon
-as he opened his mouth to eat, he had no teeth; she remarked this to
-her slaves, and they all laughed immoderately at it. Bakbarah, who
-from time to time raised his head to look at the lady and saw that
-she was laughing, imagined it was from the pleasure she felt at being
-in his company, and flattered himself, therefore, that she would soon
-order the slaves to retire, and that he should enjoy her conversation
-in private. The lady easily guessed his thoughts, and took a pleasure
-in continuing a delusion which seemed so agreeable to him: she said a
-thousand soft, tender things, and presented the best of everything to
-him with her own hand.
-
-When the collation was finished, she arose from table; ten slaves
-instantly took some musical instruments and began to play and sing,
-the others to dance. In order to make himself the more agreeable, my
-brother also began dancing, and the young lady herself partook of the
-amusement. After they had danced for some time, they all sat down to
-take breath. The lady ordered him to bring her a glass of wine, then
-cast a smile at my brother, to intimate that she was going to drink to
-his health. He instantly rose up, and stood while she drank. As soon
-as she had finished, instead of returning the glass, she had it filled
-again, and presented it to my brother, that he might pledge her.
-
-Bakbarah took the glass, and in receiving it from the young lady he
-kissed her hand, then drank to her, standing the whole time, to show
-his gratitude for the favor she had done him. After this the young
-lady made him sit down by her side, and began to give him signs of
-affection. She put her arm round his neck, and frequently gave him
-gentle pats with her hand. Delighted with these favors, he thought
-himself the happiest man in the world; he also was tempted to begin
-to play in the same manner with this charming creature, but he durst
-not take this liberty before the slaves, who had their eyes upon him,
-and who continued to laugh at this trifling. The young lady still kept
-giving him such gentle taps, till at last she began to apply them so
-forcibly that he grew angry at it. He reddened, and got up to sit
-farther from so rude a playfellow. At this moment the old woman, who
-had brought my brother there, looked at him in such a way as to make
-him understand that he was wrong, and had forgotten the advice she had
-before given him. He acknowledged his fault, and, to repair it, he
-again approached the young lady, pretending that he had not gone to a
-distance through anger. She then took hold of him by the arm, and drew
-him toward her, making him again sit down close by her, and continuing
-to bestow a thousand pretended caresses on him. Her slaves, whose only
-aim was to divert her, began to take a part in the sport. One of them
-gave poor Bakbarah a fillip on the nose with all her strength, another
-pulled his ears almost off, while the rest kept giving him slaps, which
-passed the limits of raillery and fun.
-
-My brother bore all this with the most exemplary patience; he even
-affected an air of gaiety, and looked at the old woman with a forced
-smile. “You were right,” said he, “when you said that I should find a
-very fine, agreeable, and charming young lady. How much am I obliged
-to you for it!” “Oh, this is nothing yet,” replied the old woman;
-“let her alone, and you will see very different things by and by.”
-The young lady then spoke. “You are a fine man,” said she to my
-brother, “and I am delighted at finding in you so much kindness and
-complaisance toward all my little fooleries, and that you possess
-a disposition so conformable to mine.” “Madam,” replied Bakbarah,
-ravished with this speech, “I am no longer myself, but am entirely at
-your disposal; you have full power to do with me as you please.” “You
-afford me the greatest delight,” added the lady, “by showing so much
-submission to my inclination. I am perfectly satisfied with you, and I
-wish that you should be equally so with me. Bring,” cried she to the
-attendants, “perfumes and rose-water!” At these words two slaves went
-out and instantly returned, one with a silver vase, in which there was
-exquisite aloe-wood, with which she perfumed him, and the other with
-rose-water, which she sprinkled over his face and hands. My brother
-could not contain himself for joy at seeing himself so handsomely and
-honorably treated.
-
-When this ceremony was finished, the young lady commanded the slaves
-who had before sung and played to recommence their concert. They
-obeyed; and while this was going on, the lady called another slave,
-and ordered her to take my brother with her saying, “You know what to
-do; and when you have finished, return with him to me.” Bakbarah, who
-heard this order given, immediately got up, and going toward the old
-woman, who had also risen to accompany the slave, he requested her to
-tell him what they wished him to do. “Our mistress,” replied she, in
-a whisper, “is extremely curious, and she wishes to see how you would
-look disguised as a female; this slave, therefore, has orders to take
-you with her, to paint your eyebrows, shave your mustachios, and dress
-you like a woman.” “You may paint my eyebrows,” said my brother, “as
-much as you please; to that I readily agree, because I can wash them
-again; but as to shaving me, that, mind you, I will by no means suffer.
-How do you think I dare appear without my mustachios?” “Take care,”
-answered the woman, “how you oppose anything that is required of you.
-You will quite spoil your fortune, which is going on as prosperously as
-possible. She loves you, and wishes to make you happy. Will you, for
-the sake of a paltry mustachio, forego the most delicious favors any
-man can possibly enjoy?”
-
-Bakbarah at length yielded to the old woman’s arguments, and without
-saying another word, he suffered the slave to conduct him to an
-apartment, where they painted his eyebrows red. They shaved his
-mustachios, and were absolutely going to shave his beard. But the
-easiness of my brother’s tempter did not carry him quite so far as to
-suffer that. “Not a single stroke,” he exclaimed, “shall you take at
-my beard!” The slave represented to him that it was of no use to have
-cut off his mustachios if he would not also agree to lose his beard;
-that a hairy countenance did not at all coincide with the dress of a
-woman; and that she was astonished that a man, who was on the very
-point of possessing the most beautiful woman in Bagdad, should care for
-his beard. The old woman also joined with the slave, and added fresh
-reasons; she threatened my brother with being quite in disgrace with
-her mistress. In short, she said so much that he at last permitted them
-to do what they wished.
-
-As soon as they had dressed him like a woman, they brought him back
-to the young lady, who burst into so violent a fit of laughter at the
-sight of him, that she fell down on the sofa on which she was sitting.
-The slaves all began to clap their hands, so that my brother was put
-quite out of countenance. The young lady then got up, and continuing
-to laugh all the time, said, “After the complaisance you have shown to
-me, I should be guilty of a crime not to bestow my whole heart upon
-you; but it is necessary that you should do one thing more for love
-of me: it is only to dance before me as you are.” He obeyed; and the
-young lady and the slaves danced with him, laughing all the while as if
-they were crazy. After they had danced for some time, they all threw
-themselves upon the poor wretch, and gave him so many blows, both with
-their hands and feet, that he fell down almost fainting. The old woman
-came to his assistance, and without giving him time to be angry at such
-ill treatment, she whispered in his ear, “Console yourself, for you
-are now arrived at the conclusion of your sufferings, and are about
-to receive the reward for them. You have only one thing more to do,”
-added she, “and that is a mere trifle. You must know that my mistress
-makes it her custom, whenever she has drunk a little, as she has done
-to-day, not to suffer anyone she loves to come near her, unless they
-are stripped to their shirt. When they are in this situation, she takes
-advantage of a short distance, and begins running before them through
-the gallery, and from room to room, till they have caught her. This is
-one of her fancies. Now, at whatever distance from you she may start,
-you, who are so light and active, can easily overtake her. Undress
-yourself quickly, therefore, and remain in your shirt, and do not make
-any difficulty about it.”
-
-My brother had already carried his complying humor too far to stop
-at this. The young lady at the same time took off her outer robe, in
-order to run with greater ease. When they were both ready to begin the
-race, the lady took the advantage of about twenty paces, and then
-started with wonderful celerity. My brother followed her with all
-his strength, but not without exciting the risibility of the slaves,
-who kept clapping their hands all the time. The young lady, instead
-of losing any of the advantage she had first taken, kept continually
-gaining ground of my brother. She ran round the gallery two or three
-times, then turned off down a long dark passage, where she saved
-herself by a turn of which my brother was ignorant. Bakbarah, who kept
-constantly following her, lost sight of her in this passage, and he was
-also obliged to run much slower, because it was so dark. He at last
-perceived a light, toward which he made all possible haste; he went out
-through a door which was instantly shut upon him.
-
-You may easily imagine what was his astonishment at finding himself
-in the middle of a street inhabited by curriers. Nor were they less
-surprised at seeing him in his shirt, his eyebrows painted red, and
-without either beard or mustachios. They began to clap their hands, to
-hoot at him; and some even ran after him, and kept lashing him with
-strips of their leather. They then stopped him, and set him on an ass,
-which they accidentally met with, and led him through the city, exposed
-to the laughter and shouts of the mob.
-
-To complete his misfortune, they led him through the street where the
-judge of the police court lived, and this magistrate immediately sent
-to inquire the cause of the uproar. The curriers informed him that they
-saw my brother, exactly in the state he then was, come out of the gate
-leading to the apartments of the women belonging to the grand vizier,
-which opened into their street. The judge then ordered the unfortunate
-Bakbarah, upon the spot, to receive a hundred strokes on the soles of
-his feet, to be conducted without the city, and forbade him ever to
-enter it again.--_History of the Barber’s Second Brother._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Persian Wit and humor is best known to us through the _Rubaiyat of
-Omar Khayyam_.
-
-While their interest lies partly in the adept translation, the wit of
-the original is clearly self evident.
-
-
- XXVII
-
- Myself when young did eagerly frequent
- Doctor and Saint, and heard great argument
- About it and about: but evermore
- Came out by the same door where in I went.
-
-
- XXVIII
-
- With them the seed of Wisdom did I sow,
- And with mine own hand wrought to make it grow;
- And this was all the Harvest that I reap’d--
- “I came like Water, and like Wind I go.”
-
-
- XXIX
-
- Into this Universe, and _Why_ not knowing
- Nor _Whence_, like Water willy-nilly flowing;
- And out of it, as Wind along the Waste,
- I know not _Whither_, willy-nilly blowing.
-
-
- XXX
-
- What, without asking, hither hurried _Whence_?
- And, without asking, _Whither_ hurried hence!
- Oh, many a Cup of this forbidden Wine
- Must drown the memory of that insolence!
-
-
- XXXI
-
- Up from Earth’s Centre through the Seventh Gate
- I rose, and on the Throne of Saturn sate,
- And many a Knot unravel’d by the Road;
- But not the Master-knot of Human Fate.
-
-
- XXXII
-
- There was the Door to which I found no Key;
- There was the Veil through which I might not see:
- Some little talk awhile of ME and THEE
- There was--and then no more of THEE and ME.
-
-
- LIV
-
- Waste not your Hour, nor in the vain pursuit
- Of This and That endeavour and dispute;
- Better be jocund with the fruitful Grape
- Than sadden after none, or bitter, Fruit.
-
-
- LV
-
- You know, my Friends, with what a brave Carouse
- I made a Second Marriage in my house;
- Divorced old barren Reason from my Bed,
- And took the Daughter of the Vine to Spouse.
-
-
- LIX
-
- The Grape that can with Logic absolute
- The Two-and-Seventy jarring Sects confute:
- The sovereign Alchemist that in a trice
- Life’s leaden metal into Gold transmute:
-
-
- LXI
-
- Why, be this Juice the growth of God, who dare
- Blaspheme the twisted tendril as a Snare?
- A Blessing, we should use it, should we not?
- And if a Curse--why, then, Who set it there?
-
-
- LXVIII
-
- We are no other than a moving row
- Of Magic Shadow-shapes that come and go
- Round with the Sun-illumin’d Lantern held
- In Midnight by the Master of the Show;
-
-
- LXIX
-
- But helpless Pieces of the Game He plays
- Upon this Chequer-board of Nights and Days:
- Hither and thither moves, and checks, and slays,
- And one by one back in the Closet lays.
-
-
- LXX
-
- The Ball no question makes of Ayes and Noes,
- But Here or There as strikes the Player goes;
- And He that toss’d you down into the Field,
- _He_ knows about it all--HE knows--HE knows!
-
-
- LXXII
-
- And that inverted Bowl they call the Sky,
- Whereunder crawling coop’d we live and die,
- Lift not your hands to _It_ for help--for it
- As impotently moves as you or I.
-
-
- XCIII
-
- Indeed the Idols I have loved so long
- Have done my credit in this World much wrong:
- Have drown’d my Glory in a shallow Cup,
- And sold my Reputation for a Song.
-
-
- XCIV
-
- Indeed, indeed, Repentance oft before
- I swore--but was I sober when I swore?
- And then and then came Spring, and Rose-in-hand
- My thread-bare Penitence apieces tore.
-
-
- XCV
-
- And much as Wine has play’d the Infidel,
- And robb’d me of my Robe of Honour--Well,
- I wonder often what the Vintners buy
- One half so precious as the stuff they sell.
-
-Firdausi, the greatest Epic poet of Persia, gives us this witty epigram.
-
-
- _ON SULTAN MAHMOUD_
-
- ’Tis said our monarch’s liberal mind
- Is like the ocean, unconfined.
- Happy are they who prove it so;
- ’Tis not for me that fact to know:
- I’ve plunged within its waves, ’tis true,
- But not a single pearl could view.
-
-Sadi, one of the greatest of Persian poets, was also a great scholar,
-and wrote in both Persian and Arabian, beside being, it is said, the
-first poet to write in Hindustani.
-
-His works are numerous and beautiful, both in verse and prose, and show
-a graceful wit.
-
-
- _DISCOMFORT BETTER THAN DROWNING_
-
-A king was embarked along with a Persian boy slave on board a ship. The
-boy had never been at sea nor experienced the inconvenience of a ship.
-He set up a weeping and wailing, and all his limbs were in a state
-of trepidation; and however much they soothed him, he was not to be
-pacified. The king’s pleasure-party was disconcerted by him; but there
-was no help for it. On board that ship there was a physician. He said
-to the king, “If you will order it, I can manage to silence him.” The
-king replied, “It will be an act of great favor.”
-
-The physician so directed that they threw the boy into the sea, and
-after he had plunged repeatedly, they seized him by the hair of the
-head and drew him close to the ship, when he clung with both hands to
-the rudder, and, scrambling upon the deck, slunk into a corner and sat
-down quiet. The king, pleased with what he saw, said, “What art is
-there in this?” The boy replied that originally he had not experienced
-the danger of being drowned, and undervalued the safety of being in a
-ship. In like manner, a person is aware of the preciousness of health
-when he is overtaken with the calamity of sickness.
-
-_A barley loaf of bread has, oh, epicure, no relish for thee._
-
-_To the houris, or nymphs of paradise, purgatory would be a hell. Ask
-the inmates of hell whether purgatory is not paradise._
-
-_There is a distinction between the man that folds his mistress
-in his arms and him whose two eyes are fixed on the door expecting
-her._--_The Rose Garden (Gulistan)._
-
-
- _THE STRICT SCHOOLMASTER AND THE MILD_
-
-In the west of Africa I saw a schoolmaster of a sour aspect and bitter
-speech, crabbed, misanthropic, and intemperate, insomuch that the sight
-of him would derange the ecstasies of the orthodox, and his manner of
-reading the Koran cast a gloom over the minds of the pious. A number
-of handsome boys and lovely virgins were subject to his despotic sway;
-they had neither the permission of a smile nor the option of a word,
-for this moment he would smite the silver cheek of one of them with his
-hand, and the next put the crystalline legs of another in the stocks.
-In short, their parents, I heard, were made aware of a part of his
-angry violence, and beat and drove him from his charge.
-
-They made over his school to a peaceable creature, so pious, meek,
-simple, and good-natured that he never spoke till forced to do so, nor
-would he utter a word that could offend anybody. The children forgot
-that awe in which they had held their first master, and remarking the
-angelic disposition of their second master, they became one after
-another as wicked as devils. Relying on his clemency, they would so
-neglect their studies as to pass most part of their time at play, and
-break the tablets of their unfinished tasks over each other’s heads.
-
-_When the schoolmaster relaxes in his discipline, the children will
-stop to play at marbles in the market-place._
-
-A fortnight after I passed by the gate of that mosque, and saw the
-first schoolmaster, with whom they had been obliged to make friends and
-to restore him to his place. I was in truth offended, and calling on
-God to witness, asked, saying, “Why have they again made a devil the
-preceptor of angels?”
-
-A facetious old gentleman, who had seen much of life, listened to me,
-and replied, “A king sent his son to school, and hung a tablet of
-silver round his neck. On the face of that tablet he had written in
-golden letters, ‘The severity of the master is more useful than the
-indulgence of the father.’”--_The Rose Garden (Gulistan)._
-
-
- _HATEFULNESS OF OLD HUSBANDS_
-
-An old man married a young virgin. He adorned the bridal chamber with
-flowers, seated himself with her in private, and riveted his heart and
-eyes upon her. Many a long night he would lie awake and indulge in
-pleasantries and jests, in order to remove any coyness on her part, and
-encourage familiarity. One of those nights he addressed her thus:
-
-“Lofty fortune was your friend, and the eye of your prosperity broad
-awake, when you fell into the society of such an old gentleman as I
-am, being of mature judgment, well-bred, worldly experienced, inured
-to the vicissitudes of heat and cold, and practised in the goods and
-evils of life, who can appreciate the rights of good-fellowship,
-and fulfil the duties of loving attachment and is kind and affable,
-sweet-spoken, and cheerful. I will treat you with affection, as far
-as I can, and if you deal with me unkindly, I will not be unkind in
-return. _If, like a parrot, thy food be sugar, I will devote my sweet
-life for thy nourishment._ And you did not become the victim of a
-rude, conceited, rash, and headstrong youth, who one moment gratifies
-his lust, and the next has a fresh object; who every night shifts his
-abode, and every day changes his mistress. Young men are lively and
-handsome, but they keep good faith with nobody. _Expect not constancy
-from nightingales, who will every moment serenade a fresh rose._
-Whereas my class of seniors regulate their lives by good breeding and
-sense, and are not deluded by youthful ignorance.”
-
-_Court the society of a superior, and make much of the opportunity!
-for in the company of an equal thy good fortune must decline._
-
-The old man spoke a great deal in this style, and thought that he had
-caught her heart in his snare, and made sure of her as his prey, when
-she suddenly drew a cold sigh from the bottom of a much-afflicted
-bosom, and answered:
-
-“All this speech which you have delivered has not, in the scale of my
-judgment, the weight of that one sentence which I have heard of my
-nurse, that it were better to plant a spear in a young maiden’s side
-than to lay her by an old man in bed. Much contention and strife will
-arise in that house where the wife shall get dissatisfied with her
-husband.”
-
-_Unable to rise without the help of a staff, how can an old man stir
-the staff of life?_
-
-In short, there being no prospect of concord, they agreed to separate.
-After lapse of the period prescribed by the law, she united in wedlock
-with a young man of an ill-tempered and sullen disposition, and in very
-narrow circumstances, so that she endured much tyranny and violence,
-penury and hardship. Yet she was thus offering up thanksgivings for the
-Almighty’s goodness, and saying:
-
-“Praised be God that I have escaped from such hell-torment, and secured
-a blessing so permanent. With all this violence and impetuosity of
-temper, I bear with his caprice, because he is handsome. It were better
-for me to burn with him in hellfire than to dwell in paradise with the
-other.”
-
-_The smell of an onion from the mouth of the lovely is sweeter than
-that of a rose in the hand of the ugly._
-
- --_The Rose Garden (Gulistan)._
-
- * * * * *
-
-1. LOCMAN the wise being asked, “Whence did you learn wisdom?”
-answered, _From the blind, who try the path with a stick before they
-tread on it_....
-
-4. HORMUS the tyrant, being asked, why he had put his father’s
-courtiers in prison, answered, _Because they feared me; and the
-wise say, Fear him who fears thee, though he be a fly, and thou an
-elephant_.
-
-5. A religious was famous at Bagdad for his powerful prayers. Hoschas
-Joseph, king of Persia, begged him to pray for him. The religious said,
-_O God, take away this man’s life! for no better prayer can I make
-either for him or his subjects_.
-
-6. An infamous king asked a Dervise, “Of all pious offices, which is
-the chief?” The Dervise answered, _For thee, the chief is a long
-sleep at noon, that thou mayest, for a short time, cease to injure
-mankind_.
-
-7. A courtier being deprived of his place, became a religious. After
-some time, the king wished to restore him to his station; but he said,
-_Experience has now taught me to prefer ease to dignity_.
-
-7. A slave of Omer, the viceroy, fled from his service, but was
-retaken, and brought before the king; who, at Omer’s instigation,
-condemned him to death. The slave upon this said, _O king, I am an
-innocent man; and, if I die by thy command, my blood will be required.
-Permit me then to incur guilt before I meet my sentence. Let me kill
-this Omer, my master, and I shall die contented. It is for thy sake
-only I desire this_. The king, laughing at this new mode of clearing
-his own justice, acquitted the wretch.
-
-9. A master had taught a youth to wrestle; who, proud of his acquired
-skill, and possest of more strength than his master, wished to acquire
-fame at his expence, and challenged him to wrestle before the court.
-The master, by one trick, which he had not taught the youth, threw him
-at once: and, the youth complaining that he had not taught him all his
-art, the master said, _No. I always provide against ingratitude_.
-
-10. A religious sitting by the highway, the king passed by; but the
-religious took no notice of him. A courtier saying “Do not you see
-the king?” was answered, _I want nothing of him. Kings are made for
-subjects, not subjects for kings. Why then should I respect him who
-is the publick servant?_ This anecdote from Sadi differs much from
-present Eastern despotism.
-
-11. A courtier went to his master, SUELNUN, king of Egypt,
-and begged permission to retire; saying, “Though I am night and day
-anxious in thy service; yet the fear of once displeasing thee makes me
-wretched.” Suelnun, in tears, exclaimed, _Ah, did I serve God, as
-thou thy king, I should be one of the just_.
-
-12. A king condemned an innocent man to death, who said, _O king, thy
-anger rages against me, but will injure thyself_. “How?” rejoined
-the king. _Because my pain lasts but for a moment; but thine for
-ever._ Pardon followed.
-
-13. The courtiers of king Nourshivan consulting with him on important
-business, when the king had spoken, one of them assented to his
-opinion, against the rest. Being asked the cause, he said, _Human
-affairs depend on chance, not on wisdom: and, if we err with the king,
-who shall condemn us?_ ...
-
-17. A king saying to a Dervise, “Do you never think on me?” was
-answered, _Yes: but it is when I forget God_.
-
-18. A Dervise, in a dream, saw a king in paradise, but a religious in
-hell, and thought that, upon enquiring the cause, he was told, _The
-king used to keep company with Dervises; and the Dervise with kings_.
-
-19. LOCMAN, the sage, being asked, where he learned virtue, he
-answered, _Of the vicious, for they taught me what to shun_.
-
-20. Abu Hurura used often to visit MUSTAPHA, who one day said
-to him, _O Abu Hurura, visiting seldom feeds love and friendship_.
-
-21. SADI, being taken prisoner by the Franks, or Christians,
-was redeemed for ten pieces of gold, by one, who also gave him his
-daughter in marriage, with one hundred pieces of gold as a dower.
-The lady, being a termagant, once reproached him with this; and he
-said, _Yes, I was redeemed for ten pieces, and made a slave for a
-hundred_.
-
-22. Some wicked men using a religious very ill, he went to an old
-dervise, and complained much. The elder told him, _Son, our habit is
-that of patience. Why do you wear it, if it does not fit you?_
-
-23. A sage seeing a strong man in a passion, asked the cause, and being
-told that it was on account of an affronting word, he exclaimed, _O
-strong man, with a weak mind! who could bear an elephant’s load, yet
-cannot bear a word_.
-
-24. A lawyer gave his daughter, who was very deformed in marriage
-to a blind man. A celebrated oculist coming to the place, the lawyer
-was asked why he did not employ him for his son-in-law? To which he
-answered, _Why should I endeavour to procure the divorce of my
-daughter?_
-
-25. Ardeschir enquiring of a physician, how much food was necessary for
-a day? was answered, eight ounces. Ardeschir said, “How can so little
-support a man?” The physician replied, _That will support him; if he
-takes more, he must support it_....
-
-27. A robber said to a beggar, “Art thou not ashamed to stretch out
-thy hand to all for a piece of copper?” The beggar answered, _It is
-better to stretch it out for a piece of copper, than have it cut off
-for a piece of gold_.
-
-29. SADI being about to purchase a house, a Jew came up and said, “I
-am an old neighbour, and know the house to be good and sufficient. Buy
-it by all means.” Sadi answered, _The house must be bad if thou art a
-neighbour_....
-
-31. An old man being asked, why he did not take a wife, answered, _I
-do not like old women: and a young woman, I judge from that, can never
-like me_.
-
-32. A courtier sent a foolish son to be educated by a sage. He made
-no progress, and some time after the sage brought him back, saying,
-_This boy will never be wiser; and he has even made me foolish in
-teaching him_.
-
-33. A king sent his son to an instructor, desiring him to educate the
-boy, as he did his own sons. The preceptor laboured in vain to teach
-the young prince, though his own sons made great progress. The king
-sending for him and reproaching him for this; he answered, _O king,
-the education was the same, but the capacity differed. We find gold in
-the soil! yet gold is not found in every soil_.
-
-34. A man having sore eyes went to a mule-doctor, who gave him an
-ointment that struck him blind. The man brought his doctor before the
-cadi, who acquitted him; saying to the patient, _If you had not been
-an ass, you would not have applied to a mule-doctor_.
-
-35. Sadi saw two boys, one the son of a rich man, the other of a poor,
-sitting in a cemetery. The former said “My father’s tomb is marble,
-marked with letters of gold: but what is your father’s? two turfs and a
-handful of dust spread over them.” The poor boy answered, _Be silent.
-Before your father shall have moved his marble! mine shall be already
-in paradise_.
-
-36. MUHAMMED, the learned priest of Gasala, being asked, how
-he had acquired so much science? answered, _I never was ashamed to
-ask and learn what I did not know_....
-
-Jalal uddin Rumi was another Persian who wrote a series of stories
-conveying moral maxims.
-
-
- _THE SICK SCHOOLMASTER_
-
-The boys of a certain school were tired of their teacher, as he was
-very strict in the exaction of diligence; so they consulted together
-for the best means of getting rid of him for a time. Said they, “Why
-does he not fall ill, so that he may be obliged to be away from school,
-and we be released from confinement and work? Alas! he stands as firm
-as a rock.” One of them, who was wiser than the rest, suggested this
-plan: “I shall go to the teacher, and ask him why he looks so pale,
-saying, ‘May it turn out well! But your face has not its usual color.
-Is it due to the weather, or to fever?’ This will create some alarm
-in his mind. Then you, brother,” he continued, turning to another
-boy, “must assist me by using similar words. When you come into the
-schoolroom you must say to the teacher, ‘I hope, sir, you are well.’
-This will tend to increase his apprehension, even though in a slight
-degree; and you know that even slight doubts are often enough to drive
-a man mad. Then a third, a fourth, and a fifth boy must one after
-another express his sympathy in similar words, till at last, when
-thirty boys successively have given expression to words of like nature,
-the teacher’s apprehension will be confirmed.”
-
-The boys praised his ingenuity, and wished each other success; and
-they bound themselves by solemn promises not to shirk doing what was
-expected of them. Then the first boy bade them take oaths of secrecy,
-lest some telltale should let the matter out.
-
-Next morning the boys came to school in a cheerful mood, having
-resolved on adopting the foregoing plan. They all stood outside the
-schoolhouse, waiting for the arrival of the friend who had helped them
-in the time of need--since it was he who had originated the plan: it
-is the head that is the governor of the legs. The first boy arrived,
-entered the schoolroom, and greeted the teacher with “I hope you are
-well, sir, but the color of your face is very pale.”
-
-“Nonsense!” said the teacher; “there is nothing the matter with me. Go
-and take your seat.” But inwardly he was somewhat apprehensive. Another
-boy came in, and in similar words greeted the teacher, whose misgivings
-were thereby somewhat increased. And so on, one boy after another
-greeted him, till his worst apprehensions seemed to be confirmed, and
-he was in great anxiety regarding the state of his health.
-
-He got enraged at his wife. “Her love for me is waning,” he thought. “I
-am in this bad state of health, and she did not even ask what was the
-matter with me. She did not draw my attention to the color of my face.
-Perhaps she is not unwilling that I should die.”
-
-Full of such thoughts, he came to his home, followed by the boys, and
-flung open the door. His wife exclaimed, “I hope nothing is the matter
-with you! Why have you returned so soon?”
-
-“Are you blind?” he answered. “Look at the color of my face, and at my
-condition! Even strangers show sympathetic alarm about my health.”
-
-“Well, I see nothing wrong,” said the wife. “You must be laboring under
-some senseless delusion.”
-
-“Woman,” he rejoined impatiently, “you are most obstinate! Can you not
-perceive the altered hue of my face and the shivering of my body? Go
-and get my bed made, that I may lie down, for my head is dizzy.”
-
-The bed was prepared, and the teacher lay down on it, giving vent
-to sighs and groans. The boys he ordered to sit there and read the
-lessons, which they did with much vexation. They said to themselves,
-“We did so much to be free, and still we are in confinement. The
-foundation was not well laid; we are bad architects. Some other plan
-must now be adopted, so that we may be rid of this annoyance.”
-
-The clever boy who had instigated the first plot advised the others
-to read their lessons very loudly; and when they did so, he said, in
-a tone to be overheard by the teacher, “Boys, your voices disturb our
-teacher. Loud voices will only increase his headache. Is it proper that
-he should be made to suffer pain for the sake of the trifling fees he
-gets from us?”
-
-The teacher said, “He is right. Boys, you may go. My headache has
-increased. Be off with you!” And the boys scampered away home as
-eagerly as birds fly toward a spot where they see grain.
-
-The mothers of the boys, on seeing them return, got angry, and thus
-challenged them, “This is the time for you to learn writing, and you
-are engaged in play. This is the time for acquiring knowledge, and you
-fly from your books and your teacher.”
-
-The boys urged that it was no fault of theirs, and that they were in no
-way to blame, for, by the decree of fate, their teacher had become very
-ill.
-
-The mothers, disbelieving, said, “This is all deceit and falsehood. You
-would not scruple to tell a hundred lies to get a little quantity of
-buttermilk. To-morrow morning we shall go to the teacher’s house, and
-shall ascertain what truth there is in your assertions.”
-
-So the next morning the mothers went to visit the teacher, whom they
-found lying in bed like a very sick person. He had perspired freely,
-owing to his having covered himself with blankets. His head was
-bandaged, and his face was covered with a kerchief. He was groaning in
-a feeble voice.
-
-The ladies expressed their sympathy, hoped his headache was getting
-less, and swore by his soul that they had been unaware until quite
-lately that he was so ill.
-
-“I, too,” said the teacher, “was unaware of my illness. It was through
-those little bastards that I learned of it.”
-
- --_Stories in Rime (Masnavi)._
-
-
- _THE INVALID AND HIS DEAF VISITOR_
-
-A deaf man was informed that an neighbor of his was ill, so he resolved
-upon going to see him. “But,” said he to himself, “owing to my deafness
-I shall not be able to catch the words of the sick man, whose voice
-must be very feeble at this time. However, go I must. When I see his
-lips moving I shall be able to make a reasonably good conjecture of
-what he is saying. When I ask him, ‘How are you, oh, my afflicted
-friend?’ he will probably reply, ‘I am well,’ or ‘I am better.’ I shall
-then say, ‘Thanks be to God! Tell me, what have you taken for food?’
-He will probably mention some liquid food or gruel. I shall then wish
-that the food may agree with him, and shall ask him the name of the
-physician under whose treatment he is. On his naming the man, I shall
-say, ‘He is a skilful leech. Since it is he who is attending upon you,
-you will soon be well. I have had experience of him. Wherever he goes,
-his patients very soon recover.”
-
-So the deaf man, having prepared himself for the visit, went to the
-invalid’s bedside, and sat down near the pillow. Then, rubbing his
-hands together with assumed cheerfulness, he inquired, “How are you?”
-“I am dying,” replied the patient. “Thanks be to God!” rejoined the
-deaf man.
-
-The sick man was troubled in his heart, and said to himself, “What kind
-of thanksgiving is this? Surely he must be an enemy of mine!”--little
-thinking that his visitor’s remark was but the result of wrong
-conjecture.
-
-“What have you been eating?” was the next question; to which the reply
-was, “Poison!” “May it agree with you,” was the wish expressed by the
-deaf man which only increased the other’s vexation.
-
-“And pray, who is your physician?” again asked the visitor, “Azrael,
-the Angel of Death. And now, be-gone with you!” growled the invalid.
-“Oh, is he?” pursued the deaf man. “Then you ought to rejoice, for he
-is a man of auspicious footsteps. I saw him only just now, and asked
-him to devote to you his best possible attention.”
-
-With these words he bade the sick man good-by, and withdrew, rejoicing
-that he had satisfactorily performed a neighborly duty. Meanwhile,
-the other man was angrily muttering to himself, “This fellow is an
-implacable foe of mine. I did not know his heart was so full of
-malignity.”
-
- --_Stories in Rime (Masnavi)._
-
-
- _OLD AGE--DIALOGUE_
-
-_Old Man._ I am in sore trouble owing to my brain.
-
-_Physician._ The weakness of the brain is due to old age.
-
-_Old Man._ Dark spots are floating before my eyes.
-
-_Physician._ That, too, comes from old age, oh, venerable sheikh!
-
-_Old Man._ My back aches very much.
-
-_Physician._ The result of old age, oh, lean sheikh!
-
-_Old Man._ No food that I take agrees with me.
-
-_Physician._ The failure of the digestive organs is also due to
-old age.
-
-_Old Man._ I am afflicted with hard breathing.
-
-_Physician._ Yes, the breathing ought to be affected in that
-manner. When old age comes, it brings a hundred complaints in its train.
-
-_Old Man._ My legs are getting feeble, and I am unable to walk
-much.
-
-_Physician._ It is nothing but old age which obliges you to sit in
-a corner.
-
-_Old Man._ My back has become bent like a bow.
-
-_Physician._ This trouble is merely the consequence of old age.
-
-_Old Man._ My eyesight is quite dim, oh, sage physician!
-
-_Physician._ Nothing but old age, oh, wise man!
-
-_Old Man._ Oh, you idiot, always harping on the same theme! Is
-this all you know of the science of medicine? Fool, does not your
-reason tell you that God has assigned a remedy to every ailment? You
-are a stupid ass, and with your paltry stock of learning are still
-fumbling in the mire!
-
-_Physician._ Oh, you dotard past sixty, know, then, that even this
-rage and fury is due to old age!
-
-From Abu Ishak we glean this delightful bit of parody on Hafiz.
-
-
- _PARODY ON HAFIZ_
-
- HAFIZ ABU-ISHAK
-
- Will those who can transmute Will those who sell cooked
- dust into gold by looking sheep’s-head give us a sidelong
- at it ever give a sidelong glance, when they open
- glance at us? their pots in the morning?
-
- The beauteous Turk, who The cook has to-day
- is the cause of death to her bought onions for giving a
- lovers, has to-day gone forth relish to minced meat. Let
- intoxicated. Let us see from us see, now, from whose
- whose eyes the heart’s blood eyes tears shall begin to
- shall begin to flow. flow.
-
- I have a yearning for se- I have an inclination for
- clusion and peace. But, oh! abstinent living and observing
- those narcissus-like eyes! fasts. But, oh! in what
- The commotion they cause a tempting way doth the
- me is inexpressible! roasted lamb wink at me!
-
- No one should give up his No one should partake of
- heart and his religion in the sauce to accompany sweetened
- expectation of faithfulness rice colored with saffron.
- from his sweetheart. My My having done so
- having done so has resulted has given me cause for infinite
- to me in lifelong repentance. regret.
- And from
-
-
- DO-PYAZAH
-
- _THESE DEFINITIONS_
-
-_Angel._ A hidden telltale.
-
-_King._ The idlest man in the country.
-
-_Minister of State._ The target for the arrows of the sighs of the
-oppressed.
-
-_Flatterer._ One who drives a profitable trade.
-
-_Lawyer._ One ready to tell any lie.
-
-_Fool._ An official, for instance, who is honest.
-
-_Physician._ The herald of death.
-
-_Widow._ A woman in the habit of praising her husband when he is
-gone.
-
-_Poet._ A proud beggar.
-
-_Mirror._ One that laughs at you to your face.
-
-_Bribe._ The resource of him who knows he has a bad cause.
-
-_National Calamity._ A ruler who cares for nothing but the
-pleasures of the harem.
-
-_Salutation._ A polite hint to others to get up and greet you with
-respect.
-
-_Priest Calling to Prayers._ A disturber of the indolent.
-
-_Faithful Friend._ Money.
-
-_Truthful Man._ One who is regarded as an enemy by every one.
-
-_Silence._ Half consent.
-
-_Service._ Selling one’s independence.
-
-_Hunting._ The occupation of those who have no work to do.
-
-_Mother-in-Law._ A spy domiciled in your house.
-
-_Debtor._ An ass in a quagmire.
-
-_Liar._ A person making frequent use of the expression, “I swear
-to God it is true!”
-
-_Guest._ One in your house who is impatient to hear the dishes
-clatter.
-
-_Poverty._ The consequence of marriage.
-
-_Hunger._ Something which falls to the lot of those out of
-employment.
-
-_Soporific._ Reading the verses of a dull poet.
-
-_Druggist._ One who wishes everybody to be ill.
-
-_Learned Man._ One who does not know how to earn his livelihood.
-
-_Miser’s Eye._ A vessel which is never full.
-
-
- _DIVING FOR AN EGG--ANECDOTE_
-
-The Emperor Akbar was one day sitting with his attendants in the
-garden of the palace, close to a large cistern full of water. At the
-suggestion of a courtier, the emperor commanded some of the men present
-to procure an egg each, and to place it in the cistern in such a manner
-that it could easily be found when searched for.
-
-Soon after the order had been obeyed, the Mollah Do-pyazah came to this
-spot. Akbar then turned to his attendants, saying he had dreamed the
-night before that there were eggs in the cistern, and that all who were
-his faithful servants had dived in, and brought out an egg. Whereupon
-the attendants one by one dived into the water, each one issuing forth
-with an egg in his hand. Do-pyazah, not disposed himself to enter the
-water, the emperor asked why he alone held aloof. The mollah, thus
-pressed, divested himself of his outer garments and plunged in.
-
-He searched for a long time, but could not find a single egg. At length
-he emerged from the cistern, and, moving his arms in the manner of a
-cock flapping his wings, he cried aloud, “Cock-a-doodle-doo!”
-
-“What,” asked Akbar, “is the meaning of this?”
-
-“Your Majesty,” came the reply, “those who brought you the eggs were
-hens, but I am a cock, and you must not expect an egg from me.”
-
-At which Akbar laughed heartily, and had Do-pyazah well rewarded.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Chinese are more noted for their wit that is wisdom, than for their
-humor.
-
-Confucius, doubtless the greatest of their philosophers, born 551
-B.C., left many sayings which became proverbs, yet which
-embodied only the elementary morality of all ages and races.
-
-These are some of the sayings from _The Analects of Confucius_.
-
-“While a man’s father is alive, look at the bent of his will; when his
-father is dead, look at his conduct.”
-
-“An accomplished scholar is not a cooking-pot.”
-
-“When good order prevailed in his country, Ning Wu acted the part of
-a wise man; when his country was in disorder, he acted the part of a
-fool. Others may equal his wisdom, but they cannot equal his folly.”
-
-“How can one know about death, when one does not understand life?”
-
-“Four horses cannot overtake the tongue.”
-
-“If you were not covetous, you could not even bribe a man to steal from
-you.”
-
-“When their betters love the _Rules_ [_of Propriety_], then
-the folk are easy tools.”
-
-“Why use an ox-knife to kill a hen?”
-
-“There are two classes that never change: the supremely wise and the
-profoundly stupid.”
-
-“If a man is disliked at forty, he always will be.”
-
-“When driving with a woman, hold the reins in one hand and keep the
-other behind your back.”
-
-Chwang Tze, another ancient, wrote much of life, death and immortality,
-but showed little sense of humor therein.
-
-One of his anecdotes, in lighter vein, follows.
-
-
- _THE PLEASURE OF FISHES--ANECDOTE_
-
-Chwang Tze and a friend had strolled on to a bridge over the Hao, when
-the former observed, “Look how the minnows are darting about! That is
-the pleasure of fishes.”
-
-“Not being a fish yourself,” objected the friend, “how can you possibly
-know in what the pleasure of fishes consists?”
-
-“And you not being I,” retorted Chwang Tze, “how can you know that I do
-not know?”
-
-To which the friend replied, “If I, not being you, cannot know what you
-know, it follows that you, not being a fish, cannot know in what the
-pleasure of fishes consists.”
-
-“Let us go back,” rejoined Chwang Tze, “to your original question. You
-ask me how I know in what the pleasure of fishes consists. Well, I
-know that I am enjoying myself over the Hao, and from this I infer that
-the fishes are enjoying themselves in it.”--_Autumn Floods._
-
-Sung Yu gives us this satirical outburst about
-
-
- _POPULARITY_
-
- The eagle is king of the birds; among fishes
- Leviathan holds the first place.
- Cleaving the far, crimson clouds,
- The eagle soars upward apace,
- With only the blue sky above,
- Into remote realms of space;
- But the grandeur of heaven and earth
- Is naught to the hedge-sparrow race.
- The whale through one oceans swims,
- To take its course through a second;
- While the minnow measures a puddle
- As the width of the sea might be reckoned.
- And just as with birds and fishes,
- Is the case, to be sure, with man.
- Here soars a resplendent eagle,
- There swims one huge leviathan:
- Behold the philosopher sapient,
- Whose fame will never grow dim;
- Alone in the might of his wisdom--
- Can the rabble understand him?
-
-Yuan Mei, however, possessed a satiric humor so keen as to place him
-among the true wits.
-
-His letter to a friend might have been written today and his Cookery
-Notes are such as are found in our current comics.
-
-
- _A STANZA FOR A TOBACCO-POUCH_
-
-DEAR FRIEND:
-
-I have received your letter of congratulation, and am much obliged.
-At the end of the letter, however, you mention that you have a
-tobacco-pouch for me, which will be forwarded upon the receipt of
-a stanza. But such an exchange would seem to establish a curious
-precedent. If for a tobacco pouch you expect in return a stanza, for
-a hat or a pair of boots you would demand a whole poem; while your
-brother might bestow a cloak or coat upon me, and believe himself
-entitled to an epic. At this rate, dear friend, your congratulations
-would become rather costly to me.
-
-Let me instruct you, on the other hand, that a man once gave a thousand
-yards of silk for a phrase, and another man a beautiful girl for a
-stanza--which makes your tobacco-pouch look like a slight inducement,
-does it not?
-
-Mencius forbids the taking advantage of people on the ground of one’s
-rank or merits. How much worse, therefore, to do so by virtue of a mere
-tobacco-pouch! Elegant as a tobacco-pouch may be, it is only the work
-of a sempstress; but my poetry, poor as it may be, is the work of my
-brain. The exchange would evidently be complimentary to the sempstress,
-and the reverse to me.
-
-Now, if you had taken needle and thread and made the pouch
-yourself--ah, then what a difference! Then, indeed, a dozen stanzas
-would not have been too great a return. But it would hardly be proper
-to ask a famous warrior like yourself to lay down sword and shield for
-needle and thread. Nor, dear friend, am I likely to get the pouch at
-all, if you take offense at these little jokes of mine. What I advise
-you to do is, to bear with me patiently, send the tobacco-pouch, and
-wait for the stanza until it comes.
-
- --_Letters._
-
-
- _RECIPES_
-
-Birds’ nests and water-slugs have no particular flavor of their own,
-and are therefore not worth eating.
-
-The best cook cannot prepare artistically more than five or six
-different dishes in one day. A host of mine once had forty courses
-served at a meal, and as soon as I got home I called for a bowl of rice
-to still my hunger.
-
-In order to enjoy the pleasures of the palate to the fullest degree,
-you must be sober. If you are drunk, you cannot tell one flavor from
-another.
-
-The ingredients of a dish should always harmonize with one
-another--like two people in marriage.
-
-Some cooks use the flesh of chickens and pigs for one soup, and as
-chickens and pigs have souls, they will hold those cooks to account, in
-the next world, for their treatment of them in this.
-
-Bamboo-shoots ought never to be cut with a knife which has just been
-used on onions.
-
-While cooking, do not allow ashes from your pipe, perspiration from
-your face, soot from the fuel, or beetles from the ceiling to drop
-into the saucepan: the guests would be likely to pass the dish
-by.--_Cookery Book_
-
- * * * * *
-
-The following proverbs are generally attributed to the Chinese, some of
-them being the wisdom of Confucius.
-
-
- _PROVERBS_
-
-An avaricious man, who can never get enough, is like a snake trying to
-swallow an elephant.
-
-To draw the picture of a tiger, and make a dog out of it, is to imitate
-a masterpiece and spoil it.
-
-Human pleasures are like the flittings of sparrows.
-
-A narrow-minded man resembles a frog in a well.
-
-Do not pull up your stockings in a melon-patch, or straighten your hat
-in a peach orchard; any one seeing you may think you are stealing.
-
-To talk much and arrive nowhere is the same as climbing a tree to catch
-a fish.
-
-One thread does not make a rope.
-
-The tiger does not walk with the hind.
-
-You can neither buy wood in the forest nor fish by the lake.
-
-If a blind man leads another blind man, they will both fall into a
-hole.
-
-No maker of idols worships the gods; he knows their composition too
-well.
-
-A man with a purple nose may be very temperate in drink, only no one
-will believe it.
-
-Money makes the blind man see.
-
-We admire our own writings, but other men’s wives.
-
-If you are afraid of being found out, leave it alone.
-
-Bend your neck if the eaves are low.
-
-It’s not the wine that makes a man drunk; it’s the man himself.
-
-A whisper on earth sounds like thunder in heaven.
-
-To get a favor granted is harder than to kill a tiger.
-
-Sweep the snow from your own door.
-
-If there were no error there could be no truth.
-
-A needle never pricks with both ends.
-
-Don’t put two saddles on one horse.
-
-Trust nature rather than a bad doctor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Japanese offer little that can be quoted. Their comedies are long
-and not very funny, their wit is heavy and bitterly satirical.
-
-One specimen is given from _The Land of Dreams_ by Kiokutei Bakin.
-
-
- _ON CLOTHES AND COMFORTS_
-
-However much money you have, you will not keep it long; it will leave
-you, just like a traveler who has stayed overnight at an inn. The only
-substantial things in life are food and drink. Any little house you
-can just crawl into is large enough. The only difference between an
-emperor’s palace and a straw hut is in their size and their situation,
-one being in town and the other in the country. A single room, with
-a mat long enough for you to stretch out your whole body, is quite
-sufficient lodging. As for the clothes which you dress your carcass in,
-the richest brocades and the commonest sackcloth differ only in being
-clean or dirty. After you are dead, no one can tell, from looking at
-your naked body, what sort of clothes you wore while alive. If these
-facts were to become recognized, our clothes would be patched with any
-sort of material or color. Now, however, a man will buy new, expensive
-garments which he does not really want, owe the money for them, strut
-about in these borrowed plumes, and finally pawn them.
-
- --_The Land of Dreams._
-
-
- _COLLECTIONS_
-
-Apologues and stories, now common to all the world, had their origin
-in remote antiquity. Eastern narratives were for the most part brought
-to Europe orally, but some were later translated from the Oriental
-writings.
-
-Since at first, Religion and Learning went hand in hand, these stories
-were of a moral and instructive nature. Their wit was the wit of
-wisdom, the pithiness of graphic representation of truth.
-
-But with the development of the wit of amusement, the rise of ribald
-laughter and the supremacy of priests and monks, the stories took on a
-mirthful character which may or may not have added to their efficacy as
-cautionary teachings.
-
-Humor, then, as now, was founded on the feeling of superiority which
-comes from knowledge. The stories were invariably of the discomfiture
-of some foolish person, and thereby, either definitely or tacitly
-advised against that particular foolishness.
-
-Narrative fiction was entirely in parables or apologues, the latter
-term having come to be used exclusively for the tales in which animals
-are invested with human traits.
-
-Fables, also, is a term usually restricted to moral lessons taught by
-anecdotes of beasts in human conditions.
-
-As usual in the matter of legendary literature various countries
-contend for the honor of producing the first fables.
-
-The bestowal of the palm rests between the Hindus and the Hebrews, but
-the decision may never be made.
-
-A plausible assumption for the necessity of fables lies in the fact
-that it was not the part of wisdom openly to administer reproof or
-advice to the Asiatic potentates, wherefore it was done by the device
-of speaking through the mouths of the fictitious characters.
-
-And, through the ages, this plan has been found to work with
-intractables of less celebrity.
-
-But the question of the origin of these stories is outside our
-Outline,--we may merely state that before, during and after the
-Crusades, the flood of stories and tales from the Orient into Europe
-was continuous.
-
-Which accounts for the fact that among the oldest stories of the
-various countries, duplicates are always found, and the ancient jests
-of the Far East have raised and will raise appreciative laughter
-as they are translated into all European tongues, including the
-Scandinavian.
-
-As religion gave rise to laughter, so religion was the medium for
-disseminating mirth.
-
-The preachers of the mediæval ages used many amusing stories in their
-sermons and the monks often preserved these, with additions of their
-own, in enduring literature.
-
-But literature then was not in the form of circulating libraries, so
-the tales traveled from mouth to mouth, gaining sometimes in interest
-and sometimes losing charm or worth.
-
-Perhaps about the tenth century translations began to be grouped into
-collections, in Europe, and among the first was the Greek version of
-the Fables of Pilpay. Soon after came the _Book of Sindibad_,
-which would seem to be the original form of the story of Scheherazade.
-
-But in most cases the monks were the go-between.
-
-Their zeal and indefatigability produced masses of material, primarily
-designed for the use of preachers, but easily adopted by the laymen.
-
-The _Sermones_ of Jacques de Vitry, Crusader and prelate, and
-the _Liber de Donis_ of Etienne de Bourbon are both remarkable
-collections that predated and later gave material to the Gesta
-Romanorum.
-
-As an instance of the ubiquity of stories, it may be mentioned here
-that in both the books above noticed, occurs the old tale of the
-husband who had two wives, the younger one of whom plucked out all
-his gray-white hairs, the older one plucked out all his black hairs,
-leaving the poor chap entirely bald. This story is also in the Talmud,
-in Chinese Jestbooks and in innumerable others.
-
-So with many of the ancient tales. They come down through the Fabliaux,
-Gesta Romanorum, the Heptameron, the Decameron and on to our own dinner
-tables, where many of the “latest” are merely rehashed witticisms of
-the ancient monks and priests.
-
-Nor are the stories fastened on to celebrities often authentic. Many of
-Sydney Smith’s witticisms hark back to the Eastern Tales, most of Joe
-Miller’s jests have similar paternity.
-
-Hierocles made a famous collection of old stories translated into
-Greek. Others followed rapidly even before the invention of printing.
-
-After that achievement, collections of stories flooded the book mart
-even as they do today.
-
-Selections from various collections follow.
-
-Perhaps the oldest collection of tales in the world is that known
-as the _Fables of Bidpai or Pilpay_. Both author and date of
-production are unknown, but tradition tells us that they were written
-in Sanscrit and were the work of one Vishnu Sarma, who wrote them for
-the advice and edification of certain princes. The book is enormously
-long and though not of humorous intent shows much of the native wit of
-the country.
-
-
- FABLES
-
-
- _THE GREEDY AND AMBITIOUS CAT_
-
-There was formerly an old Woman in a village, extremely thin,
-half-starved, and meager. She lived in a little cottage as dark and
-gloomy as a fool’s heart, and withal as close shut up as a miser’s
-hand. This miserable creature had for the companion of her wretched
-retirements a Cat meager and lean as herself; the poor creature never
-saw bread, nor beheld the face of a stranger, and was forced to be
-contented with only smelling the mice in their holes, or seeing the
-prints of their feet in the dust. If by some extraordinary lucky chance
-this miserable animal happened to catch a mouse, she was like a beggar
-that discovers a treasure; her visage and her eyes were inflamed
-with joy, and that booty served her for a whole week; and out of the
-excess of her admiration, and distrust of her own happiness, she would
-cry out to herself, “Heavens! Is this a dream, or is it real?” One
-day, however, ready to die for hunger, she got upon the ridge of her
-enchanted castle, which had long been the mansion of famine for cats,
-and spied from thence another Cat, that was stalking upon a neighbour’s
-wall like a Lion, walking along as if she had been counting her steps,
-and so fat that she could hardly go. The old Woman’s Cat, astonished to
-see a creature of her own species so plump and so large, with a loud
-voice, cries out to her pursy neighbour, “In the name of pity, speak to
-me, thou happiest of the Cat kind! why, you look as if you came from
-one of the Khan of Kathai’s feasts; I conjure ye, to tell me how, or
-in what region it is that you get your skin so well stuffed?” “Where?”
-replied the fat one; “why, where should one feed well but at a King’s
-table? I go to the house,” continued she, “every day about dinner-time,
-and there I lay my paws upon some delicious morsel or other, which
-serves me till the next, and then leave enough for an army of mice,
-which under me live in peace and tranquillity; for why should I commit
-murder for a piece of tough and skinny mouse flesh, when I can live on
-venison at a much easier rate?” The lean Cat, on this, eagerly inquired
-the way to this house of plenty, and entreated her plump neighbour to
-carry her one day along with her. “Most willingly,” said the fat Puss;
-“for thou seest I am naturally charitable, and thou art so lean that
-I heartily pity thy condition.” On this promise they parted; and the
-lean Cat returned to the old Woman’s chamber, where she told her dame
-the story of what had befallen her. The old Woman prudently endeavoured
-to dissuade her Cat from prosecuting her design, admonishing her
-withal to have a care of being deceived. “For, believe me,” said she,
-“the desires of the ambitious are never to be satiated, but when
-their mouths are stuffed with the dirt of their graves. Sobriety and
-temperance are the only things that truly enrich people. I must tell
-thee, poor silly Cat, that they who travel to satisfy their ambition,
-have no knowledge of the good things they possess, nor are they truly
-thankful to Heaven for what they enjoy, who are not contented with
-their fortune.”
-
-The poor starved Cat, however, had conceived so fair an idea of
-the King’s table, that the old Woman’s good morals and judicious
-remonstrances entered in at one ear and went out at the other; in
-short, she departed the next day with the fat Puss to go to the King’s
-house; but alas! before she got thither, her destiny had laid a snare
-for her. For being a house of good cheer, it was so haunted with cats,
-that the servants had, just at this time, orders to kill all the cats
-that came near it, by reason of a great robbery committed the night
-before in the King’s larder by several grimalkins. The old Woman’s Cat,
-however, pushed on by hunger, entered the house, and no sooner saw a
-dish of meat unobserved by the cooks, but she made a seizure of it,
-and was doing what for many years she had not done before, that is,
-heartily filling her belly; but as she was enjoying herself under the
-dresser-board, and feeding heartily upon her stolen morsels, one of the
-testy officers of the kitchen, missing his breakfast, and seeing where
-the poor Cat was solacing herself with it, threw his knife at her with
-such an unlucky hand, that he stuck her full in the breast. However, as
-it has been the providence of Nature to give his creature nine lives
-instead of one, poor Puss made a shift to crawl away, after she had for
-some time shammed dead: but, in her flight, observing the blood come
-streaming from her wound; “Well,” said she, “let me but escape this
-accident, and if ever I quit my old hold and my own mice for all the
-rarities in the King’s kitchen, may I lose all my nine lives at once.”
-
-
- _A RAVEN, A FOX, AND A SERPENT_
-
-A Raven had once built her nest for many seasons together in a
-convenient cleft of a mountain, but however pleasing the place was to
-her, she had always reason enough to resolve to lay there no more; for
-every time she hatched, a Serpent came and devoured her young ones.
-The Raven complaining to a Fox that was one of her friends, said to
-him, “Pray tell me, what would you advise me to do to be rid of this
-Serpent?” “What do you think to do?” answered the Fox. “Why, my present
-intent is,” replied the Raven, “to go and peck out his eyes when he
-is asleep, that so he may no longer find the way to my nest.” The Fox
-disapproved this design, and told the Raven, that it became a prudent
-person to manage his revenge in such a manner, that no mischief might
-befall himself in taking it: “Never run yourself,” says he, “into the
-misfortune that once befell the Crane, of which I will tell you the
-Fable.”
-
-
- _THE CRANE AND THE CRAY-FISH_
-
-A Crane had once settled her habitation by the side of a broad and deep
-lake, and lived upon such fish as she could catch in it; these she got
-in plenty enough for many years; but at length being become old and
-feeble, she could fish no longer. In this afflicting circumstance she
-began to reflect, with sorrow, on the carelessness of her past years;
-“I did ill,” said she to herself, “in not making in my youth necessary
-provision to support me in my old age; but, as it is, I must now make
-the best of a bad market, and use cunning to get a livelihood as I
-can”: with this resolution she placed herself by the waterside, and
-began to sigh and look mighty melancholy. A Cray-fish, perceiving her
-at a distance, accosted her, and asked her why she appeared so sad?
-“Alas,” said she, “how can I otherwise choose but grieve, seeing my
-daily nourishment is like to be taken from me? for I just now heard
-this talk between two fishermen passing this way: said the one to the
-other, Here is great store of fish, what think you of clearing this
-pond? to whom his companion answered, no; there is more in such a lake:
-let us go thither first, and then come hither the day afterwards. This
-they will certainly perform; and then,” added the Crane, “I must soon
-prepare for death.”
-
-The Cray-fish, on this, went to the fish, and told them what she had
-heard: upon which the poor fish, in great perplexity, swam immediately
-to the Crane, and addressing themselves to her, told her what they had
-heard, and added, “We are now in so great a consternation, that we are
-come to desire your protection. Though you are our enemy, yet the wise
-tell us, that they who make their enemy their sanctuary, may be assured
-of being well received: you know full well that we are your daily food;
-and if we are destroyed, you, who are now too old to travel in search
-of food, must also perish; we pray you, therefore, for your own sake,
-as well as ours, to consider, and tell us what you think is the best
-course for us to take.” To which the Crane replied, “That which you
-acquaint me with, I heard myself from the mouths of the fishermen; we
-have no power sufficient to withstand them; nor do I know any other way
-to secure you, but this: it will be many months before they can clear
-the other pond they are to go about first: and, in the mean time, I
-can at times, and as my strength will permit me, remove you one after
-another into a little pond here hard by, where there is very good
-water, and where the fishermen can never catch you, by reason of the
-extraordinary depth.” The fish approved this counsel, and desired the
-Crane to carry them one by one into this pond. Nor did she fail to fish
-up three or four every morning, but she carried them no farther than
-to the top of a small hill, where she eat them: and thus she feasted
-herself for a while.
-
-But one day, the Cray-fish, having a desire to see this delicate pond,
-made known her curiosity to the Crane, who, bethinking herself that
-the Cray-fish was her most mortal enemy, resolved to get rid of her at
-once, and murder her as she had done the rest; with this design she
-flung the Cray-fish upon her neck, and flew towards the hill. But when
-they came near the place, the Cray-fish, spying at a distance the small
-bones of her slaughtered companions, mistrusted the Crane’s intention,
-and laying hold of a fair opportunity, got her neck in her claw, and
-grasped it so hard, that she fairly saved herself, and strangled the
-Crane.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“This example,” says the Fox, “shows you, that crafty tricking people
-often become victims to their own cunning.” The Raven, returning
-thanks to the Fox for his good advice, said, “I shall not by any means
-neglect your wholesome instructions; but what shall I do?” “Why,”
-replied the Fox, “you must snatch up something that belongs to some
-stout man or other, and let him see what you do, to the end he may
-follow you. Which that he may easily do, do you fly slowly; and when
-you are just over the Serpent’s hole, let fall the thing that you hold
-in your beak or talons whatever it be, for then the person that follows
-you, seeing the Serpent come forth, will not fail to knock him on the
-head.” The Raven did as the Fox advised him, and by that means was
-delivered from the Serpent.
-
-
- _THE MERCHANT AND HIS FRIEND_
-
-A Certain Merchant, said Kalila, pursuing her discourse, had once a
-great desire to make a long journey. Now in regard that he was not
-very wealthy, it is requisite, said he to himself, that before my
-departure I should leave some part of my estate in the city, to the
-end that if I meet with ill luck in my travels, I may have wherewithal
-to keep me at my return. To this purpose he delivered a great number
-of bars of iron, which were a principal part of his wealth, in trust
-to one of his friends, desiring him to keep them during his absence;
-and then taking his leave, away he went. Some time after, having had
-but ill luck in his travels, he returned home; and the first thing he
-did was to go to his Friend, and demand his iron: but his Friend, who
-owed several sums of money, having sold the iron to pay his own debts,
-made him this answer: “Truly friend,” said he, “I put your iron into
-a room that was close locked, imagining it would have been there as
-secure as my own gold; but an accident has happened which nobody could
-have suspected, for there was a rat in the room eat it all up.” The
-Merchant, pretending ignorance, replied, “It is a terrible misfortune
-to me indeed; but I know of old that rats love iron extremely; I have
-suffered by them many times before in the same manner, and therefore
-can the better bear my present affliction.” This answer extremely
-pleased the Friend, who was glad to hear the Merchant so well inclined
-to believe that the rats had eaten his iron; and to remove all
-suspicions, desired him to dine with him the next day. The Merchant
-promised he would, but in the mean time he met in the middle of the
-city one of his Friend’s children; the child he carried home, and
-locked up in a room. The next day he went to his Friend, who seemed to
-be in great affliction, which he asked him the cause of, as if he had
-been perfectly ignorant of what had happened. “Oh, my dear friend,”
-answered the other, “I beg you to excuse me, if you do not see me so
-cheerful as otherwise I would be; I have lost one of my children; I
-have had him cried by sound of trumpet, but I know not what is become
-of him.” “Oh!” replied the Merchant, “I am grieved to hear this; for
-yesterday in the evening, as I parted from hence, I saw an owl in the
-air with a child in his claws; but whether it were yours I cannot
-tell.” “Why, you most foolish and absurd creature!” replied the Friend,
-“are you not ashamed to tell such an egregious lie? An owl, that weighs
-at most not above two or three pounds, can he carry a boy that weighs
-above fifty?” “Why,” replied the merchant, “do you make such a wonder
-at that? as if in a country where one rat can eat an hundred ton weight
-of iron, it were such a wonder for an owl to carry a child that weighs
-not above fifty pounds in all.” The Friend, upon this, found that the
-Merchant was no such fool as he took him to be, begged his pardon for
-the cheat which he designed to have put upon him, restored him the
-value of his iron, and so had his son again.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Other and very ancient Hindoo stories follow.
-
-
- _THE MAID, THE MONKEY, AND THE MENDICANT_
-
-On the banks of the Ganges there was once a city named Makandi. And in
-a temple, not far from the river, there lived a religious mendicant
-with a large number of disciples. He was a great rogue, but to impress
-the minds of the credulous people of the neighbourhood, he affected
-to be perfectly indifferent to all worldly affairs, and even went so
-far as to have taken a vow of perpetual silence. Now, in this city
-there resided a wealthy merchant, who believed in the mendicant,
-and was one of his devoted followers. The merchant had a beautiful
-daughter, who had just come of age, and who, entertaining a tender
-feeling for a handsome prince who lived in the neighbourhood, had
-begun to communicate with him by means of a confidential servant.
-One day the mendicant came on a begging excursion to the house of
-the merchant, and his daughter, beautifully dressed, came out with a
-silver cup in her hand to give him alms. The beggar as soon as he saw
-her forgot his vow of perpetual silence, and exclaimed, “Oh! what a
-sight!” but immediately afterwards he was ashamed of the words which
-he had uttered, and hastened home to the temple. The merchant, who
-had heard these words, thought that there was something unusual in
-them, and followed the mendicant to his abode. The latter, on seeing
-him, said with tears in his eyes, “Friend, I know that you are greatly
-devoted to me, and I grieve to say that a great misfortune will come
-upon you. The marks upon the body of your beautiful daughter foretell
-the ruin of your family, and the loss of your wealth as soon as she
-is married.” These words frightened the merchant almost out of his
-wits, and he implored the hypocritical mendicant to tell him if there
-were any means of averting the catastrophe. “There is one remedy,” he
-replied, “but you will find it hard to practise. You must make a box
-with holes in the lid, in the form of a boat, and having administered
-a narcotic to your daughter, place her in it, and closing the box, put
-it into the Ganges with a lamp burning on it. The waters of the river
-will carry her to some distant country, where doubtless she will be
-married, but her marriage there will not affect your fortune here.”
-Pleased with this apparently disinterested advice, the silly merchant
-returned home, and did as he was told. Fortunately, however, for
-the girl, her confidential servant heard what was going to be done,
-and immediately informed the young prince, the girl’s lover, of the
-intentions of her father. At night he accordingly watched by the river,
-and as soon as the box was left there he got hold of it, and brought
-it home, and taking the sleeping girl out, put into her place a large
-and ferocious monkey, and, having closed the lid, sent it back to the
-river upon whose broad stream it was floated once more. In the meantime
-the mendicant was enjoying golden dreams about the future. Thinking to
-secure the girl for himself, he sent some of his disciples to the river
-side, and told them to get hold of the box as it came floating down the
-stream. He further enjoined them not to pay any attention to anything
-they might hear inside the box, but to bring it directly to him as
-soon as they found it. On the box being brought, he had it carried to
-his cell, and then told his disciples to remain at a distance, and
-not to disturb him, as he had to perform some religious ceremonies in
-connection with it. The disciples then retired, and the mendicant began
-to open the box with the most pleasing anticipations. But alas, the
-retribution of sin is often too near. The ferocious monkey, exasperated
-by his confinement, jumped out at once, and began to bite, scratch, and
-tear the poor mendicant in every way. The latter bawled out as loud as
-he could, but his disciples thinking that he was performing religious
-ceremonies, or fighting with the devil, did not come to his assistance.
-At last he succeeded in opening the door of his room, and got away with
-the loss of his nose and an ear. The monkey also bolted through the
-door, and disappeared into the jungle. The good people of Nakandi were
-much amused with the incident, and drove the mendicant out of the town.
-The merchant’s daughter was delighted to find herself with her lover,
-while her father, covered with shame, consoled himself with the idea
-that she had got a good husband.
-
-
- _ABOUT A WOMAN’S PROMISE_
-
-In the city of Madanpur there reigned a king, named Birbar. In the
-same city there lived a trader, called Hermyadutt, who had a daughter,
-by name Madansena. One day, in the season of spring, she went with
-her female friends to a garden, and when there met a young man, named
-Somdatt, the son of the merchant Dharmdatt. This young man fell
-violently in love with her at first sight, and involuntarily went up
-to her, and, taking hold of her hand, began to say, “If thou wilt not
-love me, I shall abandon my life on thy account.” The girl said, “You
-must not do so, for in doing this you will commit a great sin.” Somdatt
-replied, “Excessive love has pierced my heart. The fear of separation
-has burnt up my body. From the pain all my memory and intellect are
-lost, and at present, through my excess of love, I have no regard
-for virtue or sin. If you will give me a promise, I shall hope to
-live.” Madansena said, “On the fifth day from this I am going to be
-married, then I shall first meet you, and after that I shall go with my
-husband.” Having given this promise, and affirming it by oath, she went
-home.
-
-On the fifth day after this she was married, and her husband took her
-to his house. After several days her sisters-in-law forcibly took her
-to her husband at night, but she would have nothing to do with him;
-and, when he wished to embrace her, she jerked him with her hand, and
-told the story of her promise to the merchant’s son. Hearing this, her
-husband said, “If thou truly wishest to go with him, then go.”
-
-Having thus obtained her husband’s consent, she put on her best clothes
-and jewels, and started for the merchant’s house. On her way she met
-a thief, who asked her where she was going alone at that midnight
-hour so adorned. She replied, “That she was going to meet her lover.”
-On hearing this, the thief said, “Who is your protector here?” She
-replied, “Kama, the god of love, with his weapons is my protector.”
-She then told the whole story to the thief, and said, “Do not spoil my
-attire. I promise you that, on my return, I will give you up all my
-jewels.”
-
-The thief let her go, and she proceeded to the place where Somdatt was
-lying asleep. Awaking him suddenly, he arose bewildered, and asked her
-who she was, and why she had come. She replied, “I am the daughter of
-the merchant Hermyadutt. Do you not remember that you forcibly took my
-hand in the garden, and insisted on my giving you my oath, and I swore,
-at your bidding, that I would leave the man I was married to, and come
-to you. I have come accordingly; do to me whatever thou pleasest.”
-
-Somdatt asked her if she had told the story to her husband, and she
-said that she had told him all, and that he had allowed her to come.
-The youth said: “This affair is like jewels without apparel; or food
-without clarified butter; or singing out of tune; all these things
-are alike. In the same way, dirty garments take away beauty, bad food
-saps the strength, a wicked wife takes away life, a bad son ruins the
-family. What a woman does not do is of little moment, for she does not
-give utterance to the thoughts of her mind; and what is at the tip of
-her tongue she does not reveal, and what she does, she does not tell
-of. God has created a woman in the world as a wonder.”
-
-After uttering these words, the merchant’s son said: “I will have
-nothing to do with the wife of a stranger.” Hearing this, she returned
-homeward. On her way she met the thief, and told him the whole story.
-He applauded her highly, and let her go, and she went to her husband
-and related to him the whole circumstance. Her husband, however,
-evinced no affection for her, but said, “The beauty of the cuckoo
-consists in its note alone; the beauty of a woman consists in her
-fidelity to her husband; the beauty of an ugly man is his knowledge;
-the beauty of a devotee is his patient suffering.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having related so much, the sprite said, “O king! whose is the highest
-merit of these three?” Vickram replied: “The thief’s merit is the
-greatest.” “How,” asked the sprite? The king answered: “Seeing that her
-heart was set on another man, the husband let her go; through fear of
-the king, Somdatt let her alone; whereas there was no reason for the
-thief leaving her unmolested; therefore the thief is superior.”
-
-
- _OF A QUEER RELATIONSHIP_
-
-There is a city in the south named Dhurumpoor, the king of which was
-named Mahabal. Once upon a time another king of the same region led
-an army against him, and invested his capital. After much fighting
-Mahabal was defeated, and, taking his wife and daughter with him, he
-fled by night into the jungle. After travelling several miles the day
-broke, and a village came in view. Leaving the queen and princess
-seated beneath a tree, he himself went to the village to get something
-to eat, and in the meantime a band of Bhils, or hill robbers, came and
-surrounded him, and told him to throw down his arms.
-
-The king, on hearing this, commenced discharging arrows at them, and
-the Bhils did the same from their side. After fighting for some time,
-an arrow struck the king’s forehead with such force that he reeled and
-fell, and one of the Bhils came up and cut off his head. When the queen
-and the princess saw that the king was dead, they went back into the
-jungle weeping and beating their breasts. After going some distance
-they became tired and sat down, and began to be troubled with anxiety.
-
-Now, it happened that a king named Chandrasen, together with his
-son, while pursuing game, came into that very jungle, and the king,
-noticing the footprints of the two women, said to his son, “How have
-the footprints of human feet come into this vast forest?” The prince
-replied, “These are women’s footprints, a man’s foot is not so small.”
-The king said, “Come let us look for them, and if we find them I
-will give her whose foot is the largest to thee, and I will take the
-other for myself.” Having entered into this mutual compact, they went
-forward, and soon perceived the two women seated on the ground. They
-were delighted at finding them, and seating them on their horses in the
-manner agreed upon, they brought them home. The prince took possession
-of the queen, as her feet were the largest, and the king took the
-princess, and they were married accordingly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having related so much the sprite said, “Your majesty, what
-relationship will there be between the children of these two?” On
-hearing this, the king held his tongue through ignorance, being unable
-to describe the relationship.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Hierocles’ collection of jests is mostly short anecdotes of pedants who
-are shown up as simpletons or noodles.
-
-This principle of humor which is, of course, the rock bottom theory
-of the feeling of superiority induced by the discomfiture of the other
-man, often pins the jest on the pedant or scholar by way of emphasizing
-the point.
-
-Hierocles was an Alexandrian Neoplatonic philosopher who lived in the
-Fifth Century A.D.
-
-With authorship of the usual legendary haziness the collection may not
-have been made by him at all, but it passes for his work.
-
-The stories themselves came into popular knowledge among the churchmen
-of the Middle Ages, and in their existing form probably date about the
-ninth century.
-
-As will be seen from the following examples, many of the jests are
-still being used as the basis of Twentieth century after dinner stories
-and Comic Weekly jokes.
-
-
- JESTS OF HIEROCLES
-
-A scholar meeting a physician, said, _I beg your pardon for never
-being sick, though you are one of my best friends_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar wishing to catch a mouse that eats his books, baited and set
-a trap, and sat by it to watch.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar wishing to teach his horse to eat little, gave him no food at
-all; and the horse dying, _How unlucky_, said he; _as soon as I
-had taught him to live without food he died_!
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar meaning to sell a house, carried about a stone of it as a
-specimen.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar desiring to see if sleep became him, shut both his eyes, and
-went to the mirror.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar having bought a house, looked out of the window, and asked
-the passengers, _If the house became him_?
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar dreaming he hit his foot on a nail, felt it pain him when he
-waked, and bound it up. Another scholar coming to see him, asked him,
-_Why he went to bed without shoes_.
-
-A scholar being told the river had carried off a great part of his
-ground, answered, _What shall I say?_
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar sealed a wine vessel he had, but his man bored the bottom and
-stole the liquor. He was astonished at the liquor’s diminishing, though
-the seal was entire; and another saying, “Perhaps it is taken out at
-the bottom.” The scholar answered, _Most foolish of men, it is not
-the under part, but the upper that is deficient_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar meeting a person, said to him, “I heard you were dead.” To
-which the other answered, “You see I am alive.” The scholar replied,
-_Perhaps so, but he who told me the contrary was a man of much more
-credit than you_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar hearing that crows lived two hundred years, bought one,
-saying, _I wish to make the experiment_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar being on board a ship in a tempest, when the rest seized upon
-different articles to swim ashore on, he laid hold of the anchor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar hearing one of two twins was dead, when he met the other,
-asked, _Which of you was it that died? You or your brother?_
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar coming to a ferry, went into the boat on horseback. Being
-asked the reason, he said, _I am in great haste_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar wanting money sold his books, and wrote to his father,
-_Rejoice with me, for now my books maintain me_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar sending his son to war, the youth said, “I shall bring
-you back an enemy’s head.” To which the scholar replied, _If you
-even lose your own head, I shall be happy to see you return in good
-health_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar in Greece receiving a letter from a friend, desiring him to
-buy some books there, neglected the business. But the friend arriving
-some time after, the scholar said, _I am sorry I did not receive your
-letter about the books_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A scholar, a bald man, and a barber, travelling together, agreed each
-to watch four hours at night, in turn, for the sake of security. The
-barber’s lot came first, who shaved the scholar’s head when asleep,
-then waked him when his turn came. The scholar scratching his head, and
-feeling it bald, exclaimed, _You wretch of a barber, you have waked
-the bald man instead of me_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Pope Alexander VII. asking the celebrated Greek, Leo Allatius, why he
-did not enter into orders? he answered, _Because I desire to have it
-in my power to marry if I chuse_. The pope adding, And why do you
-not marry? Leo replied, _Because I desire to have it in my power to
-enter into orders if I chuse_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Erasmus, himself a Satirist, collected thousands of the jests of the
-Greeks and Romans. These more often noted the wit than the witlessness
-of the speakers and include all degrees of wit from mere whimsicality
-to sharpest satire.
-
-Some of the best ones follow.
-
-
- GREEK
-
-A friend asking him how great glory was procured, Agesilaus answered,
-_By contempt of death_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Being asked the boundaries of the Spartan state, he answered, _The
-points of our spears_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One asking him why Sparta had no walls, he shewed him armed citizens,
-saying, _These are the walls of Sparta_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Being very fond of his children, he would sometimes ride about on a
-cane among them. A friend catching him at this sport, Agesilaus said,
-_Tell nobody till you are yourself a father_.
-
-King Demaratus being asked in company whether he was silent through
-folly, or wisdom, answered, _A fool cannot be silent_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Cleomenes the son of Cleombrotus, when presented with some game-cocks,
-by a person who, enhancing the gift, said they were of a breed who
-would die before they yielded; answered, _Give me rather some of the
-breed that kill them_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Pausanias, when a physician told him “You look well,” answered, _Yes,
-you are not my physician_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the same was blamed by a friend, for speaking ill of a physician,
-whom he had never tried, he replied, _If I had tried him, I should
-not have lived to speak ill of him_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Charillus, being angry with his slave, said to him, _Were I not in a
-passion, I would kill thee_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A dancer saying to a Spartan, “You cannot stand so long on one leg as I
-can.” _True_, answered the Spartan, _but any goose can_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another Spartan mother giving her son his shield, when going to battle,
-said _Son, either this, or upon this_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another to her son who complained that his sword was short, said _Do
-you add a step to it_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One objecting to him his luxurious feeding, he showed him some
-dear-bought dish, and said, “Would not you buy this, if it were sold
-for a penny?” “Surely,” said the other. _Then_, said Aristippus,
-_I only give to luxury what you give to avarice_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Diogenes the Cynic, being in the house of Plato, strode over the
-carpets with his dirty feet, saying _I trample the pride of
-Plato_. _True_, said Plato, _but with a greater pride_.
-
-Seeing a very unskilful archer shoot, he seated himself by the mark.
-The reason was _That he may not hit me_.
-
-Going to the town of Myndus, and seeing the gates very large, and the
-town small, he called out _Men of Myndus! shut your gates least the
-town should escape_.
-
-Being asked of what beast the bite is most dangerous, he answered _Of
-wild beasts, that of a slanderer: of tame, that of a flatterer_.
-
-Entering a dirty bath he said _Where are those washed who wash
-here?_
-
-Being asked what wine he liked best, he said _Another’s_.
-
-Crates the Cynic of Thebes, being asked a remedy for love, said
-_Hunger is one remedy. Time is a better. The best is a rope_.
-
-Theophrastus to one who was silent in company said _If you are a fool
-you do wisely! if you are wise you do foolishly_.
-
-Empedocles saying to Xenophanes the philosopher “That a wise man could
-not be found.” _True_, answered Xenophanes, _for it must be a
-wise man who knows him_.
-
-Archelaus, to a prating barber, who asked how he would please to be
-shaved? answered, _In silence_.
-
-One asking Demosthenes what is the first point in eloquence, he
-answered, _Acting_. And the second? _Acting._ And the third?
-_Acting still._
-
-An Athenian who wanted eloquence, but was very brave, when another had,
-in a long and brilliant speech, promised great affairs, got up and
-said, _Men of Athens, all that he has said, I will do_.
-
-Zeuxis entered into a contest of art with Parrhasius. The former
-painted grapes so truly that birds came and pecked at them. The latter
-delineated a cloth so exactly, that Zeuxis coming in, said, “Take away
-the cloth that we may see this piece.” And finding his error, said,
-_Parrhasius, thou hast conquered. I deceived but birds, thou an
-artist_.
-
-Zeuxis painted a boy carrying grapes: the birds came again and pecked.
-Some applauding, Zeuxis flew to the picture in a passion, saying, _My
-boy must be very ill painted_.
-
-Gnathena the courtesan, when a very small bottle of wine was brought
-in, with the praise that it was very old, answered, _It is very
-little for its age_.
-
-Philip of Macedon, sitting in judgment after dinner, an old woman
-receiving an unjust sentence, exclaimed, “I appeal.” “To whom!” said
-Philip. _To Philip, when sober_, answered the matron. The king
-took the lesson.
-
-
- ROMAN
-
-A soldier boasting of a scar in his face, from a wound in battle,
-Augustus said, _Yes, you will look back when you run away_.
-
-Fabia Dollabella saying, she was thirty years of age; Cicero answered,
-_It must be true, for I have heard it these twenty years_.
-
-Seeing Lentulus, his son-in-law, a man of very small stature, walking
-up, with a long sword at his side, he called out, _Who has tied my
-son-in-law to that sword?_
-
-One finding his shoes eaten with mice, in the morning when he rose,
-asked Cato, in great agitation, the meaning of the portent; who
-answered, _It is no prodigy that mice should eat shoes! had the shoes
-eaten the mice, it would have been indeed a prodigy_.
-
-When Brutus was dissuaded from his last battle, as the jeopardy was
-great, he only said, _To-day all will be well, or I shall not
-care_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A large bull being produced in the amphitheatre, the hunter struck
-ten times, and missed. Gallienus, the emperor, who was present, sent
-the hunter a wreath: and all wondering, he said, _It is extremely
-difficult to miss such a mark so often_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One saying, that in Sicily he had bought a lamprey five feet long, for
-a trifle; Galba, the orator, to reprove the lye, said, _No wonder.
-They are found there so long, that the fishers constantly use them for
-cables._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Scipio Nasica going to visit Ennius the poet, was told by his
-maid-servant, that he was not at home, though he knew he was. A few
-days after Ennius came to see Nasica, who hearing his voice, called
-out, that he was not within. Then said Ennius, “What! Do not I hear
-your voice?” To which Nasica replied, _You are an impudent fellow. I
-believed your maid! and you will not believe myself_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sulpitius Galba the orator, pretended to sleep once, while Mecenas made
-love to his wife, but seeing, at the same time, a slave stealing wine
-from the side-board, he cried, _Friend, I do not sleep for all_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From the collection of Poggio we get other Italian stories.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some clowns going to Arezzo, to buy a crucifix for their church, the
-carver seeing them very stupid, said, Do you want a living or a dead
-crucifix? They requiring time to consider: after much deliberation,
-returned, saying, _Make us a living one! for if our neighbours be not
-pleased with that, we can easily kill it_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-An inhabitant of a maritime town, looking out at a window, and seeing
-the ocean in a violent storm, and many vessels tossing about, said to
-a friend who was with him, “I wonder so many people go to sea, when so
-many die there.” _Do not you wonder_, answered the friend, _why
-so many people go to bed, when so many die there?_
-
- * * * * *
-
-Bardella da Mantoua, being led to execution, a priest, who was with
-him, said, “Be of good cheer, for to-night you will sup with the Virgin
-Mary, and with the apostles.” Bardella answered, _It will be a favour
-if you will go for me, for this is a fast-day with me_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Marcello da Scopeto, consulting Coccheto da Trievi, the physician, he
-wrote a receipt, and said, “Here, take this at three times; one every
-morning.” Marcello cut the paper in three; and made a shift to swallow
-it in three mornings.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Tosetto one day putting the physician Zerboico in a violent passion; he
-said, “Peace, rogue. Do not I know that your father was a bricklayer?”
-Tosetto answered, _Nobody knew this, save your father, who used to
-carry him lime_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The following are from _Il Cortegiano_, by Castiglione.
-
- * * * * *
-
-An Italian Doctor of Law, seeing a criminal, who was whipped, walking
-very slowly during the operation, asked him why he did not hasten,
-that he might have fewer stripes; adding many arguments to shew that
-the slower he went, the more he must suffer. To which, the criminal,
-standing still, and looking him full in the face, replied with great
-gravity, _When you are whipped through the streets, walk as you
-please, and pray allow me to enjoy the same liberty_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Duke Frederic of Modena, having built a palace, was at a loss what to
-do with the rubbish. An abbot, standing by, told him to cause a pit
-to be digged large enough to contain it. “And what,” said Frederic,
-laughing, “shall I do with the earth which is dug out of the pit?” To
-which the abbot, with great wisdom, replied, _Make the pit so large
-as to hold all_.
-
-Ponzio of Sila seeing a rustic who had two capons to sell, and agreeing
-on the price, begged him also to carry them to his lodging, where he
-was going, and he would pay him for his pains. Ponzio led him to a
-round bell-tower, separate from the church, near which was an alley:
-when standing still, Ponzio said, “I have wagered a couple of capons
-with a friend, that this bell-tower is not forty feet round, and have
-got a packthread here that we may try it.” So drawing the thread
-from his pocket, he gave one end to the rustic; bidding him hold it,
-while he went round. But when Ponzio came to the other side of the
-bell-tower, where the alley was, he fixed the thread with a nail, and
-ran down the alley with the capons. The peasant after long standing and
-bawling, went round, and had the nail and packthread for his capons and
-labour.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Not every tongue offers us collections to be translated, nor are all
-those that are available yet translated, but we may give a few of
-Spanish origin, taken from the collection of Melchior de Santa Cruz
-which are the flowers of Spanish Apothegms and wise or witty sayings.
-
-Like jesters of all other nations the Spaniards saw fit to heap
-sarcasms on the medical profession.
-
-We can only assume that in those days doctors had not reached the
-heights of sapience they have since attained.
-
-And also, we must remember that it was the custom for the unlearned to
-poke fun at the scholars, hence all professions felt the satiric lash.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the table of Pope Alexander the sixth, the company debated one
-day, if it were advantageous to a state to have physicians in it? The
-greater part held not; and alleged, as a reason, that Rome had passed
-her first, and best, six hundred years without them. But the pope
-said, he was not of that opinion, _for were there no physicians,
-the multitude of mankind would be so great, that the world could not
-contain them_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A Biscayan clergyman, a follower of the cardinal Don Pedro Gonzales de
-Mendoza, pulled one day a pistol out of his pocket. The cardinal saw
-him, and reproved him, saying, “That it was indecent for a clergyman
-to carry arms.” The Biscayan answered, “Most reverend lord, I do not
-carry arms to hurt any man, but to defend myself against the dogs of
-this country, which are remarkable for fierceness.” The cardinal said,
-“I can tell you a charm against dogs. You need only repeat any verse
-of the gospel of St. John.” The Biscayan replied, _Yes, my lord,
-but that does not apply in every case, for many of our dogs do not
-understand Latin_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The same cardinal said of the monks, who, by shaving the top and under
-part of the head, form a crown of hair around, that they had crowns
-which the most ambitious would not envy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A bishop sent a present of six capons to brother Bernaldino Palomo, but
-the servant who carried them stole one. _Tell his lordship_, said
-Palomo, _that I kiss his hands for the five capons.--Do you kiss his
-hands for the other_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Juan de Ayala, lord of the town of Cabolla, slew a crane. His cook,
-when he dressed it, gave a leg to his mistress. When it was served up,
-Juan said, Where is the other leg? The cook answered, Cranes have but
-one leg. The day following, Juan took his cook to the chace with him,
-and perceiving a flock of cranes, which, as usual with that bird, all
-stood upon one leg, the cook said, Your worship sees the truth of what
-I said. Juan riding up to the birds called, _Ox, Ox, Ox_. The
-cranes being startled, put down the other leg: and Juan said, See, you
-knave, have they two legs or one? The cook answered, _Body of me,
-sir, had you called Ox, Ox, to the one you dined on yesterday it would
-have produced its other leg too_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Perico de Ayala, the buffoon of the Marquis de Villena, came to see
-Don Frances, the buffoon of Charles V. when he lay on his death bed.
-Perico seeing him in so bad a way, said, Brother Don Frances, I request
-you, by the great friendship which always was between us, that when you
-go to heaven (which I believe must be very soon, since you lived so
-pious a life), you will beseech God to have mercy on my soul. Frances
-answered, _Tie a thread on this finger, that I may not forget it_.
-These were his last words; and he instantly expired.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The servants of a Spanish lord said, in his presence, that Don Diego
-Deza, archbishop of Seville, was very liberal to his domestics. The
-lord answered, So he may, for he has his wealth but for his life. A
-page replied, _And for how many lives has your lordship yours?_
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some thieves trying one night to break into a shop, in which two
-servant men lay; one of them called to the robbers. _Come back when
-we are asleep._
-
- * * * * *
-
-A rich man sent to call a physician for a slight disorder he had
-suffered the preceding night. The physician felt his pulse, and said,
-Sir, do you eat well? Yes, said the patient. Do you sleep well? I do.
-_Then_, said the physician, _I shall give you something to take
-away all that_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A labourer intending to bind his son apprentice to a butcher, asked a
-gentleman of the village, his friend, to whom he should put him. The
-answer was, _You had best bind him to the physician, for he is the
-best butcher I know_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A physician went to visit a young lady, daughter of a nobleman.
-Desiring her arm, to feel her pulse, the damsel, from pride, covered
-the place with the sleeve of her shift. The physician also drew down
-his coat sleeve, and applying it, said, _A linen pulse must have a
-woollen physician_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A bad painter, who had never produced any thing worth, went to another
-place, and commenced physician. A person who knew him, meeting him
-there, asked the reason of this change. _Because_ said he, _if I
-now commit faults, the earth covers them_.
-
-To a student of a college was brought a large dish of soup, and only
-one pea in it. He rose, and began to strip. His companion asking what
-was the matter, he answered, _I am going to swim after that pea_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The effects of a merchant, who was greatly in debt, being on sale, one
-bought a pillow, saying, _That it must be good to sleep on, since he
-could sleep on it, who owed so much_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The same merchant being asked, how he could sleep with such debts upon
-him? said, _The wonder is, how my creditors could sleep_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A Gallician, being at the war of Granada, received a wound in the head
-with an arrow. The surgeon arriving, said, upon examination, You are a
-dead man, the arrow has pierced your brain. The Gallician said, Look
-again, for that is impossible. The surgeon replied, It is so; I see it
-plain. _It cannot be_, said the Gallician: _for if I had any
-brain, I should not have been here_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A man went to borrow an ass of a neighbour, who said the ass was from
-home. Meanwhile the animal chanced to bray: upon which the borrower
-exclaimed, How! did you not tell me the ass was abroad? The other
-replied, in a passion, _Will you prefer the ass’s word to mine?_
-
- * * * * *
-
-A passenger going to Peru, a great storm arose; and the master of the
-vessel ordered, that the most burdensome articles that every one had
-should be thrown into the sea, to lighten the vessel. Upon which this
-passenger ran and brought up his wife, saying, _That she was the most
-burdensome article he had_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A squire being asked, why he had married a deaf wife? said, _In hopes
-she was also dumb_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The German nation made small pretence to wit or humor. What we have of
-their early efforts is either gross or stupid.
-
-A few specimens taken from their mediæval Jest collections will quickly
-prove this.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A malicious woman often beat her husband; being reproved for it, and
-told that her husband was her head, she answered, _May not I beat my
-own head as I please?_
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some Dutchmen conversing in a bookseller’s shop at Leyden, an unknown
-German came in, upon which one of them exclaimed, “Why is Saul among
-the prophets?” The German retorted: _He is seeking his father’s
-asses_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A very ignorant priest saying mass, saw on the margin of his book,
-_Salta per tria_ (skip three); meaning that he should find the
-rest of the office three leaves further on; upon which he leaped three
-steps forwards from the altar. The clowns about him, thinking he had
-suddenly gone mad, took and bound him, and carried him home.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One being asked, what made him bald? said, _My hair_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A lady asking that celebrated general, prince Maurice, who was the
-first captain of the age? he answered, _The marquis of Spinola is the
-second_. He thereby gave to understand, that he knew himself to be
-the first; but did not chuse either to say so, or tell a falsehood.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two ladies of high rank, disputing the precedence in a procession, the
-Emperor, Charles V. desired they would make him their arbiter. Having
-heard the reasons on both sides, he found no other way to end the
-difference, than by ordering that the most foolish should go first.
-After which there were as many disputes who should go last; till they
-agreed, that each should be foolish in her turn.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Charles V. going to see the new cloister of the Dominicans at Vienna,
-overtook a peasant, who was carrying a sucking pig, and whose cries
-were so disagreeable to the emperor, that, after many expressions of
-impatience, he said to the peasant, “My friend, do not you know how
-to silence a sucking pig?” The poor man said modestly, that he really
-did not, and should be happy to learn. “Take it by the tail,” said
-the Emperor. The peasant finding this succeed upon trial, turned to
-the Emperor, and said, _Faith, friend, you must have been longer at
-the trade than me, for you understand it better_. An answer which
-furnished repeated laughter to Charles and his court.
-
-
- EPIGRAMS
-
-Collections of Mediæval Epigrams are both numerous and lengthy and
-not infrequently their comparative value depends largely on the
-translator’s learning or talent.
-
-For instance a distich of Plato’s is thus translated by Coleridge,
-
-
- _THE THIEF AND THE SUICIDE_
-
- Jack, finding gold, left a rope on the ground;
- Bill, missing his gold, used the rope which he found.
-
-and is thus rendered by Shelley,
-
- A man was about to hang himself,
- Finding a purse, then threw away his rope;
- The owner, coming to reclaim his pelf,
- The halter found and used it. So is Hope
- Changed for Despair--one laid upon the shelf,
- We take the other. Under heaven’s high cope
- Fortune is God--all you endure and do
- Depends on circumstance as much as you.
-
-But the modernization is not just now our pursuit, so the epigrams
-will be given in something approaching chronological order and the
-translator’s name mentioned when known.
-
-
- PLATO
-
- _THE MISER AND THE MOUSE_
-
- “Thou little rogue, what brings thee to my house?”
- Said a starv’d miser to a straggling mouse.
- “Friend,” quoth the mouse, “thou hast no cause to fear;
- I only _lodge_ with thee, I _eat_ elsewhere.”
-
-
- LUCILLIUS
-
- _A MISER’S DREAM_
-
- Flint dream’d he gave a feast, ’twas regal fare,
- And hang’d himself in ’s sleep in sheer despair.
-
-
- NICARCHUS
-
- _THE GREAT CONTENTION_
-
- Three dwarfs contended by a state decree,
- Which was the least and lightest of the three.
- First, Hermon came, and his vast skill to try,
- With thread in hand leap’d through a needle’s eye.
- Forth from a crevice Demas then advanc’d
- And on a spider’s web securely danc’d.
- What feat show’d Sospiter in this high quarrel?--
- No eyes could see him, and he won the laurel.
-
-
- UNKNOWN AUTHOR
-
- _ON LATE-ACQUIRED WEALTH_
-
- Poor in my youth, and in life’s later scenes
- Rich to no end, I curse my natal hour,
- Who nought enjoy’d while young, denied the means;
- And nought when old enjoy’d, denied the power.
-
-
- _A VOICE FROM THE GRAVE_
-
- Phido nor hand nor touch to me applied;
- Fever’d, I thought but of his name--and died.
-
-
- _ON THE INCONSTANCY OF WOMAN’S LOVE_
-
- My Fair says, she no spouse but me
- Would wed, though Jove himself were he.
- She says it: but I deem
- That what the fair to lovers swear
- Should be inscribed upon the air,
- Or in the running stream.
-
-
- CATULLUS
-
- _ON HIS OWN LOVE_
-
- That I love thee, and yet that I hate thee, I feel;
- Impatient, thou bid’st me my reasons explain:
- I tell thee, nor more for my life can reveal,
- That I love thee, and hate thee--and tell it with pain.
-
-
- ALY BEN AHMED BEN MANSOUR
-
- _TO THE VIZIR CASSIM OBID ALLAH, ON THE DEATH OF ONE OF HIS SONS_
-
- Poor Cassim! thou art doom’d to mourn
- By destiny’s decree;
- Whatever happen it must turn
- To misery for thee.
- Two sons hadst thou, the one thy pride,
- The other was thy pest;
- Ah, why did cruel death decide
- To snatch away the best?
- No wonder thou should’st droop with woe,
- Of such a child bereft;
- But now thy tears must doubly flow,
- For ah!--the other’s left.
-
-
- THE KHALIPH RADHI BILLAH
-
- _TO A LADY UPON SEEING HER BLUSH_
-
- Leila! whene’er I gaze on thee
- My alter’d cheek turns pale,
- While upon thine, sweet maid, I see
- A deep’ning blush prevail.
- Leila, shall I the cause impart
- Why such a change takes place?
- The crimson stream deserts my heart,
- To mantle on thy face.
-
-
- JANUS PANNONIUS
-
- _ON AURISPA_
-
- Aurispa nothing writes though learn’d, for he
- By a wise silence seems more learn’d to be.
-
-
- ACTIUS SANNAZARIUS
-
- _ON AUFIDIUS_
-
- A hum’rous fellow in a tavern late,
- Being drunk and valiant, gets a broken pate;
- The surgeon with his instruments and skill,
- Searches his skull, deeper and deeper still,
- To feel his brains, and try if they were sound;
- And, as he keeps ado about the wound,
- The fellow cries--Good surgeon, spare your pains,
- When I began this brawl I had no brains.
-
-
- EURICIUS CORDUS
-
- _TO PHILOMUSUS_
-
- If only when they’re dead, you poets praise,
- I own I’d rather have your blame always.
-
-
- _THE DOCTOR’S APPEARANCE_
-
- Three faces wears the doctor; when first sought
- An angel’s--and a god’s the cure half wrought:
- But when, that cure complete, he seeks his fee,
- The devil looks then less terrible than he.
-
-
- GEORGIUS BUCHANANUS
-
- _TO ZOILUS_
-
- With industry I spread your praise,
- With equal, you my censure blaze;
- But, Zoilus, all in vain we do--
- The world nor credits me nor you.
-
-
- _ON LEONORA_
-
- There’s a lie on thy cheek in its roses,
- A lie echoed back by thy glass.
- Thy necklace on greenhorns imposes,
- And the ring on thy finger is brass.
- Yet thy tongue, I affirm, without giving an inch back,
- Outdoes the sham jewels, rouge, mirror, and pinchbeck.
-
-
- JOHANNES SECUNDUS
-
- _ON CHARINUS, THE HUSBAND OF AN UGLY WIFE_
-
- Your wife’s possest of such a face and mind,
- So charming that, and this so soft and kind,
- So smooth her forehead, and her voice so sweet,
- Her words so tender and her dress so neat;
- That would kind Jove, whence man all good derives,
- In wondrous bounty send me three such wives,
- Dear happy husband, take it on my word,
- To Pluto I’d give two, to take the third.
-
-
- THEODORUS BEZA
-
- In age, youth, and manhood, three wives have I tried,
- Whose qualities rare all my wants have supplied.
- The first, goaded on by the ardour of youth,
- I woo’d for the sake of her person, forsooth:
- The second I took for the sake of her purse;
- And the third--for what reason? I wanted a nurse.
-
-
- PAULUS THOMAS
-
- _ON CELSUS_
-
- With self love Celsus burns: is he not blest?
- For thus without a rival he may rest.
-
-
- STEPHANUS PASCHASIUS
-
- _MARRIED LIFE_
-
- No day, no hour, no moment, is my house
- Free from the clamour of my scolding spouse!
- My servants all are rogues; and so am I,
- Unless, for quiet’s sake, I join the cry.
- I aim, in all her freaks, my wife to please;
- I wage domestic war, in hopes of ease.
- I vain the hopes! and my fond bosom bleeds,
- To feel how soon to peace mad strife succeeds:
- To find, with servants jarring, or my wife,
- The worst of lawsuits is a married life.
-
-
- JOHANNES AUDŒMUS
-
- _TO A FRIEND IN DISTRESS_
-
- I wish thy lot, now bad, still worse, my friend;
- For when at worst, they say, things always mend.
-
-
- _ADVICE TO PONTICUS_
-
- Thou nothing giv’st, but dying wilt: then die:
- He giveth twice, who giveth speedily.
-
-
- BALTHASAR BONIFACIUS
-
- _DANGEROUS LOVE_
-
- All whom I love die young; Zoilus, I’ll try,
- Tho’ loath’d, to love thee--that thou too may’st die.
-
-From Bhartrihari, an Indian philosopher who flourished about the ninth
-century, we select the following cynical paragraphs.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I believed that one woman was devoted to me, but she is now attracted
-by another man, and another man takes pleasure in her, while a second
-woman interests herself in me. Curses on them both, and on the god of
-love, and on the other woman, and on myself.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The fundamentally ignorant man is easily led, and the wise man still
-more easily; but not even the Almighty Himself can exercise any
-influence on the smatterer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A man may tear the pearl from between the teeth of the crocodile; he
-may steer his ship over the roughest seas; he may twine a serpent round
-his brow like a laurel; but he cannot convince a foolish and stubborn
-opponent.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A man may squeeze oil from sand; he may slake his thirst from the well
-in a mirage; he may even obtain possession of a hare’s horn; but he
-cannot convince a foolish and stubborn opponent.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A dog will eat with delight the most noisome and decaying bones, and
-will pay no attention even if the ruler of the gods stands before
-him--and in like manner a mean man takes no heed of the worthlessness
-of his belongings.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Our nobility of birth may pass away; our virtues may fall into decay:
-our moral character may perish as if thrown over a precipice: our
-family may be burnt to ashes, and a thunderbolt may dash away our power
-like an enemy: let us keep a firm grip on our money, for without this
-the whole assembly of virtues are but as blades of glass.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Let a man be wealthy, and he shall be quite wise, learned in the sacred
-writings and of good birth; virtuous, handsome and eloquent. Gold
-attracts all the virtues to itself.
-
-The same portion of the sky that forms a circle round the moon by night
-also forms a circle round the sun by day How great is the labour of
-both!
-
- * * * * *
-
-A sour heart; a face hardened with inward pride and a nature as
-difficult to penetrate as the narrowest of mountain passes--these
-things are known to be characteristic of women: their mind is known
-by the wise to be as changeable as the drop of dew on the lotus leaf.
-Faults develop in a woman as she grows up, exactly as poisonous
-branches sprout from the creeper.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The beautiful features of a woman are praised by the poets--her breasts
-are compared to pots of gold: her face to the shining moon, and her
-hips to the forehead of an elephant: nevertheless the beauty of a woman
-merits no praise.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From _The Baharistan_, the work of Jami, a Persian poet and
-philosopher.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Bahlúl being asked to count the fools of Basrah, replied: “They are
-without the confines of computation. If you ask me, I will count the
-wise men, for they are no more than a limited few.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-A learned man being annoyed while writing a letter to one of his
-confidential friends, at the conduct of a person who, seated at his
-side, glanced out of the corner of his eye at his writing, wrote: “Had
-not a hireling thief been seated at my side and engaged in reading my
-letter I should have written to thee all my secrets.” The man said:
-“By God, my lord, I have neither read nor even looked at thy letter.”
-“Fool!” exclaimed the other; “how then canst thou say what thou now
-sayest?”
-
-A mendicant once coming to beg something at the door of a house, the
-master of it called out to him from the interior: “Pray excuse me: the
-women of the house are not here.” The beggar retorted: “I wish for a
-morsel of bread, not to embrace the women of the house.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-A certain person made a claim of ten dirams on Júhí. The judge
-enquired: “Hast thou any testimony to offer?” On the answer being in
-the negative he continued: “Shall I put him on his oath?” “Of what
-value is _his_ oath?” said the man in reply. “O judge of the
-Faithful,” then proposed Júhí in his turn, “there lives in my quarter
-of the town an Imám, temperate, truthful and beneficent, send for him
-and put him on his oath instead of me, that this man’s mind may be
-easy.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- A poet read me once a wretched ode--
- Verse of the kind where “alif” finds no place.
- I said the kind of verse that _thou_ should’st make,
- Is that in which _no_ letter we could trace.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Jáhiz relates: “I never experienced so much shame as this event
-occasioned me. One day a woman took my hand and led me to the shop of
-a master metal founder, saying to him: ‘Be it thus formed.’ I being
-puzzled to know what this conduct signified, questioned the master, who
-in reply said: ‘She had ordered me to make her a figure in the form
-of Satan. When I told her that I did not know in what semblance to
-make it, she brought thee, as thou knowest, and said: ‘Make it in this
-semblance.’”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The same learned man, too, gives us this relation: “As I was once
-standing in the street, in conversation with a friend, a woman came and
-standing opposite me, gazed in my face. When her staring had exceeded
-all bounds, I said to my slave: ‘Go to that woman and ask her what she
-seeks.’ The slave returning to me thus reported her answer: ‘I wished
-to inflict some punishment on my eyes which had committed a great
-fault, and could find none more severe for them than the sight of thy
-ugly face.’”
-
-A person who perceived an ugly man asking pardon for his sins, and
-praying for deliverance from the fire of hell, said to him: “Wherefore,
-O friend, with such a countenance as thou hast, would’st thou cheat
-hell, and give such a face reluctantly to the fire?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-An assembly of people being seated together, and engaged in discussing
-the merits and defects of men, one of them observed: “Whoever has not
-two seeing eyes is but half a man; and whoever has not in his house a
-beautiful bride is but half a man; finally he who cannot swim in the
-sea is but half a man.” A blind man in the company who had no wife, and
-could not swim, called out to him: “O my dear friend, thou hast laid
-down an extraordinary principle, and cast me so far out of the circle
-of manhood, that still half a man is required before I can take the
-name of one who is no man.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-A Beduin having lost a camel, made an oath that when he found it he
-would sell it for one diram. When however he found it, repenting of
-his oath, he tied a cat to its neck, and called out: “Who will buy
-the camel for one diram and the cat for a hundred dirams; but both
-together, as I will not part them.” “How cheap,” said a person who had
-arrived there, “would be this camel, had it not this collar attached to
-its neck!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-A Beduin who had lost a camel, proclaimed: “Whoever brings me my camel
-shall have two camels as a reward.” “Out, man!” said they to him; “what
-kind of business is this? Is the whole ass load of less value than
-a small additional bundle laid upon it?” “You have this excuse for
-your words,” replied he, “that you have never tasted the pleasure of
-finding, and the sweetness of recovering what has been lost.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-A Khalíf was partaking of food with an Arab from the desert. During
-the repast as his glance fell upon the Arab’s portion he saw in it a
-hair, and said: “O Arab, take that hair out of thy food.” The Arab
-exclaimed: “It is impossible to eat at the table of one who looks so at
-his guest’s portion as to perceive a hair in it.” Then withdrawing his
-hand he swore never again to partake of food at his table.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A weaver left a deposit in the house of a learned man. After a few
-days had elapsed, finding some necessity for it, he paid him a visit
-and found him seated at the door of his house giving instruction to a
-number of pupils who were standing in a row before him. “O Professor,”
-said the man, “I am in want of the deposit which I left.” “Be seated
-a moment,” replied the other, “until I have finished the lesson.” The
-weaver sat down, but the lesson lasted a long time and he was pressed
-for time. Now that learned man had a habit when giving lessons, of
-wagging his head, and the weaver seeing this, and fancying that to
-give a lesson was merely to wag the head, said: “Rise up, O Professor,
-and make me thy deputy till thy return: let me wag my head in place
-of thee, and do thou bring out my deposit, for I am in a hurry.” The
-learned man, hearing this, laughed and said:
-
- * * * * *
-
- In public halls the city jurist boasts
- That all, obscure or clear, to him is known;
- But if thou ask him aught, his answer mark:--
- A gesture with the hand or head alone.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From a collection called _The Pleasantries of Cogia Nasr Eddin
-Effendi_, the typical noodle of the Turks.
-
-Cogia Effendi one day went into a garden, pulled up some carrots and
-turnips and other kinds of vegetables, which he found, putting some
-into a sack and some into his bosom; suddenly the gardener coming up,
-laid hold of him, and said, “What are you seeking here?” The Cogia,
-being in great consternation, not finding any other reply, answered,
-“For some days past a great wind has been blowing, and that wind blew
-me hither.” “But who pulled up these vegetables,” said the gardener?
-“As the wind blew very violently,” replied the Cogia, “it cast me here
-and there, and whatever I laid hold of in the hope of saving myself
-remained in my hands.” “Ah,” said the gardener, “but who filled the
-sack with them?” “Well,” said the Cogia, “that is the very question I
-was about to ask myself when you came up.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day Cogia Nasr Eddin Effendi said, “O Mussulmen, give thanks to God
-Most High that He did not give the camel wings; for, had He given them,
-they would have perched upon your houses and chimneys, and have caused
-them to tumble upon your heads.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day the, Cogia saw a great many ducks playing on the top of a
-fountain. The Cogia, running towards them, said, “I’ll catch you”;
-whereupon they all rose up and took to flight. The Cogia, taking a
-little bread in his hand, sat down on the side of the fountain, and
-crumbling the bread in the fountain, fell to eating. A person coming
-up, said, “What are you eating?” “Duck broth,” replied the Cogia.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day the Cogia went with Cheragh Ahmed to the den of a wolf, in
-order to see the cubs. Said the Cogia to Ahmed: “Do you go in.” Ahmed
-did so. The old wolf was abroad, but presently returning, tried to get
-into the cave to its young. When it was about half way in the Cogia
-seized hard hold of it by the tail. The wolf in its struggles cast a
-quantity of dust into the eyes of Ahmed. “Hallo, Cogia,” he cried,
-“What does this dust mean.” “If the wolf’s tail breaks,” said the
-Cogia, “You’ll soon see what the dust means.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day a thief got into the Cogia’s house. Cries his wife, “O Cogia,
-there is a thief in the house.” “Don’t make any disturbance,” says the
-Cogia. “I wish to God that he may find something, so that I may take it
-from him.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Cogia Effendi, every time he returned to his house, was in the habit
-of bringing a piece of liver, which his wife always gave to a common
-woman, placing before the Cogia leavened patties to eat when he came
-home in the evening. One day the Cogia said, “O wife, every day I bring
-home a liver: where do they all go to?” “The cat runs away with all
-of them,” replied the wife. Therefore the Cogia getting up, put his
-hatchet in the trunk and locked it up. Says his wife to the Cogia,
-“For fear of whom do you lock up the hatchet?” “For fear of the cat,”
-replied the Cogia. “What should the cat do with the hatchet?” said the
-wife. “Why,” replied the Cogia, “as he takes a fancy to the liver,
-which costs two aspres, is it not likely that he will take a fancy to
-the hatchet, which costs four?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day the Cogia, being out on a journey, encamped along with a
-caravan, and tied up his horse along with the others. When it was
-morning the Cogia could not find his horse amongst the rest, not
-knowing how to distinguish it; forthwith taking a bow and arrow in his
-hand, he said, “Men, men, I have lost my horse.” Every one laughing,
-took his own horse; and the Cogia looking, saw a horse which he
-instantly knew to be his own. Forthwith placing his right foot in the
-stirrup, he mounted the horse, so that his face looked to the horse’s
-tail. “O Cogia,” said they, “why do you mount the horse the wrong way?”
-“It is not my fault,” said he, “but the horse’s, for the horse is
-left-handed.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day as the Cogia was travelling in the Derbend he met a shepherd.
-Said the shepherd to the Cogia. “Art thou a faquir?” “Yes,” said the
-Cogia. Said the shepherd, “See these seven men who are lying here, they
-were men like you whom I killed because they could not answer questions
-which I asked. Now, in the first place let us come to an understanding;
-if you can answer my questions let us hold discourse, if not, let us
-say nothing.” Says the Cogia, “What may your questions be?” Said the
-shepherd, “The moon, when it is new, is small, afterwards it increases,
-until it looks like a wheel; after the fifteenth, it diminishes, and
-does not remain; then again, there is a little one, of the size of
-Hilal, which does remain. Now what becomes of the old moons?” Says
-the Cogia. “How is it that you don’t know a thing like that? They take
-those old moons and make lightning of them, have you not seen them when
-the heaven thunders, glittering like so many swords?” “Bravo, Fakeer,”
-said the shepherd. “Well art thou acquainted with the matter, I had
-come to the same conclusion myself.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day the Cogia’s wife, in order to plague the Cogia, boiled some
-broth exceedingly hot, brought it into the room and placed it on the
-table. The wife then, forgetting that it was hot, took a spoon and
-put some into her mouth, and, scalding herself, began to shed tears.
-“O, wife,” said the Cogia, “what is the matter with you; is the broth
-hot?” “Dear Efendy,” said the wife, “my mother, who is now dead loved
-broth very much; I thought of that, and wept on her account.” The Cogia
-thinking that what she said was truth, took a spoonful of the broth and
-burning his mouth began to cry and bellow. “What is the matter with
-you,” said his wife; “why do you cry?” Said the Cogia, “You cry because
-your mother is gone, but I cry because her daughter is here.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day a man came to the house of the Cogia and asked him to lend him
-his ass. “He is not at home,” replied the Cogia. But it so happened
-that the ass began to bray within. “O Cogia Efendy,” said the man, “you
-say that the ass is not at home, and there he is braying within.” “What
-a strange fellow you are!” said the Cogia. “You believe the ass, but
-will not believe a grey bearded man like me.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day the Cogia roasted a goose, and set out in order to carry it to
-the Emperor. On the way, feeling very hungry, he cut off one leg and
-ate it. Coming into the presence of the Emperor, he placed the goose
-before him. On seeing it, Tamerlank said to himself, “The Cogia is
-making game of me,” and was very angry, and demanded, “How happens it
-that this goose has but one foot?” Said the Cogia, “In our country all
-the geese have only one foot. If you disbelieve me, look at the geese
-by the side of that fountain.” Now at that time there was a flock of
-geese by the rim of the fountain, all of whom were standing on one leg.
-Timour instantly ordered that all the drummers should at once play up;
-the drummers began to strike with their sticks, and forthwith all the
-geese stood on both legs. On Timour saying, “Don’t you see that they
-have two legs?” the Cogia replied, “If you keep up that drumming you
-yourself will presently have four.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day the Cogia’s wife, having washed the Cogia’s kaftan, hung it
-upon a tree to dry; the Cogia going out saw, as he supposed, a man
-standing in the tree with his arms stretched out. Says the Cogia to his
-wife, “O wife, go and fetch me my bow and arrow.” His wife fetched and
-brought them to him; the Cogia taking an arrow, shot it and pierced the
-kaftan and stretched it on the ground; then returning, he made fast
-his door and lay down to sleep. Going out in the morning he saw that
-what he had shot was his own kaftan; thereupon, sitting down, he cried
-aloud, “O God, be thanked; if I had been in it I should have certainly
-been killed.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day as the Cogia was going to his house, he met a number of
-students, and said to them, “Gentlemen, pray this night come to our
-house and taste a sup of the old father’s broth.” “Very good,” said the
-students, and following the Cogia, came to the house. “Pray enter,”
-said he, and brought them into the house, then going up to where his
-wife was, “O wife,” said he, “I have brought some travellers that we
-may give them a cup of broth.” “O master,” said his wife, “is there
-oil in the house or rice, or have you brought any that you wish to
-have broth?” “Bless me,” said the Cogia, “give me the broth pan,” and
-snatching it up, he forthwith ran to where the students were, and
-exclaimed, “Pray, pardon me gentlemen, but had there been oil or rice
-in our house, this is the pan in which I would have served the broth up
-to you.”
-
-One day the Cogia going into a person’s garden climbed up into an
-apricot tree and began to eat the apricots. The master coming said,
-“Cogia, what are you doing here?” “Dear me,” said the Cogia, “don’t
-you see that I am a nightingale sitting in the apricot tree?” Said the
-gardener, “Let me hear you sing.” The Cogia began to warble. Whereupon
-the other fell to laughing, and said: “Do you call that singing?” “I am
-a Persian nightingale,” said the Cogia, “and Persian nightingales sing
-in this manner.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-From _The Book of Laughable Stories_, collected by Gregory Bar
-Hebræus in the thirteenth century. The collection includes some seven
-hundred stories taken from the literary products of all the Oriental
-countries available at that time.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Bazarjamhir said, “When thou dost not know which of two things is the
-better for thee [to do], take counsel with thy wife and do the opposite
-of that which she saith, for she will only counsel [thee to do] the
-things which are injurious to thee.”
-
-A certain woman saw Socrates as they were carrying him along to crucify
-him, and she wept and said, “Woe is me, for they are about to slay thee
-without having committed any offence.” And Socrates made answer unto
-her, saying, “O foolish woman, wouldst thou have me also commit some
-crime that I might be punished like a criminal?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Alexander [the Great] saw among the soldiers of his army a man called
-Alexander who continually took to flight in the time of war, and he
-said to him, “It is said that upon the ring of Pythagoras there was
-written, ‘The evil which is not perpetual is better than the good which
-is not perpetual.’”
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is said that upon the ring of Pythagoras there was written, “The
-evil which is not perpetual is better than the good which is not
-perpetual.”
-
-It was said to Socrates, “Which of the irrational animals is not
-beautiful?” And he replied, “Woman,” referring to her folly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another of the sages said, “The members of a man’s household are the
-moth of his money.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-A certain man who had once been a painter left off painting and became
-a physician. And when it was said to him, “Why hast thou done this?” he
-replied, “The errors [made] in painting [all] eyes see and scrutinize;
-but the mistakes of the healing art the ground covereth.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another king was asked by his sages, “To what limit hath thine
-understanding reached?” And he replied, “To the extent that I believe
-no man, neither do I put any confidence in any man whatsoever.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another king said, “If men only knew how pleasant to me it is to
-forgive faults there is not one of them who would not commit them.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-A poet said unto a certain avaricious man, “Why dost thou never bid me
-to a feast with thee?” He replied to him, “Because thou eatest very
-heartily indeed, besides thou swallowest so hurriedly; and whilst thou
-art still eating one morsel thou art getting ready for the next.” The
-poet said to him, “What wouldst thou have then? Wouldst thou have me
-whilst I am eating one morsel to stand up and bow the knee, and then
-take another?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another sage said, “I hold every man who saith that he hateth riches to
-be a liar until he establisheth a sure proof thereof from what he hath
-gathered together, and having established his belief it is, at the same
-time, quite certain that he is a fool!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another miser whilst quarreling violently with his neighbour was asked
-by a certain man, “Why art thou fighting with him?” He replied to him,
-“I had eaten a roasted head, and I threw the bones outside my door, so
-that my friends might rejoice and mine enemies be sorry when they saw
-in what a luxurious manner I was living; and this fellow rose up and
-took the bones and threw them before his own door.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another poet was questioned by a man concerning a certain miser,
-saying, “Who eateth with him at his table?” and the poet replied,
-“Flies.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-To a certain comedian it was said, “When a cock riseth up in the early
-morning hours, why doth he hold one foot in the air?” He replied, “If
-he should lift up both feet together he would fall down.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another actor went into his house and found a sieve laid upon his
-couch, and he went and hung himself up on the peg in the wall. His wife
-said to him, “What is this? Art thou possessed of a devil?” And he
-said to her, “Nay, but when I saw the sieve in my place, I went to its
-place.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another fool had two hunting dogs, one black and the other white. And
-the governor said to him, “Give me one of them.” The man said to him,
-“Which of them dost thou want?” and the governor said, “The black one.”
-The man said, “The black one I love more than the white,” and the
-governor replied, “Then give me the white one.” And the foolish man
-said to him, “The white one I love more than both put together.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another fool said, “My father went twice to Jerusalem, and there did he
-die and was buried, but I do not know which time he died, whether it
-was during the first visit or the last.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-When another fool was told, “Thy ass is stolen,” he said, “Blessed be
-God that I was not upon him.”
-
-Another silly man buried some zûzê coins in the plain, and made a
-fragment of a cloud a mark of the place where it was. And some days
-after he came to carry away the money, but could not find the place to
-do so, and he said, “Consider now; the zûzê were in the ground, and
-they must have been carried away by some people. For who can steal the
-cloud which is in the sky? And what arm could reach there unto? This
-matter is one worthy to be wondered at.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another simpleton was asked, “How many days’ journey is it between
-Aleppo and Damascus?” and he replied, “Twelve; six to go and six to
-come back.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another silly man having gone on a journey to carry on his trade wrote
-to his father, saying, “I have been ill with a very grievous sickness,
-and if any one else had been in my place he would not have been able to
-live.” And his father made him answer, saying, “Believe me, my son, if
-thou hadst died thou wouldst have grieved me sadly, and I would never
-have spoken to thee again in the whole course of my life.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-A certain lunatic put on a skin cloak with the hairy side outwards,
-and when people asked him why he did so, he replied, “If God had known
-that it was better to have the hairy side of the skin cloak inwards, He
-would not have created the wool on the outside of the sheep.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another fool owned a house together with some other folk, and he said
-one day, “I want to sell the half of it which is my share and buy the
-other half, so that the whole building may be mine.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-From earliest times the stupid or blundering fellow has been the butt
-of his comrades’ shafts of wit or sarcasm.
-
-The feeling of superiority, so delightful to the human mind, found easy
-expression in jeering at the discomfiture of the noodle.
-
-More often than not, noodle stories are told of residents of some
-particular locality or district, whose people are looked upon as
-simpletons. Doubtless this originally meant merely country people, who
-were provincial or outlandish compared to the city bred.
-
-But as the Greeks chose Bœotia for their noodle colony and the Persians
-guyed the people of Emessa, so each country has had a location or a
-community for its laughing stock down to the Gothamites of the English.
-
-As a rule the same noodle stories are found in many languages, and only
-an exhaustive study of comparative folk lore can adequately consider
-the various tales.
-
-As an instance, there is the story, of Eastern origin, that may be
-found in the booby tales of all nations. It has come down in late years
-in the form of a play, called in a German version, “Der Tisch Ist
-Gedeckt” and in an English form, “The Obstinate Family.”
-
-In the Arabian tale,
-
-A blockhead, having married his pretty cousin, gave the customary feast
-to their relations and friends. When the festivities were over, he
-conducted his guests to the door, and from absence of mind neglected
-to shut it before returning to his wife. “Dear cousin,” said his wife
-to him when they were alone, “go and shut the street door.” “It would
-be strange indeed,” he replied, “if I did such a thing. Am I just made
-a bridegroom, clothed in silk, wearing a shawl and a dagger set with
-diamonds, and am I to go and shut the door? Why, my dear, you are
-crazy. Go and shut it yourself.” “Oh, indeed!” exclaimed the wife.
-“Am I, young, robed in a dress, with lace and precious stones--am I
-to go and shut the street door? No, indeed! It is you who are become
-crazy, and not I. Come, let us make a bargain,” she continued; “and
-let the first who speaks go and fasten the door.” “Agreed,” said the
-husband, and immediately he became mute, and the wife too was silent,
-while they both sat down, dressed as they were in their nuptial
-attire, looking at each other and seated on opposite sofas. Thus they
-remained for two hours. Some thieves happened to pass by, and seeing
-the door open, entered and laid hold of whatever came to their hands.
-The silent couple heard footsteps in the house, but opened not their
-mouths. The thieves came into the room and saw them seated motionless
-and apparently indifferent to all that might take place. They continued
-their pillage, therefore, collecting together everything valuable, and
-even dragging away the carpets from beneath them; they laid hands on
-the noodle and his wife, taking from their persons every article of
-jewellery, while they, in fear of losing the wager, said not a word.
-Having thus cleared the house, the thieves departed quietly, but the
-pair continued to sit, uttering not a syllable. Towards morning a
-police officer came past on his tour of inspection, and seeing the door
-open, walked in. After searching all the rooms and finding no person,
-he entered their apartment, and inquired the meaning of what he saw.
-Neither of them would condescend to reply. The officer became angry,
-and ordered their heads to be cut off. The executioner’s sword was
-about to perform its office, when the wife cried out, “Sir, he is my
-husband. Do not kill him!” “Oh, oh,” exclaimed the husband, overjoyed
-and clapping his hands, “you have lost the wager; go and shut the
-door.” He then explained the whole affair to the police officer, who
-shrugged his shoulders and went away.
-
-Another story, known in a score of variants is found in a collection of
-tales of the Kabaïl, Algeria, to this effect:
-
-The mother of a youth of the Beni Jennad clan gave him a hundred reals
-to buy a mule; so he went to market, and on his way met a man carrying
-a water melon for sale. “How much for the melon?” he asks. “What will
-you give?” says the man. “I have only got a hundred reals,” answered
-the booby; “had I more, you should have it.” “Well,” rejoined the man,
-“I’ll take them.” Then the youth took the melon and handed over the
-money. “But tell me,” says he, “will its young one be as green as it
-is?” “Doubtless,” answered the man, “it will be green.” As the booby
-was going home, he allowed the melon to roll down a slope before him.
-It burst on its way, when up started a frightened hare. “Go to my
-house, young one,” he shouted. “Surely a green animal has come out of
-it.” And when he got home, he inquired of his mother if the young one
-had arrived.
-
-Other stories of boobies or simpletons follow, taken here and there
-from the enormous mass of humorous literature on this theme.
-
-Yet noodles are not always witless fools.
-
-The principle of the humor in such tales is merely and only the
-superiority complex, that loves to laugh good naturedly or with a
-contemptuous tolerance at the speech or actions of those less clever
-than itself. It is the attitude of the cognoscenti toward,
-
- “The lady from the provinces, who dresses like a guy,
- Who doesn’t think she waltzes,--but would rather like to try,”
-
-as W. S. Gilbert puts it.
-
-One day some men were walking by the riverside, and came to a place
-where the contrary currents caused the water to boil as in a whirlpool.
-“See how the water boils!” says one. “If we had plenty of oatmeal,”
-says another, “we might make enough porridge to serve all the village
-for a month.” So it was resolved that part of them should go to the
-village and fetch their oatmeal, which was soon brought and thrown into
-the river. But there presently arose the question of how they were to
-know when the porridge was ready. This difficulty was overcome by the
-offer of one of the company to jump in, and it was agreed that if he
-found it ready for use, he should signify the same to his companions.
-The man jumped in, and found the water deeper than he expected. Thrice
-he rose to the surface, but said nothing. The others, impatient at his
-remaining so long silent, and seeing him smack his lips, took this for
-an avowal that the porridge was good, and so they all jumped in after
-him and were drowned.
-
-A poor old woman used to beg her food by day and cook it at night.
-Half of the food she would eat in the morning, and the other half in
-the evening. After a while a cat got to know of this arrangement, and
-came and ate the meal for her. The old woman was very patient, but at
-last could no longer endure the cat’s impudence, and so she laid hold
-of it. She argued with herself as to whether she should kill it or
-not. “If I slay it,” she thought, “it will be a sin; but if I keep it
-alive, it will be to my heavy loss.” So she determined only to punish
-it. She procured some cotton wool and some oil, and soaking the one in
-the other, tied it on to the cat’s tail and then set it on fire. Away
-rushed the cat across the yard, up the side of the window, and on to
-the roof, where its flaming tail ignited the thatch and set the whole
-house on fire. The flames soon spread to other houses, and the whole
-village was destroyed.
-
-Not a few of the _Bizarrures_ of the Sieur Gaulard are the
-prototypes of bulls and foolish sayings of the typical Irishman,
-which go their ceaseless rounds in popular periodicals, and are even
-audaciously reproduced as original in our “comic” journals. To cite
-some examples:
-
- * * * * *
-
-A friend one day told M. Gaulard that the Dean of Besançon was dead.
-“Believe it not,” said he, “for had it been so he would have told me
-himself, since he writes to me about everything.”
-
-M. Gaulard asked his secretary one evening what hour it was. “Sir,”
-replied the secretary, “I cannot tell you by the dial, because the sun
-is set.” “Well,” quoth M. Gaulard, “and can you not see by the candle?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-On another occasion the Sieur called from his bed to a servant desiring
-him to see if it was daylight yet. “There is no sign of daylight,”
-said the servant. “I do not wonder,” rejoined the Sieur, “that thou
-canst not see day, great fool as thou art. Take a candle and look with
-it out at the window, and thou shalt see whether it be day or not.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-In a strange house, the Sieur found the walls of his bed chamber full
-of great holes. “This,” exclaimed he in a rage, “is the cursedest
-chamber in all the world. One may see day all the night through.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Travelling in the country, his man, to gain the fairest way, rode
-through a field sowed with pease, upon which M. Gaulard cried to him,
-“Thou knave, wilt thou burn my horse’s feet? Dost thou not know that
-about six weeks ago I burned my mouth with eating pease, they were so
-hot?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-A poor man complained to him that he had had a horse stolen from him.
-“Why did you not mark his visage,” asked M. Gaulard, “and the clothes
-he wore?” “Sir,” said the man, “I was not there when he was stolen.”
-Quoth the Sieur, “You should have left somebody to ask him his name,
-and in what place he resided.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-M. Gaulard felt the sun so hot in the midst of a field at noontide in
-August that he asked of those about him, “What means the sun to be
-so hot? How should it not keep its heat till winter, when it is cold
-weather?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-A proctor, discoursing with M. Gaulard, told him that a dumb, deaf, or
-blind man could not make a will but with certain additional forms. “I
-pray you,” said the Sieur, “give me that in writing, that I may send it
-to a cousin of mine who is lame.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day a friend visited the Sieur and found him asleep in his chair.
-“I slept,” said he, “only to avoid idleness; for I must always be doing
-something.”
-
-The Abbé of Poupet complained to him that the moles had spoiled a fine
-meadow, and he could find no remedy for them. “Why, cousin,” said M.
-Gaulard, “it is but paving your meadow, and the moles will no more
-trouble you.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-M. Gaulard had a lackey belonging to Auvergne, who robbed him of twelve
-crowns and ran away, at which he was very angry, and said he would have
-nothing that came from that country. So he ordered all that was from
-Auvergne to be cast out of the house, even his mule; and to make the
-animal more ashamed, he caused his servants to take off its shoes and
-its saddle and bridle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Among the cases decided by a Turkish Kází, two men came before him
-one of whom complained that the other had almost bit his ear off. The
-accused denied this, and declared that the fellow had bit his own
-ear. After pondering the matter for some time, the judge told them to
-come again two hours later. Then he went into his private room, and
-attempted to bring his ear and his mouth together; but all he did was
-to fall backwards and break his head. Wrapping a cloth round his head,
-he returned to court, and the two men coming in again presently, he
-thus decided the question: “No man can bite his own ear, but in trying
-to do so he may fall down and break his head.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The typical noodle of the Turks, the Khoja Nasru ’d-Dín, quoted above
-as Cogia Nasr Eddin Effendi, is said to have been a subject of the
-independent prince of Karaman, at whose capital, Konya, he resided, and
-he is represented as a contemporary of Timúr (Tamerlane), in the middle
-of the fourteenth century. The pleasantries which are ascribed to him
-are for the most part common to all countries, but some are probably of
-genuine Turkish origin. To cite a few specimens: The Khoja’s wife said
-to him one day, “Make me a present of a kerchief of red Yemen silk, to
-put on my head.” The Khoja stretched out his arms and said, “Like that?
-Is that large enough?” On her replying in the affirmative he ran off
-to the bazaar, with his arms still stretched out, and meeting a man on
-the road, he bawled to him, “Look where you are going, O man, or you
-will cause me to lose my measure!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One evening the Khoja went to the well to draw water, and seeing the
-moon reflected in the water, he exclaimed, “The moon has fallen into
-the well; I must pull it out.” So he let down the rope and hook, and
-the hook became fastened to a stone, whereupon he exerted all his
-strength, and the rope broke, and he fell upon his back. Looking into
-the sky, he saw the moon, and cried out joyfully, “Praise be to Allah!
-I am sorely bruised, but the moon has got into its place again.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Chinese have a story of a lady who had been recently married, and
-on the third day saw her husband returning home, so she slipped quietly
-behind him and gave him a hearty kiss. The husband was annoyed, and
-said she offended all propriety. “Pardon! pardon!” said she. “I did not
-know it was you.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Indian fiction abounds in stories of simpletons, and probably the
-oldest extant drolleries of the Gothamite type are found in the
-_J[.a]takas_, or Buddhist Birth stories. Assuredly they were own
-brothers to our mad men of Gotham, the Indian villagers who, being
-pestered by mosquitoes when at work in the forest, bravely resolved,
-according to _J[.a]taka_ 44, to take their bows and arrows and
-other weapons and make war upon the troublesome insects until they
-had shot dead or cut in pieces every one; but in trying to shoot the
-mosquitoes they only shot, struck, and injured one another. And nothing
-more foolish is recorded of the Schildburgers than Somadeva relates,
-in his _Kathá Sarit Ságara_, of the simpletons who cut down the
-palm-trees: Being required to furnish the king with a certain quantity
-of dates, and perceiving that it was very easy to gather the dates of
-a palm which had fallen down of itself, they set to work and cut down
-all the date-palms in their village, and having gathered from them
-their whole crop of dates, they raised them up and planted them again,
-thinking they would grow.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In Málava there were two Bráham brothers, and the wealth inherited
-from their father was left jointly between them. And while they were
-dividing that wealth they quarrelled about one having too little and
-the other having too much, and they made a teacher learned in the
-Vedas arbitrator, and he said to them, “You must divide everything
-your father left into two halves, so that you may not quarrel about
-the inequality of the division.” When the two fools heard this, they
-divided every single thing into two equal parts--house, beds, in fact,
-all their property, including their cattle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry Stephens (Henri Estienne), in the Introduction to his _Apology
-for Herodotus_, relates some very amusing noodle-stories, such as of
-him who, burning his shins before the fire, and not having wit enough
-to go back from it, sent for masons to remove the chimney; of the fool
-who ate the doctor’s prescription, because he was told to “take it”; of
-another wittol who, having seen one spit upon iron to try whether it
-was hot, did likewise with his porridge; and, best of all, he tells of
-a fellow who was hit on the back with a stone as he rode upon his mule,
-and cursed the animal for kicking him. This last exquisite jest has its
-analogue in that of the Irishman who was riding on an ass one fine day,
-when the beast, by kicking at the flies that annoyed him, got one of
-its hind feet entangled in the stirrup, whereupon the rider dismounted,
-saying, “Faith, if you’re going to get up, it’s time I was getting
-down.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The poet Ovid alludes to the story of Ino persuading the women of the
-country to roast the wheat before it was sown, which may have come
-to India through the Greeks, since we are told in the _Kathá Sarit
-S[.a]gara_ of a foolish villager who one day roasted some sesame
-seeds, and finding them nice to eat, he sowed a large quantity of
-roasted seeds, hoping that similar ones would come up. The story
-also occurs in Coelho’s _Contes Portuguezes_, and is probably of
-Buddhistic origin. An analogous story is told of an Irishman who gave
-his hens hot water, in order that they should lay boiled eggs!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Few folk-tales are more widely diffused than that of the man who set
-out in quest of as great noodles as those of his own household. The
-details may be varied more or less, but the fundamental outline is
-identical, wherever the story is found; and, whether it be an instance
-of the transmission of popular tales from one country to another, or
-one of those “primitive fictions” which are said to be the common
-heritage of the Aryans, its independent development by different
-nations and in different ages cannot be reasonably maintained.
-
-Thus, in one Gaelic version of this diverting story--in which our old
-friends the Gothamites reappear on the scene to enact their unconscious
-drolleries--a lad marries a farmer’s daughter, and one day while they
-are all busily engaged in peat cutting, she is sent to the house to
-fetch the dinner. On entering the house, she perceives the speckled
-pony’s packsaddle hanging from the roof, and says to herself, “Oh, if
-that packsaddle were to fall and kill me, what should I do?” and here
-she began to cry, until her mother, wondering what could be detaining
-her, comes, when she tells the old woman the cause of her grief,
-whereupon the mother, in her turn, begins to cry, and when the old man
-next comes to see what is the matter with his wife and daughter, and
-is informed about the speckled pony’s packsaddle, he too, “mingles his
-tears” with theirs. At last the young husband arrives, and finding the
-trio of noodles thus grieving at an imaginary misfortune, he there
-and then leaves them, declaring his purpose not to return until he
-has found three as great fools as themselves. In the course of his
-travels he meets with some strange folks: men whose wives make them
-believe whatever they please--one, that he is dead; another, that he is
-clothed, when he is stark naked; a third, that he is not himself. He
-meets with the twelve fishers who always miscounted their number; the
-noodles who went to drown an eel in the sea; and a man trying to get
-his cow on the roof of his house, in order that she might eat the grass
-growing there.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In Russian variants the old parents of a youth named Lutonya weep over
-the supposititious death of a potential grandchild, thinking how sad
-it would have been if a log which the old woman had dropped had killed
-that hypothetical infant. The parents’ grief appears to Lutonya so
-uncalled for that he leaves the house, declaring he will not return
-until he has met with people more foolish than they. He travels long
-and far, and sees several foolish doings. In one place a horse is
-being inserted into its collar by sheer force; in another, a woman is
-fetching milk from the cellar a spoonful at a time; and in a third
-place some carpenters are attempting to stretch a beam which is not
-long enough, and Lutonya earns their gratitude by showing them how to
-join a piece to it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A well known English version is to this effect: There was a young man
-who courted a farmer’s daughter, and one evening when he came to the
-house she was sent to the cellar for beer. Seeing an axe stuck in a
-beam above her head, she thought to herself, “Suppose I were married
-and had a son, and he were to grow up, and be sent to this cellar for
-beer, and this axe were to fall and kill him--oh, dear! oh dear!” and
-there she sat crying and crying, while the beer flowed all over the
-cellar floor, until her old father and mother come in succession and
-blubber along with her about the hypothetical death of her imaginary
-grown up son. The young man goes off in quest of three bigger fools,
-and sees a woman hoisting a cow on to the roof of her cottage to
-eat the grass that grew among the thatch, and to keep the animal
-from falling off, she ties a rope round its neck, then goes into the
-kitchen, secures at her waist the rope, which she had dropped down the
-chimney, and presently the cow stumbles over the roof, and the woman
-is pulled up the flue till she sticks half way. In an inn he sees a
-man attempting to jump into his trousers--a favourite incident in this
-class of stories; and farther along he meets with a party raking the
-moon out of a pond.
-
-Another English variant relates that a young girl having been left
-alone in the house, her mother finds her in tears when she comes home,
-and asks the cause of her distress. “Oh,” says the girl, “while you
-were away, a brick fell down the chimney, and I thought, if it had
-fallen on me I might have been killed!” The only novel adventure which
-the girl’s betrothed meets with, in his quest of three bigger fools, is
-an old woman trying to drag an oven with a rope to the table where the
-dough lay.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a Sicilian version in Pitrá’s collection, called _The
-Peasant of Larcarà_, in which the bride’s mother imagines that her
-daughter has a son who falls into the cistern. The groom--they are
-not yet married--is disgusted, and sets out on his travels with no
-fixed purpose of returning if he finds some fools greater than his
-mother-in-law, as in the Venetian tale. The first fool he meets is a
-mother, whose child, in playing the game called _nocciole_, tries
-to get his hand out of the hole whilst his fist is full of stones. He
-cannot, of course, and the mother thinks they will have to cut off
-his hand. The traveller tells the child to drop the stones, and then
-he draws out his hand easily enough. Next he finds a bride who cannot
-enter the church because she is very tall and wears a high comb. The
-difficulty is settled as in the former story. After a while he comes
-to a woman who is spinning and drops her spindle. She calls out to the
-pig, whose name is Tony, to pick it up for her. The pig does nothing
-but grunt, and the woman in anger cries, “Well, you won’t pick it up?
-May your mother die!” The traveller, who had overheard all this, takes
-a piece of paper, which he folds up like a letter, and then knocks at
-the door. “Who is there?” “Open the door, for I have a letter for you
-from Tony’s mother, who is ill and wishes to see her son before she
-dies.” The woman wonders that her imprecation has taken effect so soon,
-and readily consents to Tony’s visit. Not only this, but she loads a
-mule with everything necessary for the comfort of the body and soul of
-the dying pig. The traveller leads away the mule with Tony, and returns
-home so pleased with having found that the outside world contains so
-many fools that he marries as he had first intended.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In other Italian versions, a man is trying to jump into his stockings;
-another endeavours to put walnuts into a sack with a fork; and a woman
-dips a knotted rope into a deep well, and then having drawn it up,
-squeezes the water out of the knots into a pail.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mediæval writers most frequently gave voice to short proverbs, maxims
-or epigrams, but a longer story is this delightful one from the old
-Folk tales of India.
-
-
- SAN SHROE BU
-
- _ENFORCED GREATNESS_
-
-Once upon a time there lived a very poor middle aged couple on the
-outskirts of a great and magnificent city. Early in the morning the man
-used to set out to the city and return home in the evening with a few
-odd annas earned by picking up small jobs in the warehouses of wealthy
-merchants. One fine morning, being lazier than usual, he remained in
-bed with his eyes closed though fully awake, and furtively watched the
-proceedings of his wife during her toilette. When she was completely
-satisfied with her performance the man pretended to wake up as though
-from a deep sleep and addressed his wife, “you know, my dear, of late I
-have been feeling that some strange power has been granted to me by the
-gracious nats who preside over our destinies. To illustrate my point,
-you saw just now that I was fast asleep, and yet, would you believe it,
-I know exactly what you were doing a little while ago from the time you
-rose from your bed up till the present moment,” and proceeded to tell
-her all she did at her toilette. As may be imagined, his wife was quite
-astonished at this feat, and womanlike, she began to see in this power
-the means to a profitable living.
-
-Just about this time the kingdom became greatly distracted by a
-series of daring thefts which took place both by day and night.
-All efforts made by the authorities to capture the culprits proved
-useless. At length the king became seriously alarmed for the safety of
-his treasures, and in order to afford better protection he redoubled
-the guards round the palace. But in spite of all this precaution the
-thieves entered the palace one night and succeeded in carrying away a
-large quantity of gold, silver and precious stones.
-
-On the following morning the king issued a proclamation to the effect
-that a thousand gold mohurs would be given as a reward to the person
-who could either capture the thieves or restore the stolen property. So
-without consulting her husband in whom she had absolute faith, she went
-off to the palace and informed the king that her husband was a great
-astrologer and that it would be quite easy for him to find the lost
-treasures. The king’s heart was filled with gladness on receiving this
-information. He told the good woman that if her husband could do all
-that she promised, further honours and rewards would be heaped upon him.
-
-When the woman returned home she joyfully related to her husband the
-details of her interview with the king. “What have you done, you silly
-fool?” shouted the man with mingled astonishment and alarm. “The other
-day when I spoke to you about my powers I was merely imposing upon you.
-I am neither an astrologer nor a diviner. It will be impossible for me
-to find the lost property. By your silly act you have not only brought
-disgrace upon us but you have also imperilled our lives. I don’t care
-what happens to you; I only know that I am going to commit suicide this
-very day.”
-
-So saying he left the house and entered a dense forest with the
-intention of cutting a stout creeper with which to hang himself. After
-he got what he wanted he climbed up a big tree to tie one end of the
-creeper to a branch. But while he was engaged in this act the notorious
-thieves came to the foot of the very tree on which he was perched and
-proceeded to divide the treasures which they stole from the palace. The
-man on the top remained absolutely still and eagerly listened to all
-that was going on down below. Apparently the division was not quite
-satisfactory to every one, and as a result a terrible dispute arose
-among them. For long hours they argued and abused each other without
-being able to come to a settlement. At length seeing that the sun was
-already declining they agreed to bury the treasure at the foot of the
-tree and to return on the morrow for a further discussion relative to
-their respective shares.
-
-As soon as they left the place the poor man came down from the tree and
-ran home as fast as he could. “My dear wife, I know exactly where the
-treasures are to be found. If you make haste and come along with me I
-shall be able to remove the whole lot to our house.” So they hastened
-together with baskets on their heads and reached the spot when darkness
-had properly set in. They then dug up the treasures as quickly as they
-could and conveyed them home.
-
-On the following day they went to the palace and restored the lost
-treasures to the king. Greatly overjoyed at his good fortune the king
-praised the man and marvelled at his rare knowledge. In addition to the
-reward which he received, the man was forthwith appointed the chief
-astrologer to the King with a handsome salary which placed him beyond
-the dreams of avarice.
-
-While in the enjoyment of such honours and rewards the astrologer one
-day thought to himself, “So far I have been very fortunate. My luck has
-been phenomenally good. Everybody takes me to be a great man, though
-actually I am not. I wonder for how long my luck will befriend me?”
-From that time forward his mind became uneasy. He often sat up in bed
-at nights dreading the future which should bring about his exposure
-and disgrace. Every day he spoke to his wife about his false position
-and the peril that threatened him. He saw that it would be utter folly
-and madness to make a clean breast of everything as he had already
-committed himself too far. So he decided to say nothing for the present
-but to await a favourable opportunity of extricating himself from the
-awkward situation.
-
-It so happened that one day the king received a letter from the ruler
-of a distant country which stated that he had heard about the famous
-astrologer. But that somehow he did not quite believe all that was
-said concerning the wisdom and knowledge of the man. By way of testing
-his real powers would he, the king, enter into a bet? If acceptable,
-he said he would send him a gourd fruit by his Envoys, and if his
-astrologer could say how many seeds it contained, he was willing to
-forfeit his kingdom provided he (the former) did the same in the
-event of his protégé going wrong in his calculations. Having absolute
-faith in his astrologer the king forthwith sent a reply to the letter
-accepting the bet.
-
-For many days after this the poor astrologer thought very hard how
-he should act in the matter. He knew that the gourd fruit usually
-contained thousands of seeds and that to attempt a guess would be worse
-than useless. Being fully convinced that the day of reckoning had
-at last arrived, he determined to run away and hide himself in some
-obscure corner rather than face the disgrace of a public exposure. So
-the next thing he did was to procure a boat. He then loaded it with
-food for many days and quietly left the shores of the city.
-
-The following day as he was nearing the mouth of the river, a foreign
-vessel came sailing up under a full spread of canvas. He saw from a
-distance that the sailors, having nothing particular to do, sat in a
-group and were engaged in pleasant conversation. As he came alongside
-the vessel he heard a man remark to the others, “Somehow I feel quite
-certain that our king will lose the bet. Don’t you fellows know
-that this country possesses an astrologer who is infallible in his
-calculations? He is reputed to possess the combined sight of a thousand
-_devas_. To such a one the single seed, lying hidden within this
-gourd we now convey with us, will not prove an obstacle of any serious
-difficulty. You may therefore rest assured that he will find it out in
-a very short time.”
-
-When the man heard these words he felt very glad and blessed his good
-luck for having freed him once again from a dangerous situation.
-Instead, therefore, of continuing his journey, he swung his boat round
-and made for home, happy in the possession of his freshly acquired
-knowledge. On his arrival he related everything to his wife who shed
-tears of joy on hearing the good news.
-
-Early next day, hearing that the king was about to grant an audience
-to the foreign Envoys, the royal astrologer went to the palace. The
-courtiers were very glad to see him turn up, for so great was their
-confidence in him that they felt that their country was quite safe and
-that the chances were in favour of their acquiring a new kingdom. When
-the king entered the Hall of Audience he invited the astrologer to sit
-on his right while the others sat in front of him with their faces
-almost touching the floor. Then the real proceedings began.
-
-First of all presents were exchanged and complimentary speeches were
-delivered on both sides. When these ceremonies were over the Chief
-Envoy addressed the king in the following terms, “Oh Mighty Monarch!
-The real object of our journey to your most beautiful country has
-already formed the subject of correspondence between your Majesty and
-my king. I will not therefore tire you by its recital all over again.
-My master commands me to show you this gourd and to ask you to say how
-many seeds exactly it contains. If what you say be correct his kingdom
-passes into your possession, but on the other hand should you be wrong
-your kingdom becomes the property of my master.”
-
-Hearing these words the king smiled and turning to the astrologer near
-him, said, “My dear _saya_, it is unnecessary for me to tell
-you what you have got to do. Consult your stars and tell us how many
-seeds the fruit contains. You already know how generous I have been
-to you in the past. And now at this crisis, if you are able to assist
-me in winning a kingdom, my reward to you shall be such as to make
-you rejoice for all the remaining days of your life.” “Your Majesty,”
-replied the astrologer, “everything I have, including my life, belongs
-to you. By your will I am able to live, and by your will I must also
-die. In the present case my calculations point to one answer only, and
-therefore I have no hesitation in saying that this gourd contains one
-seed only.”
-
-Accustomed to seeing gourds with thousands of seeds, the king
-turned pale when he heard the astrologer’s answer. But still having
-complete faith in him, with effort he restrained himself from further
-questioning him. The gourd was then placed upon a gold plate and was
-cut open in the presence of all those present. To the astonishment of
-everybody there was but a single seed as was said by the astrologer.
-The foreign Envoy congratulated the king on having won his bet and on
-the possession of so valuable a servant. He then returned home with a
-heavy heart bearing the news of his sovereign’s ruin and his country’s
-misfortune.
-
-As to the astrologer his fame spread far and wide. All sorts of
-honours and rewards were heaped upon him. He was even granted the
-unique privilege of entering or leaving any part of the palace at all
-hours, just as his own inclinations directed him. Yet in spite of all
-these things he was not happy. He knew he was an imposter who stood in
-imminent danger of being found out. He was more than satisfied with
-the reputation he had made and the riches he had acquired. He did not
-desire any more of these things. His greatest ambition now was to find
-a graceful way of escape from his false position.
-
-So he thus spoke to his wife one day, “My dear wife, so far I have had
-most wonderful luck. It has enabled me to escape two great dangers with
-honour to myself. But how long will this luck stand by me? Something
-tells me that I shall be found out on the third occasion. What I
-propose to do next is this. Listen carefully so that you may carry out
-my instructions without a hitch. Tomorrow while I am at the palace with
-the king you must set fire to our house. Being of thatch and bamboo
-it will not take long to be consumed. You must then come running to
-the palace to inform me about it and at the same time you must keep on
-repeating these words, ‘the Astrological Tables are gone.’ I will then
-do the rest.”
-
-On the following day while the king was holding a grand Durbar in the
-Hall of Audience, a great commotion was heard outside the gates. On
-enquiry the king was informed that the astrologer’s wife had come to
-inform her husband that their house was burnt down and that everything
-of value, including the most precious astrological tables by which her
-husband made his wonderful predictions, had been consumed by the fire.
-Hearing these words the astrologer pretended to be terribly affected.
-He struck his forehead with the palm of his hand and for a long time he
-remained silent and motionless with grief. Then turning to the king he
-said, “May it please your Majesty I am now utterly ruined. For had it
-been my riches alone that perished in the fire I should not have minded
-so much. They could have been easily replaced. But now since these
-precious tables are gone it is impossible to procure a similar set from
-anywhere else. I hope I have served your Majesty faithfully and to your
-satisfaction in the past; but I grieve to say that I shall not be in
-a position to give you the same service in the future. I beseech you
-therefore to release me from the present responsible position, for I
-shall no longer be useful to you. But in recognition of my past humble
-services if your Majesty, in your great goodness of heart, can see fit
-to grant me a small pension for the rest of my life I shall have cause
-to consider myself exceptionally favoured.”
-
-The king was very sad to hear of his favourite’s misfortune. And as
-there was nothing else to be said or done in the matter he ordered a
-beautiful building to be erected on the site of the house that was
-burnt down. Next he filled it with a large retinue of servants and
-other equipments such as horses, carriages and so forth. Then the whole
-thing was made over to the astrologer with the command that for the
-rest of his life he was to draw from the Royal Treasury no less a sum
-than ten thousand gold mohurs a month.
-
-As may be imagined the lucky astrologer was more than satisfied
-with the arrangements and inwardly congratulated himself upon his
-good fortune which once more enabled him to escape from a dangerous
-situation. Thus some men are born great, some achieve greatness; but
-there are also others who have greatness forced upon them, and it is
-to this third and last class that our hero the pretentious astrologer
-belongs.
-
-In the Middle Ages, popular sculpture and painting were but the
-translation of popular literature, and nothing was more common to
-represent, in pictures and carvings, than individual men under the
-forms of the animals who displayed similar characters or similar
-propensities. Cunning, treachery, and intrigue were the prevailing
-vices of the middle ages, and they were those also of the fox, who
-hence became a favourite character in satire. The victory of craft
-over force always provoked mirth. The fabulists, or, we should perhaps
-rather say, the satirists, soon began to extend their canvas and
-enlarge their picture, and, instead of single examples of fraud or
-injustice, they introduced a variety of characters, not only foxes, but
-wolves, and sheep, and bears, with birds also, as the eagle, the cock,
-and the crow, and mixed them up together in long narratives, which
-thus formed general satires on the vices of contemporary society. In
-this manner originated the celebrated romance of “Reynard the Fox,”
-which in various forms, from the twelfth century to the eighteenth,
-has enjoyed a popularity which was granted probably to no other book.
-The plot of this remarkable satire turns chiefly on the long struggle
-between the brute force of Isengrin the Wolf, possessed only with a
-small amount of intelligence, which is easily deceived--under which
-character is presented the powerful feudal baron--and the craftiness
-of Reynard the Fox, who represents the intelligent portion of society,
-which had to hold its ground by its wits, and these were continually
-abused to evil purposes. Reynard is swayed by a constant impulse to
-deceive and victimise everybody, whether friends or enemies, but
-especially his uncle Isengrin. It was somewhat the relationship between
-the ecclesiastical and baronial aristocracy. Reynard was educated in
-the schools, and intended for the clerical order; and at different
-times he is represented as acting under the disguise of a priest,
-of a monk, of a pilgrim, or even of a prelate of the church. Though
-frequently reduced to the greatest straits by the power of Isengrin,
-Reynard has generally the better of it in the end: he robs and defrauds
-Isengrin continually, outrages his wife, who is half in alliance
-with him, and draws him into all sorts of dangers and sufferings,
-for which the latter never succeeds in obtaining justice. The old
-sculptors and artists appear to have preferred exhibiting Reynard in
-his ecclesiastical disguises, and in these he appears often in the
-ornamentation of mediæval architectural sculpture, in wood-carvings,
-in the illuminations of manuscripts, and in other objects of art. The
-popular feeling against the clergy was strong in the middle ages, and
-no caricature was received with more favour than those which exposed
-the immorality or dishonesty of a monk or a priest. A sculpture in
-the church of Christchurch, in Hampshire, represents Reynard in the
-pulpit preaching; behind, or rather perhaps beside him, a diminutive
-cock stands upon a stool--in modern times we should be inclined to
-say he was acting as clerk. Reynard’s costume consists merely of the
-ecclesiastical hood or cowl. Such subjects are frequently found on the
-carved seats, or misereres, in the stalls of the old cathedrals and
-collegiate churches. The painted glass of the great window of the north
-cross-aisle of St. Martin’s church in Leicester, which was destroyed
-in the last century, represented the fox, in the character of an
-ecclesiastic, preaching to a congregation of geese.
-
-Reynard’s mediæval celebrity dates certainly from a rather early
-period. Montfaucon has given an alphabet of ornamental initial letters,
-formed chiefly of figures of men and animals, from a manuscript which
-he ascribes to the ninth century, among which is one representing
-a fox walking upon his hind legs, and carrying two small cocks,
-suspended at the ends of a cross staff. It is hardly necessary to say
-that this group forms the letter T. Long before this, the Frankish
-historian Fredegarius, who wrote about the middle of the seventh
-century, introduces a fable in which the fox figures at the court of
-the lion. The same fable is repeated by a monkish writer of Bavaria,
-named Fromond who flourished in the tenth century, and by another named
-Aimoinus, who lived about the year 1,000. At length, in the twelfth
-century, Guibert de Nogent, who died about the year 1124, and who has
-left us his autobiography (_de Vita Sua_), relates an anecdote
-in that work, in explanation of which he tells us that the wolf was
-then popularly designated by the name of Isengrin; and in the fables
-of Odo, as we have already seen, this name is commonly given to the
-wolf, Reynard to the fox, Teburg to the cat, and so on with the others.
-This only shows that in the fables of the twelfth century the various
-animals were known by these names, but it does not prove that what we
-know as the romance of Reynard existed. Jacob Grimm argued from the
-derivation and forms of these names, that the fables themselves, and
-the romance, originated with the Teutonic peoples, and were indigenous
-to them; but his reasons seem more specious than conclusive, and
-Paulin Paris holds that the romance of Reynard was native of France,
-and that it was partly founded upon old Latin legends perhaps poems.
-Its character is altogether feudal, and it is strictly a picture of
-society, in France primarily, and secondly in England and the other
-nations of feudalism, in the twelfth century. The earliest form in
-which this romance is known is in the French poem--or rather poems, for
-it consists of several branches or continuations--and is supposed to
-date from about the middle of the twelfth century. It soon became so
-popular, that it appeared in different forms in all the languages of
-Western Europe, except in England, where there appears to have existed
-no edition of the romance of Reynard the Fox until Caxton printed
-his prose English version of the story. From that time it became, if
-possible, more popular in England than elsewhere, and that popularity
-had hardly diminished down to the commencement of the present century.
-
-The popularity of the story of Reynard caused it to be imitated in a
-variety of shapes, and this form of satire, in which animals acted the
-part of men, became altogether popular.
-
-A direct imitation of “Reynard the Fox” is found in the early French
-romance of “Fauvel,” the hero of which is neither a fox nor an ass,
-but a horse. People of all ranks and classes repair to the court of
-Fauvel, the horse, and furnish abundant matter for satire on the moral,
-political, and religious hypocrisy which pervaded the whole frame
-of society. At length the hero resolves to marry, and, in a finely
-illuminated manuscript of this romance, preserved in the Imperial
-Library in Paris, this marriage furnishes the subject of a picture,
-which gives the only representation to be met with of one of the
-popular burlesque ceremonies which were so common in the middle ages.
-
-Among other such ceremonies, it was customary with the populace, on the
-occasion of a man’s or woman’s second marriage, or an ill-sorted match,
-or on the espousals of people who were obnoxious to their neighbours,
-to assemble outside the house, and greet them with discordant music.
-This custom is said to have been practiced especially in France, and
-it was called a _charivari_. There is still a last remnant of it
-in our country in the music of marrow-bones and cleavers, with which
-the marriages of butchers are popularly celebrated; but the derivation
-of the French name appears not to be known. It occurs in old Latin
-documents, for it gave rise to such scandalous scenes of riot and
-licentiousness, that the Church did all it could, though in vain, to
-suppress it. The earliest mention of this custom, furnished in the
-_Glossarium_ of Ducange, is contained in the synodal statutes of
-the church of Avignon, passed in the year 1337, from which we learn
-that when such marriages occurred, people forced their way into the
-houses of the married couple, and carried away their goods, which they
-were obliged to pay a ransom for before they were returned, and the
-money thus raised was spent in getting up what is called in the statute
-relating to it a _Chalvaricum_. It appears from this statute, that
-the individuals who performed the _charivari_ accompanied the
-happy couple to the church, and returned with them to their residence,
-with coarse and indecent gestures and discordant music, and uttering
-scurrilous and indecent abuse, and that they ended with feasting.
-In the statutes of Meaux, in 1365, and in those of Hugh, bishop of
-Beziers, in 1368, the same practice is forbidden, under the name of
-_Charavallium_; and it is mentioned in a document of the year
-1372, also quoted by Ducange, under that of _Carivarium_, as then
-existing at Nîmes. Again, in 1445, the Council of Tours made a decree,
-forbidding, under pain of excommunication, “the insolences, clamours,
-sounds, and other tumults practiced at second and third nuptials,
-called by the vulgar a _Charivarium_, on account of the many and
-grave evils arising out of them.” It will be observed that these early
-allusions to the charivari are found almost solely in documents coming
-from the Roman towns in the south of France, so that this practice
-was probably one of the many popular customs derived directly from
-the Romans. When Cotgrave’s “Dictionary” was published (that is, in
-1632) the practice of the _charivari_ appears to have become more
-general in its existence, as well as its application; for he describes
-it as “a public defamation, or traducing of; a foule noise made, blacke
-santus rung, to the shame and disgrace of another; hence an infamous
-(or infaming) ballad sung, by an armed troupe, under the window of an
-old dotard, married the day before unto a young wanton, in mockerie of
-them both.” And, again, a _charivaris de poelles_ is explained
-as “the carting of an infamous person, graced with the harmonie of
-stinging kettles and frying-pan musicke.” The word is now generally
-used in the sense of a great tumult of discordant music, produced often
-by a number of persons playing different tunes on different instruments
-at the same time.
-
-The sermons and satires against extravagance in costume began at
-an early period. The Anglo-Norman ladies, in the earlier part of
-the twelfth century, first brought in vogue in our island this
-extravagance in fashion, which quickly fell under the lash of satirist
-and caricaturist. It was first exhibited in the robes rather than
-in the head-dress. These Anglo-Norman ladies are understood to have
-first introduced stays, in order to give an artificial appearance of
-slenderness to their waists; but the greatest extravagance appeared in
-the forms of their sleeves. The robe, or gown, instead of being loose,
-as among the Anglo-Saxons, was laced close around the body, and the
-sleeves, which fitted the arm tightly till they reached the elbows,
-or sometimes nearly to the wrist, then suddenly became larger, and
-hung down to an extravagant length, often trailing on the ground, and
-sometimes shortened by means of a knot. The gown, also, was itself
-worn very long. The clergy preached against these extravagances in
-fashion, and at times, it is said, with effect; and they fell under
-the vigorous lash of the satirist. In a class of satires which became
-extremely popular in the twelfth century, and which produced in the
-thirteenth the immortal poem of Dante--the visions of purgatory and of
-hell--these contemporary extravagances in fashion are held up to public
-detestation, and are made the subject of severe punishment. They were
-looked upon as among the outward forms of pride. It arose, no doubt,
-from this taste--from the darker shade which spread over men’s minds in
-the twelfth century--that demons, instead of animals, were introduced
-to personify the evil-doers of the time. Such is the figure, seen in a
-very interesting manuscript in the British Museum (MS. Cotton. Nero, C
-iv.). The demon is here dressed in the fashionable gown with its long
-sleeves, of which one appears to have been usually much longer than
-the other. Both the gown and sleeve are shortened by means of knots,
-while the former is brought close round the waist by tight lacing.
-It is a picture of the use of stays made at the time of their first
-introduction.
-
-This superfluity of length in the different parts of the dress was a
-subject of complaint and satire at various and very distant periods,
-and contemporary illuminations of a perfectly serious character show
-that these complaints were not without foundation.
-
-The professional entertainers of the Middle Ages performed in the
-streets and public places, or in the theatres, and especially at
-festivals, and they were often employed at private parties, to
-entertain the guests at a supper.
-
-We trace the existence of this class of performers during the earlier
-period of the middle ages by the expressions of hostility towards
-them used from time to time by the ecclesiastical writers, and the
-denunciations of synods and councils. Nevertheless, it is evident from
-many allusions to them, that they found their way into the monastic
-houses, and were in great favour not only among the monks, but among
-the nuns also; that they were introduced into the religious festivals;
-and that they were tolerated even in the churches. It is probable
-that they long continued to be known in Italy and the countries
-near the centre of Roman influence, and where the Latin language was
-continued, by their old name of _mimus_. The Anglo-Saxon vocabularies
-interpret the Latin _mimus_ by _glig-mon_, a gleeman. In Anglo-Saxon,
-_glig_ or _gliu_ meant mirth and game of every description, and as the
-Anglo-Saxon teachers who compiled the vocabularies give, as synonyms
-of _mimus_, the words _scurra_, _jocifta_, and _pantomimus_, it is
-evident that all these were included in the character of the gleeman,
-and that the latter was quite identical with his Roman type. It was
-the Roman _mimus_ introduced into Saxon England. We have no traces of
-the existence of such a class of performers among the Teutonic race
-before they became acquainted with the civilisation of imperial Rome.
-We know from drawings in contemporary illuminated manuscripts that the
-performances of the gleeman did include music, singing, and dancing,
-and also the tricks of mountebanks and jugglers, such as throwing up
-and catching knives and balls, and performing with tamed bears, etc.
-
-But even among the peoples who preserved the Latin language, the word
-_mimus_ was gradually exchanged for others employed to signify the
-same thing. The word _jocus_ had been used in the signification of a
-jest, playfulness, _jocari_ signified to jest, and _joculator_ was a
-word for a jester; but, in the debasement of the language, _jocus_
-was taken in the signification of everything which created mirth. It
-became, in the course of time the French verb _jeu_, and the Italian
-_gioco_, or _giuoco_. People introduced a form of the verb _jocare_,
-which became the French _juer_, to play or perform. _Joculator_ was
-then used in the sense of _mimus_. In French the word became _jogléor_,
-or _jougléor_, and in its later form _jougleur_. I may remark that, in
-mediæval manuscripts, it is almost impossible to distinguish between
-the _u_ and the _n_, and that modern writers have misread this last
-word as _jongleur_, and thus introduced into the language a word which
-never existed, and which ought to be abandoned. In old English, as we
-see in Chaucer, the usual form was _jogelere_. The mediæval joculator,
-or jougleur, embraced all the attributes of the Roman _mimus_, and
-perhaps more. In the first place he was very often a poet himself,
-and composed the pieces which it was one of his duties to sing or
-recite. These were chiefly songs, or stories, the latter usually told
-in verse, and so many of them are preserved in manuscripts that they
-form a very numerous and important class of mediæval literature. The
-songs were commonly satirical and abusive, and they were made use of
-for purposes of general or personal vituperation. Out of them, indeed,
-grew the political songs of a later period. They carried about with
-them for exhibition tame bears, monkeys, and other animals, taught to
-perform the actions of men. As early as the thirteenth century, we find
-them including among their other accomplishments that of dancing upon
-the tight-rope. Finally, the jougleurs performed tricks of sleight of
-hand, and were often conjurers and magicians. As, in modern times, the
-jougleurs of the middle ages gradually passed away, sleight of hand
-appears to have become their principal accomplishment, and the name
-only was left in the modern word _juggler_. The jougleurs of the middle
-ages, like the mimi of antiquity, wandered about from place to place,
-and often from country to country, sometimes singly and at others in
-companies, exhibited their performances in the roads and streets,
-repaired to all great festivals, and were employed especially in the
-baronial hall, where, by their songs, stories, and other performances,
-they created mirth after dinner.
-
-This class of society had become known by another name, the origin of
-which is not so easily explained. The primary meaning of the Latin
-word _minister_ was a servant, one who ministers to another, either
-in his wants or in his pleasures and amusements. It was applied
-particularly to the cupbearer. In low Latinity, a diminutive of this
-word was formed, _minestellus_, or _ministrellus_, a petty servant, or
-minister. When we first meet with this word, which is not at a very
-early date, it is used as perfectly synonymous with _joculator_, and,
-as the word is certainly of Latin derivation, it is clear that it was
-from it the middle ages derived the French word _menestrel_ (the modern
-_menetrier_), and the English _minstrel_. The mimi or jougleurs were
-perhaps considered as the petty ministers to the amusements of their
-lord, or of him who for the time employed them. Until the close of the
-middle ages, the minstrel and the jougleur were absolutely identical.
-Possibly the former may have been considered the more courtly of the
-two names. But in England, as the middle ages disappeared, and lost
-their influence on society sooner than in France, the word minstrel
-remained attached only to the musical part of the functions of the old
-mimus, while, as just observed, the juggler took the sleight of hand
-and the mountebank tricks. In modern French, except where employed
-technically by the antiquity, the word _menetrier_ means a fiddler.
-
-The jougleurs, or minstrels, formed a very numerous and important,
-though a low and despised, class of mediæval society. The dulness of
-every-day life in a feudal castle or mansion required something more
-than ordinary excitement in the way of amusement, and the old family
-bard, who continually repeated to the Teutonic chief the praises of
-himself and his ancestors, was soon felt to be a wearisome companion.
-The mediæval knights and their ladies wanted to laugh, and to make
-them laugh sufficiently it required that the jokes, or tales, or comic
-performances, should be broad, coarse, and racy, with a good spicing of
-violence and of the wonderful. Hence the jougleur was always welcome
-to the feudal mansion, and he seldom went away dissatisfied. But the
-subject of the present chapter is rather the literature of the jougleur
-than his personal history, and, having traced his origin to the Roman
-mimus, we will now proceed to one class of his performances.
-
-It has been stated that the mimus and the jougleurs told stories.
-Of those of the former, unfortunately, none are preserved, except,
-perhaps, in a few anecdotes scattered in the pages of such writers as
-Apuleius and Lucian, and we are obliged to guess at their character,
-but of the stories of the jougleurs a considerable number has been
-preserved. It becomes an interesting question how far these stories
-have been derived from the mimi, handed down traditionally from mimus
-to jougleur, how far they are native in our race, or how far they were
-derived at a later date from other sources. And in considering this
-question, we must not forget that the mediæval jougleurs were not the
-only representatives of the mimi, for among the Arabs of the East also
-there had originated from them, modified under different circumstances,
-a very important class of minstrels and story-tellers, and with these
-the jougleurs of the west were brought into communication at the
-commencement of the crusades. There can be no doubt that a very large
-number of the stories of the jougleurs were borrowed from the East, for
-the evidence is furnished by the stories themselves; and there can be
-little doubt also that the jougleurs improved themselves, and underwent
-some modification, by their intercourse with Eastern performers of the
-same class.
-
-The people of the middle ages, who took their word _fable_ from the
-Latin _fabula_, which they appear to have understood as a mere term for
-any short narration, included under it the stories told by the mimi and
-jougleurs; but, in the fondness of the middle ages for diminutives, by
-which they intended to express familiarity and attachment, applied to
-them more particularly the Latin _fabella_, which in the old French
-became _fablel_, or, more usually, _fabliau_. The fabliaux of the
-jougleurs form a most important class of the comic literature of the
-middle ages. They must have been wonderfully numerous, for a very large
-quantity of them still remain, and these are only the small portion of
-what once existed, which have escaped perishing like the others by the
-accident of being written in manuscripts which have had the fortune to
-survive; while manuscripts containing others have no doubt perished,
-and it is probable that many were only preserved orally, and never
-written down at all. The recital of these fabliaux appears to have
-been the favourite employment of the jougleurs, and they became so
-popular that the mediæval preachers turned them into short stories in
-Latin prose, and made use of them as illustrations in their sermons.
-Many collections of these short Latin stories are found in manuscripts
-which had served as note-books to the preachers, and out of them was
-originally compiled that celebrated mediæval book called the “Gesta
-Romanorum.”
-
-The _Trouvères_, or poets, who wrote the Fabliaux flourished chiefly
-from the close of the twelfth century to the earlier part of the
-fourteenth. They all composed in French, which was a language then
-common to England and France, but some of their compositions bear
-internal evidence of having been composed in England. No objection
-appears to have been entertained to the recital of these licentious
-stories before the ladies of the castle or of the domestic circle, and
-their general popularity was so great, that the more pious clergy seem
-to have thought necessary to find something to take their place in the
-post-prandial society of the monastery, and especially of the nunnery;
-and religious stories were written in the same form and metre as the
-fabliaux. Some of these have been published under the title of _Contes
-Devots_, and, from their general dulness, it may be doubted if they
-answered their purpose of furnishing amusement so well as the others.
-
-Troubadour was the Provençal name for the _Trouvères_, and in the
-twelfth century these poets flourished so luxuriantly that their
-influence is still felt in the poetic sentiment of today.
-
-Yet they were in no sense humorous writers, unless their satire on the
-foibles and follies of the times may be so construed. They were Boudoir
-poets and their airs and graces were romantic rather than mirthful.
-
-Much of their production was of the languishing, sighing order, but the
-Fabliaux, of a ruder narrative type were also popular.
-
-These Fabliaux, now usually given out in expurgated editions, were
-extremely plain spoken, and, as so often occurred, were adopted and
-adapted by the monks for the real or pretended furtherance of their
-religious teachings.
-
-The Troubadours did much for lyric art by their conscientious attention
-to form, but the humor of their productions is almost a negligible
-quantity. Their songs were invariably sung, and usually to the
-accompaniment of the blue-ribboned guitar, but oftenest the burden was
-of sorrowful intent.
-
-And it was, perhaps, owing to the want of a humorous sense, that the
-Troubadours could carry on their lackadaisical and lovesick careers.
-
-Yet there were some of the Troubadours’ songs which showed a departure
-from the usual romantic wailings and a few are here given.
-
-Doubtless the very free translation adds to their humor, but the motive
-is clear.
-
-Rambaud d’Orange thus declares his policy in treatment to the fair sex.
-
-
- I.
-
- My boy, if you’d wish to make constant your Venus,
- Attend to the plan I disclose.
- Her first naughty word you must meet with a menace,
- Her next--drop your fist on her nose.
- When she’s bad, be you worse,
- When she scolds, do you curse,
- When she scratches, just treat her to blows.
-
-
- II.
-
- Defame and lampoon her, be rude and uncivil,
- Then you’ll vanquish the haughtiest dame.
- Be proud and presumptuous, deceive like the ----
- And aught that you wish you may claim.
- All the beautiful slight,
- To the plain be polite,
- That’s the way the proud hussies to tame.
-
-Bernard de Ventadour is thus unromantic.
-
- You say the moon is all aglow,
- The nightingale a-singing.
- I’d rather watch the red wine flow
- And hear the goblets ringing.
-
- You say ’tis sweet to hear the gale
- Creep sighing through the willows.
- I’d rather hear a merry tale
- ’Mid a group of jolly fellows.
-
- You say ’tis sweet the stars to view
- Upon the waters gleaming.
- I’d rather see (’twixt me and you
- And the post) my supper steaming.
-
-While the Monk of Montaudon, an incorrigible satirist, thus descants on
-the ladies.
-
- I am a saint of good repute, by mortals called St. Julian;
- Being wanted much on earth I go not oft to realms cerulean.
- Yet once of late I made a call, which you may term a high call--
- I went aloft to have a chat along with good St. Michael.
- But soon the saint was called away, which closed our conversation,
- To judge between some dames and monks engaged in disputation.
- _Paint_ was the subject of their strife, the rock on which they
- split;
- Each party wanted to monopolise the use of it.
- The monks declared, with many tears, that they were ruined quite,
- For not an ounce of it was left to keep their pictures bright.
- The ladies laid it on so thick, as you can understand,
- That the compounders could not quite keep pace with their demand.
- And so, unless the former were restrained by stringent law,
- Each shrine they swore would quickly cease its worshippers to draw.
-
- Then stepped an ancient beauty forth, and thus to Mike descanted:
- “Our sex was painted long before paint was for pictures wanted;
- As for myself, how can it hurt a clergyman or saint,
- If the crows’-feet beneath my eyes I cover up with paint?
- In keeping up my beauteous looks I cannot see a crime;
- In spite of them I’ll still repair the ravages of time.”
-
- St. Michael scratched his pate awhile, then, looking very wise,
- Said: “Dames and monks, let me suggest, I pray, a compromise.
- The soul as well as body, dames, requires both paint and padding.
- You should not wholly spend your years in love-making and gadding.
- And you, my monks, be less severe, nor bend the bow to breaking;
- All dames should have a moderate time allowed to them for raking.
- Then let them paint till forty-five”--at this the dames looked
- glum--
- “Or fifty,” cried the saint in haste. “Agree, my monks, now come.”
-
- “No,” said the monks, “that cannot be, the time is far too long;
- But, though we feel within our souls the compromise is wrong,
- Yet, in our deep respect for you, our scruples we will drop,
- And let the dames, till thirty-five, frequent the painter’s shop;
- But only on condition that thereafter they shall cease
- To daub, and let us monks enjoy our privilege in peace.”
-
- Before the ladies could rejoin, two other saints appeared--
- Peter and Lawrence--by the dames no less than monks revered.
- They reasoned with the parties, and so well employed their wit,
- That they persuaded them at length the difference to split.
- The monks agreed to yield five years; the ladies condescended
- Up to their fortieth year to paint, and there the trial ended.
-
-And the same merry Monk of Montaudon voices his sentiments thus:
-
- I like those sports the world calls folly,
- Banquets that know no melancholy;
- I love a girl whose talk is jolly,
- Not silent like a painted dolly.
-
- A rich man of my love is winner,
- His foe I feel must be a sinner;
- And I adore, or I’d be thinner,
- A fine fat salmon-trout for dinner.
-
- I hold among my chief of blisses,
- Basking beside a stream with misses;
- Love sunshine, flowers; but O than this is
- A joy more deep--I _do_ like kisses.
-
- I hate a husband who’s uxorious;
- A grocer’s son, whose dress is glorious;
- Hate men in drink who get uproarious
- And maids whose conduct is censorious.
-
- I hate young folks who are precocious,
- Hate parsons with a beard ferocious;
- Of wine too much can no one broach us;
- But too much water is atrocious!
-
-The Court of Love, a gay and whimsical institution, doubtless
-originated in the contests of the Troubadours, when the poets recited
-for a prize the particular style of an ode called the _Tenson_.
-
-Though a fascinating subject, we may not dwell on it further than to
-quote the thirty-one articles of the Code of Love, this being the most
-available bit of humor.
-
- 1. Marriage is no legitimate excuse against love.
- 2. Whoever cannot conceal cannot love.
- 3. No one must have two lovers at the same time.
- 4. Love must always be increasing or diminishing.
- 5. Favours unwillingly granted have no charm.
- 6. No male must love until of full age.
- 7. Whoever of two lovers survives the other must observe a
- widowhood of two years.
- 8. None should be deprived of love except they lose their reason.
- 9. None can love except when compelled by the stress of love.
- 10. Love is an exile from the homes of avarice.
- 11. She who is scrupulous of the marriage tie should not love.
- 12. A true lover desires no embraces save those of his lady-love.
- 13. Love divulged rarely lasts.
- 14. Easy winning makes love contemptible; difficulty renders it
- dear.
- 15. Every lover grows pale at the sight of his lady-love.
- 16. The heart of a lover trembles at the sudden sight of his
- lady-love.
- 17. A new love makes an old one depart.
- 18. Probity alone makes a man worthy to be loved.
- 19. If love diminishes it soon fails, and rarely recovers its
- strength.
- 20. The lover is always timid.
- 21. From true jealousy love always increases.
- 22. When suspicion is aroused about a lover, jealousy and love
- increase.
- 23. Filled with thoughts of love, the lover eats and drinks less
- [than usual].
- 24. Every act of a lover is determined by thoughts of the beloved.
- 25. A true lover thinks naught happy save what would please his
- beloved.
- 26. Love can deny nothing to love.
- 27. A lover cannot be satiated with the charms of the beloved.
- 28. A slight prejudice makes a lover think ill of the beloved.
- 29. He is not wont to love who is oppressed by too great abundance
- of pleasure.
- 30. A true lover is always without intermission filled with the
- image of his lady-love.
- 31. Nothing hinders one woman being loved by two men, or one man by
- two women.
-
-On these rules--some nonsensical, many contradictory, and all
-abominable--the following decisions, among many others, were based.
-
-The first is that of the Countess of Champagne already quoted, with its
-approval by Queen Eleanor. In its original verbiage it runs thus:
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Question._ Can true love exist between married persons?
-
-_Judgment_, by the Countess of Champagne: “We say and establish,
-by the tenor of these presents, that love cannot extend its rights
-to married persons. In fact, lovers accord everything to each other
-mutually and gratuitously, without being constrained by motives of
-necessity; while married people are bound by the duty of mutually
-sacrificing their wills and refusing nothing the one to the other.
-
-“Let this judgment, which we have given with extreme care, and after
-taking counsel of a large number of ladies, be to you a constant and
-irrefragable truth. Thus determined in the year 1174, the third day
-before the kalends of May.”
-
-_Question._ Do the greater affection and livelier attachment exist
-between lovers or married people? [It having been already decided, let
-us remember, that married people could not love one another.]
-
-_Judgment_, by Ermengarde, Viscountess of Narbonne: “The
-attachment of married people and the tender affection of lovers are
-sentiments of a nature and custom altogether different. There can
-consequently be no just comparison established between objects which
-have no resemblance or connection the one with the other.”
-
-_Question._ A lady attached to a gentleman in an honorable love
-marries another. Has she the right to repel her former lover and refuse
-him his accustomed favours?
-
-_Judgment_, by Ermengarde, Viscountess of Narbonne: “The
-supervenience of the marriage bond does not bar the right of the prior
-attachment, unless the lady utterly renounces love, and declares that
-she does so for ever.”
-
-The _Gesta Romanorum_, one of the most important collections
-of moral tales, was put together during the thirteenth century by a
-learned Frenchman named Pierre Bercheure, who was a Benedictine Prior.
-He chose to lay the scenes of the stories in Rome, though this was not
-historically true. Gesta means merely acts or exploits, and many of the
-tales are descended from Oriental Folk Lore.
-
-Not all students of ancient literature agree as to the authorship of
-the Gesta as it appears in its present form, but the consensus of
-opinion seems to point to the aforesaid Frenchman.
-
-However, the collector’s name matters little; the work itself, while it
-harks back to the Fables of Æsop and Pilpay and to the _Talmud_,
-is of interest as a veritable storehouse of Mediæval stories.
-
-Each of these has its religious application, but it is easy to think
-that the readers were oftener intrigued by the story than by the
-appended moral.
-
-
- _OF SLOTH_
-
-The emperor Pliny had three sons, to whom he was extremely indulgent.
-He wished to dispose of his kingdom, and calling the three into his
-presence, spoke thus--“The most slothful of you shall reign after my
-decease.” “Then,” answered the elder, “the kingdom must be mine; for
-I am so lazy, that sitting once by the fire, I burnt my legs, because
-I was too indolent to withdraw them.” The second son observed, “The
-kingdom should properly be mine, for if I had a rope round my neck, and
-held a sword in my hand, my idleness is such, that I should not put
-forth my hand to cut the rope.” “But I,” said the third son, “ought to
-be preferred to you both; for I outdo both in indolence. While I lay
-upon my bed, water dropped from above upon my eyes; and though, from
-the nature of the water, I was in danger of becoming blind, I neither
-could nor would turn my head ever so little to the right hand or to
-the left.” The emperor, hearing this, bequeathed the kingdom to him,
-thinking him the laziest of the three.
-
-
- _Application_
-
-My beloved, the king is the devil; and the three sons, different
-classes of corrupt men.
-
-
- _OF THE GOOD, WHO ALONE WILL ENTER THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN_
-
-There was a wise and rich king who possessed a beloved, but not a
-loving wife. She had three illegitimate sons who proved ungrateful
-and rebellious to their reputed parent. In due time she brought forth
-another son, whose legitimacy was undisputed; and after arriving
-at a good old age, he died, and was buried in the royal sepulchre
-of his fathers. But the death of the old king caused great strife
-amongst his surviving sons, about the right of succession. All of
-them advanced a claim, and none would relinquish it to the other; the
-three first, presuming upon their priority in birth, and the last upon
-his legitimacy. In this strait, they agreed to refer the absolute
-decision of their cause to a certain honourable soldier of the late
-king. When this person, therefore, heard their difference, he said,
-“Follow my advice, and it will greatly benefit you. Draw from its
-sepulchre the body of the deceased monarch; prepare, each of you,
-a bow and single shaft, and whosoever transfixes the heart of his
-father, shall obtain the kingdom.” The counsel was approved, the body
-was taken from its repository and bound naked to a tree. The arrow
-of the first son wounded the king’s right hand--on which, as if the
-contest were determined, they proclaimed him heir to the throne. But
-the second arrow went nearer, and entered the mouth; so that he too
-considered himself the undoubted lord of the kingdom. However, the
-third perforated the heart itself, and consequently imagined that his
-claim was fully decided, and his succession sure. It now came to the
-turn of the fourth and last son to shoot; but instead of fixing his
-shaft to the bow-string, and preparing for the trial, he broke forth
-into a lamentable cry, and with eyes swimming in tears, said, “Oh! my
-poor father; have I then lived to see you the victim of an impious
-contest? Thine own offspring lacerate thy unconscious clay?--Far,
-oh! far be it from me to strike thy venerated form, whether living or
-dead.” No sooner had he uttered these words, than the nobles of the
-realm, together with the whole people, unanimously elected him to the
-throne; and depriving the three barbarous wretches of their rank and
-wealth, expelled them for ever from the kingdom.
-
-
- _Application_
-
-My beloved, that wise and rich king is the King of kings, and Lord
-of lords, who joined himself to our flesh, as to a beloved wife. But
-going after other gods, it forgot the love due to him in return, and
-brought forth by an illicit connection, three sons, viz., Pagans,
-Jews, and Heretics. The first wounded the right hand--that is, the
-doctrine of Christ by persecutions. The second, the mouth--when they
-gave Christ vinegar and gall to drink; and the third, wounded, and
-continue to wound the _heart_,--while they strive, by every
-sophistical objection, to deceive the faithful. The fourth son is any
-good Christian.
-
-
- _OF THE INCARNATION OF OUR LORD_
-
-A certain king was remarkable for three qualities. Firstly, he
-was braver than all men; secondly, he was wiser; and lastly, more
-beautiful. He lived a long time unmarried; and his counsellors would
-persuade him to take a wife. “My friends,” said he, “it is clear to
-you that I am rich and powerful enough; and therefore want not wealth.
-Go, then, through town and country, and seek me out a beautiful and
-wise virgin; and if ye can find such a one, however poor she may be,
-I will marry her.” The command was obeyed; they proceeded on their
-search, until at last they discovered a lady of royal extraction with
-the qualifications desired. But the king was not so easily satisfied,
-and determined to put her wisdom to the test. He sent to the lady by
-a herald a piece of linen cloth, three inches square; and bade her
-contrive to make for him a shirt exactly fitted to his body. “Then,”
-added he, “she shall be my wife.” The messenger, thus commissioned,
-departed on his errand, and respectfully presented the cloth, with the
-request of the king. “How can I comply with it,” exclaimed the lady,
-“when the cloth is but three inches square? It is impossible to make a
-shirt of that; but bring me a vessel in which I may work, and I promise
-to make the shirt long enough for the body.” The messenger returned
-with the reply of the virgin, and the king immediately sent a sumptuous
-vessel, by means of which she extended the cloth to the required size,
-and completed the shirt. Whereupon the wise king married her.
-
-
- _Application_
-
-My beloved, the king is God; the virgin, the mother of Christ; who
-was also the chosen vessel. By the messenger, is meant Gabriel. The
-cloth, is the Grace of God, which, by proper care and labour, is made
-sufficient for man’s salvation.
-
-
- _OF THE DECEITS OF THE DEVIL_
-
-There were once three friends, who agreed to make a pilgrimage
-together. It happened that their provisions fell short, and having
-but one loaf between them, they were nearly famished. “Should this
-loaf,” they said to each other, “be divided amongst us, there will
-not be enough for any one. Let us then take counsel together, and
-consider how the bread is to be disposed of.” “Suppose we sleep upon
-the way,” replied one of them; “and whosoever hath the most wonderful
-dream, shall possess the loaf.” The other two acquiesced, and settled
-themselves to sleep. But he who gave the advice, arose while they
-were sleeping, and eat up the bread, not leaving a single crumb for
-his companions. When he had finished he awoke them. “Get up quickly,”
-said he, “and tell us your dreams.” “My friends,” answered the first,
-“I have had a very marvellous vision. A golden ladder reached up to
-heaven, by which angels ascended and descended. They took my soul from
-my body, and conveyed it to that blessed place where I beheld the Holy
-Trinity; and where I experienced such an overflow of joy, as eye hath
-not seen, nor ear heard. This is my dream.” “And I,” said the second,
-“beheld the devils with iron instruments, by which they dragged my
-soul from the body, and plunging it into hell flames, most grievously
-tormented me; saying, ‘As long as God reigns in heaven this will be
-your portion.’” “Now then,” said the third, who had eaten the bread,
-“hear my dream. It appeared as if an angel came and addressed me in
-the following manner, ‘My friend, would you see what is become of your
-companions?’ I answered, ‘Yes, Lord. We have but one loaf between us,
-and I fear that they have run off with it.’ ‘You are mistaken,’ he
-rejoined, ‘it lies beside us: follow me.’ He immediately led me to the
-gate of heaven, and by his command I put in my head and saw you; and I
-thought that you were snatched up into heaven and sat upon a throne of
-gold, while rich wines and delicate meats stood around you. Then said
-the angel, ‘Your companion, you see, has an abundance of good things,
-and dwells in all pleasures. There he will remain for ever; for he has
-entered a celestial kingdom and cannot return. Come now where your
-other associate is placed.’ I followed, and he led me to hell-gates,
-where I beheld you in torment, as you just now said. Yet they furnished
-you, even there, with bread and wine in abundance. I expressed my
-sorrow at seeing you in misery, and you replied, ‘As long as God reigns
-in heaven here I must remain, for I have merited it. Do you then rise
-up quickly, and eat all the bread, since you will see neither me nor
-my companion again.’ I complied with your wishes; arose, and eat the
-bread.”
-
-
- _Application_
-
-My beloved, the Saracens and Jews; the rich and powerful; and finally,
-the perfect among men, are typified by the three companions. The bread,
-represents the kingdom of heaven.
-
-
- _OF VIGILANCE IN OUR CALLING_
-
-A thief went one night to the house of a rich man, and scaling the
-roof, peeped through a hole to examine if any part of the family were
-yet stirring. The master of the house, suspecting something, said
-secretly to his wife, “Ask me in a loud voice how I acquired the
-property I possess; and do not desist until I bid you.” The woman
-complied, and began to vociferate, “My dear husband, pray tell me,
-since you never were a merchant, how you obtained all the wealth which
-you have now collected.” “My love,” answered her husband, “do not ask
-such foolish questions.” But she persisted in her enquiries; and at
-length, as if overcome by her urgency, he said, “Keep what I am going
-to tell you a secret, and your curiosity shall be gratified.”
-
-“Oh, trust me.”
-
-“Well, then, you must know that I was a thief, and obtained what I now
-enjoy by nightly depredations.” “It is strange,” said the wife, “that
-you were never taken.” “Why,” replied he, “my master, who was a skilful
-clerk, taught me a particular word, which, when I ascended the tops of
-people’s houses, I pronounced, and thus escaped detection.” “Tell me, I
-conjure you,” returned the lady, “what that powerful word was.” “Hear,
-then; but never mention it again, or we shall lose all our property.”
-“Be sure of that;” said the lady, “it shall never be repeated.”
-
-“It was--is there no one within hearing?--the mighty word was
-‘FALSE.’”
-
-The lady, apparently quite satisfied, fell asleep; and her husband
-feigned it. He snored lustily, and the thief above, who had heard
-their conversation with much pleasure, aided by the light of the moon,
-descended, repeating seven times the cabalistic sound. But being too
-much occupied with the charm to mind his footing, he stepped through
-the window into the house; and in the fall dislocated his leg and arm,
-and lay half dead upon the floor. The owner of the mansion, hearing
-the noise, and well knowing the reason, though he pretended ignorance,
-asked, “What was the matter?” “Oh!” groaned the suffering thief,
-“_False_ words have deceived me.” In the morning he was taken
-before the judge, and afterwards suspended on a cross.
-
-
- _Application_
-
-My beloved, the thief is the devil; the house is the human heart. The
-man is a good prelate, and his wife is the church.
-
-To sum up, then, it would appear that the humorous muse in the Middle
-Ages concerned herself chiefly with scattering and disseminating moral
-lessons, which, because of the superiority of the teachers to the
-taught, showed up an ignorance that was laughable.
-
-The fables and maxims that had been passed from mouth to mouth were put
-into writing and translated into various tongues.
-
-The Sanscrit or Hindoo stories were undoubtedly the oldest and from
-them were taken the Arabic and Persian tales. These drifted into Europe
-and took a proper place among the literatures of the world.
-
-Coleridge says that humor took its rise in the Middle Ages, while a
-present day writer contradictingly asserts that nobody smiled from the
-second century until the fifteenth.
-
-It is true, that as the advent of Christianity put a full stop to all
-progress in the arts and sciences so it impeded the advance of learning
-and delayed the development of humor.
-
-And yet, though men may not have smiled during the dark ages, they now
-and then laughed, at a humor that was far from subtle, but which was
-the foundation of the world’s merriment.
-
-The monks and ecclesiastics who formulated the moral precepts for the
-people found that the lessons were better conveyed by funny stories
-than by serious ones, and the preachers came to use the hammer of
-amusement to drive home their good advices.
-
-
-
-
- MODERN HUMOR
-
-With the readiness of the essayists to ascribe literary paternity,
-Chaucer is called the Father of English Poetry.
-
-Coleridge observes that he is the best representative in English of the
-Norman-French Trouvères, but even more than by the French, Chaucer was
-influenced by the great Italians, Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio, as
-well as by Ovid and Virgil.
-
-Father of Modern Poetry more correctly describes Chaucer, and as he was
-the first notable English poet who was a layman, so also, was he the
-first connected with the court.
-
-Though his time, the Fourteenth Century, is practically in the Middle
-Ages, Chaucer is distinctly modern in viewpoint and philosophy.
-
-Born in London, he lived his life in the company of the men and women
-of the circles he knew and loved. Mankind was his study and his theme.
-
-The average reader is hampered by the difficulties of the early English
-diction, and the modern mind is shocked by the freedom of speech then
-in vogue.
-
-But we append such bits of Chaucer’s verse as space allows.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The story of the Cock and the Fox, in the Nun’s Priest’s Tale, is
-allowed by judges to be the most admirable fable (in the narration)
-that ever was written. The description of the birds, the delightful
-gravity with which they are invested with intellectual endowments, are
-conceived in the highest taste of true poetry and natural humour.
-
-
- _THE COCK AND THE FOX_
-
- Now every wise man, let him hearken me:
- This story is all so true, I undertake,
- As is the book of Lancelot du Lake,
- That women hold in full great reverence.
- Now will I turn again to my sentence.
- A col fox, full of sly iniquity,
- That in the grove had wonned yearés three,
- By high imagination forecast.
- The samé night throughout the hedges brast
- Into the yard where Chanticleer the fair
- Was wont, and eke his wivés to repair,
- And in a bed of wortés still he lay
- Till it was passed undern of the day,
- Waiting his time on Chanticleer to fall,
- As gladly do these homicidés all
- That in await liggen to murder men.
- O falsé murderer! rucking in thy den,
- O newé Scariot, newé Ganelon!
- O false dissimuler, O Greek Simon!
- That broughtest Troy all utterly to sorrow.
- O Chanticleer, accursed be the morrow
- That thou into thy yard flew from thy beams
- Thou were full well ywarnéd by thy dreams
- That thilké day was perilous to thee:
- But what that God forewot must needés be,
- After the opinion of certain clerkés,
- Witness on him that any perfect clerk is,
- That in schoolé is great altercation
- In this matteré, and great disputision,
- And hath been of a hundred thousand men:
- But I ne cannot boult it to the bren,
- As can the holy Doctor Augustin,
- Or Boece, or the Bishop Bradwardin,
- Whether that Godde’s worthy foreweeting
- Straineth me needly for to do a thing
- (Needely clepe I simple necessity)
- Or elles if free choice be granted me
- To do the samé thing or do it naught
- Though God forewot it ere that it was wrought,
- Or if his weeting straineth never a deal
- But by necessity conditional.
- I will not have to do of such mattere;
- My Tale is of a Cock, as ye may hear,
- That took his counsel of his wife with sorrow,
- To walken in the yard upon the morrow
- That he had met the dream, as I you told.
- Womenne’s counsels be full often cold;
- Womenne’s counsels brought us first to woe,
- And made Adam from Paradise to go,
- There as he was full merry and well at ease:
- But for I n’ot to whom I might displease
- If I counsel of women wouldé blame--
- Pass over, for I said it in my game.
- Read authors where they treat of such mattere,
- And what they say of women ye may hear,
- These be the cocke’s wordés and not mine:
- I can none harm of no womán devine.
- Fair in the sand to bathe her merrily
- Li’th Partelote, and all her sisters by,
- Against the sun, and Chanticleer so free
- Sang merrier than the mermaid in the sea,
- (For Phisiologus sayeth sikerly
- How that they singeth well and merrily).
- And so befell that as he cast his eye
- Among the wortés on a butterfly,
- He was ware of this fox that lay full low,
- Nothing he list him thenné for to crow,
- But cried anon, “Cok! cok!” and up he start
- As man that was affrayed in his heart,
- For naturally a beast desireth flee
- From his contráry if he may it see,
- Though he ne’er erst had seen it with his eye.
- This Chanticleer, when he ’gan him espy,
- He would have fled, but that the fox anon
- Said: “Gentle sir, alas! what will be done?
- Be ye afraid of me that am your friend?
- Now, certes, I were worse than any fiend
- If I to you would harm or villany.
- I am not come your counsel to espy;
- But truély the cause of my coming
- Was only for to hearken how ye sing,
- For truély ye have as merry a steven
- As any angel hath that is in heaven;
- Therwith ye have of music more feeling
- Than had Boece, or any that can sing.
- My Lord, your father (God his soulé bless!)
- And eke your mother of her gentleness,
- Have in my house ybeen to my great ease,
- And certés, Sir, full fain would I you please.
- But for men speak of singing, I will say,
- (So may I brouken well my eyen tway,)
- Save you, ne heard I never man so sing
- As did your father in the morrowning:
- Certés it was of heart all that he sung:
- And for to make his voice the moré strong
- He would so pain him, that with both his eyen
- He musté wink, so loud he wouldé crien,
- And standen on his tiptoes therewithal,
- And stretchen forth his necké long and small.
- And eke he was of such discretion,
- That there n’as no man in no región
- That him in song or wisdom mighté pass.
- I have well read in Dan Burnel the ass
- Among his Vers, how that there was a cock,
- That for a Priestés son gave him a knock
- Upon his leg when he was young and nice
- He made him for to lose his benefice;
- But certain there is no comparison
- Betwixt the wisdom and discretion
- Of youré father and his subtilty.
- Now singeth, Sir, for Sainté Charity:
- Let see, can ye your father counterfeit?
- This Chanticleer his wingés ’gan to beat,
- As man that could not his treason espy,
- So was he ravished with his flattery.
- Alas! ye lordés, many a false flatour
- Is in your court, and many a losengeour,
- That pleaseth you well moré, by my faith,
- Than he that sothfastness unto you saith.
- Readeth Ecclesiast of flattery:
- Beware ye lordés of their treachery.
- This Chanticleer stood high upon his toes
- Stretching his neck, and held his eyen close,
- And ’gan to crowen loude for the nones;
- And Dan Russell the fox start up at once,
- And by the gargat henté Chanticleer
- And on his back toward the wood him bear,
- For yet ne was there no man that him sued.
- O destiny! that mayst not be eschew’d,
- Alas that Chanticleer flew from the beams,
- Alas his wife ne raughté not of dreams!
- And on a Friday fell all this mischance.
-
-
- _TO MY EMPTY PURSE_
-
- To you, my purse, and to none other wight,
- Complain I, for ye be my lady dear;
- I am sorry now that ye be so light,
- For certés ye now make me heavy cheer;
- Me were as lief be laid upon a bier,
- For which unto your mercy thus I cry,
- Be heavy again, or ellés must I die.
-
- Now vouchsafen this day, ere it be night,
- That I of you the blissful sound may hear,
- Or see your colour like the sunné bright,
- That of yellowness ne had never peer;
- Ye be my life, ye be my heartés steer;
- Queen of comfórt and of good company,
- Be heavy again, or ellés must I die.
-
- Now, purse, that art to me my livés light,
- And saviour, as down in this world here,
- Out of this towné help me by your might,
- Sithen that you will not be my tresór,
- For I am shave as nigh as any frere,
- But I prayen unto your courtesy,
- Be heavy again, or ellés must I die.
-
-
- _BALLAD OF WOMEN’S DOUBLENESS_
-
- This world is full of variance
- In everything; who taketh heed,
- That faith and trust, and all Constance,
- Exiléd be, this is no drede,
- And save only in womanhead,
- I can ysee no sikerness;
- But, for all that, yet as I read,
- Beware alway of doubleness.
-
- Also that the fresh summer flowers,
- The white and red, the blue and green,
- Be suddenly with winter showers,
- Made faint and fade, withouten ween;
- That trust is none, as ye may seen,
- In no thing, nor no steadfastness,
- Except in women, thus I mean;
- Yet aye beware of doubleness.
-
- The crooked moon (this is no tale),
- Some while isheen and bright of hue,
- And after that full dark and pale,
- And every moneth changeth new,
- That who the very sothé knew
- All thing is built on brittleness,
- Save that women always be true;
- Yet aye beware of doubleness.
-
- The lusty freshé summer’s day,
- And Phœbus with his beamés clear,
- Towardés night they draw away,
- And no longer list t’ appear,
- That in this present life now here
- Nothing abideth in his fairness,
- Save women aye be found entere,
- And devoid of all doubleness.
-
- The sea eke with his sterné wawés
- Each day yfloweth new again,
- And by the concourse of his lawés
- The ebbe floweth in certain;
- After great drought there cometh rain;
- That farewell here all stableness,
- Save that women be whole and plein;
- Yet aye beware of doubleness.
-
- Fortunés wheel go’th round about
- A thousand timés day and night,
- Whose course standeth ever in doubt
- For to transmue she is so light,
- For which adverteth in your sight
- Th’ untrust of worldly fickleness,
- Save women, which of kindly right
- Ne hath no touch of doubleness.
-
- What man ymay the wind restrain,
- Or holden a snake by the tail?
- Who may a slipper eel constrain
- That it will void withouten fail?
- Or who can driven so a nail
- To maké sure newfangleness,
- Save women, that can gie their sail
- To row their boat with doubleness?
-
- At every haven they can arrive
- Whereat they wot is good passáge;
- Of innocence they cannot strive
- With wawés, nor no rockés rage;
- So happy is their lodemanage
- With needle and stone their course to dress,
- That Solomon was not so sage
- To find in them no doubleness.
-
- Therefore whoso doth them accuse
- Of any double intentión,
- To speaké rown, other to muse,
- To pinch at their conditión,
- All is but false collusión,
- I dare right well the soth express;
- They have no better protectión,
- But shroud them under doubleness.
-
- So well fortunéd is their chance,
- The dice to-turnen up so down,
- With sice and cinque they can advance,
- And then by revolutión
- They set a fell conclusión
- Of lombés, as in sothfastness,
- Though clerkés maken mentión
- Their kind is fret with doubleness.
-
- Sampson yhad experience
- That women were full true yfound
- When Dalila of innocence
- With shearés ’gan his hair to round;
- To speak also of Rosamond,
- And Cleopatra’s faithfulness,
- The stories plainly will confound
- Men that apeach their doubleness.
-
- Single thing is not ypraiséd,
- Nor of old is of no renown,
- In balance when they be ypesed,
- For lack of weight they be borne down,
- And for this cause of just reason
- These women all of rightwisness
- Of choice and free electión
- Most love exchange and doubleness.
-
-
- _L’ENVOI_
-
- O ye women! which be inclinéd
- By influence of your natúre
- To be as pure as gold yfinéd,
- And in your truth for to endure,
- Armeth yourself in strong armúre,
- (Lest men assail your sikerness,)
- Set on your breast, yourself t’assure,
- A mighty shield of doubleness.
-
-Chaucer was called the Morning Star of Song, and his immediate
-followers proved to be satellites of far less magnitude.
-
-John Skelton, an early Poet Laureate, was of a buffoon type of humor,
-yet thus speaks of his own verse.
-
- Though my rhyme be ragged,
- Tattered and gagged,
- Rudely rainbeaten,
- Rusty, moth-eaten,
- If ye take well therewith,
- It hath in it some pith.
-
-One, at least, of his whimsical poems is not without charm.
-
-
- _TO MAISTRES MARGARET HUSSEY_
-
- Mirry Margaret
- As midsomer flowre,
- Gentyll as faucon
- Or hauke of the towre,
- With solace and gladnes
- Moch mirth, and no madnes,
- All good and no badnes,
- So joyously
- So maydenly
- So womanly
- Her demeynynge
- In every thynge
- Far, far passynge
- That I can endite
- Or suffice to write
- Of mirry Margaret
- As mydsomer flowre
- Gentill as faucon
- Or hawke of the towre.
- As pacient and as styll
- And as ful of good wil
- As faire Isiphyll
- Coliander
- Sweete pomaunder
- Good Cassander;
- Stedfast of thought
- Wel made, wel wroght,
- Far may be sought
- Erst that ye can fynde
- So curteise so kynde
- As mirry Margaret
- This midsomer flowre,
- Gentyll as faucon
- Or hauke of the towre.
-
-The Troubadours and Minstrels were followed by a type of entertainer
-known as the Fool or the Court Fool, who took the place of the satirist
-in the great households.
-
-Soon various jests were collected, and attributed to these domestic
-fools, whose garb began to take the form of the cap and bells,
-accompanied by the jester’s bauble.
-
-As printing became more widespread, the jestbooks multiplied, and many
-collections were published in England.
-
-Skelton seems to have been quite as much Court Jester as Poet Laureate
-under Henry VII and Henry VIII, and a volume of _Merie Tayles of
-Skelton_ is one of the earliest of the Jest Books.
-
-Yet, since this was published some forty years after Skelton’s death
-it is assumed that but few of the tales are really of the poet’s
-origination.
-
-Likewise, Scogin’s Jests and the stories attributed to Tarlton and
-Peele are considered unauthentic as to authorship and merely the work
-of the hack writers of the period.
-
-These Jestbooks as well as the _C. Mery Talys_, or _Hundred
-Merry Tales_, which, with its companion volume, _Mery Tales and
-Quicke Answeres_, was, we are told, used by Shakespeare, are now
-found in many reprints, and only a few bits of their witty or humorous
-lore may be given here.
-
-As an example of the sharp satire of Skelton, the following shows how
-he regarded the prevalent practice of obtaining letters patent of
-monopoly from the crown, and also is a hit at the fondness for drinking
-among the Welsh.
-
-
- _HOW THE WELSHMAN DYD DESYRE SKELTON TO AYDE HIM IN HYS SUTE TO THE
- KYNGE FOR A PATENT TO SELL DRYNKE_
-
-Skelton, when he was in London went to the kynge’s courte, where there
-dyd come to him a Welshman saying, “Syr, it is so that many dooth come
-upp of my country to the kynge’s court, and some doth get of the kynge
-by a patent a castell, and some a parke, and some a forest, and some
-one fee and some another, and they doe lyve lyke honest men, and I
-should lyve as honestly as the best, if I might have a patent for good
-drynke, wherefore I dooe praye you to write a fewe woords for me in a
-lytle byll to geve the same to the kynge’s handes, and I will geve you
-well for your laboure. I am contented sayde Skelton. Syte downe, then,
-sayd the Welshman and write. What shall I wryte? sayde Skelton. The
-Welshman said wryte “_dryncke_.” Nowe sayde the Welshman wryte
-“_more dryncke_.” What nowe? said Skelton. Wryte now “_A great
-deale of dryncke_.” Nowe sayd the Welshman putte to all thys dryncke
-“_A littell crome of breade_, and _a great déale of dryncke to
-it_,” and reade once again. Skelton dyd reade “_Dryncke, more
-dryncke, and a great deale of dryncke and a lytle crome of breade and a
-great deale of dryncke to it_.” Then the Welshman sayde Put oute the
-litle crome of breade, and sette in _all dryncke and no breade_.
-And if I myght have thys sygned of the kynge, sayde the Welshman, I
-care for no more as long as I lyve. Well, then, sayde Skelton, when you
-have thys sygned of the kynge then will I labour for a patent to have
-bread, that you wyth your dryncke and I with the bread may fare well,
-and seeke our livinge with bagge and staffe.
-
-
- HERE BEGYNNETH CERTAYNE MERYE TALES OF SKELTON, POET LAURIAT
-
-
- _HOW SKELTON CAME LATE HOME TO OXFORD FROM ABINGTON_
-
-Skelton was an Englysheman borne as Skogyn was, and hee was educated
-& broughte up in Oxfoorde: and there was he made a poete lauriat. And
-on a tyme he had ben at Abbington to make mery, wher that he had eate
-salte meates, and hee did com late home to Oxforde, and he did lye in
-an ine named y^e Tabere whyche is now the Angell, and hee dyd drynke,
-& went to bed. About midnight he was so thyrstie or drye that hee was
-constrained to call to the tapster for drynke, & the tapster harde
-him not. Then hee cryed to hys oste & hys ostes, and to the ostler,
-for drinke; and no man wold here hym. Alacke, sayd Skelton, I shall
-peryshe for lacke of drynke! what reamedye? At the last he dyd crie
-out and sayd: Fyer, fyer, fyer! when Skelton hard euery man bustle
-hymselfe upward, & some of them were naked, & some were halfe asleepe
-and amased, and Skelton dyd crye: Fier, fier! styll, that everye man
-knewe not whether to resorte. Skelton did go to bed, and the oste and
-ostis, & the tapster with the ostler, dyd runne to Skeltons chamber
-with candles lyghted in theyr handes, saying: where, where, where is
-the fyer? Here, here, here, said Skelton, & poynted hys fynger to hys
-moouth, saying: fetch me some drynke to quenche the fyer and the heate
-and the drinesse in my mouthe: & so they dyd. Wherfore it is good for
-everye man to helpe hys owne selfe in tyme of neede wythe some policie
-or crafte, so bee it there bee no deceit nor falshed used.
-
-
- THE JESTS OF SCOGIN
-
-
- _HOW JACKE BY SOPHISTRY WOULD MAKE OF TWO EGGS THREE_
-
-Scogin on a tyme had two egs to his breakfast, and Jack his scholler
-should rost them; and as they were rosting, Scogin went to the fire
-to warme him. And as the egs were rosting, Jacke said: sir, I can by
-sophistry prove that here be three egs. Let me se that, said Scogin.
-I shall tel you, sir, said Jack. Is not here one? Yes, said Scogin.
-And is not here two? Yes, said Scogin; of that I am sure. Then Jack
-did tell the first egge againe, saying: is not this the third? O, said
-Scogin, Jack, thou art a good sophister; wel, said Scogin, these two
-eggs shall serve me for my breakfast, and take thou the third for thy
-labour and for the herring that thou didst give mee the last day. So
-one good turne doth aske another, and to deceive him that goeth about
-to deceive is no deceit.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This is a very common story. It is, in a slightly varied form, No. 67
-of _A C Mery Tales_, and Johnson has introduced it into _The
-Pleasant Conceits of Old Hobson, the Merry Londoner_, 1607.
-
-
- _HOW SCOGIN SOLD POWDER TO KILL FLEAS_
-
-Scogin divers times did lacke money, and could not tell what shift
-to make. At last, he thought to play the physician, and did fill a
-box full of the powder of a rotten post; and on a Sunday he went to
-a Parish Church, and told the wives that hee had a powder to kil up
-all the fleas in the country, and every wife bought a pennyworth; and
-Scogin went his way, ere Masse was done. The wives went home, and
-cast the powder into their beds and in their chambers, and the fleas
-continued still. On a time, Scogin came to the same Church on a
-sunday, and when the wives had espied him, the one said to the other:
-this is he that deceived us with the powder to kill fleas; see, said
-the one to the other, this is the selfe-same person. When Masse was
-done, the wives gathered about Scogin, and said: you be an honest man
-to deceive us with the powder to kill fleas. Why, said Scogin, are not
-your fleas all dead? We have more now (said they) than ever we had. I
-marvell of that, said Scogin, I am sure you did not use the medicine as
-you should have done. They said: wee did cast it in our beds and in our
-chambers. I, said he, there be a sort of fooles that will buy a thing,
-and will not aske what they should doe with it. I tell you all, that
-you should have taken every flea by the neck, and then they would gape;
-and then you should have cast a little of the powder into every flea’s
-mouth, and so you should have killed them all. Then said the wives: we
-have not onely lost our money, but we are mocked for our labour.
-
-
- FROM MERY TALES OF THE MAD MEN OF GOTTAM
-
-
- _THE SECOND TALE_
-
-There was a man of Gottam did ride to the market with two bushells of
-wheate, and because his horse should not beare heavy, he caried his
-corne upon his owne necke, & did ride upon his horse, because his horse
-should not cary to heavy a burthen. Judge you which was the wisest, his
-horse or himselfe.
-
-
- _THE THIRD TALE_
-
-On a tyme, the men of Gottam would have pinned in the Cuckoo, whereby
-shee should sing all the yeere, and in the midst of ye town they made
-a hedge round in compasse, and they had got a Cuckoo, and had put
-her into it, and said: Sing here all the yeere, and thou shalt lacke
-neither meate nor drinke. The Cuckoo, as soone as she perceived her
-selfe incompassed within the hedge, flew away. A vengeance on her! said
-they; we made not our hedge high enough.
-
-
- FROM MOTHER BUNCHES MERRIMENTS
-
-
- _HOW MADDE COOMES, WHEN HIS WIFE WAS DROWNED, SOUGHT HER AGAINST THE
- STREAME_
-
-Coomes of Stapforth, hearing that his wife was drowned comming from
-market, went with certayne of his friends to see if they could find her
-in the river. He, contrary to all the rest, sought his wife against
-the streame; which they perceyving, sayd he lookt the wrong way. And
-why so? (quoth he.) Because (quoth they) you should looke downe the
-streame, and not against it. Nay, zounds (quoth hee), I shall never
-find her that way: for shee did all things so contrary in her life
-time, that now she is dead, I am sure she will goe against the streame.
-
-
- THE PLEASANT CONCEITS OF OLD HOBSON
-
-
- _HOW MAISTER HOBSON SAID HE WAS NOT AT HOME_
-
-On a time Master Hobson upon some ocation came to Master Fleetewoods
-house to speake with him, being then new chosen the recorder of London,
-and asked one of his men if he were within, and he said he was not at
-home. But Maister Hobson, perceving that his maister bad him say so,
-and that he was within (not being willing at that time to be spoken
-withall), for that time desembling the matter, he went his way. Within
-a few dayes after, it was Maister Fleetwoods chaunse to come to Maister
-Hobson’s, and knocking at the dore, asked if he were within. Maister
-Hobson, hearing and knowing how he was denyed Maister Fleetwoods speach
-before time, spake himselfe aloud, and said hee was not at home. Then
-sayd Maister Fleetwood: what, Master Hobson, thinke you that I knowe
-not your voyce? Whereunto Maister Hobson answered and said: now,
-Maister Fleetewood, am I quit with you: for when I came to speake with
-you, I beleeved your man that said you were not at home, and now you
-will not beleeve mine owne selfe; and this was the mery conference
-betwixt these two merry gentlemen.
-
-
- _FROM CERTAINE CONCEYTS & JEASTS; AS WELL TO LAUGH DOWNE OUR
- HARDER UNDIGESTED MORSELLS, AS BREAKE UP WITH MYRTH OUR BOOKE
- AND BANQUET. COLLECTED OUT OF SCOTUS POGGIUS, AND OTHERS_
-
-A certayne Poore-man met king Phillip, & besought him for something,
-because he was his kinsman. The king demanded frō whence descended.
-Who answered: from Adam. Then the K. commaunded an Almes to be given.
-Hee replyed, an Almes was not the gift of a king; to whome the king
-answered: if I should so reward all my kindred in that kinde, I should
-leave but little for myselfe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A certaine conceyted Traveller being at a Banquet, where chanced a
-flye to fall into his cuppe, which hee (being to drinke) tooke out for
-himselfe, and afterwards put in againe for his fellow: being demanded
-his reason, answered, that for his owne part he affected them not, but
-it might be some other did.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A certaine player, seeing Thieves in his house in the night, thus
-laughingly sayde: I knowe not what you will finde here in the dark,
-when I can find nothing my selfe in the light.
-
-
- _WIT AND MIRTH. CHARGEABLY COLLECTED OUT OF TAVERNS,
- ORDINARIES, INNES, BOWLING-GREENES AND ALLYES, ALEHOUSES,
- TOBACCO-SHOPS, HIGHWAYES, AND WATER-PASSAGES. MADE UP, AND
- FASHIONED INTO CLINCHES, BULLS, QUIRKES, YERKES, QUIPS, AND
- JERKES. APOTHEGMATICALLY BUNDLED UP AND GARBLED AT THE REQUEST
- OF JOHN GARRET’S GHOST_
-
-Taylor the Water-Poet was one of the favourite authors of Robert
-Southey, who has given an account of his life and writings in
-his _Uneducated Poets_, and has quoted him largely in his
-_Common-Place Book_.
-
-John Garret, at the request of whose ghost the Water-Poet professes
-to have formed the present collection, was a jester of the period,
-mentioned by Bishop Corbet and others. Heylin, author of the
-Cosmography, speaks of “Archy’s bobs, and Garrets sawcy jests.” In his
-dedication of the _Wit and Mirth_, Taylor alludes to Garret as
-“that old honest mirrour of mirth deceased.”
-
-Taylor, to forestall possible cavils at his plagiarisms from others, or
-adoption of good sayings already published and well-known, expressly
-says in the dedication: “Because I had many of them [the jests] by
-relation and heare-say, I am in doubt that some of them may be in print
-in some other Authors, which I doe assure you is more than I doe know.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One said, that hee could never have his health in _Cambridge_,
-and that if hee had lived there till this time, hee thought in his
-conscience that hee had dyed seven yeeres agoe.
-
-A Judge upon the Bench did aske an old man how old he was. My Lord,
-said he, I am eight and fourscore. And why not fourscore and eight?
-said the Judge. The other repli’d: because I was eight, before I was
-fourescore.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A rich man told his nephew that hee had read a booke called _Lucius
-Apuleius of the Golden Asse_, and that he found there how Apuleius,
-after he had beene an asse many yeeres, by eating of Roses he did
-recover his manly shape againe, and was no more an asse: the young man
-replied to his uncle: Sir, if I were worthy to advise you, I would give
-you counsell to eate a salled of Roses once a weeke yourselfe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A country man being demanded how such a River was called, that ranne
-through their Country, hee answered that they never had need to call
-the River, for it alwayes came without calling.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One borrowed a cloake of a Gentleman, and met one that knew him, who
-said: I thinke I know that cloake. It may be so, said the other, I
-borrowed it of such a Gentleman. The other told him that it was too
-short. Yea, but, quoth he that had the cloake, I will have it long
-enough, before I bring it home againe.
-
-
- _OF THE WOMAN THAT FOLLOWED HER FOURTH HUSBANDS BERE AND WEPT_
-
-A woman there was which had had iiii husbandys. It fourtuned also that
-this fourth husbande dyed and was brought to chyrche upon the bere;
-whom this woman folowed and made great mone, and waxed very sory,
-in so moche that her neyghbours thought she wolde swown and dye for
-sorow. Wherfore one of her gosseps cam to her, and spake to her in
-her ere, and bad her, for Godds sake, comfort her self and refrayne
-that lamentacion, or ellys it wold hurt her and peraventure put her in
-jeopardy of her life. To whom this woman answeryd and sayd: I wys, good
-gosyp, I have grete cause to morne, if ye knew all. For I have beryed
-iii husbandes besyde this man; but I was never in the case that I am
-now. For there was not one of them but when that I folowed the corse to
-chyrch, yet I was sure of an nother husband, before the corse cam out
-of my house, and now I am sure of no nother husband; and therfore ye
-may be sure I have great cause to be sad and hevy.
-
-By thys tale ye may se that the olde proverbe ys trew, that it is as
-great pyte to se a woman wepe as a gose to go barefote.
-
-
- A C. MERY TALYS
-
-
- _OF THE MERCHAUNTE OF LONDON THAT DYD PUT NOBLES IN HIS MOUTHE IN HYS
- DETHE BEDDE_
-
-A ryche covetous marchant there was that dwellid in London, which
-ever gaderyd mony and could never fynd in hys hert to spend ought
-_upon_ hym selfe nor upon no man els. Whiche fell sore syke, and
-as he laye on hys deth bed had his purs lyenge at his beddys hede, and
-[he] had suche a love to his money that he put his hande in his purs,
-and toke out thereof x or xii li. in nobles and put them in his mouth.
-And because his wyfe and other perceyved hym very syke and lyke to dye,
-they exortyd hym to be confessyd, and brought the curate unto hym.
-Which when they had caused him to say Benedicite, the curate bad hym
-crye God mercy and shewe to hym his synnes. Than this seyck man began
-to sey: I crey God mercy I have offendyd in the vii dedly synnes and
-broken the x commaundementes; but because of the gold in his mouth he
-muffled so in his speche, that the curate could not well understande
-hym: wherfore the curat askyd hym, what he had in his mouthe that
-letted his spech. I wys, mayster parsone, quod the syke man,
-muffelynge, I have nothyng in my mouthe but a lyttle money; bycause I
-wot not whither I shal go, I thought I wold take some spendynge money
-with me: for I wot not what nede I shall have therof; and incontynent
-after that sayeng dyed, before he was confessyd or repentant that any
-man coulde perceyve, and so by lyklyhod went to the devyll.
-
-By this tale ye may se, that they that all theyr lyves wyll never do
-charyte to theyr neghbours, that God in tyme of theyr dethe wyll not
-suffre them to have grace of repentaunce.
-
-
- _OF THE SCOLER OF OXFORDE THAT PROVED BY SOVESTRY II CHYKENS III_
-
-A ryche Frankelyn in the contrey havynge by his wyfe but one chylde and
-no mo, for the great affeccyon that he had to his sayd chylde founde
-hym at Oxforde to schole by the space of ii or iii yere. Thys yonge
-scoler, in a vacacyon tyme, for his disporte came home to his father.
-It fortuned afterwarde on a nyght, the father, the mother and the sayd
-yonge scoler
-
- _5 lines wanting._
-
-_I_ have studyed sovestry, and by that scyence I can prove, that
-these ii chekyns in the dysshe be thre chekyns. Mary, sayde the father,
-that wolde I fayne se. The scoller toke one of the chekyns in his hande
-and said: lo! here is one chekyn, and incontynente he toke bothe the
-chekyns in his hande jointely and sayd: here is ii chekyns; and one and
-ii maketh iii: ergo here is iii chekyns. Than the father toke one of
-the chekyns to him selfe, and gave another to his wyfe, and sayd thus:
-lo! I wyll have one of the chekyns to my parte, and thy mother shal
-have a nother, and because of thy good argumente thou shalte have the
-thyrde to thy supper: for thou gettyst no more meate here at this tyme;
-whyche promyse the father kepte, and so the scoller wente without his
-supper.
-
-By this tale men may se, that it is great foly to put one to scole to
-lerne any subtyll scyence, whiche hathe no naturall wytte.
-
-
- _OF THE COURTEAR THAT ETE THE HOT CUSTARDE_
-
-A certayne merchaunt and a courtear, _being upon a time together_
-at dyner having a hote custerd, _the courtear being_ somwhat
-homely of maner toke _parte of it and put it_ in hys mouth, whych
-was so hote that made him _shed teares._ The merchaunt, lookyng
-on him, thought that he had _ben weeping, and asked hym why_ he
-wept. This curtear, not wyllynge it to be _known that he had brent
-his_ mouth with the hote custerd, answered and said, sir: _quod
-he, I had_ a brother whych dyd a certayn offence wherfore he was
-hanged; _and, chauncing_ to think now uppon his deth, it maketh
-me to wepe. This merchaunt thought the courtear had said trew, and
-anon after the merchaunt was disposid to ete _of the custerd_,
-and put a sponefull of it in his mouth, and brent his mouth also, that
-his _eyes watered_. This courtear, that percevyng, spake to the
-merchaunt and seyd: sir, quod _he, pray_ why do ye wepe now? The
-merchaunt perseyved how he had _bene deceived_ and said: mary,
-quod he, I wepe, because thou wast not hangid, _when that_ they
-brother was hangyd.
-
-
- _OF HYM THAT SOUGHT HIS WYFE AGAYNST THE STREME_
-
-A man there was whose wyfe, as she came over a bridg, fell in to the
-ryver and was drowned; wherfore he wente and sought for her upward
-against the stream, wherat his neighboures, that wente with hym,
-marvayled, and sayde he dyd nought, he shulde go seke her downeward
-with the streme. Naye, quod he, I am sure I shall never fynde her that
-waye: for she was so waywarde and so contrary to every thynge, while
-she lyvedde, that I knowe very well nowe she is deed, she wyll go a
-gaynste the stream.
-
-
- _OF THE FOOLE THAT THOUGHT HYM SELFE DEED_
-
-There was a felowe dwellynge at Florence, called Nigniaca, whiche was
-nat verye wyse, nor all a foole, but merye and jocunde. A sorte of
-yonge men, for to laughe and pastyme, appoynted to gether to make hym
-beleve that he was sycke. So, whan they were agreed howe they wolde do,
-one of them mette hym in the mornynge, as he came out of his house, and
-bad him good morowe, and than asked him, if he were nat yl at ease? No,
-quod the foole, I ayle nothynge, I thanke God. By my faith, ye have a
-sickely pale colour, quod the other, and wente his waye.
-
-Anone after, an other of them mette hym, and asked hym if he had nat an
-ague: for your face and colour (quod he) sheweth that ye be very sycke.
-Than the foole beganne a lyttel to doubt, whether he were sycke or no:
-for he halfe beleved that they sayd trouth. Whan he had gone a lytel
-farther, the thyrde man mette hym, and sayde: Jesu! manne, what do you
-out of your bed? ye loke as ye wolde nat lyve an houre to an ende. Nowe
-he doubted greatly, and thought verily in his mynde, that he had hadde
-some sharpe ague; wherfore he stode styll and wolde go no further; and,
-as he stode, the fourth man came and sayde: Jesu! man, what dost thou
-here, and arte so sycke? Gette the home to thy bedde: for I parceyve
-thou canste nat lyve an houre to an ende. Than the foles harte beganne
-to feynte, and [he] prayde this laste man that came to hym to helpe
-hym home. Yes, quod he, I wyll do as moche for the as for myn owne
-brother. So home he brought hym, and layde hym in his bed, and than he
-fared with hym selfe, as thoughe he wolde gyve up the gooste. Forth
-with came the other felowes, and saide he hadde well done to lay hym in
-his bedde. Anone after, came one whiche toke on hym to be a phisitian;
-whiche, touchynge the pulse, sayde the malady was so vehement, that he
-coulde nat lyve an houre. So they, standynge aboute the bedde, sayde
-one to an other: nowe he gothe his waye: for his speche and syght fayle
-him; by and by he wyll yelde up the goste. Therfore lette us close his
-eyes, and laye his hands a crosse, and cary hym forth to be buryed.
-And than they sayde lamentynge one to an other: O! what a losse have we
-of this good felowe, our frende?
-
-The foole laye stylle, as one [that] were deade; yea, and thought in
-his mynde, that he was deade in dede. So they layde hym on a bere, and
-caryed hym through the cite. And whan any body asked them what they
-caryed, they sayd the corps of Nigniaca to his grave. And ever as they
-went, people drew about them. Among the prece ther was a taverners boy,
-the whiche, whan he herde that it was the cors of Nigniaca, he said to
-them: O! what a vile bestly knave, and what a stronge thefe is deed! by
-the masse, he was well worthy to have ben hanged longe ago. Whan the
-fole harde those wordes, he put out his heed and sayd: I wys, horeson,
-if I were alyve nowe, as I am deed, I wolde prove the a false lyer to
-thy face. They, that caryed him, began to laugh so hartilye, that they
-sette downe the bere, and wente theyr waye.
-
-By this tale ye maye se, what the perswasion of many doth. Certaynly he
-is very wyse, that is nat inclined to foly, if he be stered thereunto
-by a multitude. Yet sapience is founde in fewe persones: and they be
-lyghtly olde sobre men.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A few further bits are added, being witty sayings from Camden, Bacon
-and the Jest Books and manuscripts of the period.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Queen Elizabeth seeing a gentleman in her garden, who had not felt
-the effect of her favours so soon as he expected, looking out of her
-window, said to him, in Italian, “What does a man think of, Sir Edward,
-when he thinks of nothing?” After a little pause, he answered, “He
-thinks, Madam, of a woman’s promise.” The queen shrunk in her head, but
-was heard to say, _Well, Sir Edward, I must not confute you: Anger
-makes dull men witty, but it keeps them poor_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A certain nobleman sold a gentleman a horse for a good round sum, which
-he took upon his lordship’s word, that he had no fault. About three
-weeks after, he met my lord; “Why, your lordship told me,” says he,
-“that your horse had no fault, and he is blind of an eye.” _Well,
-Sir_, says my lord, _it is no fault, it is only a misfortune_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A doctor of little learning, and less modesty, having talked much at
-table; one, much admiring him, asked another, when the doctor was gone,
-if he did not think him a great scholar? The answer was, _He may be
-learned, for aught I know, or can discover; but I never heard learning
-make such a noise_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sir Drue Drury called for tobacco-pipes at a tavern. The waiter brought
-some, and, in laying them down on the table, broke most of them. Sir
-Drue swore a great oath, that they were made of the same metal with
-the Commandments. “Why so?” says one. _Because they are so soon
-broken._
-
- * * * * *
-
-A rich usurer was very lame of one of his legs, and yet nothing of hurt
-outwardly to be seen, whereupon he sent for a surgeon for his advice;
-who, being more honest than ordinary, told him, “It was in vain to
-meddle with it, for it was only old age that was the cause.” _But why
-then_ (said the usurer) _should not my other leg be as lame as
-this, seeing that the one is no older than the other?_
-
- * * * * *
-
-A gentleman disputing about religion in Button’s Coffeehouse, some of
-the company said, “You talk of religion! I will hold you five guineas,
-you cannot repeat the Lord’s prayer; Sir Richard Steele here shall hold
-stakes.” The money being deposited, the gentleman began, _I believe
-in God_; and so went through his Creed. _Well_, said the other,
-_I own I have lost, but I did not think that you could have done
-it_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A gentleman calling for small-beer at another gentleman’s table,
-finding it very hard, gave it the servant again without drinking.
-“What,” said the master of the house, “do you not like the beer?” _It
-is not to be found fault with_, answered the other, _for one
-should never speak ill of the dead_.
-
-Some gentlemen being at a tavern together, for want of better
-diversion, some proposed play; but, said another of the company, “I
-have fourteen good reasons against gaming.” “What are those,” said
-another? “In the first place,” answered he, _I have no Money_.
-_Oh!_ said the first, _if you had four hundred reasons, you need
-not name another_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Quin used to apply a story to the then ministry. A master of a brig
-calls out, _Who is there?_ A boy answered, _Will, Sir.--What are
-you doing?--Nothing, Sir.--Is Tom there?--Yes_, says Tom.--_What
-are you doing, Tom?--Helping Will, Sir._
-
- * * * * *
-
-A gentleman, passing a woman who was skinning eels, and observing the
-torture of the poor animals, asked her, how she could have the heart to
-put them to such pain. _Ah_, said she, _poor creatures! they be
-used to it_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A silly priest at Trumpington being to read that place, _Eli, Eli,
-Lamasabachthani_, began to consider with himself, that it might
-be ridiculous and absurd for him to read it as it stood, because he
-was vicar of Trumpington, and not of Ely: and therefore he read it,
-_Trumpington, Trumpington, Lamasabachthani_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It seems impossible, right here, not to digress, chronologically, for a
-moment.
-
-Every one will have noticed that these old time jests are the
-foundations on which many modern stories are built, but the last one
-quoted above is so palpably the prototype of a current Boston story
-that it must be told.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A small child named Halliwell, spending the night with a neighbor, Mrs.
-Cabot, knelt at the knee of her hostess to say her evening prayer.
-
-“Our Father who art in Heaven,” the little visitor began devoutly,
-“Cabot be thy name--”
-
-“What? What do you mean?” asked the startled lady.
-
-“Oh,” said the child, “of course, at home, I say ‘Halliwell be thy
-name,’ but here, I thought it more polite to say Cabot.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is held by most writers on the subject that the great influx of
-humor into literature took place in the latter half of the sixteenth
-century.
-
-This is partly because the progressing art of printing brought about
-the influx of many elements into literature at that time, and also
-because then appeared the work of three of the greatest of the world’s
-humorists.
-
-Shakespeare in England, Rabelais in France and Cervantes in Spain, gave
-us their immortal works.
-
-Earlier in the century Thomas More in his _Utopia_ and Nicholas
-Udall in his _Ralph Royster Doyster_ wrote in humorously satiric
-vein, but these works are difficult to quote from satisfactorily.
-
-Having reached the period when Humor began to be produced in various
-countries independently of one another, it becomes necessary to modify
-our strict chronological arrangement and consider the nations and their
-humorists separately.
-
-Before this, broadly speaking, literature should be considered as a
-whole, but as great names began to appear in certain widely separated
-localities, a national division must be made.
-
-And so, continuing in England, we come to William Shakespeare.
-
-With Shakespeare’s greatness as a poet and dramatist we are not here
-concerned, but there are some critics who dispute his preeminence as a
-humorist.
-
-While Hazlitt declared that in his opinion Molière was as great or
-greater than Shakespeare as a comic genius; Doctor Johnson, on the
-other hand, held that Shakespeare’s comedies are better than his
-tragedies.
-
-However, few are found to support Johnson’s opinion, and Hazlitt
-qualifies his by saying that as Shakespeare’s imagination and poetry
-were the master qualities of his mind, the ludicrous was forced to take
-second place.
-
-Both these worthies, however, agree on the question of Falstaff’s
-greatness, and Hazlitt takes this attitude.
-
-“I would not be understood to say that there are not scenes or whole
-characters in Shakespeare equal in wit and drollery to anything upon
-record. Falstaff alone is an instance, which, if I would, I could not
-get over. He is the leviathan of all the creatures of the author’s
-comic genius, and tumbles about his unwieldy bulk in an ocean of wit
-and humour. But in general it will be found (if I am not mistaken),
-that even in the very best of these the spirit of humanity and the
-fancy of the poet greatly prevail over the mere wit and satire, and
-that we sympathize with his characters oftener than we laugh at them.
-His ridicule wants the sting of ill-nature. He had hardly such a thing
-as spleen in his composition. Falstaff himself is so great a joke,
-rather from his being so huge a mass of enjoyment than of absurdity.”
-
-While with equal perceptive judgment “Falstaff,” says Dr. Johnson,
-“unimitated, unimitable Falstaff, how shall I describe thee? Thou
-compound of sense and vice; of sense which may be admired but not
-esteemed; of vice which may be despised, but hardly detested! Falstaff
-... is a thief and a glutton, a coward and a boaster, always ready to
-cheat the weak and prey upon the poor; to terrify the timorous and
-insult the defenceless. At once obsequious and malignant, he satirizes
-in their absence those whom he lives by flattering.... Yet the man thus
-corrupt, thus despicable, makes himself necessary to the Prince that
-despises him, by the most pleasing of all qualities, perpetual gaiety,
-by an unfailing power of exciting laughter, which is the more freely
-indulged, as his wit is not of the splendid or ambitious kind, but
-consists in easy scapes and sallies of levity, which make sport, but
-raise no envy.”
-
-One of the most difficult of all poets to quote from, we can only offer
-detached and fugitive fragments of Shakespeare’s plays; beginning with
-a bit quoted by Hazlitt and accompanied by his delightful observations
-thereon.
-
-“Shakespeare takes up the meanest subjects with the same tenderness
-that we do an insect’s wing, and would not kill a fly. To give a more
-particular instance of what I mean, I will take the inimitable and
-affecting, though most absurd and ludicrous dialogue, between Shallow
-and Silence, on the death of old Double.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Shallow._ Come on, come on, come on; give me your hand, sir; give
-me your hand, sir; an early stirrer, by the rood. And how doth my good
-cousin Silence?
-
-_Silence._ Good morrow, good cousin Shallow.
-
-_Shallow._ And how doth my cousin, your bedfellow? and your
-fairest daughter, and mine, my god-daughter Ellen?
-
-_Silence._ Alas, a black ouzel, cousin Shallow.
-
-_Shallow._ By yea and nay, sir; I dare say, my cousin William is
-become a good scholar: he is at Oxford still, is he not?
-
-_Silence._ Indeed, sir, to my cost.
-
-_Shallow._ He must then to the inns of court shortly. I was once
-of Clement’s inn; where, I think, they will talk of mad Shallow yet.
-
-_Silence._ You were called lusty Shallow then, cousin.
-
-_Shallow._ I was called anything, and I would have done anything
-indeed, and roundly too. There was I, and little John Doit of
-Staffordshire, and black George Bare, and Francis Pickbone, and Will
-Squele, a Cotswold man, you had not four such swinge-bucklers in all
-the inns of court again; and, I may say to you, we knew where the
-bonarobas were, and had the best of them all at commandment. Then was
-Jack Falstaff, now Sir John, a boy, and page to Thomas Mowbray, Duke of
-Norfolk.
-
-_Silence._ This Sir John, cousin, that comes hither anon about
-soldiers?
-
-_Shallow._ The same Sir John, the very same: I saw him break
-Schoggan’s head at the court-gate, when he was a crack, not thus
-high; and the very same day did I fight with one Sampson Stockfish, a
-fruiterer, behind Gray’s-inn. O, the mad days that I have spent! and to
-see how many of mine old acquaintances are dead!
-
-_Silence._ We shall all follow, cousin.
-
-_Shallow._ Certain, ’tis certain, very sure, very sure: death (as
-the Psalmist saith) is certain to all, all shall die.--How a good yoke
-of bullocks at Stamford fair?
-
-_Silence._ Truly cousin, I was not there.
-
-_Shallow._ Death is certain. Is old Double of your town living yet?
-
-_Silence._ Dead, sir.
-
-_Shallow._ Dead! see, see! he drew a good bow; and dead? he shot
-a fine shoot. John of Gaunt loved him well, and betted much money on
-his head. Dead! he would have clapped i’ th’ clout at twelve score; and
-carried you a forehand shaft a fourteen and a half, that it would have
-done a man’s heart good to see.--How a score of ewes now?
-
-_Silence._ Thereafter as they be: a score of good ewes may be
-worth ten pounds.
-
-_Shallow._ And is old Double dead?
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is not anything more characteristic than this in all Shakespeare.
-A finer sermon on mortality was never preached. We see the frail
-condition of human life, and the weakness of the human understanding
-in Shallow’s reflections on it; who, while the past is sliding
-from beneath his feet, still clings to the present. The meanest
-circumstances are shown through an atmosphere of abstraction that
-dignifies them: their very insignificance makes them more affecting,
-for they instantly put a check on our aspiring thoughts, and remind us
-that, seen through that dim perspective, the difference between the
-great and little, the wise and foolish, is not much. ‘One touch of
-nature makes the whole world kin’: and old Double, though his exploits
-had been greater, could but have had his day. There is a pathetic
-_naïveté_ mixed up with Shallow’s commonplace reflections and
-impertinent digressions. The reader laughs (as well he may) in reading
-the passage, but he lays down the book to think. The wit, however
-diverting, is social and humane. But this is not the distinguishing
-characteristic of wit, which is generally provoked by folly, and spends
-its venom upon vice.
-
-The fault, then, of Shakespeare’s comic Muse is, in my opinion, that it
-is too good-natured and magnanimous. It mounts above its quarry. It is
-‘apprehensive, quick, forgetive, full of nimble, fiery, and delectable
-shapes’: but it does not take the highest pleasure in making human
-nature look as mean, as ridiculous, and contemptible as possible. It is
-in this respect, chiefly, that it differs from the comedy of a later,
-and (what is called) a more refined period.”
-
-
- _FROM HENRY IV, PART I_
-
-_Enter_ HENRY _Prince of Wales and_ SIR JOHN FALSTAFF.
-
-_Falstaff._ Now, Hal, what time of day is it, lad?
-
-_Prince Henry._ Thou art so fat-witted with drinking of old
-sack, and unbuttoning thee after supper, and sleeping upon benches
-after noon, that thou hast forgotten to demand that truly which thou
-wouldst truly know. What a devil hast thou to do with the time of the
-day? Unless hours were cups of sack, and minutes capons, and clocks
-the tongues of bawds, and dials the signs of leaping-houses, and the
-blessed sun himself a fair hot wench in flame-colored taffata, I see no
-reason why thou should’st be so superfluous to demand the time of the
-day.
-
-_Falstaff._ Indeed, you come near me now, Hal; for we that take
-purses, go by the moon and seven stars; and not by Phœbus--he, “that
-wand’ring knight so fair.” And, I pray thee, sweet wag, when thou art
-king, as God save thy grace (majesty I should say; for grace thou wilt
-have none)--
-
-_Prince Henry._ What! none?
-
-_Falstaff._ No, by my troth; not so much as will serve to be
-prologue to an egg and butter.
-
-_Prince Henry._ Well, how then? come, roundly, roundly.
-
-_Falstaff._ Marry, then, sweet wag, when thou art king, let not us
-that are squires of the night’s body, be called thieves of the day’s
-beauty; let us be--Diana’s foresters, gentlemen of the shade, minions
-of the moon: and let men say, we be men of good government; being
-governed, as the sea is, by our noble and chaste mistress the moon,
-under whose countenance we--steal.
-
-_Prince Henry._ Thou say’st well, and it holds well, too; for the
-fortune of us, that are the moon’s men, doth ebb and flow like the sea;
-being governed as the sea is, by the moon. As, for proof, now, a purse
-of gold most resolutely snatched on Monday night, and most dissolutely
-spent on Tuesday morning; got with swearing--_lay by_; and spent
-with crying--_bring in_; now, in as low an ebb as the foot of the
-ladder; and, by and by, in as high a flow as the ridge of the gallows.
-
-_Falstaff._ By the Lord, thou say’st true, lad. And is not my
-hostess of the tavern a most sweet wench?
-
-_Prince Henry._ As the honey of Hybla, my old lad of the castle.
-And is not a buff jerkin a most sweet robe of durance?
-
-_Falstaff._ How now, how now, mad wag? what, in thy quips and thy
-quiddities? what a plague have I to do with a buff jerkin?
-
-_Prince Henry._ Why, what a pox have I to do with my hostess of
-the tavern?
-
-_Falstaff._ Well, thou hast called her to a reckoning many a time
-and oft.
-
-_Prince Henry._ Did I ever call for thee to pay thy part?
-
-_Falstaff._ No, I’ll give thee thy due, thou hast paid all there.
-
-_Prince Henry._ Yea, and elsewhere, so far as my coin would
-stretch; and where it would not I have used my credit.
-
-_Falstaff._ Yea, and so used it, that, were it not here apparent
-that thou art heir apparent,--But, I pr’ythee, sweet wag, shall there
-be gallows standing in England when thou art king? and resolution thus
-fobbed as it is, with the rusty curb of old father antic the law? Do
-not thou, when thou art king, hang a thief.
-
-_Prince Henry._ No; thou shalt.
-
-_Falstaff._ Shall I? Oh, rare! By the Lord, I’ll be a brave judge.
-
-_Prince Henry._ Thou judgest false already; I mean thou shalt have
-the hanging of the thieves, and so become a rare hangman.
-
-_Falstaff._ Well, Hal, well; and in some sort it jumps with my
-humor, as well as waiting in the court, I can tell you.
-
-_Prince Henry._ For obtaining of suits?
-
-_Falstaff._ Yea, for obtaining of suits; whereof the hangman hath
-no lean wardrobe. ’Sblood, I am as melancholy as a gib-cat or a lugged
-bear.
-
-_Prince Henry._ Or an old lion; or a lover’s lute.
-
-_Falstaff._ Yea, or the drone of a Lincolnshire bagpipe.
-
-_Prince Henry._ What say’st thou to a hare, or the melancholy of
-Moor-ditch.
-
-_Falstaff._ Thou hast the most unsavory similes; and art, indeed,
-the most comparative, rascalliest,--sweet young prince,--But Hal, I
-pr’ythee trouble me no more with vanity. I would to God thou and I
-knew where a commodity of good names were to be bought: an old lord of
-the council rated me the other day in the street about you, sir; but I
-marked him not; and yet he talked very wisely; but I regarded him not:
-and yet he talked wisely, and in the street too.
-
-_Prince Henry._ Thou didst well; for wisdom cries out in the
-streets and no man regards it.
-
-_Falstaff._ Oh, thou hast damnable iteration; and art, indeed,
-able to corrupt a saint. Thou hast done much harm upon me, Hal,--God
-forgive thee for it! Before I knew thee, Hal, I knew nothing; and
-now am I, if a man should speak truly, little better than one of the
-wicked. I must give over this life, and I will give it over; by the
-Lord, and I do not, I am a villain; I’ll be damned for never a king’s
-son in Christendom.
-
-_Prince Henry._ Where shall we take a purse tomorrow, Jack?
-
-_Falstaff._ Zounds, where thou wilt, lad; I’ll make one; an I do
-not, call me villain, and baffle me.
-
-_Prince Henry._ I see a good amendment of life in thee; from
-praying to purse-taking.
-
-
- _FROM MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING_
-
- CONRADE, BORACHIO, DOGBERRY, VERGES, SEXTON, _and the_
- WATCH.
-
-_Dogberry._ Is our whole dissembly appeared?
-
-_Verges._ Oh, a stool and a cushion for the sexton!
-
-_Sexton._ Which be the malefactors?
-
-_Dogberry._ Marry, that am I and my partner.
-
-_Verges._ Nay, that’s certain. We have the exhibition to examine.
-
-_Sexton._ But which are the offenders that are to be examined? Let
-them come before master constable.
-
-_Dogberry._ Yea, marry, let them come before me. What is your
-name, friend?
-
-_Borachio._ Borachio.
-
-_Dogberry._ Pray, write down--Borachio.--Yours, sirrah?
-
-_Conrade._ I am a gentleman, sir, and my name is Conrade.
-
-_Dogberry._ Write down--master gentleman Conrade.--Masters, do you
-serve God?
-
-_Conrade, Borachio._ Yea, sir, we hope.
-
-_Dogberry._ Write down--that they hope they serve God. And
-write God first; for God defend but God should go before such
-villains!--Masters, it is proved already that you are little better
-than false knaves; and it will go near to be thought so shortly. How
-answer you for yourselves?
-
-_Conrade._ Marry, sir, we are none.
-
-_Dogberry._ A marvellous witty fellow, I assure you; but I will go
-about with him.--Come you hither, sirrah; a word in your ear, sir; I
-say to you, it is thought you are false knaves.
-
-_Borachio._ Sir, I say to you, we are none.
-
-_Dogberry._ Well, stand aside.--’Fore God, they are both in a
-tale. Have you writ down, that they are none?
-
-_Sexton._ Master constable, you go not the way to examine: you
-must call forth the watch that are their accusers.
-
-_Dogberry._ Yea, marry, that’s the eftest way.--Let the watch come
-forth.--Masters, I charge you, in the prince’s name, accuse these men.
-
-_1st Watch._ This man said, sir, that Don John, the prince’s
-brother, was a villain.
-
-_Dogberry._ Write down--Prince John a villain. Why, this is flat
-perjury, to call a prince’s brother villain.
-
-_Borachio._ Master constable--
-
-_Dogberry._ Pray thee, fellow, peace: I do not like thy look, I
-promise thee.
-
-_Sexton._ What heard you him say else?
-
-_2d Watch._ Marry, that he had received a thousand ducats of Don
-John, for accusing the Lady Hero wrongfully.
-
-_Dogberry._ Flat burglary as ever was committed!
-
-_Verges._ Yea, by the mass, that it is.
-
-_Sexton._ What else, fellow?
-
-_1st Watch._ And that Count Claudio did mean, upon his words, to
-disgrace Hero before the whole assembly, and not marry her.
-
-_Dogberry._ O villain! thou wilt be condemned into everlasting
-redemption for this.
-
-_Sexton._ What else?
-
-_2d Watch._ This is all.
-
-_Sexton._ And this is more, masters, than you can deny. Prince
-John is this morning secretly stolen away; Hero was in this manner
-accused, in this very manner refused, and, upon the grief of this,
-suddenly died.--Master constable, let these men be bound, and brought
-to Leonato’s: I will go before, and show him their examination.
- (_Exit._)
-
-_Dogberry._ Come, let them be opinioned.
-
-_Verges._ Let them be in the hands--
-
-_Conrade._ Off, coxcomb!
-
-_Dogberry._ God’s my life! Where’s the sexton? Let him write
-down--the prince’s officer, coxcomb.--Come, bind them.--Thou naughty
-varlet!
-
-_Conrade._ Away! You are an ass! you are an ass!
-
-_Dogberry._ Dost thou not suspect my place? Dost thou not suspect
-my years?--Oh, that he were here to write me down an ass!--But,
-masters, remember that I am an ass; though it be not written down, yet
-forget not than I am an ass.--No, thou villain, thou art full of piety,
-as shall be proved upon thee by good witness. I am a wise fellow;
-and, which is more, an officer; and, which is more, a householder;
-and, which is more, as pretty a piece of flesh as any in Messina;
-and one that knows the law, go to; and a rich fellow enough, go to;
-and a fellow that hath had losses; and one that hath two gowns, and
-everything handsome about him.--Bring him away.--Oh, that I had been
-writ down an ass!
-
-
- _FROM THE MERCHANT OF VENICE_
-
-_Launcelot._ Certainly, my conscience will serve me to run this
-Jew my master. The fiend is at mine elbow, and tempts me, saying to
-me, “Gobbo, Launcelot Gobbo, good Launcelot,” or “good Gobbo,” or
-“good Launcelot Gobbo, use your legs, take the start, run away.” My
-conscience says, “No; take heed, honest Launcelot; take heed, honest
-Gobbo”; or, as aforesaid, “honest Launcelot Gobbo; do not run; scorn
-running with thy heels.” Well, the most courageous fiend bids me pack:
-“Via!” says the fiend; “away!” says the fiend; “for the heavens, rouse
-up a brave mind,” says the fiend, “and run.” Well, my conscience,
-hanging about the neck of my heart, says very wisely to me, “My honest
-friend Launcelot, being an honest man’s son,” or rather an honest
-woman’s son; for, indeed, my father did something smack--something
-grow to--he had a kind of taste--well, my conscience says, “Launcelot,
-budge not.” “Budge,” says the fiend. “Budge not,” says my conscience.
-“Conscience,” say I, “you counsel well.” “Fiend,” say I, “you counsel
-well.” To be ruled by my conscience, I should stay with the Jew my
-master, who--God bless the mark!--is a kind of devil; and to run
-away from the Jew, I should be ruled by the fiend, who, saving your
-reverence, is the devil himself. Certainly, the Jew is the very devil
-incarnation; and, in my conscience, my conscience is a kind of hard
-conscience to offer to counsel me to stay with the Jew. The fiend gives
-the more friendly counsel: I will run, fiend; my heels are at your
-commandment; I will run.
-
-
- _FROM HAMLET_
-
- POLONIUS _and_ HAMLET, _reading_.
-
-_Polonius._ How does my good Lord Hamlet?
-
-_Hamlet._ Well, God-’a’-mercy.
-
-_Polonius._ Do you know me, my lord?
-
-_Hamlet._ Excellent well; you are a fishmonger
-
-_Polonius._ Not I, my lord.
-
-_Hamlet._ Then I would you were so honest a man.
-
-_Polonius._ Honest, my lord?
-
-_Hamlet._ Ay, sir: to be honest, as this world goes, is to be one
-man picked out of ten thousand.
-
-_Polonius._ That’s very true, my lord.
-
-_Hamlet._ For if the sun breed maggots in a dead dog, being a good
-kissing carrion--Have you a daughter?
-
-_Polonius._ I have, my lord.
-
-_Hamlet._ Let her not walk i’ the sun: conception is a blessing;
-but not as your daughter may conceive. Friend, look to’t.
-
-_Polonius._ How say you by that? (_Aside._) Still harping on
-my daughter. Yet he knew me not at first; he said I was a fishmonger.
-He is far gone, far gone: and truly in my youth I suffered much
-extremity for love; very near this. I’ll speak to him again.--What do
-you read, my lord?
-
-_Hamlet._ Words, words, words.
-
-_Polonius._ What is the matter, my lord?
-
-_Hamlet._ Between who?
-
-_Polonius._ I mean the matter that you read, my lord.
-
-_Hamlet._ Slanders, sir. For the satirical slave says here, that
-old men have gray beards; that their faces are wrinkled; their eyes
-purging thick amber or plum-tree gum; and that they have a plentiful
-lack of wit, together with weak hams. All of which, sir, though I most
-powerfully and potently believe, yet I hold it not honesty to have it
-thus set down; for you yourself, sir, shall grow old as I am: if, like
-a crab, you could go backward.
-
-_Polonius._ (_Aside._) Though this be madness, yet there is
-method in’t.--Will you walk out o’ the air, my lord?
-
-_Hamlet._ Into my grave?
-
-_Polonius._ Indeed, that is out o’ the air. (_Aside._) How
-pregnant sometimes his replies are! A happiness that often madness hits
-on, which reason and sanity could not so prosperously be delivered of.
-I will leave him, and suddenly contrive the means of meeting between
-him and my daughter.--My honourable lord, I will most humbly take my
-leave of you.
-
-_Hamlet._ You cannot, sir, take from me anything that I will more
-willingly part withal: except my life, except my life, except my life.
-
-_Polonius._ Fare you well, my lord.
-
-_Hamlet._ These tedious old fools!
-
-
- _FROM AS YOU LIKE IT_
-
- ROSALIND _and_ ORLANDO
-
-_Rosalind._ (_Aside._) I will speak to him like a saucy lackey, and
-under that habit play the knave with him.--Do you hear, forester?
-
-_Orlando._ Very well: what would you?
-
-_Rosalind._ I pray you, what is’t o’clock?
-
-_Orlando._ You should ask me, what time o’ day: there’s no clock
-in the forest.
-
-_Rosalind._ Then there is no true lover in the forest; else
-sighing every minute, and groaning every hour, would detect the lazy
-foot of Time as well as a clock.
-
-_Orlando._ And why not the swift foot of Time? Had not that been
-as proper?
-
-_Rosalind._ By no means, sir. Time travels in divers paces with
-divers persons. I’ll tell you, who Time ambles withal, who Time trots
-withal, who Time gallops withal, and who he stands still withal.
-
-_Orlando._ I prithee, who doth he trot withal?
-
-_Rosalind._ Marry, he trots hard with a young maid, between the
-contract of her marriage and the day it is solemnised: if the interim
-be but a se’nnight, Time’s pace is so hard that it seems the length of
-seven years.
-
-_Orlando._ Who ambles Time withal?
-
-_Rosalind._ With a priest that lacks Latin, and a rich man that
-hath not the gout; for the one sleeps easily, because he cannot study;
-and the other lives merrily, because he feels no pain: the one lacking
-the burden of lean and wasteful learning; the other knowing no burden
-of heavy, tedious penury. These Time ambles withal.
-
-_Orlando._ Who doth he gallop withal?
-
-_Rosalind._ With a thief to the gallows; for though he go as
-softly as foot can fall, he thinks himself too soon there.
-
-_Orlando._ Who stays it still withal?
-
-_Rosalind._ With lawyers in the vacation; for they sleep between
-term and term, and then they perceive not how Time moves.
-
-_Orlando._ Where dwell you, pretty youth?
-
-_Rosalind._ Here in the skirts of the forest, like fringe upon a
-petticoat.
-
-_Orlando._ Are you native of this place?
-
-_Rosalind._ As the cony, that you see dwell where she is kindled.
-
-_Orlando._ Your accent is something finer than you could purchase
-in so removed a dwelling.
-
-_Rosalind._ I have been told of so many: but, indeed, an old
-religious uncle of mine taught me to speak, who was in his youth an
-inland man; one that knew courtship too well, for there he fell in
-love. I have heard him read many lectures against it; and I thank God
-I am not a woman, to be touched with so many giddy offences as he hath
-generally taxed their whole sex withal.
-
-_Orlando._ Can you remember any of the principal evils that he
-laid to the charge of women?
-
-_Rosalind._ There were none principal: they were all like one
-another, as half-pence are; every one fault seeming monstrous, till its
-fellow fault came to match it.
-
-_Orlando._ I prithee, recount some of them.
-
-_Rosalind._ No; I will not cast away my physic but on those that
-are sick. There is a man haunts the forest, that abuses our young
-plants with carving Rosalind on their barks; hangs odes upon hawthorns,
-and elegies on brambles; all, forsooth, deifying the name of Rosalind:
-if I could meet that fancy-monger I would give him some good counsel,
-for he seems to have the quotidian of love upon him.
-
-_Orlando._ I am he that is so love-shaked. I pray you, tell me
-your remedy.
-
-_Rosalind._ There is none of my uncle’s marks upon you: he taught
-me how to know a man in love; in which cage of rushes, I am sure, you
-are not prisoner.
-
-_Orlando._ What were his marks?
-
-_Rosalind._ A lean cheek, which you have not; a blue eye, and
-sunken, which you have not; an unquestionable spirit, which you have
-not; a beard neglected, which you have not (but I pardon you for that,
-for, simply, your having in beard is a younger brother’s revenue.
-Then, your hose shall be ungartered, your bonnet unbanded, your sleeve
-unbuttoned, your shoe untied, and everything about you demonstrating
-a careless desolation. But you are no such man; you are rather
-point-device in your accoutrements, as loving yourself, than seeming
-the lover of any other.
-
-_Orlando._ Fair youth, I would I could make thee believe I love.
-
-_Rosalind._ Me believe it? You may as soon make her that you love
-believe it; which, I warrant, she is apter to do than to confess she
-does. That is one of the points in the which women still give the lie
-to their consciences. But, in good sooth, are you he that hangs the
-verses on the trees, wherein Rosalind is so admired?
-
-_Orlando._ I swear to thee, youth, by the white hand of Rosalind,
-I am that he, that unfortunate he.
-
-_Rosalind._ But are you so much in love as your rhymes speak?
-
-_Orlando._ Neither rhyme nor reason can express how much.
-
-_Rosalind._ Love is merely a madness; and, I tell you, deserves as
-well a dark house and a whip as madmen do. And the reason why they are
-not so punished and cured is, that the lunacy is so ordinary that the
-whippers are in love too. Yet I profess curing it by counsel.
-
-_Orlando._ Did you ever cure any so?
-
-_Rosalind._ Yes, one; and in this manner. He was to imagine me his
-love, his mistress, and I set him every day to woo me: at which time
-would I, being but a moonish youth, grieve, be effeminate, changeable,
-longing, and liking; proud, fantastical, apish, shallow, inconstant,
-full of tears, full of smiles; for every passion something, and for
-no passion truly anything, as boys and women are, for the most part,
-cattle of this colour: would now like him, now loathe him; then
-entertain him, then forswear him; now weep for him, then spit at him;
-that I drave my suitor from his mad humour of love, to a living humour
-of madness, which was, to forswear the full stream of the world, and
-to live in a nook merely monastic. And thus I cured him; and in this
-way will I take upon me to wash your liver as clean as a sound sheep’s
-heart, that there shall not be one spot of love in’t.
-
-_Orlando._ I would not be cured, youth.
-
-_Rosalind._ I would cure you, if you would but call me Rosalind,
-and come every day to my cote, and woo me.
-
-_Orlando._ Now, by the faith of my love, I will. Tell me where it
-is.
-
-_Rosalind._ Go with me to it, and I’ll show it you; and, by the
-way, you shall tell me where in the forest you live. Will you go?
-
-_Orlando._ With all my heart, good youth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Francis, Lord Bacon, gave us much wise writing, and, incidentally much
-of the wit of wisdom, but we look to him in vain for laughable humor.
-
-A few epigrammatic selections from his essays are given.
-
- * * * * *
-
-All colours will agree in the dark.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This is certain, that a man that studieth revenge keepeth his own
-wounds green, which otherwise would heal and do well.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Whosoever esteemeth too much of an amourous affection, quitteth both
-riches and wisdom.
-
-Money is like muck: not good except it be spread.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Princes are like to heavenly bodies, which cause good or evil times,
-and which have much veneration, and no rest.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Old men object too much, consult too long, adventure too little, repent
-too soon.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To take advice of some few friends is ever honourable; for lookers-on
-many times see more than gamesters.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Suspicions that the mind of itself gathers are but buzzes; but
-suspicions that are artificially nourished and put into men’s heads by
-the tales and whisperings of others, have stings.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man, and writing an exact
-man. And therefore, if man write little, he had need have a great
-memory; if he confer little, he had need have a present wit; and if he
-read little, he had need have much cunning to seem to know that which
-he doth not.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sir John Harington, chiefly remembered for his translation of
-_Orlando Furioso_, wrote clever humorous verse.
-
-
- _OF A PRECISE TAILOR_
-
- A tailor, thought a man of upright dealing--
- True, but for lying, honest, but for stealing--
- Did fall one day extremely sick by chance,
- And on the sudden was in wondrous trance.
- The fiends of hell, mustering in fearful manner,
- Of sundry coloured silks displayed a banner
- Which he had stolen, and wished, as they did tell,
- That he might find it all one day in hell.
- The man, affrighted with this apparition,
- Upon recovery grew a great precisian.
- He bought a Bible of the best translation,
- And in his life he showed great reformation;
- He walked mannerly, he talked meekly,
- He heard three lectures and two sermons weekly;
- He vowed to shun all company unruly,
- And in his speech he used no oath but “truly”;
- And, zealously to keep the Sabbath’s rest,
- His meat for that day on the eve was drest;
- And, lest the custom which he had to steal
- Might cause him sometimes to forget his zeal,
- He gives his journeyman a special charge,
- That if the stuff, allowance being large,
- He found his fingers were to filch inclined,
- Bid him to have the banner in his mind.
- This done--I scant can tell the rest for laughter--
- A captain of a ship came three days after,
- And brought three yards of velvet and three-quarters,
- To make Venetians down below the garters.
- He, that precisely knew what was enough,
- Soon slipt aside three-quarters of the stuff.
- His man, espying it, said, in derision,
- “Master, remember how you saw the vision!”
- “Peace, knave!” quoth he; “I did not see one rag
- Of such a coloured silk in all the flag.”
-
-
- _OF A CERTAIN MAN_
-
- There was (not certain when) a certain preacher
- That never learned, and yet became a teacher,
- Who, having read in Latin thus a text
- Of _erat quidam homo_, much perplext,
- He seemed the same with studie great to scan,
- In English thus: _There was a certain man._
- But now (quoth he), good people, note you this:
- He saith there _was_--he doth not say there _is_;
- For in these days of ours it is most plain
- Of promise, oath, word, deed, no man’s certain;
- Yet by my text you see it comes to pass
- That surely once a certain man there was;
- But yet, I think, in all your Bible no man
- Can find this text, _There was a certain woman_.
-
-Ben Jonson, next to Shakespeare as a dramatist, is a master of satiric
-wit. His strong, somewhat psychological comedies are difficult to quote
-from except in long extracts.
-
-
- _FROM “EVERY MAN IN HIS HUMOR”_
-
-_Bobadil._ I will tell you, sir, by the way of private, and under
-seal, I am a gentleman, and live here obscure, and to myself; but were
-I known to her majesty and the lords (observe me), I would undertake,
-upon this poor head and life, for the public benefit of the state, not
-only to spare the entire lives of her subjects in general, but to save
-the one-half, nay, three parts of her yearly charge in holding war, and
-against what enemy soever. And how would I do it, think you?
-
-_E. Knowell._ Nay, I know not, nor can I conceive.
-
-_Bobadil._ Why, thus, sir. I would select nineteen more, to
-myself, throughout the land; gentlemen they should be of good spirit,
-strong and able constitution; I would choose them by an instinct, a
-character that I have: and I would teach these nineteen the special
-rules--as your punto, your reverso, your stoccata, your imbroccato,
-your passado, your montanto--till they could all play very near, or
-altogether as well as myself. This done, say the enemy were forty
-thousand strong, we twenty would come into the field the tenth of
-March, or thereabouts; and we would challenge twenty of the enemy; they
-could not in their honor refuse us; well, we would kill them: challenge
-twenty more, kill them; twenty more, kill them; twenty more, kill them
-too; and thus would we kill every man his twenty a day, that’s twenty
-score; twenty score, that’s two hundred; two hundred a day, five days
-a thousand; forty thousand; forty times five, five times forty, two
-hundred days kills them all up by computation. And this will I venture
-my poor gentleman-like carcass to perform, provided there be no treason
-practised upon us, by fair and discreet manhood; that is, civilly by
-the sword.
-
-
- _FROM “VOLPONE”_
-
-_Volpone._ Lady, I kiss your bounty, and for this timely grace
-you have done your poor Scoto, of Mantua, I will return you, over and
-above my oil, a secret of that high and inestimable nature which shall
-make you for ever enamoured on that minute, wherein your eye first
-descended on so mean, yet not altogether to be despised, an object.
-Here is a powder concealed in this paper, of which, if I should speak
-to the worth, nine thousand volumes were but as one page, that page as
-a line, that line as a word; so short is this pilgrimage of man, which
-some call life, to the expression of it. Would I reflect on the price?
-Why, the whole world is but as an empire, that empire as a province,
-that province as a bank, that bank as a private purse to the purchase
-of it. I will only tell you it is the powder that made Venus a goddess,
-given her by Apollo, that kept her perpetually young, cleared her
-wrinkles, firmed her gums, filled her skin, coloured her hair, from her
-derived to Helen, and at the sack of Troy unfortunately lost: till now,
-in this our age, it was as happily recovered, by a studious antiquary,
-out of some ruins of Asia, who sent a moiety of it to the Court of
-France, but much sophisticated, wherewith the ladies there now colour
-their hair. The rest, at this present, remains with me, extracted to a
-quintessence; so that, wherever it but touches in youth it perpetually
-preserves, in age restores the complexion; seats your teeth, did they
-dance like virginal jacks, firm as a wall; makes them white as ivory,
-that were black as coal.
-
-
- _A VINTNER_,
-
-To whom Jonson was in debt, told him that he would excuse the payment,
-if he could give an immediate answer to the following questions: What
-God is best pleased with; what the devil is best pleased with: what the
-world is best pleased with; and what he was best pleased with. Jonson,
-without hesitation, replied thus:
-
- God is best pleas’d, when men forsake their sin;
- The devil’s best pleas’d, when they persist therein:
- The world’s best pleas’d, when thou dost sell good wine;
- And you’re best pleas’d, when I do pay for mine.
-
-It was the fashion to flatter in those days, and King James had
-abundance of such incense offered to him, though according to Ben
-Jonson it was impossible to _flatter_ so perfect a monarch.
-The dramatist addressed the following epigram _To the Ghost of
-Martial_ (Ep. 36):
-
- Martial, thou gav’st far nobler epigrams
- To thy Domitian, than I can my James:
- But in my royal subject I pass thee,
- Thou flattered’st thine, mine cannot flatter’d be.
-
-A thought which has been humorously expanded by Ben Jonson (Ep. 42):
-
- Who says that Giles and Joan at discord be?
- Th’ observing neighbours no such mood can see.
- Indeed, poor Giles repents he married ever;
- But that his Joan doth too. And Giles would never
- By his free will be in Joan’s company;
- No more would Joan he should. Giles riseth early,
- And having got him out of doors is glad;
- The like is Joan. But turning home is sad;
- And so is Joan. Oft-times when Giles doth find
- Harsh sights at home, Giles wisheth he were blind;
- All this doth Joan. Or that his long-yearn’d life
- Were quite outspun; the like wish hath his wife.
-
- * * * * *
-
- If now, with man and wife, to will and nill
- The self-same things, a note of concord be,
- I know no couple better can agree.
-
-John Donne, one of the greatest preachers of the English church, was
-also a noted wit, poet and courtier. Like his contemporaries his wit
-was satirical, but in more playful vein than most.
-
-
- _THE WILL_
-
- Before I sigh my last gasp, let me breathe,
- Great Love, some legacies: Here I bequeathe
- Mine eyes to Argus, if mine eyes can see;
- If they be blind, then, Love, I give them thee;
- My tongue to fame; to embassadors mine ears;
- To women or the sea, my tears.
- Thou, Love, hast taught me heretofore,
- By making me serve her who had twenty more,
- That I should give to none but such as had too much before.
-
- My constancy I to the planets give;
- My truth to them who at the court do live;
- My ingenuity and openness
- To Jesuits; to buffoons my pensiveness;
- My silence to any who abroad have been;
- My money to a Capuchin.
- Thou, Love, taught’st me, by appointing me
- To love there where no love received can be,
- Only to give to such as have an incapacity.
-
- My faith I give to Roman Catholics;
- All my good works unto the schismatics
- Of Amsterdam; my best civility
- And courtship to a university;
- My modesty I give to soldiers bare;
- My patience let gamesters share.
- Thou, Love taught’st me, by making me
- Love her that holds my love disparity,
- Only to give to those that count my gifts indignity.
-
- I give my reputation to those
- Which were my friends; mine industry to foes;
- To schoolmen I bequeathe my doubtfulness;
- My sickness to physicians, or excess;
- To Nature all that I in rhyme have writ;
- And to my company my wit.
- Thou, Love, by making me adore
- Her who begot this love in me before,
- Taught’st me to make as though I gave, when I do but restore.
-
- To him for whom the passing bell next tolls
- I give my physic-books; my written rolls
- Of moral counsel I to Bedlam give;
- My brazen medals unto them which live
- In want of bread; to them which pass among
- All foreigners, mine English tongue.
- Thou, Love, by making me love one
- Who thinks her friendship a fit portion
- For younger lovers, dost my gifts thus disproportion.
-
- Therefore I’ll give no more, but I’ll undo
- The world by dying, because love dies too.
- Then all your beauties will no more be worth
- Than gold in mines where none doth draw it forth;
- And all your graces no more use shall have
- Than a sundial in a grave.
- Thou, Love, taught’st me, by making me
- Love her who doth neglect both thee and me,
- To invent and practise this one way to annihilate all three.
-
-Thomas Dekker was a prolific dramatic author of the period, and his
-satirical characterizations are among the wittiest of his day.
-
-
- _OBEDIENT HUSBANDS_
-
-There is a humour incident to a woman, which is, when a young man
-hath turmoiled himself so long that with much ado he hath gotten
-into marriage, and hath perhaps met with a wife according to his own
-desire, and perchance such an one that it had been better for him had
-he lighted on another, yet he likes her so well that he would not have
-missed her for any gold; for, in his opinion, there is no woman like
-unto her. He hath a great delight to hear her speak, is proud of his
-match, and is, peradventure, withal of so sheepish a nature, that he
-has purposed to govern himself wholly by her counsel and direction,
-so that if any one speak to him of a bargain, or whatsoever other
-business, he tells them that he will have his wife’s opinion on it, and
-if she be content, he will go through with it; if not, then will he
-give it over.
-
-Thus he is as tame and pliable as a jackanapes to his keeper. If the
-Prince set forth an army, and she be unwilling that he should go,
-who (you may think) will ask her leave, then must he stay at home,
-fight who will for the country. But if she be desirous at any time to
-have his room (which many times she likes better than his company),
-she wants no journey to employ him in, and he is as ready as a page
-to undertake them. If she chide, he answers not a word; generally,
-whatsoever she does, or howsoever, he thinks it well done.
-
-Judge, now, in what a case this silly calf is! Is not he, think you,
-finely dressed, that is in such subjection? The honestest woman and
-most modest of that sex, if she wear the breeches, is so out of reason
-in taunting and controlling her husband--for this is their common
-fault--and be she never so wise, yet a woman, scarce able to govern
-herself, much less her husband and all his affairs; for, were it not
-so, God would have made her the head. Which, since it is otherwise,
-what can be more preposterous than that the head should be governed by
-the foot?
-
-If, then, a wise and honest woman’s superiority be unseemly, and breed
-great inconvenience, how is he dressed, think you, if he light on a
-fond, wanton, and malicious dame? Then doubtless he is soundly sped.
-She will keep a sweetheart under his nose, yet is he so blind that he
-can perceive nothing. But, for more security, she will many times send
-him packing beyond sea, about some odd errand that she will buzz in his
-ears, and he will perform it at her pleasure, though she send him forth
-at midnight, in hail, rain, and snow, for he must be a man for all
-weathers.
-
-Their children, if they have any, must be brought up, apparelled,
-taught, and fed according to her pleasure, and one point of their
-learning is always to make no account of their father. Finally, she
-orders all things as she thinks best herself, making no more account
-of him, especially if he be in years, than men do of an old horse that
-is put to labour. Thus is he mewed up, plunged in a sea of cares;
-and yet he, kind fool, deems himself most happy in his happiness,
-wherein he must now perforce remain while life doth last, and pity it
-were he should want it, since he likes it so well.--_The Bachelor’s
-Banquet._
-
-Horace is thus amusingly introduced as in the act of concocting an ode:
-
- To thee whose forehead swells with roses,
- Whose most haunted bower
- Gives life and scent to every flower,
- Whose most adoréd name encloses
- Things abstruse, deep and divine;
- Whose yellow tresses shine
- Bright as Eoan fire.
- Oh, me thy priest inspire!
- For I to thee and thine immortal name,
- In--in--in golden tunes,
- For I to thee and thine immortal name--
- In--sacred raptures flowing, flowing, swimming, swimming:
- In sacred raptures swimming,
- Immortal name, game, dame, tame, lame, lame, lame,
- [Foh,] hath, shame, proclaim, oh--
- In sacred raptures flowing, will proclaim [no!].
- Oh, me they priest inspire!
- For I to thee and thine immortal name,
- In flowing numbers filled with spright and flame (Good, good!)
- In flowing numbers filled with spright and flame.
-
-John Fletcher is believed to have composed the greater part of the
-plays by Beaumont and Fletcher.
-
-The _Laughing Song_ is attributed to Fletcher alone.
-
-
- _LAUGHING SONG_
-
- (_For several voices_)
-
- Oh how my lungs do tickle! ha ha ha!
- Of how my lungs do tickle! ho ho ho ho!
- Set a sharp jest
- Against my breast,
- Then how my lungs do tickle!
- As nightingales,
- And things in cambric rails,
- Sing best against a prickle.
- Ha ha ha ha!
- Ho ho ho ho ho!
- Laugh! Laugh! Laugh! Laugh!
- Wide! Loud! And vary!
- A smile is for a simpering novice,--
- One that ne’er tasted caviarë,
- Nor knows the smack of dear anchovies.
- Ha ha ha ha ha!
- Ho ho ho ho ho!
- A giggling waiting-wench for me,
- That shows her teeth how white they be,--
- A thing not fit for gravity,
- For theirs are foul and hardly three.
- Ha ha ha!
- Ho ho ho!
- “Democritus, thou ancient fleerer,
- How I miss thy laugh, and ha’ since!”
- There thou named the famous[est] jeerer
- That e’er jeered in Rome or Athens.
- Ha ha ha!
- Ho ho ho!
- “How brave lives he that keeps a fool,
- Although the rate be deeper!”
- But he that is his own fool, sir,
- Does live a great deal cheaper.
- “Sure I shall burst, burst, quite break,
- Thou art so witty.”
- “’Tis rare to break at court,
- For that belongs to the city.”
- Ha ha! my spleen is almost worn
- To the last laughter.
- “Oh keep a corner for a friend!
- A jest may come hereafter.”
-
-Bishop Corbet, more sociable and vivacious than many of his calling
-wrote rollicking verses as well as wise and serious sermons.
-
-Perhaps this is the first known example of sheer nonsense verse.
-
-
- _LIKE TO THE THUNDERING TONE_
-
- Like to the thundering tone of unspoke speeches,
- Or like a lobster clad in logic breeches,
- Or like the gray fur of a crimson cat,
- Or like the mooncalf in a slipshod hat;
- E’en such is he who never was begotten
- Until his children were both dead and rotten.
-
- Like to the fiery tombstone of a cabbage,
- Or like a crab-louse with its bag and baggage,
- Or like the four square circle of a ring,
- Or like to hey ding, ding-a, ding-a, ding;
- E’en such is he who spake, and yet, no doubt,
- Spake to small purpose, when his tongue was out.
-
- Like to a fair, fresh, fading, wither’d rose,
- Or like to rhyming verse that runs in prose,
- Or like the stumbles of a tinder-box,
- Or like a man that’s sound yet sickness mocks;
- E’en such is he who died and yet did laugh
- To see these lines writ for his epitaph.
-
-It may be that utter nonsense was more in vogue at this time than can
-be definitely asserted, for such productions would, naturally, not be
-preserved as were the more important matters.
-
-This anonymous bit of nonsense is said to have been written in 1617,
-and may be from the pen of the same worthy Bishop.
-
-
- _NONSENSE_
-
- Oh, that my lungs could bleat like butter’d Pease;
- But bleating of my lungs hath caught the itch,
- And are as mangy as the Irish seas
- That offer wary windmills to the Rich.
-
- I grant that Rainbowes being lull’d asleep,
- Snort like a woodknife in a Lady’s eyes;
- Which makes her grieve to see a pudding creep,
- For Creeping puddings only please the wise.
-
- Not that a hard-row’d herring should presume
- To swing a tyth pig in a Cateskin purse;
- For fear the hailstons which did fall at Rome,
- By lesning of the fault should make it worse.
-
- For ’tis most certain Winter woolsacks grow
- From geese to swans if men could keep them so.
- Till that the sheep shorn Planets gave the hint
- To pickle pancakes in Geneva print.
-
- Some men there were that did suppose the skie
- Was made of Carbonado’d Antidotes;
- But my opinion is, a Whale’s left eye,
- Need not be coynéd all King Harry groates.
-
- The reason’s plain, for Charon’s Westerne barge
- Running a tilt at the Subjunctive mood,
- Beckoned to Bednal Green, and gave him charge
- To fasten padlockes with Antartic food.
-
- The End will be the Mill ponds must be laded,
- To fish for white pots in a Country dance;
- So they that suffered wrong and were upbraded
- Shall be made friends in a left-handed trance.
-
-A charming lyric by Bishop Corbet is:
-
-
- _FAREWELL TO THE FAIRIES_
-
- “Farewell, rewards and fairies!”
- Good housewives now may say,
- For now foul sluts in dairies
- Do fare as well as they.
- And, though they sweep their hearths no less
- Than maids were wont to do,
- Yet who of late, for cleanliness,
- Finds sixpence in her shoe?
-
- Lament, lament, old Abbeys,
- The fairies lost command!
- They did but change priests’ babies,
- But some have changed your land;
- And all your children stoln from thence
- Are now grown Puritans;
- Who live as changelings ever since,
- For love of your domains.
-
- At morning and at evening both,
- You merry were and glad,
- So little care of sleep or sloth
- These pretty ladies had;
- When Tom came home from labour,
- Or Cis to milking rose,
- Then merrily went their tabor,
- And nimbly went their toes.
-
- Witness those rings and roundelays
- Of theirs, which yet remain,
- Were footed in Queen Mary’s days
- On many a grassy plain;
- But, since of late Elizabeth,
- And later James, came in,
- They never danced on any heath
- As when the time hath been.
-
- By which we note the fairies
- Were of the old profession,
- Their songs were Ave-Maries,
- Their dances were procession:
- But now, alas! they all are dead,
- Or gone beyond the seas;
- Or further for religion fled,
- Or else they take their ease.
-
- A tell-tale in their company
- They never could endure,
- And whoso kept not secretly
- Their mirth was punished sure;
- It was a just and Christian deed
- To pinch such black and blue:
- Oh how the commonwealth doth need
- Such justices as you!
-
-Bishop Corbet’s epigram on Beaumont’s early death is well known:
-
- He that hath such acuteness and such wit,
- As would ask ten good heads to husband it;
- He, that can write so well that no man dare
- Refuse it for the best, let him beware:
- Beaumont is dead, by whose sole death appears,
- Wit’s a disease consumes men in few years.
-
-Sir Walter Raleigh, the graceful and brilliant courtier, is thought by
-most students of the subject to have written _The Lie_. Though it
-has been attributed to various authors the weight of evidence is in
-favor of Raleigh.
-
-
- _THE LIE_
-
- Go, Soul, the body’s guest,
- Upon a thankless errand;
- Fear not to touch the best;
- The truth shall be thy warrant.
- Go, since I needs must die,
- And give them all the lie.
-
- Go tell the Court it glows
- And shines like rotten wood;
- Go tell the Church it shows
- What’s good, but does no good.
- If Court and Church reply,
- Give Court and Church the lie.
-
- Tell Potentates they live
- Acting, but oh! their actions;
- Not loved, unless they give,
- Not strong but by their factions.
- If Potentates reply,
- Give Potentates the lie.
-
- Tell men of high condition,
- That rule affairs of state,
- Their purpose is ambition;
- Their practice only hate;
- And if they do reply,
- Then give them all the lie.
-
- Tell those that brave it most,
- They beg for more by spending,
- Who in their greatest cost
- Seek nothing but commending;
- And if they make reply,
- Spare not to give the lie.
-
- Tell zeal it wants devotion;
- Tell love it is but lust;
- Tell time it is but motion;
- Tell flesh it is but dust:
- And wish them not reply,
- For thou must give the lie.
-
- Tell age it daily wasteth;
- Tell honor how it alters;
- Tell beauty how she blasteth;
- Tell favor how it falters:
- And as they shall reply,
- Give every one the lie.
-
- Tell wit how much it wrangles
- In tickle points of niceness;
- Tell wisdom she entangles
- Herself in over-wiseness:
- And when they do reply,
- Straight give them both the lie.
-
- Tell physic of her boldness;
- Tell skill it is pretension;
- Tell charity of coldness;
- Tell law it is contention:
- And as they do reply,
- So give them still the lie.
-
- Tell fortune of her blindness;
- Tell nature of decay;
- Tell friendship of unkindness;
- Tell justice of delay:
- And if they will reply,
- Then give them all the lie.
-
- Tell arts they have no soundness,
- But vary by esteeming;
- Tell schools they want profoundness,
- And stand too much on seeming:
- If arts and schools reply,
- Give arts and schools the lie.
-
- Tell faith it’s fled the city;
- Tell how the country erreth;
- Tell, manhood shakes off pity;
- Tell, virtue least preferreth:
- And if they do reply,
- Spare not to give the lie.
-
- So when thou hast, as I
- Commanded thee, done blabbing,--
- Although to give the lie
- Deserves no less than stabbing,--
- Yet, stab at thee that will,
- No stab the soul can kill.
-
-The following well-known and thoroughly characteristic verses
-originally appeared in _Gammer Gurton’s Needle_, an old English
-comedy, which was long supposed to be the earliest written in the
-language, but which now ranks as the second in point of age. It was
-written by John Still, afterwards Bishop of Bath and Wells.
-
-
- _JOLLY GOOD ALE AND OLD_
-
- I cannot eat but little meat;
- My stomach is not good;
- But sure I think that I can drink
- With him that wears a hood.
- Though I go bare, take ye no care,
- I nothing am a-cold,
- I stuff my skin so full within
- Of jolly good ale and old.
-
- Back and side go bare, go bare;
- Both foot and hand go cold;
- But, belly, God send thee good ale enough,
- Whether it be new or old.
-
- I love no roast but a nut-brown toast,
- And a crab laid in the fire;
- And little bread shall do me stead;
- Much bread I nought desire.
- No frost, no snow, no wind, I trow,
- Can hurt me if I wold,
- I am so wrapp’d, and thoroughly lapp’d,
- Of jolly good ale and old.
-
- Back and side, etc.
-
- And Tib, my wife, that as her life
- Loveth well good ale to seek,
- Full oft drinks she, till ye may see
- The tears run down her cheek:
- Then doth she troul to me the bowl,
- Even as a maltworm should,
- And saith, “Sweetheart, I took my part
- Of this jolly good ale and old.”
-
- Back and side, etc.
-
- Now let them drink till they nod and wink
- Even as good fellows should do;
- They shall not miss to have the bliss
- Good ale doth bring men to.
- And all poor souls that have scour’d bowls
- Or have them lustily troul’d,
- God save the lives of them and their wives,
- Whether they be young or old.
-
- Back and side, etc.
-
-Sir John Davies, poet and lawyer, wrote many acrostics to Queen
-Elizabeth, and other witty verses.
-
-
- _ACROSTICS_
-
- Earth now is green and heaven is blue;
- Lively spring which makes all new,
- Iolly spring doth enter.
- Sweet young sunbeams do subdue
- Angry aged winter.
- Blasts are mild and seas are calm,
- Every meadow flows with balm,
- The earth wears all her riches,
- Harmonious birds sing such a psalm
- As ear and heart bewitches.
- Reserve (sweet spring) this nymph of ours,
- Eternal garlands of thy flowers,
- Green garlands never wasting;
- In her shall last our state’s fair spring,
- Now and forever flourishing,
- As long as heaven is lasting.
-
-
- _THE MARRIED STATE_
-
- Wedlock, indeed, hath oft comparèd been
- To public feasts, where meet a public rout,
- Where they that are without would fain go in,
- And they that are within would fain go out.
-
-John Marston, both dramatist and divine, gives us this bit of humorous
-satire--
-
-
- _THE SCHOLAR AND HIS DOG_
-
- I was a scholar: seven useful springs
- Did I deflower in quotations
- Of cross’d opinions ’bout the soul of man;
- The more I learnt, the more I learnt to doubt.
- Delight my spaniel slept, whilst I baus’d leaves,
- Toss’d o’er the dunces, pored on the old print
- Of titled words: and still my spaniel slept.
- Whilst I wasted lamp-oil, baited my flesh,
- Shrunk up my veins: and still my spaniel slept.
- And still I held converse with Zabarell,
- Aquinas, Scotus, and the musty saw
- Of antick Donate: still my spaniel slept.
- Still on went I; first, _an sit anima_;
- Then, an it were mortal. Oh, hold, hold! at that
- They’re at brain buffets, fell by the ears amain
- Pell-mell together; still my spaniel slept.
- Then, whether ’t were corporeal, local, fixt,
- _Ex traduce_, but whether ’t had free will
- Or no, hot philosophers
- Stood banding factions, all so strongly propt,
- I stagger’d, knew not which was firmer part,
- But thought, quoted, read, observ’d, and pryed,
- Stufft noting-books: and still my spaniel slept.
- At length he wak’d, and yawned; and by yon sky,
- For aught I know he knew as much as I.
-
-Following the example of Jest Books and collections of Merry Tales,
-came the Anthologies.
-
-The most important of these was the _Miscellany_, which went
-through eight editions in thirty years, and is said to be the book of
-songs and sonnets that Master Slender missed so much.
-
-This book was first published in 1557 and was followed by many less
-worthy collections.
-
-In 1576 appeared _The Paradise of Dainty Devices_ which also ran
-through many editions.
-
-As a rule these collections were uninteresting and composed largely
-of dull and prosy numbers. Their chief charm lay in their titles,
-which were such as _A Gorgeous Gallery of Gallant Inventions_,
-_A Handful of Pleasant Delights_, and _A Bouquet of Dainty
-Conceits_.
-
-Yet it must be remembered that this latter half of the Sixteenth
-Century saw the splendid flowering of lyric poetry, and in the last
-year appeared a famous book called _England’s Helicon_ or _The
-Muses’ Harmony_, which was a sort of Golden Treasury of the
-Elizabethan age.
-
-This was supplemented two years later by the _Poetical Rhapsody_,
-edited by Francis Davison, and from then on, the collected songs and
-verses of England showed poetry from the masters.
-
-Also there were produced at this period many translations, both of
-the classics and of more modern works of various countries; though no
-important humorous work was translated until the next century, when
-Urquhart gave Rabelais to the English people.
-
-
-
-
- FRENCH WIT AND HUMOR
-
-Rutebœuf, the Trouvère, of the Thirteenth Century, if not the principal
-author of the Fabliaux was the first to put them into rhyme.
-
-Most of his tales are too long and rambling to quote, and we content
-ourselves with one.
-
-
- _THE ASS’S TESTAMENT_
-
- A priest there was in times of old,
- Fond of his church, but fonder of gold,
- Who spent his days and all his thought
- In getting what he preached was naught.
- His chests were full of robes and stuff,
- Corn filled his garners to the roof,
- Stored up against the fair-times gay,
- From Saint Rémy to Easter Day.
- An ass he had within his stable,
- A beast most sound and valuable.
- For twenty years he lent his strength
- For the priest, his master, till at length,
- Worn out with work and age, he died.
- The priest, who loved him, wept and cried;
- And, for his service long and hard,
- Buried him in his own churchyard.
-
- Now turn we to another thing:
- ’Tis of a bishop that I sing.
- No greedy miser he, I ween;
- Prelate so generous ne’er was seen.
- Full well he loved in company
- Of all good Christians still to be;
- When he was well, his pleasure still,
- His medicine best when he was ill.
- Always his hall was full, and there
- His guests had ever best of fare.
- Whate’er the bishop lack’d or lost
- Was bought at once despite the cost;
- And so, in spite of rent and score,
- The bishop’s debts grew more and more.
- For true it is--this ne’er forget--
- Who spends too much gets into debt.
- One day his friends all with him sat,
- The bishop talking this and that,
- Till the discourse on rich clerks ran,
- Of greedy priests, and how their plan
- Was all good bishops still to grieve,
- And of their dues their lords deceive.
- And then the priest of whom I’ve told
- Was mention’d; how he loved his gold.
- And because men do often use
- More freedom than the truth would choose,
- They gave him wealth, and wealth so much,
- As those like him could scarcely touch.
- “And then besides, a thing he’s done,
- By which great profit might be won,
- Could it be only spoken here.”
- Quoth the bishop, “Tell it without fear.”
- “He’s worse, my lord, than Bedouin,
- Because his own dead ass, Baldwin,
- He buried in the sacred ground.”
- “If this is truth, as shall be found,”
- The bishop cried, “a forfeit high
- Will on his worldly riches lie.
- Summon this wicked priest to me;
- I will myself in this case be
- The judge. If Robert’s word be true,
- Mine are the fine and forfeit too.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- “Disloyal! God’s enemy and mine,
- Prepare to pay a heavy fine.
- Thy ass thou buriedst in the place
- Sacred to church. Now, by God’s grace,
- I never heard of crime more great.
- What! Christian men with asses wait?
- Now, if this thing be proven, know
- Surely to prison thou wilt go.”
- “Sir,” said the priest, “thy patience grant;
- A short delay is all I want.
- Not that I fear to answer now--
- But give me what the laws allow.”
- And so the bishop leaves the priest,
- Who does not feel as if at feast.
- But still, because one friend remains,
- He trembles not at prison pains.
- His purse it is which never fails
- For tax or forfeit, fine or vails.
-
- The term arrived, the priest appeared,
- And met the bishop, nothing feared;
- For ’neath his girdle safe there hung
- A leathern purse, well stocked and strung
- With twenty pieces fresh and bright,
- Good money all, none clipped or light.
- “Priest,” said the bishop, “if thou have
- Answer to give to charge so grave,
- ’Tis now the time.”
- “Sir, grant me leave
- My answer secretly to give.
- Let me confess to you alone,
- And, if needs be, my sins atone.”
- The bishop bent his head to hear,
- The priest he whispered in his ear:
- “Sir, spare a tedious tale to tell.
- My poor ass served me long and well,
- For twenty years my faithful slave,
- Each year his work a saving gave
- Of twenty sous---so that in all
- To twenty livres the sum will fall;
- And, for the safety of his soul,
- To you, my lord, he left the whole.”
- “’Twas rightly done,” the bishop said,
- And gravely shook his godly head:
- “And, that his soul to heaven may go,
- My absolution I bestow.”
- Now have you heard a truthful lay,
- How with rich priests the bishops play;
- And Rutebœuf the moral draws
- That, spite of kings’ and bishops’ laws,
- ’Gainst evil is the man secure
- That shields himself with money’s lure.
-
-In the Fourteenth century, Eustache Deschampes wrote more than a
-thousand ballades, virelais and other forms of light verse.
-
-One of his ballades, here given in translation, is of a distinctly
-modern type of wit.
-
-
- _ADVICE TO A FRIEND ON MARRIAGE_
-
- Ope! Who? A friend! What wouldst obtain?
- Advice! Whereof? Is’t well to wed?
- I wish to marry. What’s your pain?
- No wife have I for board and bed,
- By whom my house is wisely led.
- One meek and fair I wish to gain,
- Young, wealthy, too, and nobly bred;
- You’re crazy--batter out your brain!
-
- Consider! Grief can you sustain?
- Women have tempers bold and dread;
- When for a dish of eggs you’re fain,
- Broth, cheese, you’ll have before you spread:
- Now free, you’ll be a slave instead--
- When married, you yourself have slain.
- Think well. My first resolve is said;
- You’re crazy--batter out your brain!
-
- No wife will be like her you feign;
- On angry words you shall be fed,
- So shall you bitterly complain,
- With woes too hard to bear, bested:
- Better a life in forest led
- Than of such beast to bear the strain.
- No! The sweet fancy fills my head;
- You’re crazy--batter out your brain!
-
-
- _ENVOY_
-
- Soon you will long that you were dead
- When married; seek in street or lane
- Some love. No! Passion bids me wed;
- You’re crazy--batter out your brain!
-
-Olivier Basselin who flourished in the Fifteenth century, and who was
-a fuller by trade, is another one of the literary “Fathers,” his title
-being, “Le Pere Joyeux du Vaudeville.” Born at Vire, surrounded by
-valleys, it is held by some, while contradicted by others, that the
-modern term vaudeville is a corruption of Vaux de Vire.
-
-His songs are mostly convivial and his humor broad and rollicking.
-
-
- _TO MY NOSE_
-
- Fair Nose! whose rubies red have cost me many a barrel
- Of claret wine and white,
- Who wearest in thy rich and sumptuous apparel
- Such red and purple light!
-
- Great Nose! who looks at thee through some huge glass at revel,
- More of thy beauty thinks:
- For thou resemblest not the nose of some poor devil
- Who only water drinks.
-
- The turkey-cock doth wear, resembling thee, his wattles,
- How many rich men now
- Have not so rich a nose! To paint thee, many bottles
- And much time I allow.
-
- The glass my pencil is for thine illumination;
- My color is the wine,
- With which I’ve painted thee more red than the carnation,
- By drinking of the fine.
-
- ’Tis said it hurts the eyes; but shall they be the masters?
- Wine is the cure for all;
- Better the windows both should suffer some disasters,
- Than have the whole house fall.
-
-
- _APOLOGY FOR CIDER_
-
- Though Frenchmen at our drink may laugh,
- And think their taste is wondrous fine,
- The Norman cider, which we quaff,
- Is quite the equal of his wine,--
- When down, down, down it freely goes,
- And charms the palate as it flows.
-
- Whene’er a potent draught I take,
- How dost thou bid me drink again?
- Yet, pray, for my affection’s sake,
- Dear Cider, do not turn my brain.
- O, down, down, down it freely goes,
- And charms the palate as it flow.
-
- I find I never lose my wits,
- However freely I carouse,
- And never try in angry fits
- To raise a tempest in the house;
- Though down, down, down the cider goes,
- And charms the palate as it flows.
-
- To strive for riches in all stuff,
- Just take the good the gods have sent;
- A man is sure to have enough
- If with his own he is content;
- As down, down, down, the cider goes,
- And charms the palate as it flows.
-
- In truth that was a hearty bout;
- Why, not a drop is left,--not one;
- I feel I’ve put my thirst to rout;
- The stubborn foe at last is gone.
- So down, down, down the cider goes,
- And charms the palate as it flows.
-
-Francois Villon, born 1431, though not paternally designated, is
-called, and rightly, the Prince of Ballade Makers.
-
-Two translations are here given of one of his most popular poems, and
-another witty Ballade is added.
-
-
- _THE BALLADE OF DEAD LADIES_
-
- _Translated by Dante Gabriel Rossetti_
-
- Tell me now in what hidden way is
- Lady Flora the lovely Roman?
- Where’s Hipparchia, and where is Thais,
- Neither of them the fairer woman?
- Where is Echo, beheld of no man,
- Only heard on river and mere,--
- She whose beauty was more than human?...
- But where are the snows of yester-year?
-
- Where’s Héloïse, the learned nun,
- For whose sake Abeillard, I ween,
- Lost manhood and put priesthood on?
- (From Love he won such dule and teen!)
- And where, I pray you, is the Queen
- Who willed that Buridan should steer
- Sewed in a sack’s mouth down the Seine?...
- But where are the snows of yester-year?
-
- White Queen Blanche, like a queen of lilies,
- With a voice like any mermaiden,--
- Bertha Broad-foot, Beatrice, Alice,
- And Ermengarde the lady of Maine,--
- And that good Joan whom Englishmen
- At Rouen doomed and burned her there,--
- Mother of God, where are they then?...
- But where are the snows of yester-year?
-
-
- _Envoi:_
-
- Nay, never ask this week, fair lord,
- Where they are gone, nor yet this year,
- Except with this for an overword,--
- But where are the snows of yester-year?
-
-
- _A BALLADE OF OLD TIME LADIES_
-
- _Translated by John Payne_
-
- Tell me, where, in what land of shade,
- Hides fair Flora of Rome? and where
- Are Thaìs and Archipiade,
- Cousins-german in beauty rare?
- And Echo, more than mortal fair,
- That when one calls by river flow,
- Or marish, answers out of the air?
- But what has become of last year’s snow?
-
- Where did the learn’d Héloïsa vade,
- For whose sake Abelard did not spare
- (Such dole for love on him was laid)
- Manhood to lose and a cowl to wear?
- And where is the queen who will’d whilere
- That Buridan, tied in a sack, should go
- Floating down Seine from the turret-stair?
- But what has become of last year’s snow?
-
- Blanche, too, the lily-white queen, that made
- Sweet music as if she a siren were?
- Broad-foot Bertha? and Joan, the maid,
- The good Lorrainer the English bare
- Captive to Rouen, and burn’d her there?
- Beatrix, Eremburge, Alys--lo!
- Where are they, virgins debonair?
- But what has become of last year’s snow?
-
-
- _Envoi_:
-
- Prince, you may question how they fare,
- This week, or liefer this year, I trow:
- Still shall the answer this burden bear--
- But what has become of last year’s snow?
-
-
- _BALLAD OF THE WOMEN OF PARIS_
-
- Albeit the Venice girls get praise
- For their sweet speech and tender air,
- And though the old women have wise ways
- Of chaffering for amorous ware,
- Yet at my peril dare I swear,
- Search Rome, where God’s grace mainly tarries,
- Florence and Savoy, everywhere,
- There’s no good girl’s lip out of Paris.
-
- The Naples women, as folk prattle,
- Are sweetly spoken and subtle enough:
- German girls are good at tattle,
- And Prussians make their boast thereof;
- Take Egypt for the next remove,
- Or that waste land the Tartar harries,
- Spain or Greece, for the matter of love,
- There’s no good girl’s lip out of Paris.
-
- Breton and Swiss know nought of the matter,
- Gascony girls or girls of Toulouse;
- Two fisherwomen with a half-hour’s chatter
- Would shut them up by threes and twos;
- Calais, Lorraine, and all their crews,
- (Names enow the mad song marries)
- England and Picardy, search them and choose,
- There’s no good girl’s lip out of Paris.
-
-
- _Envoi_:
-
- Prince, give praise to our French ladies
- For the sweet sound their speaking carries;
- ’Twixt Rome and Cadiz many a maid is,
- But no good girl’s lip out of Paris.
-
-From Clement Marot, a delightful French poet of the Sixteenth century,
-we give the following two extracts translated by Leigh Hunt.
-
-
- _A LOVE-LESSON_
-
- A sweet “No! no!” with a sweet smile beneath
- Becomes an honest girl,--I’d have you learn it;
- As for plain “Yes!” it may be said, i’ faith.
- Too plainly and too oft,--pray, well discern it!
-
- Not that I’d have my pleasure incomplete,
- Or lose the kiss for which my lips beset you;
- But that in suffering me to take it, Sweet!
- I’d have you say--“No! no! I will not let you.”
-
-
- _MADAME D’ALBRET’S LAUGH_
-
- Yes! that fair neck, too beautiful by half,
- Those eyes, that voice, that bloom, all do her honour;
- Yet, after all, that little giddy laugh
- Is what, in my mind, sits the best upon her.
-
- Good God! ’twould make the very streets and ways,
- Through which she passes, burst into a pleasure!
- Did melancholy come to mar my days
- And kill me in the lap of too much leisure,
- No spell were wanting, from the dead to raise me,
- But only that sweet laugh wherewith she slays me.
-
-About this time appeared the Heptameron, a series of tales of similar
-form and character to the Decameron of Boccaccio. This work was
-attributed to Margaret of Navarre, and doubtless was written by the
-queen with the assistance of some of her people. The tales are too long
-to quote.
-
-Jehan du Pontalais wrote a clever satirical skit on the love of money.
-
-
- _MONEY_
-
- Who money has, well wages the campaign;
- Who money has, becomes of gentle strain;
- Who money has, to honor all accord:
- He is my lord.
- Who money has, the ladies ne’er disdain;
- Who money has, loud praises will attain;
- Who money has, in the world’s heart is stored,
- The flower adored.
- O’er all mankind he holds his conquering track--
- They only are condemned who money lack.
-
- Who money has, will wisdom’s credit gain;
- Who money has, all earth is his domain;
- Who money has, praise is his sure reward,
- Which all afford.
- Who money has, from nothing need refrain;
- Who money has, on him is favor poured;
- And, in a word,
- Who money has, need never fear attack--
- They only are condemned who money lack.
-
- Who money has, in every heart does reign;
- Who money has, all to approach are fain;
- Who money has, of him no fault is told,
- Nor harm can hold.
- Who money has, none does his right restrain;
- Who money has, can whom he will maintain;
- Who money has, clerk, prior, by his gold,
- Is straight enrolled.
- Who money has, all raise, none hold him back--
- They only are condemned who money lack.
-
-Francois Rabelais was born in or about 1495, in Chinon, Touraine.
-Successively, monk, physician and scientist, he is best known as a
-master of humor and grotesque invention. His romance of Gargantua and
-Pantagruel is an extravagant, satirical criticism of the follies and
-vices of the period, burlesquing the current abuses of government and
-religion.
-
-Unable to escape a paternal label,
-
-An able writer in the _Foreign Quarterly Review_ speaks of
-Rabelais as “an author without parallel in the history of literature:
-an author who is the literary parent of many authors, since without him
-we should probably have never known a Swift, a Sterne, a Jean Paul, or,
-in fact, any of the irregular humorists: an author who did not appear
-as a steadily shining light to the human race, but as a wild, startling
-meteor, predicting the independence of thought, and the downfall of
-the authority of ages: an author who for the union of heavy learning
-with the most miraculous power of imagination, is perhaps without a
-competitor.”
-
-The works of Rabelais abound in learning and serious intent, but the
-riotous humor and flashing wit are presented with an accompaniment of
-repulsive coarseness intolerable to the modern mind.
-
-This phase, however, was a part of the manners and customs of his time,
-and to philosophers and students Rabelais will ever be a mine of deep
-and recondite wisdom and thought.
-
-Indicative of his wildly extravagant fancy are the following extracts.
-
-
- _OF THE ECLIPSES THIS YEAR_
-
-This year there will be so many eclipses of the sun and moon, that I
-fear (not unjustly) our pockets will suffer inanition, be full empty,
-and our feeling at a loss. Saturn will be retrograde, Venus direct,
-Mercury as unfixed as quicksilver. And a pack of planets won’t go as
-you would have them.
-
-For this reason the crabs will go side-long, and the rope-makers
-backward; the little stools will get upon the benches, and the spits on
-the racks, and the bands on the hats; fleas will be generally black;
-bacon will run away from peas in lent; there won’t be a bean left in a
-twelfth cake, nor an ace in a flush; the dice won’t run as you wish,
-tho’ you cog them, and the chance that you desire will seldom come;
-brutes shall speak in several places; Shrovetide will have its day; one
-part of the world shall disguise itself to gull and chouse the other,
-and run about the streets like a parcel of addle-pated animals and mad
-devils; such a hurly-burly was never seen since the devil was a little
-boy; and there will be above seven and twenty irregular verbs made this
-year, if Priscian don’t hold them in. If God don’t help us, we shall
-have our hands and hearts full.
-
-
- _OF THE DISEASES THIS YEAR_
-
-This year the stone-blind shall see but very little; the deaf shall
-hear but scurvily; the dumb shan’t speak very plain; the rich shall
-be somewhat in a better case than the poor, and the healthy than the
-sick. Whole flocks, herds, and droves of sheep, swine and oxen; cocks
-and hens, ducks and drakes, geese and ganders, shall go to pot; but
-the mortality will not be altogether so great among apes, monkeys,
-baboons and dromedaries. As for old age, ’twill be incurable this year,
-because of the years past. Those who are sick of the pleurisy will
-feel a plaguy stitch in their sides; catarrhs this year shall distill
-from the brain on the lower parts; sore eyes will by no means help the
-sight; ears shall be at least as scarce and short in Gascony, and among
-knights of the post, as ever; and a most horrid and dreadful, virulent,
-malignant, catching, perverse and odious malady, shall be almost
-epidemical, insomuch that many shall run mad upon it, not knowing what
-nails to drive to keep the wolf from the door, very often plotting,
-contriving, cudgeling and puzzling their weak shallow brains, and
-syllogizing and prying up and down for the philosopher’s stone, tho’
-they only get Midas’s lugs by the bargain. I quake for very fear when
-I think on’t; for I assure you, few will escape this disease, which
-Averroes calls lack of money, and by consequence of the last year’s
-comet, and Saturn’s retrogradation, there will be a horrid clutter
-between the cats and the rats, hounds and hares, hawks and ducks, and
-eke between the monks and eggs.
-
-
- _OF THE FRUITS OF THE EARTH THIS YEAR_
-
-I find by the calculations of Albumazar in his book of the great
-conjunction, and elsewhere, that this will be a plentiful year of
-all manner of good things to those who have enough; but your hops
-of Picardy will go near to fare the worse for the cold. As for oats
-they’ll be a great help to horses. I dare say, there won’t be much
-more bacon than swine. Pisces having the ascendant, ’twill be a mighty
-year for muscles, cockles, and periwinkles. Mercury somewhat threatens
-our parsly-beds, yet parsly will be to be had for money. Hemp will
-grow faster than the children of this age, and some will find there’s
-but too much on’t. There will be a very few _bon-chretiens_, but
-choak-pears in abundance. As for corn, wine, fruit and herbs, there
-never was such plenty as will be now, if poor folks may have their wish.
-
-
- _RABELAIS IMITATES DIOGENES_
-
- (_From the Author’s Prologue to Book III._)
-
-When Philip, King of Macedon, enterprised the siege and ruin of
-Corinth, the Corinthians having received certain intelligence by their
-spies, that he with a numerous army in battle array was coming against
-them, were all of them, not without cause, most terribly afraid; and,
-therefore, were not neglective of their duty, in doing their best
-endeavors to put themselves in a fit posture to resist his hostile
-approach, and defend their own city. Some from the fields brought
-into the fortified places their movables, cattle, corn, wine, fruit,
-victuals and other necessary provisions. Others did fortify and rampire
-their walls, set up little fortresses, bastions, squared ravelins,
-digged trenches, cleansed countermines, fenced themselves with gabions,
-contrived platforms, emptied casemates, barricaded the false brayes,
-erected the cavalliers, repaired the contrescarpes, plaistered the
-courtines, lengthened ravelins, stopped parapets, mortised barbacans,
-new pointed the portcullises with fine steel or good iron, fastened the
-herses and cataracts, placed their sentries and doubled their patrol.
-
-Every one did watch and ward, and not one was exempted from carrying
-the basket. Some polished corselets, varnished backs and breasts,
-cleaned the headpieces, mailcoats, brigandins, salads, helmets,
-murrions, jacks, gushets, gorgets, hoguines, brassars and cuissars,
-corselets, haubergeons, shields, bucklers, targets, greves, gauntlets
-and spurs.
-
-Others made ready bows, slings, cross-bows, pellets, catapults,
-migraines or fire-balls, firebrands, balists, scorpions, and other such
-warlike engines, repugnatory, and destructive to the Helepolides.
-
-They sharpened and prepared spears, staves, pikes, brown bills,
-halberts, long hooks, lances, zagages, quarterstaves, eelspears,
-partisans, troutstaves, clubs, battle-axes, maces, darts, dartlets,
-glaves, javelins, javelots, and truncheons.
-
-They set edges upon scimetars, cutlasses, badelairs, backswords, tucks,
-rapiers, bayonets, arrow-heads, dags, daggers, mandousians, poniards,
-whinyards, knives, skenes, chipping knives, and raillons.
-
-Diogenes seeing them all so warm at work, and himself not employed
-by the magistrates in any business whatsoever, he did very seriously
-(for many days together, without speaking one word) consider, and
-contemplate the countenance of his fellow-citizens.
-
-Then on a sudden, as if he had been roused up and inspired by a martial
-spirit, he girded his cloak, scarf-ways, about his left arm, tucked
-up his sleeves to the elbow, trussed himself like a clown gathering
-apples, and giving to one of his old acquaintance his wallet, books,
-and opistographs, away went he out of town towards a little hill or
-promontory of Corinth called Craneum; and there on, the strand, a
-pretty level place, did he roll his jolly tub, which served him for an
-house to shelter him from the injuries of the weather: there, I say, in
-a great vehemency of spirit, did he turn it veer it, wheel it, whirl
-it, frisk it, jumble it, shuffle it, hurdle it, tumble it, hurry it,
-jolt it, jostle it, overthrow it, evert it, invert it, subvert it,
-overturn it, beat it, thwack it, bump it, batter it, knock it, thrust
-it, push it, jerk it, shock it, shake it, toss it, throw it, overthrow
-it upside down, topsyturvy, tread it, trample it, stamp it, tap it,
-ting it, ring it, tingle it, towl it, sound it, resound it, stop it,
-shut it, unbung it, close it, unstopple it. And then again in a mighty
-bustle he bandied it, slubbered it, hacked it, whittled it, wayed it,
-darted it, hurled it, staggered it, reeled it, swinged it, brangled it,
-tottered it, lifted it, heaved it, transformed it, transfigured it,
-transposed it, transplaced it, reared it, raised it, hoised it, washed
-it, dighted it, cleansed it, rinsed it, nailed it, settled it, fastened
-it, shackled it, fettered it, levelled it, blocked it, tugged it, tewed
-it, carried it, bedashed it, bewrayed it, parched it, mounted it,
-broached it, nicked it, notched it, bespattered it, decked it, adorned
-it, trimmed it, garnished it, gaged it, furnished it, bored it, pierced
-it, tapped it, rumbled it, slid it down the hill, and precipitated it
-from the very height of the Craneum; then from the foot to the top
-(like another Sisyphus with his stone) bore it up again, and every way
-so banged it and belabored it, that it was ten thousand to one he had
-not struck the bottom of it out.
-
-Which when one of his friends had seen, and asked him why he did
-so toil his body, perplex his spirit, and torment his tub? the
-philosopher’s answer was, that not being employed in any other office
-by the Republic, he thought it expedient to thunder and storm it so
-tempestuously upon his tub, that amongst a people so fervently busy
-and earnest at work, he alone might not seem a loitering slug and lazy
-fellow. To the same purpose may I say to myself,--
-
- Tho’ I be rid from fear,
- I am not void of care.
-
-For perceiving no account to be made of me towards the discharge of a
-trust of any great concernment, and considering that through all the
-parts of this most noble kingdom of France, both on this and on the
-other side of the mountains, every one is most diligently exercised
-and busied; some in the fortifying of their own native country, for
-its defence; others, in the repulsing of their enemies by an offensive
-war; and all this with a policy so excellent, and such admirable order,
-so manifestly profitable for the future, whereby France shall have
-its frontiers most magnifically enlarged, and the French assured of a
-long and well-grounded peace, that very little withholds me from the
-opinion of good Heraclitus, which affirmeth war to be the parent of all
-good things; and therefore do I believe that war is in Latin called
-_bellum_, not by antiphrasis, as some patchers of old rusty Latin
-would have us to think, because in war there is little beauty to be
-seen; but absolutely and simply; for that in war (_bellum_ in
-_Latin_) appears all that is good and graceful, _bon_ and
-_bel_ in French, and that by the wars is purged out all manner
-of wickedness and deformity. For proof whereof the wise and pacific
-Solomon could no better represent the unspeakable perfection of the
-divine wisdom, than by comparing it to the due disposure and ranking of
-an army in battle array, well provided and ordered.
-
-Therefore by reason of my weakness and inability, being reputed by my
-compatriots unfit for the offensive part of warfare; and on the other
-side, being no way employed in matter of the defensive, although it had
-been but to carry burdens, fill ditches, or break clods, each whereof
-had been to me indifferent, I held it not a little disgraceful to be
-only an idle spectator of so many valorous, eloquent, and warlike
-persons, who in the view and sight of all Europe act this notable
-interlude or tragicomedy, and not exert myself, and contribute thereto
-this nothing, my all; which remained for me to do. For, in my opinion,
-little honor is due to such as are mere lookers on, liberal of their
-eyes, and of their strength parsimonious; who conceal their crowns and
-hide their silver; scratching their head with one finger like grumbling
-puppies, gaping at the flies like tithe calves; clapping down their
-ears like Arcadian asses at the melody of musicians, who with their
-very countenances in the depth of silence express their consent to the
-prosopopeia.
-
-Having made this choice and election, it seemed to me that my exercise
-therein would be neither unprofitable nor troublesome to any, whilst I
-should thus set agoing my Diogenical Tub.
-
-
- _THE LOST HATCHET_
-
-There once lived a poor honest country fellow of Gravot, Tom Wellhung
-by name, a wood-cleaver by trade, who in that low drudgery made shift
-so to pick up a sorry livelihood. It happened that he lost his hatchet.
-Now tell me who ever had more cause to be vexed than poor Tom? Alas,
-his whole estate and life depended on his hatchet; by his hatchet he
-earned many a fair penny of the best wood-mongers or log-merchants,
-among whom he went a-jobbing; for want of his hatchet he was like to
-starve; and had Death but met him six days after without a hatchet, the
-grim fiend would have mowed him down in the twinkling of a bed-staff.
-In this sad case he began to be in a heavy taking, and called upon
-Jupiter with most eloquent prayers (for, you know, necessity was the
-mother of eloquence), with the whites of his eyes turned up toward
-heaven, down on his marrow-bones, his arms reared high, his fingers
-stretched wide, and his head bare, the poor wretch without ceasing was
-roaring out by way of Litany at every repetition of his supplications,
-“My hatchet, Lord Jupiter, my hatchet, my hatchet, only my hatchet,
-oh, Jupiter, or money to buy another, and nothing else; alas, my poor
-hatchet!”
-
-Jupiter happened then to be holding a grand council about certain
-urgent affairs, and old Gammer Cybele was just giving her opinion, or,
-if you had rather have it so, it was young Phœbus the Beau; but, in
-short, Tom’s outcry and lamentations were so loud that they were heard
-with no small amazement at the council-board by the whole consistory
-of the gods. “What a devil have we below,” quoth Jupiter, “that howls
-so horridly? By the mud of Styx, haven’t we had all along, and haven’t
-we here still, enough to do to set to rights a world of puzzling
-businesses of consequence? Let us, however, despatch this howling
-fellow below; you, Mercury, go see who it is, and discover what he
-wants.” Mercury looked out at heaven’s trapdoor, through which, as I
-am told, they hear what’s said here below. By the way, one might well
-enough mistake it for the scuttle of a ship; though Icaromenippus said
-it was like the mouth of a well. The light-heeled deity saw that it
-was honest Tom, who asked for his lost hatchet; and, accordingly, he
-made his report to the Synod. “Marry,” said Jupiter, “we are finely
-holped up, as if we had now nothing else to do here but to restore lost
-hatchets. Well, he must have it for all that, for so ’tis written in
-the Book of Fate, as well as if it was worth the whole Duchy of Milan.
-The truth is, the fellow’s hatchet is as much to him as a kingdom to a
-king. Come, come, let no more words be scattered about it; let him have
-his hatchet again. Run down immediately, and cast at the poor fellow’s
-feet three hatchets! his own, another of gold, and a third of massy
-silver, all of one size; then, having left it to his will to take his
-choice, if he take his own, and be satisfied with it, give him t’other
-two. If he take another, chop his head off with his own; and henceforth
-serve me all those losers of hatchets after that manner.”
-
-Having said this, Jupiter, with an awkward turn of his head, like a
-jackanapes swallowing pills, made so dreadful a phiz that all the
-vast Olympus quaked again. Heaven’s foot-messenger, thanks to his
-low-crowned, narrow-brimmed hat, and plume of feathers, heel-pieces,
-and running-stick with pigeon-wings, flings himself out at heaven’s
-wicket, through the empty deserts of the air, and in a trice nimbly
-alights on the earth, and throws at friend Tom’s feet the three
-hatchets, saying to him: “Thou hast bawled long enough to be a-dry; thy
-prayers and requests are granted by Jupiter; see which of these three
-is thy hatchet, and take it away with thee.”
-
-Wellhung lifts up the golden hatchet, peeps upon it, and finds it very
-heavy; then staring on Mercury cries, “Gadzooks, this is none of mine;
-I won’t ha’t.” The same he did with the silver one, and said, “’Tis not
-this either; you may e’en take them again.” At last, he takes up his
-own hatchet, examines the end of the helve, and finds his mark there;
-then, ravished with joy, like a fox that meets some straggling poultry,
-and sneering from the tip of the nose, he cries, “By the Mass, this
-is my hatchet; Master God, if you will leave it me, I will sacrifice
-to you a very good and huge pot of milk, brim full, covered with fine
-strawberries, next Ides, _i.e._, the 15th of May.”
-
-“Honest fellow,” said Mercury, “I leave it thee; take it; and because
-thou hast wished and chosen moderately, in point of hatchet, by
-Jupiter’s command I give thee these two others; thou hast now wherewith
-to make thyself rich: be honest.”
-
-Honest Tom gave Mercury a whole cart-load of thanks, and paid reverence
-to the most great Jupiter. His old hatchet he fastened close to his
-leathern girdle, and girds it about his breech like Martin of Cambray;
-the two others, being more heavy, he lays on his shoulder. Thus he
-plods on, trudging over the fields, keeping a good countenance among
-his neighbors and fellow-parishioners, with one merry saying or other,
-after Patelin’s way.
-
-The next day, having put on a clean white jacket, he takes on his
-back the two precious hatchets, and comes to Chinon, the famous city,
-noble city, ancient city, yea, the first city in the world, according
-to the judgment and assertion of the most learned Massoreths. In
-Chinon he turned his silver hatchet into fine testons, crown-pieces,
-and other white cash; his golden hatchet into fine angels, curious
-ducats, substantial ridders, spankers, and rose nobles. Then with
-them purchases a good number of farms, barns, houses, outhouses,
-thatch-houses, stables, meadows, orchards, fields, vineyards, woods,
-arable lands, pastures, ponds, mills, gardens, nurseries, oxen,
-cows, sheep, goats, swine, hogs, asses, horses, hens, cocks, capons,
-chickens, geese, ganders, ducks, drakes, and a world of all other
-necessaries, and in a short time became the richest man in all the
-country. His brother bumpkins, and the yeomen and other country-puts
-thereabout, perceiving his good fortune, were not a little amazed,
-insomuch that their former pity of poor Tom was soon changed into an
-envy of his so great and unexpected rise; and, as they could not for
-their souls devise how this came about, they made it their business to
-pry up and down, and lay their heads together, to inquire, seek, and
-inform themselves by what means, in what place, on what day, what hour,
-how, why, and wherefore, he had come by this great treasure.
-
-At last, hearing it was by losing his hatchet, “Ha, ha!” said they,
-“was there no more to do, but to lose a hatchet, to make us rich?” With
-this they all fairly lost their hatchets out of hand. The devil a one
-that had a hatchet left; he was not his mother’s son, that did not lose
-his hatchet. No more was wood felled or cleared in that country through
-want of hatchets. Nay, the Æsopian apologue even saith, that certain
-petty country gents, of the lower class, who had sold Wellhung their
-little mill and little field to have wherewithal to make a figure at
-the next muster, having been told that this treasure was come to him by
-that means only, sold the only badge of their gentility, their swords,
-to purchase hatchets to go to lose them, as the silly clodpates did, in
-hopes to gain store of coin by that loss.
-
-You would have truly sworn they had been a parcel of your petty
-spiritual usurers, Rome-bound, selling their all, and borrowing of
-others to buy store of mandates, a pennyworth of a new-made pope.
-
-Now they cried out and brayed, and prayed and bawled, and lamented and
-invoked Jupiter, “My hatchet! My hatchet! Jupiter, my hatchet!” On this
-side, “My hatchet!” On that side, “My hatchet! Ho, ho, ho, ho, Jupiter,
-my hatchet!” The air round about rung again with the cries and howlings
-of these rascally losers of hatchets.
-
-Mercury was nimble in bringing them hatchets; to each offering that
-which he had lost, as also another of gold, and a third of silver.
-
-Everywhere he still was for that of gold, giving thanks in abundance
-to the great giver Jupiter; but in the very nick of time, that they
-bowed and stooped to take it from the ground, whip in a trice, Mercury
-lopped off their heads, as Jupiter had commanded. And of heads thus cut
-off, the number was just equal to that of the lost hatchets.
- --_Gargantua and Pantagruel._
-
-There is an epigram in Martial, and one of the very good ones--for he
-has all sorts--where he pleasantly tells the story of Cælius, who, to
-avoid making his court to some great men of Rome, to wait their rising,
-and to attend them abroad, pretended to have the gout; and the better
-to color this, anointed his legs and had them lapped up in a great many
-swathings, and perfectly counterfeited both the gesture and countenance
-of a gouty person; till in the end, Fortune did him the kindness to
-make him one indeed.
-
- “Tantum cura potest, et ars doloris!
- Desit fingere Cælius podagram.”
-
-I think I have read somewhere in Appian, a story like this, of one who
-to escape the proscriptions of the triumvirs of Rome, and the better to
-be concealed from the discovery of those who pursued him, having hidden
-himself in a disguise, would yet add this invention, to counterfeit
-having but one eye; but when he came to have a little more liberty,
-and went to take off the plaster he had a great while worn over his
-eye, he found he had totally lost the sight of it indeed, and that it
-was absolutely gone. ’Tis possible that the action of sight was dulled
-from having been so long without exercise, and that the optic power
-was wholly retired into the other eye for we evidently perceive that
-the eye we keep shut sends some part of its virtue to its fellow, so
-that it will swell and grow bigger; and so, inaction, with the heat of
-ligatures and plaster might very well have brought some gouty humor
-upon this dissembler of Martial.
-
-Reading in Froissart the vow of a troop of young English gallants,
-to keep their left eyes bound up till they had arrived in France and
-performed some notable exploit upon us, I have often been tickled with
-the conceit: suppose it had befallen them as it did the Roman, and
-they had returned with but one eye apiece to their mistresses, for
-whose sakes they had made his ridiculous vow.
-
-Mothers have reason to rebuke their children when they counterfeit
-having but one eye, squinting, lameness, or any other personal defect;
-for, besides that their bodies being then so tender may be subject to
-take an ill bent, Fortune, I know not how, sometimes seems to delight
-in taking us at our word; and I have heard several examples related
-of people who have become really sick, by only feigning to be so. I
-have always used, whether on horseback or on foot, to carry a stick in
-my hand, and even to affect doing it with an elegant air; many have
-threatened that this fancy would one day be turned into necessity: if
-so, I should be the first of my family to have the gout.
-
-But let us a little lengthen this chapter, and add another anecdote
-concerning blindness. Pliny reports of one who, dreaming he was blind,
-found himself so indeed in the morning without any preceding infirmity
-in his eyes. The force of imagination might assist in this case, as I
-have said elsewhere, and Pliny seems to be of the same opinion; but it
-is more likely that the motions which the body felt within, of which
-physicians, if they please, may find out the cause, taking away his
-sight, were the occasion of his dream.
-
-Let us add another story, not very improper for this subject, which
-Seneca relates in one of his epistles: “You know,” says he, writing
-to Lucilius, “that Harpaste, my wife’s fool, is thrown upon me as an
-hereditary charge for I have naturally an aversion to those monsters;
-and if I have a mind to laugh at a fool, I need not seek him far, I
-can laugh at myself. This fool has suddenly lost her sight: I tell
-you a strange, but a very true thing; she is not sensible that she is
-blind, but eternally importunes her keeper to take her abroad, because
-she says the house is dark. That what we laugh at in her, I pray you
-to believe, happens to every one of us: no one knows himself to be
-avaricious or grasping: and again, the blind call for a guide, while we
-stray of our own accord. I am not ambitious, we say; but a man cannot
-live otherwise at Rome; I am not wasteful, but the city requires a
-great outlay; ’tis not my fault if I am choleric--if I have not yet
-established any certain course of life: ’tis the fault of youth. Let us
-not seek our disease out of ourselves; ’tis in us, and planted in our
-bowels; and the mere fact that we do not perceive ourselves to be sick,
-renders us more hard to be cured. If we do not betimes begin to see to
-ourselves, when shall we have provided for so many wounds and evils
-wherewith we abound? And yet we have a most sweet and charming medicine
-in philosophy; for of all the rest we are sensible of no pleasure till
-after the cure: this pleases and heals at once.” This is what Seneca
-says, that has carried me from my subject, but there is advantage in
-the change.
-
-As in England, the French published many jest books containing short
-anecdotes or epigrams, as well as the ubiquitous noodle stories.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A wife said to her husband, who was much attached to reading, “I wish
-I were a book, that I might always have your company.” _Then_,
-answered he, _I should wish you an almanac, that I might change once
-a year_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was said of a malicious parasite, that he never opened his mouth
-but at the expense of others; because he always ate at the tables of
-others, and spoke ill of everybody.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Duke of Vivonne, who was a heretic in medicine, being indisposed,
-his friends sent for a physician. When the Duke was told a physician
-was below, he said, _Tell him I cannot see him, because I am not
-well. Let him call again at another time_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Marechal de Faber, at a siege, was pointing out a place with his
-finger. As he spoke, a musket-ball carried off the finger. Instantly
-stretching another, he continued his discourse, _Gentlemen, as I was
-saying_--. This was true _sang froid_.
-
-A man, carrying on an unjust process, was advised to pray to God for
-its success. _Stop, stop_, replied he, _God must hear nothing of
-this_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another princess of France, being espoused by the king of Spain, in
-passing through a town, on her way to Madrid, the magistrates of the
-place, which was a famous mart for stockings, waited on the queen with
-a present of a dozen pairs of remarkable fineness. The Spanish grandee,
-who attended her, full of the jealous humour of his nation, said, in
-a passion. “You fools, know that a queen of Spain has no legs.” The
-magistrates retired in terror, and the poor queen, weeping sadly, said,
-_Must I then have both my legs cut off?_
-
- * * * * *
-
-In a village of Poitou, a peasant’s wife, after a long illness, fell
-into a lethargy. She was thought dead; and being only wrapped in linen,
-as the custom of burying the poor in that country is, she was carried
-to the place of interment. In going to church, the body, being borne
-aloft, was caught hold of by some briars, and so scratched, that as
-if bled by a surgeon, she revived. Fourteen years after, she died in
-earnest, as was thought; and as they carried her to church, the husband
-exclaimed, _For God’s sake, do not go near the briars_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A gentleman, seeing in his yard a mass of rubbish, blamed his people
-for not removing it. A domestic said, no cart could be got. “Why,”
-answered the master, “do you not make a pit beside the rubbish, and
-bury it?” “But,” answered the domestic, “where shall we put the earth
-that comes out of the pit?” _You great fool_, replied his master,
-_make the pit so large as to hold all_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A lady sitting near the fire, and telling a long story, a spark flew on
-her gown, and she did not perceive it till it had burnt a good while.
-_I saw it at first, madam_, said a lady who was present, _but I
-could not be so rude as to interrupt you_.
-
-When Rabelais lay on his death-bed, he could not help jesting at the
-very last moment; for, having received the extreme unction, a friend
-coming to see him, said, he hoped he was prepared for the next world.
-_Yes, yes_, answered Rabelais, _I am ready for my journey now;
-they have just greased my boots_.
-
-
-
-
- GERMAN WIT AND HUMOR
-
-Brandt’s _Das Narrenschiff_, or _The Ship of Fools_, a long
-satirical poem, was published at the close of the Fifteenth century.
-
-It was followed by _The Boats of Foolish Women_ and other
-imitative works.
-
-Among them, was _The Praise of Folly_, by Desiderius Erasmus, a
-Dutch classical scholar and satirist.
-
-The following is from the Dedicatory Epistle which introduces _The
-Praise of Folly_, and which is addressed to Sir Thomas More.
-
-“But those who are offended at the lightness and pedantry of this
-subject, I would have them consider that I do not set myself for the
-first example of this kind, but that the same has been oft done by many
-considerable authors. For thus, several ages since, Homer wrote of no
-more weighty a subject than of a war between the frogs and mice; Virgil
-of a gnat and a pudding cake; and Ovid of a nut. Polycrates commended
-the cruelty of Busiris; and Isocrates, that corrects him for this, did
-as much for the injustice of Glaucus. Favorinus extolled Thersites,
-and wrote in praise of a quartane ague. Synesius pleaded in behalf of
-baldness; and Lucian defended a sipping fly. Seneca drollingly related
-the deifying of Claudius; Plutarch the dialogue betwixt Gryllus and
-Ulysses; Lucian and Apuleius the story of an ass; and somebody else
-records the last will of a hog, of which St. Hierom makes mention. So
-that, if they please, let themselves think the worst of me, and fancy
-to themselves that I was, all this while, a playing at push-pin, or
-riding astride on a hobby-horse. For how unjust is it, if when we allow
-different recreations to each particular course of life, we afford no
-diversion to studies; especially when trifles may be a whet to more
-serious thoughts, and comical matters may be so treated of, as that
-a reader of ordinary sense may possibly thence reap more advantage
-than from some more big and stately argument.... As to what relates
-to myself, I must be forced to submit to the judgment of others, yet,
-except I am too partial to be judge in my own case, I am apt to believe
-I have praised Folly in such a manner as not to have deserved the name
-of fool for my pains.”
-
-A short extract from the book follows.
-
- “It is one farther very commendable property of fools, that
- they always speak the truth, than which there is nothing more
- noble and heroical. For so, though Plato relates it as a
- sentence of Alcibiades, that in the sea of drunkenness truth
- swims uppermost, and so wine is the only teller of truth, yet
- this character may more justly be assumed by me, as I can make
- good from the authority of Euripides, who lays down this as an
- axiom, ‘Children and fools always speak the truth.’ Whatever the
- fool has in his heart, he betrays in his face; or what is more
- notifying, discovers it by his words; while the wise man, as
- Euripides observes, carries a double tongue; the one to speak
- what may be said, the other what ought to be; the one what
- truth, the other what time requires; whereby he can in a trice
- so alter his judgment, as to prove that to be now white, which
- he had just swore to be black; like the satyr at his porridge,
- blowing hot and cold at the same breath; in his lips professing
- one thing, when in his heart he means another.
-
- Furthermore, princes in their greatest splendor seem upon this
- account unhappy, in that they miss the advantage of being told
- the truth, and are shammed off by a parcel of insinuating
- courtiers, that acquit themselves as flatterers more than as
- friends. But some will perchance object that princes do not love
- to hear the truth, and therefore wise men must be very cautious
- how they behave themselves before them, lest they should take
- too great a liberty in speaking what is true, rather than what
- is acceptable. This must be confessed, truth indeed is seldom
- palatable to the ears of kings, yet fools have so great a
- privilege as to have free leave, not only to speak bare truths,
- but the most bitter ones too; so as the same reproof which, had
- it come from the mouth of a wise man would have cost him his
- head, being blurted out by a fool, is not only pardoned, but
- well taken, and rewarded. For truth has naturally a mixture of
- pleasure, if it carry with it nothing of offence to the person
- whom it is applied to; and the happy knack of ordering it so, is
- bestowed only on fools....”
-
-However, but few individual names stand out in the early German
-literature that can by any stretch of definition be called humorous.
-
-As in all other countries, legends and folk lore tales were rife, and
-eventually produced popular heroes about whom stories were invented.
-
-Brother Rush, who seems to be merely a demon of darkness, is first
-found in print in Germany in 1515.
-
-He is a tricksy sprite and goes through various vicissitudes of rather
-dull interest.
-
-He was followed by Tyll Eulenspiegel, a far more popular personage, and
-translated to England under the name of Owleglas or Howleglas.
-
-Eulenspiegel was a shrewd and cunning proposition and had many
-startling adventures, two of which are here given.
-
-
- _EULENSPIEGEL’S PRANKS_
-
-
- _The Golden Horseshoes_
-
-Eulenspiegel came to the court of the King of Denmark, who liked him
-well, and said that if he would make him some diversion, then might he
-have the best of shoes for his horse’s hoofs. Eulenspiegel asked the
-king if he was minded to keep his word well and truly, and the king did
-answer most solemnly, “Yes.”
-
-Now did Eulenspiegel ride his horse to a goldsmith, by whom he
-suffered to be beaten upon the horse’s hoofs shoes of gold with silver
-nails. This done, Eulenspiegel went to the king, that the king might
-send his treasurer to pay for the shoeing. The treasurer believed
-he should pay a blacksmith, but Eulenspiegel conducted him to the
-goldsmith, who did require and demand one hundred Danish marks. This
-would the treasurer not pay, but went and told his master.
-
-Therefore the king caused Eulenspiegel to be summoned into his
-presence, and spoke to him:
-
-“Eulenspiegel, why did you have such costly shoes? Were I to shoe all
-my horses thus, soon would I be without land or any possessions.”
-
-To which Eulenspiegel did make reply:
-
-“Gracious King, you did promise me the best of shoes for my horse’s
-hoofs, and I did think the best were of gold.”
-
-Then the king laughed:
-
-“You shall be of my court, for you act upon my very word.”
-
-And the king commanded his treasurer to pay the hundred marks for the
-horse’s golden shoes. But these Eulenspiegel caused to be taken off,
-and iron shoes put on in their stead; and he remained many a long day
-in the service of the King of Denmark.
-
-
- _Paying with the Sound of a Penny_
-
-Eulenspiegel was at a tavern where the host did one day put the meat
-on the spit so late that Eulenspiegel got hungry for dinner. The host,
-seeing his discontent, said to him:
-
-“Who cannot wait till the dinner be ready, let him eat what he may.”
-
-Therefore Eulenspiegel went aside, and ate some dry bread; after that
-he had eaten he sat by the fire and turned the spit until the meat was
-roasted. Then was the meat borne upon the table, and the host, with the
-guests, did feast upon it. But Eulenspiegel stayed on the bench by the
-fire, nor would he sit at the board, since he told the host that he had
-his fill from the odor of the meat. So when they had eaten, and the
-host came to Eulenspiegel with the tray, that he might place in it the
-price of the food, Eulenspiegel did refuse, saying:
-
-“Why must I pay for what I have not eaten?”
-
-To which the host replied, in anger:
-
-“Give me your penny; for by sitting at the fire, and swallowing the
-savor of the meat, you had the same nourishment as though you had
-partaken of the meat at the board.”
-
-Then Eulenspiegel searched in his purse for a penny, and threw it on
-the bench, saying to the host:
-
-“Do you hear this sound?”
-
-“I do, indeed,” answered the host.
-
-Then did Eulenspiegel pick up the penny and restore it to his purse;
-which done, he spoke again:
-
-“To my belly the odor of the meat is worth as much as the sound of the
-penny is to you.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-About this time came into being the tales of the Schildburgers, or
-Noodles, who correspond to the Gothamites of England.
-
-Schildburg, we are told, was a town “in Misnopotamia, beyond Utopia,
-in the kingdom of Calecut.” The Schildburgers were originally so
-renowned for their wisdom, that they were continually invited into
-foreign countries to give their advice, until at length not a man was
-left at home, and their wives were obliged to assume the charge of the
-duties of their husbands. This became at length so onerous, that the
-wives held a council, and resolved on despatching a solemn message in
-writing to call the men home. This had the desired effect; all the
-Schildburgers returned to their own town, and were so joyfully received
-by their wives that they resolved upon leaving it no more. They
-accordingly held a council, and it was decided that, having experienced
-the great inconvenience of a reputation of wisdom, they would avoid
-it in future by assuming the character of fools. One of the first
-evil results of their long neglect of home affairs was the want of a
-council-hall, and this want they now resolved to supply without delay.
-They accordingly went to the hills and woods, cut down the timber,
-dragged it with great labour to the town, and in due time completed
-the erection of a handsome and substantial building. But, when they
-entered their new council-hall, what was their consternation to find
-themselves in perfect darkness! In fact, they had forgotten to make
-any windows. Another council was held, and one who had been among the
-wisest in the days of their wisdom, gave his opinion very oracularly;
-the result of which was that they should experiment on every possible
-expedient for introducing light into the hall, and that they should
-first try that which seemed most likely to succeed. They had observed
-that the light of day was caused by sunshine, and the plan proposed was
-to meet at mid-day when the sun was brightest, and fill sacks, hampers,
-jugs, and vessels of all kinds, with sunshine and daylight, which they
-proposed afterwards to empty into the unfortunate council-hall. Next
-day, as the clock struck one, you might see a crowd of Schildburgers
-before the council-house door, busily employed, some holding the sacks
-open, and others throwing the light into them with shovels and any
-other appropriate implements which came to hand. While they were thus
-labouring, a stranger came into the town of Schildburg, and, hearing
-what they were about, told them they were labouring to no purpose,
-and offered to show them how to get the daylight into the hall. It is
-unnecessary to say more than that this new plan was to make an opening
-in the roof, and that the Schildburgers witnessed the effect with
-astonishment, and were loud in their gratitude to the new comer.
-
-The Schildburgers met with further difficulties before they completed
-their council-hall. They sowed a field with salt, and when the
-salt-plant grew up next year, after a meeting of the council, at which
-it was stiffly disputed whether it ought to be reaped, or mowed, or
-gathered in in some other manner, it was finally discovered that
-the crop consisted of nothing but nettles. After many accidents of
-this kind, the Schildburgers are noticed by the emperor, and obtain
-a charter of incorporation and freedom, but they profit little by
-it. In trying some experiments to catch mice, they set fire to their
-houses, and the whole town is burnt to the ground, upon which, in their
-sorrow, they abandon it altogether, and become, like the Jews of old,
-scattered over the world, carrying their own folly into every country
-they visit.
-
-Another tale relates how the boors of Schilda contrived to get their
-millstone twice down from a high mountain:
-
-The boors of Schilda had built a mill, and with extraordinary labour
-they had quarried a millstone for it out of a quarry which lay on
-the summit of a high mountain; and when the stone was finished, they
-carried it with great labour and pain down the hill. When they had
-got to the bottom, it occurred to one of them that they might have
-spared themselves the trouble of carrying it down by letting it roll
-down. “Verily,” said he, “we are the stupidest of fools to take these
-extraordinary pains to do that which we might have done with so little
-trouble. We will carry it up, and then let it roll down the hill
-by itself, as we did before with the tree which we felled for the
-council-house.”
-
-This advice pleased them all, and with greater labour they carried
-the stone to the top of the mountain again, and were about to roll it
-down, when one of them said, “But how shall we know where it runs to?
-Who will be able to tell us aught about it?” “Why,” said the bailiff,
-who had advised the stone being carried up again, “this is very easily
-managed. One of us must stick in the hole [for the millstone, of
-course, had a hole in the middle], and run down with it.” This was
-agreed to, and one of them, having been chosen for the purpose, thrust
-his head through the hole, and ran down the hill with the millstone.
-Now at the bottom of the mountain was a deep fish-pond, into which the
-stone rolled, and the simpleton with it, so that the Schildburgers
-lost both stone and man, and not one among them knew what had become
-of them. And they felt sorely angered against their old companion who
-had run down the hill with the stone, for they considered that he had
-carried it off for the purpose of disposing of it. So they published a
-notice in all the neighbouring boroughs, towns, and villages, calling
-on them, that “if any one come there with a millstone round his neck,
-they should treat him as one who had stolen the common goods, and give
-him to justice.” But the poor fellow lay in the pond, dead. Had he been
-able to speak, he would have been willing to tell them not to worry
-themselves on his account, for he would give them their own again. But
-his load pressed so heavily upon him, and he was so deep in the water,
-that he, after drinking water enough--more, indeed, than was good for
-him--died; and he is dead at the present day, and dead he will, shall,
-and must remain!
-
-The earliest known edition of the history of the Schildburgers was
-printed in 1597, but the story itself is no doubt older. It will be
-seen at once that it involves a satire upon the municipal towns of the
-middle ages.
-
-
-
-
- ITALIAN WIT AND HUMOR
-
-Of Italian wit and humor up to and through the Sixteenth Century there
-is little to be said. Translators who have given us in English the
-early literature of Italy have been so concerned with the serious
-poetry and prose that they neglected the lighter veins.
-
-If, indeed, there were any worth while.
-
-The outstanding name of the Fourteenth Century is that of Giovanni
-Boccaccio.
-
-But though the Decameron, a collection of one hundred stories, is a
-mirror of the humorous taste of that time, the stories are for the most
-part, long, dull and prosy.
-
-They relate the intrigues of lovers in a freely licentious way, but
-both humorous description and witty repartee are consciously lacking.
-
-One of the most amusing of the decent tales is here given, also a
-sonnet of Boccaccio’s translated by Rossetti.
-
-
- _OF THREE GIRLS AND THEIR TALK_
-
- By a clear well, within a little field
- Full of green grass and flowers of every hue,
- Sat three young girls, relating (as I knew)
- Their loves. And each had twined a bough to shield
- Her lovely face; and the green leaves did yield
- The golden hair their shadow,--while the two
- Sweet colours mingled, both blown lightly through
- With a soft wind for ever stirr’d and still’d.
- After a little while one of them said
- (I heard her)--“Think! if ere the next hour struck
- Each of our lovers should come here to-day,
- Think you that we should fly or feel afraid?”
- To whom the others answer’d--“From such luck
- A girl would be a fool to run away!”
-
-
- _THE STOLEN PIG_
-
-Calandrino had a little farm, not far from Florence, which came to him
-through his wife. There he used to have a pig fatted every year, and
-some time about December he and his wife went always to kill and salt
-it for the use of the family. Now it happened once--she being unwell
-at the time--that he went thither by himself to kill his pig; which
-Bruno and Buffalmacco hearing, and knowing she was not to be there,
-they went to spend a few days with a great friend of theirs, a priest
-in Calandrino’s neighborhood. Now the pig had been killed the very day
-they came thither, and Calandrino, seeing them along with the priest,
-called to them and said, “Welcome, kindly; I would gladly you should
-see what a good manager I am.” Then, taking them into the house, he
-showed them this pig. They saw that it was fat, and were told by him
-that it was to be salted for his family. “Salted, booby?” said Bruno.
-“Sell it, let us make merry with the money, and tell your wife that it
-was stolen.” “No,” said Calandrino, “she will never believe it; and,
-besides, she would turn me out of doors. Trouble me, then, no further
-about any such thing, for I will never do it.” They said a great deal
-more to him, but all to no purpose. At length he invited them to
-supper, but did it in such a manner that they refused.
-
-After they had come away from him, said Bruno to Buffalmacco, “Suppose
-we steal this pig from him to-night.” “How is it possible?” “Oh,
-I know well enough how to do it, if he does not remove it in the
-meantime from the place where we just now saw it.” “Then let us do it,
-and afterward we and the parson will make merry over it.” The priest
-assured them that he should like it above all things. “We must use a
-little art,” quoth Bruno; “you know how covetous he is, and how freely
-he drinks when it is at another’s cost. Let us get him to the tavern,
-where the parson shall make a pretense of treating us all, out of
-compliment to him. He will soon get drunk, and then the thing will be
-easy enough, as there is nobody in the house but himself.”
-
-This was done, and Calandrino, finding that the parson was to pay, took
-his glasses pretty freely, and, getting his dose, walked home betimes,
-left the door open, thinking that it was shut, and so went to bed.
-Buffalmacco and Bruno went from the tavern to sup with the priest, and
-as soon as supper was over they took proper tools with them to get into
-the house; but finding the door open, they carried off the pig to the
-priest’s and went to bed likewise.
-
-In the morning, as soon as Calandrino had slept off his wine, he rose,
-came down-stairs, and finding the door open and his pig gone, began to
-inquire of everybody if they knew anything of the matter; and receiving
-no tidings of it, he made a terrible outcry, saying, “What shall I do
-now? Somebody has stolen my pig!” Bruno and Buffalmacco were no sooner
-out of bed than they went to his house to hear what he would say;
-and the moment he saw them he roared out, “Oh, my friends, my pig is
-stolen!” Upon this Bruno whispered to him and said, “Well, I am glad
-to see you wise in your life for once.” “Alas!” quoth he, “it is too
-true.” “Keep to the same story,” said Bruno, “and make noise enough for
-every one to believe you.”
-
-Calandrino now began to bawl louder, “Indeed! I vow and swear to you
-that it is stolen.” “That’s right; be sure you let everybody hear you,
-that it may appear so.” “Do you think that I would forswear myself
-about it? May I be hanged this moment if it is not so!” “How is it
-possible!” quoth Bruno; “I saw it but last night; never imagine that
-I can believe it.” “It is so, however,” answered he, “and I am undone.
-I dare not now go home again, for my wife will never believe me, and
-I shall have no peace this twelve-month.” “It is a most unfortunate
-thing,” said Bruno, “if it be true; but you know I put it into your
-head to say so last night, and you should not make sport both of your
-wife and us at the same time.”
-
-At this Calandrino began to roar out afresh, saying, “Good God! you
-make me mad to hear you talk. I tell you once for all it was stolen
-this very night!” “Nay, if it be so,” quoth Buffalmacco, “we must think
-of some way to get it back again.” “And what way must we take,” said he
-“to find it?” “Depend upon it,” replied the other, “that nobody came
-from the Indies to steal it; it must be somewhere in your neighborhood,
-and if you could get the people together I could make a charm, with
-some bread and cheese, that would soon discover the thief.” “True,”
-said Bruno, “but they would know in that case what you were about; and
-the person that has it would never come near you.” “How must we manage,
-then?” said Buffalmacco. “Oh!” replied Bruno, “you shall see me do it
-with some pills of ginger and a little wine, which I will ask them to
-come and drink. They will have no suspicion what our design is, and we
-can make a charm of these as well as of the bread and cheese.” “Very
-well,” quoth the other. “What do you say, Calandrino? Have you a mind
-we should try it?” “For Heaven’s sake do,” he said; “if I only knew who
-the thief is, I should be half comforted.” “Well, then,” quoth Bruno,
-“I am ready to go to Florence for the things, if you will only give me
-some money.” He happened to have a few florins in his pocket, which he
-gave him, and off went Bruno.
-
-When he got to Florence, Bruno went to a friend’s house and bought a
-pound of ginger made into pills. He also got two pills made of aloes,
-which had a private mark that he should not mistake them, being candied
-over with sugar like the rest. Then, having bought a jar of good
-wine, he returned to Calandrino, and said, “To-morrow you must take
-care to invite every one that you have the least suspicion of; it is
-a holiday, and they will be glad to come. We will finish the charm
-to-night, and bring the things to your house in the morning, and then I
-will take care to do and say on your behalf what is necessary upon such
-an occasion.”
-
-Calandrino did as he was told, and in the morning he had nearly all the
-people in the parish assembled under an elm-tree in the churchyard. His
-two friends produced the pills and wine, and, making the people stand
-round in a circle, Bruno said to them, “Gentlemen, it is fit that I
-should tell you the reason of your being summoned here in this manner,
-to the end, if anything should happen which you do not like, that I
-be not blamed for it. You must know, then, that Calandrino had a pig
-stolen last night, and, as some of the company here must have taken
-it, he, that he may find out the thief, would have every man take and
-eat one of these pills, and drink a glass of wine after it. Whoever
-the guilty person is, you will find he will not be able to get a bit
-of it down, but it will taste so bitter that he will be forced to spit
-it out. Therefore, to prevent such open shame, he had better, whoever
-he is, make a secret confession to the priest, and I will proceed no
-further.”
-
-All present declared their readiness to eat; so, placing them all in
-order, he gave every man his pill and coming to Calandrino, he gave one
-of the aloe pills to him, which he straightway put into his mouth, and
-no sooner did he began to chew it than he was forced to spit it out.
-Every one was now attentive to see who spit his pill out, and while
-Bruno kept going round, apparently taking no notice of Calandrino, he
-heard somebody say behind him, “Hey-day! what is the meaning of its
-disagreeing so with Calandrino?” Bruno now turned suddenly about, and
-seeing that Calandrino had spit out his pill, he said, “Stay a little,
-honest friends, and be not too hasty in judging; it may be something
-else that has made him spit, and therefore he shall try another.” So he
-gave him the other aloe pill, and then went on to the rest that were
-unserved. But if the first was bitter to him, this he thought much
-more so. However, he endeavored to get it down as well as he could.
-But it was impossible; it made the tears run down his cheeks, and he
-was forced to spit it out at last, as he had done the other. In the
-meantime Buffalmacco was going about with the wine; but when he and all
-of them saw what Calandrino had done, they began to bawl out that he
-had robbed himself, and some of them abused him roundly.
-
-After they were all gone, Buffalmacco said, “I always thought that you
-yourself were the thief, and that you were willing to make us believe
-the pig was stolen in order to keep your money in your pocket, lest we
-should expect a treat upon the occasion.” Calandrino, who had still the
-taste of the aloes in his mouth, fell a-swearing that he knew nothing
-of the matter. “Honor bright, now, comrade,” said Buffalmacco, “what
-did you get for it?” This made Calandrino quite furious.
-
-To crown all, Bruno struck in: “I was just now told,” said he, “by
-one of the company, that you have a mistress in this neighborhood to
-whom you are very kind, and that he is confident you have given it to
-her. You know you once took us to the plains of Mugnone, to look for
-some black stones, when you left us in the lurch, and pretended you
-had found them; and now you think to make us believe that your pig is
-stolen, when you have either given it away or sold it. You have played
-so many tricks upon us, that we intend to be fooled no more by you.
-Therefore, as we have had a deal of trouble in the affair, you shall
-make us amends by giving us two couple of fowls, unless you mean that
-we should tell your wife.”
-
-Calandrino, now perceiving that he would not be believed, and being
-unwilling to have them add to his troubles by bringing his wife upon
-his back, was forced to give them the fowls, which they joyfully
-carried off along with the pork.
-
- --_The Decameron._
-
-Rather earlier than Boccaccio lived Rustico di Filippo, who gives us
-the following satirical bit.
-
-
- _THE MAKING OF MASTER MESSERIN_
-
- When God had finished Master Messerin,
- He really thought it something to have done:
- Bird, man, and beast had got a chance in one,
- And each felt flattered, it was hoped, therein.
- For he is like a goose i’ the windpipe thin,
- And like a camelopard high i’ the loins,
- To which for manhood, you’ll be told, he joins
- Some kind of flesh hues and a callow chin.
- As to his singing, he affects the crow,
- As to his learning, beasts in general,
- And sets all square by dressing like a man.
- God made him, having nothing else to do,
- And proved there is not anything at all
- He cannot make, if that’s a thing He can.
-
-Among other collections of tales was the _Novellino_, collected by
-Massuchio di Salerno, about the middle of the Fifteenth Century.
-
-We quote
-
-
- _THE INHERITANCE OF A LIBRARY_
-
-Jeronimo, who had inherited the place of master and head of the house,
-found himself in possession of many thousand florins in ready money.
-Wherefore the youth, seeing that he himself had endured no labor and
-weariness in gathering together the same, forthwith made up his mind
-not to place his affection in possessions of this sort, and at once
-began to array himself in sumptuous garments, to taste the pleasures of
-the town in the company of certain chosen companions of his, to indulge
-in amorous adventures, and in a thousand other ways to dissipate his
-substance abroad without restraint of any kind. Not only did he banish
-from his mind all thought and design of continuing his studies, but he
-even went so far as to harbor against the books, which his father had
-held in such high esteem and reverence and had bequeathed to him, the
-most fierce and savage hatred. So violent, indeed, was his resentment
-against them that he set them down as the worst foes he had in the
-world.
-
-On a certain day it happened that the young man, either by accident
-or for some reason of his own, betook himself into the library of his
-dead father, and there his eye fell upon a vast quantity of handsome
-and well-arranged books, such as are wont to be found in places of this
-sort. At the first sight of these he was somewhat stricken with fear,
-and with a certain apprehension that the spirit of his father might
-pursue him; but, having collected his courage somewhat, he turned with
-a look of hatred on his face toward the aforesaid books and began to
-address them in the following terms:
-
-“Books, books, so long as my father was alive you waged against me war
-unceasing, forasmuch as he spent all his time and trouble either in
-purchasing you, or in putting you in fair bindings; so that, whenever
-it might happen that there came upon me the need of a few florins or
-of certain other articles, which all youths find necessary, he would
-always refuse to let me have them, saying that it was his will and
-pleasure to dispense his money only in the purchase of such books as
-might please him. And over and beyond this, he purposed in his mind
-that I, altogether against my will, should spend my life in close
-companionship with you, and over this matter there arose between us
-many times angry and contumelious words. Many times, also, you have put
-me in danger of being driven into perpetual exile from this my home.
-Therefore it cannot but be pleasing to God--since it is no fault of
-yours that I was not hunted forth from this place--that I should send
-you packing from this my house in such fashion that not a single one
-of you will ever behold my door again. And, in sooth, I wonder more
-especially that you have not before this disordered my wits, a feat
-you might well have accomplished with very little more trouble on your
-part, in your desire to do with me as you did with my father, according
-to my clear recollection. He, poor man, as if he had become bemused
-through conversing with you alone, was accustomed to demean himself
-in strange fashion, moving his hands and his head in such wise that
-over and over again I counted him to be one bereft of reason. Now, on
-account of all this, I bid you have a little patience, for the reason
-that I have made up my mind to sell you all forthwith, and thus in a
-single hour to avenge myself for all the outrages I have suffered on
-your account and, over and beyond this, to set myself free from the
-possible danger of going mad.”
-
-After he had thus spoken, and had packed up divers volumes of the
-aforesaid books--one of his servants helping him in the work--he sent
-the parcel to the house of a certain lawyer, who was a friend of his,
-and then in a very few words came to an agreement with the lawyer as to
-the business, the issue of the affair being that, though he had simply
-expelled the books from his house, and had not sold them, he received,
-nevertheless, on account of the same, several hundred florins. With
-these, added to the money which still remained in his purse, he
-continued to pursue the course of pleasure he had begun.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another ironical skit is by Francesco Berni, entitled
-
-
- _LIVING IN BED_
-
- Yet field-sports, dice, cards, balls, and such like courses,
- Things which he might be thought to set store by,
- Gave him but little pleasure. He liked horses,
- But was content to let them please his eye--
- Buying them, not squaring with his resources.
- Therefore his _summum bonum_ was to lie
- Stretch’d at full length--yea, frankly be it said,
- To do no single thing but lie in bed.
-
- ’Twas owing all to that infernal writing.
- Body and brains had borne such grievous rounds
- Of kicks, cuffs, floors, from copying and inditing,
- That he could find no balsam for his wounds,
- No harbor for his wreck half so inviting
- As to lie still, far from all sights and sounds,
- And so, in bed, do nothing on God’s earth
- But try and give his senses a new birth.
-
- “Bed--bed’s the thing, by Heaven!” thus would he swear.
- “Bed is your only work, your only duty.
- Bed is one’s gown, one’s slippers, one’s armchair,
- Old coat; you’re not afraid to spoil its beauty.
- Large you may have it, long, wide, brown, or fair,
- Down-bed or mattress, just as it may suit ye.
- Then take your clothes off, turn in, stretch, lie double;
- Be but in bed, you’re quit of earthly trouble!”
-
- Borne to the fairy palace then, but tired
- Of seeing so much dancing, he withdrew
- Into a distant room, and there desired
- A bed might be set up, handsome and new,
- With all the comforts that the case required:
- Mattresses huge, and pillows not a few
- Put here and there, in order that no ease
- Might be found wanting to cheeks, or arms, or knees.
-
- The bed was eight feet wide, lovely to see,
- With white sheets, and fine curtains, and rich loops
- Things vastly soothing to calamity;
- The coverlet hung light in silken droops;
- It might have held six people easily;
- But he disliked to lie in bed by groups.
- A large bed to himself, that was his notion,
- With room enough to swim in--like the ocean.
-
- In this retreat there joined him a good soul,
- A Frenchman, one who had been long at court,
- An admirable cook--though, on the whole,
- His gains of his deserts had fallen short.
- For him was made, cheek, as it were, by jowl,
- A second bed of the same noble sort,
- Yet not so close but that the folks were able
- To set between the two a dinner-table.
-
- Here was served up, on snow-white table-cloths,
- Each daintiest procurable comestible
- In the French taste (all others being Goths),
- Dishes alike delightful and digestible.
- Only our scribe chose sirups, soups, and broths,
- The smallest trouble being a detestable
- Bore, into which not ev’n his dinner led him.
- Therefore the servants always came and fed him.
-
- Nothing at these times but his head was seen;
- The coverlet came close beneath his chin;
- And then, from out the bottle or tureen,
- They fill’d a silver pipe, which he let in
- Between his lips, all easy, smooth, and clean,
- And so he filled his philosophic skin.
- And not a finger all the while he stirred,
- Nor, lest his tongue should tire, scarce uttered word.
-
- The name of that same cook was Master Pierre;
- He told a tale well--something short and light.
- Quoth scribe, “Those people who keep dancing there
- Have little wit.” Quoth Pierre, “You’re very right.”
- And then he told a tale, or hummed an air;
- Then took a sip of something, or a bite;
- And then he turned himself to sleep; and then
- Awoke and ate. And then he slept again.
-
- One more thing I may note that made the day
- Pass well--one custom, not a little healing,
- Which was, to look above him, as he lay.
- And count the spots and blotches in the ceiling;
- Noting what shapes they took to, and which way,
- And where the plaster threatened to be peeling;
- Whether the spot looked new, or old, or what--
- Or whether ’twas, in fact, a spot or not.
- --From _Roland Enamored_.
-
-Francho Sacchetti, poet and novelist, wrote many stories and verses in
-lighter vein.
-
-
- _ON A WET DAY_
-
- As I walk’d thinking through a little grove,
- Some girls that gather’d flowers came passing me,
- Saying--“Look here! look there!” delightedly.
- “O here it is!” “What’s that?” “A lily? love!”
- “And there are violets!”
- “Farther for roses! O the lovely pets!
- The darling beauties! O the nasty thorn!
- Look here, my hand’s all torn!”
- “What’s that that jumps?” “O don’t! it’s a grasshopper!”
- “Come, run! come, run!
- Here’s blue-bells!” “O what fun!”
- “Not that way! stop her!”
- “Yes! this way!” “Pluck them then!”
- “O, I’ve found mushrooms! O look here!” “O, I’m
- Quite sure that farther on we’ll get wild thyme.”
- “O, we shall stay too long; it’s going to rain;
- There’s lightning; O! there’s thunder!”
- “O sha’n’t we hear the vesper bell? I wonder.”
- “Why, it’s not nones, you silly little thing!
- And don’t you hear the nightingales that sing--
- Fly away O die away?”
- “O, I hear something; hush!”
- “Why, where? what is it then?” “Ah! in that bush.”
- So every girl here knocks it, shakes and shocks it:
- Till with the stir they make
- Out skurries a great snake.
- “O Lord! O me! Alack! Ah me! alack!”
- They scream, and then all run and scream again,
- And then in heavy drops comes down the rain.
-
- Each running at the other in a fright,
- Each trying to get before the other, and crying.
- And flying, and stumbling, tumbling, wrong or right;--
- One sets her knee
- There where her foot should be;
- One has her hands and dress
- All smother’d up with mud in a fine mess;
- And one gets trampled on by two or three.
- What’s gathered is let fall
- About the wood, and not pick’d up at all.
- The wreaths of flowers are scatter’d on the ground,
- And still as, screaming, hustling, without rest,
- They run this way and that and round and round,
- She thinks herself in luck who runs the best.
-
- I stood quite still to have a perfect view,
- And never noticed till I got wet through.
- --_Translated by Rossetti._
-
-This brings us to Benvenuto Cellini, who, though not classed among the
-humorists, gives us many flashes of wit and humor in his celebrated
-Biography.
-
-
- _A COMPULSORY MARRIAGE AT SWORD’S POINT_
-
-One of those busy personages who delight in spreading mischief came to
-inform me that Paolo Micceri had taken a house for his new lady and her
-mother, and that he made use of the most injurious and contemptuous
-expressions regarding me, to wit:
-
-“Poor Benvenuto! he paid the piper while I danced; and now he goes
-about boasting of the exploit. He thinks I am afraid of him--I, who can
-wear a sword and dagger as well as he. But I would have him to know my
-weapons are as keen as his. I, too, am a Florentine, and come of the
-Micceri, a much better house than the Cellini any time of day.”
-
-In short, the vile informer painted the things in such colors to my
-disadvantage that it fired my whole blood. I was in a fever of the most
-dangerous kind. And feeling it must kill me unless it found vent, I had
-recourse to my usual means on such occasions. I called to my workman,
-Chioccia, to accompany me, and told another to follow me with my horse.
-On reaching the wretch’s house, finding the door half open, I entered
-abruptly in. There he sat with his precious “lady-love,” his boasted
-sword and dagger beside him, in the very act of jesting with the elder
-woman upon my affairs. To slam the door, draw my sword and present the
-point to his throat, was the work of a moment, giving him no time to
-think of defending himself:
-
-“Vile poltroon, recommend thy soul to God! Thou art a dead man!”
-
-In the excess of his terror he cried out thrice, in a feeble voice,
-“Mama! mama! mama! Help, help, help!”
-
-At this ludicrous appeal, so like a girl’s, and the ridiculous manner
-in which it was uttered, though I had a mind to kill, I lost half my
-rage and could not forbear laughing. Turning to Chioccia, however, I
-bade him make fast the door; for I was resolved to inflict the same
-punishment upon all three. Still with my sword-point at his throat,
-and pricking him a little now and then, I terrified him with the most
-desperate threats, and finding that he made no defense, was rather at
-a loss how to proceed. It was too poor a revenge--it was nothing--when
-suddenly it came into my head to make it effectual, and compel him to
-espouse the girl upon the spot.
-
-“Up! Off with that ring on thy finger, villain!” I cried. “Marry her
-this instant, and then I shall have my full revenge.”
-
-“Anything--anything you like, provided you will not kill me,” he
-eagerly answered.
-
-Removing my sword a little:
-
-“Now, then,” I said, “put on the ring.”
-
-He did so, trembling all the time.
-
-“This is not enough. Go and bring me two notaries to draw up the
-contract.” Then, addressing the girl and her mother in French:
-
-“While the notaries and witnesses are coming, I will give you a word of
-advice. The first of you that I know to utter a word about my affairs,
-I will kill you--all three. So remember.”
-
-I afterward said in Italian to Paolo:
-
-“If you offer the slightest opposition to the least thing I choose to
-propose, I will cut you up into mince-meat with this good sword.”
-
-“It is enough,” he interrupted in alarm, “that you will not kill me. I
-will do whatever you wish.”
-
-So this singular contract was duly drawn out and signed. My rage
-and fever were gone. I paid the notaries, and went home.--_The
-Biography._
-
-
- _CRITICISM OF A STATUE OF HERCULES_
-
-Bandinello was incensed to such a degree that he was ready to burst
-with fury, and turning to me said, “What faults have you to find with
-my statues?”
-
-I answered, “I will soon tell them, if you have but the patience to
-hear me.”
-
-He replied, “Tell them, then.”
-
-The duke and all present listened with the utmost attention. I began
-by promising that I was sorry to be obliged to lay before him all
-the blemishes of his work, and that I was not so properly delivering
-my own sentiments as declaring what was said of it by the artistic
-school of Florence. However, as the fellow at one time said something
-disobliging, at another made some offensive gesture with his hands or
-his feet, he put me into such a passion that I behaved with a rudeness
-which I should otherwise have avoided.
-
-“The artistic school of Florence,” said I, “declares what follows:
-If the hair of your Hercules were shaved off, there would not remain
-skull enough to hold his brains. With regard to his face, it is hard
-to distinguish whether it be the face of a man, or that of a creature
-something between a lion and an ox; it discovers no attention to what
-it is about; and it is so ill set upon the neck, with so little art
-and in so ungraceful a manner, that a more shocking piece of work was
-never seen. His great brawny shoulders resemble the two pommels of an
-ass’s packsaddle. His breasts and their muscles bear no similitude to
-those of a man, but seem to have been drawn from a sack of melons.
-As he leans directly against the wall, the small of the back has the
-appearance of a bag filled with long cucumbers. It is impossible to
-conceive in what manner the two legs are fastened to this distorted
-figure, for it is hard to distinguish upon which leg he stands, or
-upon which he exerts any effort of his strength; nor does he appear to
-stand upon both, as he is sometimes represented by those masters of
-the art of statuary who know something of their business. It is plain,
-too, that the statue inclines more than one-third of a cubit forward;
-and this is the greatest and the most insupportable blunder which
-pretenders to sculpture can be guilty of. As for the arms, they both
-hang down in the most awkward and ungraceful manner imaginable; and so
-little art is displayed in them that people would be almost tempted to
-think that you had never seen a naked man in your life. The right leg
-of Hercules and that of Cacus touch at the middle of their calves, and
-if they were to be separated, not one of them only, but both, would
-remain without a calf, in the place where they touch. Besides, one of
-the feet of the Hercules is quite buried, and the other looks as if it
-stood upon hot coals.”--_The Biography._
-
-
-
-
- SPANISH WIT AND HUMOR
-
-The Spanish literature of this time contains little that can be quoted
-as humor.
-
-Hurtado de Mendoza, a novelist, historian and poet, and Lope de Vega,
-dramatist, are the principal names among the Spanish writers.
-
-About 1600 there flourished a poet named Baltazar del Alcazar, whose
-work shows a rather modern type of humor.
-
-
- _SLEEP_
-
- Sleep is no servant of the will;
- It has caprices of its own;
- When most pursued, ’tis swiftly gone;
- When courted least, it lingers still.
- With its vagaries long perplext,
- I turned and turned my restless sconce,
- Till, one fine night, I thought at once
- I’d master it. So hear my text.
-
- When sleep doth tarry, I begin
- My long and well-accustomed prayer,
- And in a twinkling sleep is there,
- Through my bed-curtains peeping in.
- When sleep hangs heavy on my eyes,
- I think of debts I fain would pay,
- And then, as flies night’s shade from day,
- Sleep from my heavy eyelids flies.
-
- And, thus controlled, the winged one bends
- E’en his fantastic will to me,
- And, strange yet true, both I and he
- Are friends--the very best of friends.
- We are a happy wedded pair,
- And I the lord and he the dame;
- Our bed, our board, our dreams the same,
- And we’re united everywhere.
-
- I’ll tell you where I learned to school
- This wayward sleep: a whispered word
- From a church-going hag I heard,
- And tried it, for I was no fool.
- So, from that very hour I knew
- That, having ready prayers to pray,
- And having many debts to pay,
- Will serve for sleep, and waking too.
-
-In 1605 was published the first part of _Don Quixote de la Mancha_
-the celebrated satirical work of Miguel de Cervantes.
-
-Of this book Hallam says, “it is the only Spanish book which can be
-said to possess a European reputation.”
-
-Its reputation is world wide and fine translations have given us the
-spirit of the original.
-
-
- _HE SECURES SANCHO PANZA AS HIS SQUIRE_
-
-In the meantime, Don Quixote tampered with a laborer, a neighbor of
-his and an honest man (if such an epithet can be given to one that is
-poor), but shallow-brained; in short, he said so much, used so many
-arguments and made so many promises, that the poor fellow resolved to
-sally out with him and serve him in the capacity of a squire. Among
-other things, Don Quixote told him that he ought to be very glad to
-accompany him, for such an adventure might, some time or the other,
-occur that by one stroke an island might be won, where he might leave
-him governor. With this and other promises, Sancho Panza (for that was
-the laborer’s name) left his wife and children and engaged himself as
-squire to his neighbor. Don Quixote now set about raising money; and,
-by selling one thing, pawning another, and losing by all, he collected
-a tolerable sum. He fitted himself likewise with a buckler, which he
-borrowed of a friend, and, patching up his broken helmet in the best
-manner he could, he acquainted his squire Sancho of the day and hour
-he intended to set out, that he might provide himself with what he
-thought would be most needful. Above all, he charged him not to forget
-a wallet, which Sancho assured him he would not neglect; he said also
-that he thought of taking an ass with him, as he had a very good one,
-and he was not used to travel much on foot. With regard to the ass,
-Don Quixote paused a little, endeavoring to recollect whether any
-knight-errant had ever carried a squire mounted on ass-back, but no
-instance of the kind occurred to his memory. However, he consented that
-he should take his ass, resolving to accommodate him more honorably, at
-the earliest opportunity, by dismounting the first discourteous knight
-he should meet. He provided himself also with shirts, and other things,
-conformably to the advice given him by the innkeeper.
-
-All this being accomplished, Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, without
-taking leave, the one of his wife and children, or the other of
-his housekeeper and niece, one night sallied out of the village
-unperceived; and they travelled so hard that by break of day they
-believed themselves secure, even if search were made after them. Sancho
-Panza proceeded upon his ass like a patriarch, with his wallet and
-leathern bottle, and with a vehement desire to find himself governor
-of the island which his master had promised him. Don Quixote happened
-to take the same route as on his first expedition, over the plain of
-Montiel, which he passed with less inconvenience than before; for it
-was early in the morning, and the rays of the sun, darting on them
-horizontally, did not annoy them. Sancho Panza now said to his master,
-“I beseech your worship, good Sir Knight-errant, not to forget your
-promise concerning that same island, for I shall know how to govern
-it, be it ever so large.” To which Don Quixote answered: “Thou must
-know, friend Sancho Panza, that it was a custom much in use among the
-knights-errant of old to make their squires governors of the islands or
-kingdoms they conquered; and I am determined that so laudable a custom
-shall not be lost through my neglect; on the contrary, I resolve to
-outdo them in it, for they, sometimes, and perhaps most times, waited
-till their squires were grown old; and when they were worn out in
-their service, and had endured many bad days and worse nights, they
-conferred on them some title, such as count, or at least marquis, of
-some valley or province of more or less account; but if you live and
-I live, before six days have passed I may probably win such a kingdom
-as may have others depending on it, just fit for thee to be crowned
-king of one of them. And do not think this any extraordinary matter,
-for things fall out to knights by such unforeseen and unexpected ways,
-that I may easily give thee more than I promise.” “So, then,” answered
-Sancho Panza, “if I were a king, by some of those miracles your worship
-mentions, Joan Gutierrez, my duck, would come to be a queen, and my
-children infantas!” “Who doubts it?” answered Don Quixote. “I doubt
-it,” replied Sancho Panza; “for I am verily persuaded that, if God
-were to rain down kingdoms upon the earth, none of them would set well
-upon the head of Mary Gutierrez; for you must know, sir, she is not
-worth two farthings for a queen. The title of countess would sit better
-upon her, with the help of Heaven and good friends.” “Recommend her
-to God, Sancho,” answered Don Quixote, “and He will do what is best
-for her; but do thou have a care not to debase thy mind so low as to
-content thyself with being less than a viceroy.” “Sir, I will not,”
-answered Sancho; “especially having so great a man for my master as
-your worship, who will know how to give me whatever is most fitting for
-me and what I am best able to bear.”
-
-
- _OF THE VALOROUS DON QUIXOTE’S SUCCESS IN THE DREADFUL AND
- NEVER-BEFORE-IMAGINED ADVENTURE OF THE WINDMILLS_
-
-Engaged in this discourse, they came in sight of thirty or forty
-windmills which are in that plain; and as soon as Don Quixote espied
-them, he said to his squire, “Fortune disposes our affairs better than
-we ourselves could have desired; look yonder, friend Sancho Panza,
-where thou mayest discover somewhat more than thirty monstrous giants,
-whom I intend to encounter and slay, and with their spoils we will
-begin to enrich ourselves; for it is lawful war, and doing God good
-service, to remove so wicked a generation from off the face of the
-earth.” “What giants?” said Sancho Panza. “Those thou seest yonder,”
-answered his master, “with their long arms; for some are wont to have
-them almost of the length of two leagues.”
-
-“Look, sir,” answered Sancho, “those which appear yonder are not
-giants, but windmills, and what seem to be arms are the sails, which,
-whirled about by the wind, make the millstone go.” “It is very
-evident,” answered Don Quixote, “that thou art not versed in the
-business of adventures. They are giants; and if thou art afraid, get
-thee aside and pray, whilst I engage with them in fierce and unequal
-combat.” So saying, he clapped spurs to his steed, notwithstanding the
-cries his squire sent after him, assuring him that they were certainly
-windmills, and not giants. But he was so fully possessed that they were
-giants, that he neither heard the outcries of his squire Sancho, nor
-yet discerned what they were, though he was very near them, but went
-on, crying out aloud, “Fly not, ye cowards and vile caitiffs! for it is
-a single knight who assaults you.” The wind now rising a little, the
-great sails began to move, upon which Don Quixote called out, “Although
-ye should have more arms than the giant Briareus, ye shall pay for it.”
-
-Thus recommending himself devoutly to his lady Dulcinea, beseeching
-her to succor him in the present danger, being well covered with his
-buckler and setting his lance in the rest he rushed on as fast as
-Rozinante could gallop and attacked the first mill before him, when,
-running his lance into the sail, the wind whirled it about with so
-much violence that it broke the lance to shivers, dragging horse and
-rider after it, and tumbling them over and over on the plain in very
-evil plight. Sancho Panza hastened to his assistance as fast as the ass
-could carry him; and when he came up to his master he found him unable
-to stir, so violent was the blow which he and Rozinante had received in
-their fall.
-
-“God save me!” quoth Sancho, “did not I warn you to have a care of what
-you did, for that they were nothing but windmills? And nobody could
-mistake them but one that had the like in his head.”
-
-“Peace, friend Sancho,” answered Don Quixote; “for matters of war
-are, of all others, most subject to continual change. Now I verily
-believe, and it is most certainly the fact, that the sage Freston, who
-stole away my chamber and books, has metamorphosed these giants into
-windmills, on purpose to deprive me of the glory of vanquishing them,
-so great is the enmity he bears me! But his wicked arts will finally
-avail but little against the goodness of my sword.”
-
-“God grant it!” answered Sancho Panza. Then, helping him to rise, he
-mounted him again upon his steed, which was almost disjointed.--_Don
-Quixote._
-
-
- THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
-
-Though still serious-minded in the main, the world at the beginning of
-the Seventeenth century recognized and appreciated humor.
-
-And, growing with what it fed upon the vein of humor became more marked
-and more important in literature.
-
-Wherefore our outline must from now on be less comprehensive and more
-discriminating.
-
-The field is getting too wide, the harvest too bountiful for gleaning,
-even for general reaping; we can now only pluck spears of ripened grain.
-
-An Outline can touch only the high spots, and though many wonderful
-flashes of wit and humor occur in the works of the most serious writers
-space cannot be given to such, it must be conserved for the definitely
-and intentionally humorous writers.
-
-This is greatly to be regretted, for not infrequently the jests of the
-serious-minded are more intrinsically witty than those of professed
-humorists.
-
-As an example may be mentioned George Herbert, the famous clergyman who
-was called Holy George Herbert.
-
-His religious writings are interspersed with flashes of exquisite wit.
-
-“God gave thy soul brave wings; put not those feathers Into a bed to
-sleep out all ill weathers,”
-
-is a most graceful bit of word play.
-
-And so with scores, even hundreds of worthy writers, among whose pages
-brilliant shafts of wit are found.
-
-Such excursions we have no room for, and must abide by the inexorable
-laws of limitation.
-
-Nor can such a matter as the Ballads be touched upon.
-
-The historical ballads of this time were narrative poems of exceeding
-great length and usually, of exceeding great dulness. Fun they show,
-here and there, but the bulk of them are destitute of mirth-provoking
-lines.
-
-Not so the Ballad Literature intended for social diversion and lovers
-of ribaldry. These, in large numbers, were put forth, and were oftener
-than not, founded on the old Jest Books, the Merry Tales, and even the
-Gesta and Fabliaux of earlier days.
-
-Collections of these include the effusions of the balladists from the
-short stanzas, mere epigrams, to the intolerably long tales based on
-political or religious matters.
-
-Yet it is at this juncture we must mention the name of Thomas Hobbes,
-the Malmesbury Philosopher, and a most important figure of the
-seventeenth century.
-
-Not because of his own wit or humor, but of his understanding and
-valuation of it.
-
-His observations on laughter, hereinbefore referred to, must be quoted
-entire.
-
-
- FROM HUMAN NATURE
-
-
- _LAUGHTER_
-
-There is a passion that hath no name; but the sign of it is that
-distortion of the countenance which we call laughter, which is always
-joy: but what joy, what we think, and wherein we triumph when we laugh,
-is not hitherto declared by any. That it consisteth in wit, or, as they
-call it, in the jest, experience confuteth; for men laugh at mischances
-and indecencies, wherein there lieth no wit nor jest at all. And
-forasmuch as the same thing is no more ridiculous when it groweth stale
-or usual, whatsoever it be that moveth laughter, it must be new and
-unexpected. Men laugh often--especially such as are greedy of applause
-from everything they do well--at their own actions performed never so
-little beyond their own expectations as also at their own jests: and
-in this case it is manifest that the passion of laughter proceedeth
-from a sudden conception of some ability in himself that laugheth.
-Also, men laugh at the infirmities of others by comparison wherewith
-their own abilities are set off and illustrated. Also men laugh at
-jests the wit whereof always consisteth in the elegant discovering and
-conveying to our minds some absurdity of another; and in this case also
-the passion of laughter proceedeth from the sudden imagination of our
-own odds and eminency; for what is else the recommending of ourselves
-to our own good opinion, by comparison with another man’s infirmity or
-absurdity? For when a jest is broken upon ourselves, or friends, of
-whose dishonour we participate, we never laugh thereat. I may therefore
-conclude that the passion of laughter is nothing else but sudden glory
-arising from a sudden conception of some eminency in ourselves, by
-comparison with the infirmity of others, or with our own formerly; for
-men laugh at the follies of themselves past, when they come suddenly
-to remembrance, except they bring with them any present dishonour.
-It is no wonder, therefore, that men take heinously to be laughed at
-or derided--that is, triumphed over. Laughing without offence must be
-at absurdities and infirmities abstracted from persons, and when all
-the company may laugh together; for laughing to one’s self putteth all
-the rest into jealousy and examination of themselves. Besides, it is
-vain-glory, and an argument of little worth, to think the infirmity of
-another sufficient matter for his triumph.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Robert Herrick, among the most exquisite of lyric poets, was a
-classical scholar, addicted to Martial. His works, neglected for long
-years, came into their own about a century ago, and his spontaneous
-gayety and tenderness is not frequently equalled.
-
-The temptation is to quote his lyrics, but his whimsical humor is more
-clearly shown in his waggish lines.
-
-
- _THE KISS--A DIALOGUE_
-
- 1. Among thy fancies, tell me this:
- What is the thing we call a kisse?
- 2. I shall resolve ye, what it is.
-
- It is a creature born and bred
- Between the lips, (all cherrie red,)
- By love and warme desires fed;
- _Chorus._--And makes more soft the bridal bed.
-
- 2. It is an active flame, that flies
- First to the babies of the eyes, pupils
- And charms them there with lullabies;
- _Chorus._--And stils the bride too, when she cries.
-
- 2. Then to the chin, the cheek, the eare
- It frisks and flyes; now here, now there;
- ’Tis now farre off, and then ’tis nere;
- _Chorus._--And here, and there, and every where.
-
- 1. Has it a speaking virtue?--2. Yes.
- 1. How speaks it, say?--2. Do you but this,
- Part your joyn’d lips, then speaks your kisse;
- _Chorus._--And this loves sweetest language is.
-
- 1. Has it a body?--2. Ay, and wings,
- With thousand rare encolourings;
- And as it flies, it gently sings,
- _Chorus._--Love honie yeelds, but never stings.
-
-
- _A TERNARY OF LITTLES, UPON A PIPKIN OF JELLY SENT TO A LADY_
-
- A little saint best fits a little shrine,
- A little prop best fits a little vine;
- As my small cruse best fits my little wine.
-
- A little seed best fits a little soil,
- A little trade best fits a little toil;
- As my small jar best fits my little oil.
-
- A little bin best fits a little bread,
- A little garland fits a little head;
- As my small stuff best fits my little shed.
-
- A little hearth best fits a little fire,
- A little chapel fits a little choir;
- As my small bell best fits my little spire.
-
- A little stream best fits a little boat,
- A little lead best fits a little float;
- As my small pipe best fits my little note.
-
- A little meat best fits a little belly,
- As sweetly, lady, give me leave to tell ye,
- This little pipkin fits this little jelly.
-
-Thomas Carew, Edmund Waller, Sir John Suckling and Richard Lovelace
-all followed more or less in Herrick’s footsteps, and though each
-possessed what is called a pretty wit, they were not primarily humorous
-writers.
-
-A few poems are given, perhaps of more lyric than witty value.
-
-
- RICHARD LOVELACE
-
- _SONG_
-
- Why should you swear I am forsworn,
- Since thine I vowed to be?
- Lady, it is already morn,
- And ’twas last night I swore to thee
- That fond impossibility.
-
- Have I not loved thee much and long,
- A tedious twelve hours’ space?
- I must all other beauties wrong,
- And rob thee of a new embrace,
- Could I still dote upon thy face.
-
- Not but all joy in thy brown hair
- By others may be found;
- But I must search the black and fair,
- Like skilful mineralists that sound
- For treasure in unploughed-up ground.
-
- Then, if when I have loved my round,
- Thou prov’st the pleasant she;
- With spoils of meaner beauties crowned
- I laden will return to thee,
- Even sated with variety.
-
-
- SIR JOHN SUCKLING
-
- _THE CONSTANT LOVER_
-
- Out upon it! I have loved
- Three whole days together,
- And am like to love three more,
- If it prove fair weather.
-
- Time shall moult away his wings
- Ere he shall discover
- In the whole wide world again
- Such a constant lover.
-
- But the spite on ’tis, no praise
- Is due at all to me:
- Love with me had made no stays,
- Had it any been but she.
-
- Had it any been but she,
- And that very face,
- There had been at least ere this
- A dozen dozen in her place.
-
-
- _THE REMONSTRANCE_
-
- Why so pale and wan, fond lover?
- Prithee, why so pale?
- Will, when looking well can’t move her,
- Looking ill prevail?
- Prithee, why so pale?
-
- Why so dull and mute, young sinner?
- Prithee, why so mute?
- Will, when speaking well can’t win her,
- Saying nothing do’t?
- Prithee, why so mute?
-
- Quite, quit, for shame! this will not move,
- This cannot take her;
- If of herself she will not love,
- Nothing can make her:
- The devil take her!
-
-John Milton, second only to Shakespeare in all literature, is not
-usually looked upon as a humorist.
-
-A wise commentator (of more wisdom than wit), has said, of Milton, “Few
-great poets are so utterly without humor; alone among the greatest
-poets he has not sung of love.”
-
-We take objection to both these statements, though with the second we
-are not now concerned.
-
-But surely no humorless pen could have indited _L’Allegro_, and as
-to less subtle humor, we give in evidence the well known Epitaph on the
-Carrier.
-
-
- _FROM L’ALLEGRO_
-
- But come, thou goddess fair and free,
- In heaven yclep’d Euphrosyne,
- And by men, heart-easing Mirth;
- Whom lovely Venus, at a birth,
- With two sister Graces more,
- To ivy-crowned Bacchus bore:
- Or whether (as some sages sing)
- The frolic wind that breathes the spring,
- Zephyr, with Aurora, playing,
- As he met her once a-Maying!
- There on beds of violets blue,
- And fresh-blown roses wash’d in dew,
- Fill’d her with thee, a daughter fair,
- So buxom, blithe, and debonair.
- Haste thee, nymph, and bring with thee
- Jest, and youthful jollity,
- Quips, and cranks, and wanton wiles,
- Nods, and becks, and wreathed smiles,
- Such as hang on Hebe’s cheek,
- And love to live in dimple sleek;
- Sport that wrinkled Care derides,
- And Laughter holding both his sides
- Come, and trip it, as you go,
- On the light fantastic toe;
- And in thy right hand lead with thee
- The mountain nymph, sweet Liberty;
- And if I give thee honor due,
- Mirth, admit me of thy crew,
- To live with her, and live with thee,
- In unreproved pleasures free:
-
- * * * * *
-
- Then to the spicy nut-brown ale,
- With stories told of many a feat,
- How faery Mab the junkets ate;
- She was pinch’d, and pulled, she said;
- And he, by friar’s lantern led,
- Tells how the drudging goblin sweat
- To earn his cream-bowl duly set,
- When in one night, ere glimpses of morn,
- His shadowy flail had thresh’d the corn,
- That ten day-laborers could not end;
- Then lies him down, the lubber fiend,
- And, stretched out all the chimney’s length,
- Basks at the fire his hairy strength;
- And, crop-full, out of doors he flings,
- Ere the first cock his matin rings.
- Thus done the tales, to bed they creep,
- By whispering winds soon lull’d asleep.
- Tower’d cities please us then,
- And the busy hum of men.
- Where throngs of knights and barons bold,
- In weeds of peace, high triumphs hold,
- With store of ladies, whose bright eyes
- Rain influence, and judge and prize
- Of wit or arms, while both contend
- To win her grace, whom all commend.
- There let Hymen oft appear
- In saffron robes, with taper clear,
- And pomp, and feast, and revelry,
- With mask and antique pageantry;
- Such sights as youthful poets dream
- On summer eves by haunted stream.
- Then to the well-trod stage anon,
- If Jonson’s learned sock be on,
- Or sweetest Shakespeare, Fancy’s child,
- Warble his native wood-notes wild.
- And ever, against eating cares,
- Lap me in soft Lydian airs,
- Married to immortal verse;
- Such as the melting soul may pierce,
- In notes with many a winding bout
- Of linked sweetness long drawn out,
- With wanton heed and giddy cunning,
- The melting voice through mazes running,
- Untwisting all the chains that tie
- The hidden soul of harmony;
- That Orpheus’ self may heave his head
- From golden slumber on a bed
- Of heap’d Elysian flowers, and hear
- Such strains as would have won the ear
- Of Pluto, to have quite set free
- His half-regain’d Eurydice.
- These delights if thou canst give,
- Mirth, with thee I mean to live.
-
-
- _EPITAPH FOR AN OLD UNIVERSITY CARRIER_
-
- Here lieth one who did most truly prove
- That he could never die while he could move;
- So hung his destiny, never to rot
- While he might still jog on and keep his trot;
- Made of sphere-metal, never to decay
- Until his revolution was at stay.
- Time numbers motion, yet (without a crime
- ’Gainst old truth) motion number’d out his time,
- And, like an engine moved with wheel and weight,
- His principles being ceased, he ended straight.
- Rest, that gives all men life, gave him his death,
- And too much breathing put him out of breath.
- Nor were it contradiction to affirm,
- Too long vacation hastened on his term.
- Merely to drive away the time, he sicken’d,
- Fainted, died, nor would with ale be quicken’d.
- “Nay,” quoth he, on his swooning bed outstretch’d,
- “If I mayn’t carry, sure I’ll ne’er be fetch’d,
- But vow, though the cross doctors all stood hearers,
- For one carrier put down to make six bearers.”
- Ease was his chief disease; and, to judge right,
- He died for heaviness that his cart went light.
- His leisure told him that his time was come,
- And lack of load made his life burdensome,
- That even to his last breath (there be that say’t),
- As he were press’d to death, he cried, “More weight!”
- But had his doings lasted as they were,
- He had been an immortal carrier.
- Obedient to the moon, he spent his date
- In course reciprocal, and had his fate
- Link’d to the mutual flowing of the seas,
- Yet (strange to think) his _wain_ was his _increase_.
- His letters are deliver’d all and gone;
- Only remains this superscription.
-
-Samuel Butler, a brilliant and satiric wit, wrote _Hudibras_, the
-immortal Cavalier burlesque of the views and manners of the English
-Puritans. In some degree imitated from _Don Quixote_ as to plan,
-this burlesque is so full of shrewd wit and felicitous drollery as to
-hold a unique place in literature.
-
-Like all such long works, it is difficult to quote from, but some
-passages are given, as well as some of Butler’s clever epigrams.
-
-
- _THE RELIGION OF HUDIBRAS_
-
- For his religion it was fit
- To match his learning and his wit:
- Twas Presbyterian true blue;
- For he was of that stubborn crew
- Of errant saints, whom all men grant
- To be the true Church militant;
- Such as do build their faith upon
- The holy text of pike and gun;
- Decide all controversies by
- Infallible artillery,
- And prove their doctrine orthodox,
- By apostolic blows and knocks;
- Call fire, and sword, and desolation,
- A godly, thorough reformation.
- Which always must be carried on,
- And still be doing, never done;
- As if religion were intended
- From nothing else but to be mended;
- A sect whose chief devotion lies
- In odd perverse antipathies;
- In falling out with that or this,
- And finding somewhat still amiss;
- More peevish, cross, and splenetic,
- Than dog distract or monkey sick;
- That with more care keep holy-day
- The wrong, than others the right way;
- Compound for sins they are inclin’d to,
- By damning those they have no mind to;
- Still so perverse and opposite,
- As if they worshipped God for spite;
- The self-same thing they will abhor
- One way, and long another for;
- Free-will they one way disavow,
- Another, nothing else allow;
- All piety consists therein
- In them, in other men all sin;
- Rather than fail, they will defy
- That which they love most tenderly;
- Quarrel with minc’d pies, and disparage
- Their best and dearest friend, plum porridge;
- Fat pig and goose itself oppose,
- And blaspheme custard through the nose.
-
-
- _SAINTSHIP VERSUS CONSCIENCE_
-
- “Why didst thou choose that cursed sin,
- Hypocrisy, to set up in?”
- “Because it is the thriving’st calling,
- The only saints’ bell that rings all in;
- In which all churches are concern’d,
- And is the easiest to be learn’d.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- Quoth he, “I am resolv’d to be
- Thy scholar in this mystery;”
- “And therefore first desire to know
- Some principles on which you go.”
-
- “What makes a knave a child of God,
- And one of us?” “A livelihood.”
- “What renders beating out of brains,
- And murder, godliness?” “Great gains.”
- “What’s tender conscience?” “’Tis a botch
- That will not bear the gentlest touch;
- But, breaking out, despatches more
- Than th’ epidemical’st plague-sore.”
- “What makes y’ incroach upon our trade,
- And damn all others?” “To be paid.”
- “What’s orthodox and true believing
- Against a conscience?” “A good living.”
- “What makes rebelling against kings
- A good old cause?” “Administ’rings.”
- “What makes all doctrines plain and clear?”
- “About two hundred pounds a-year.”
- “And that which was proved true before,
- Prove false again?” “Two hundred more.”
- “What makes the breaking of all oaths
- A holy duty?” “Food and clothes.”
- “What laws and freedom, persecution?”
- “Being out of power, and contribution.”
- “What makes a church a den of thieves?”
- “A dean and chapter, and white sleeves.”
- “And what would serve, if those were gone,
- To make it orthodox?” “Our own.”
- “What makes morality a crime,
- The most notorious of the time--
- Morality, which both the saints
- And wicked too cry out against?”
- “’Cause grace and virtue are within
- Prohibited degrees of kin;
- And therefore no true saint allows
- They shall be suffered to espouse.”
-
-
- _DESCRIPTION OF HOLLAND_
-
- A country that draws fifty foot of water,
- In which men live as in the hold of Nature,
- And when the sea does in upon them break,
- And drowns a province, does but spring a leak;
- That always ply the pump, and never think
- They can be safe but at the rate they stink;
- They live as if they had been run aground,
- And, when they die, are cast away and drowned;
- That dwell in ships, like swarms of rats, and prey
- Upon the goods all nations’ fleets convey;
- And when their merchants are blown up and crackt,
- Whole towns are cast away in storms, and wreckt;
- That feed, like cannibals, on other fishes,
- And serve their cousin-germans up in dishes:
- A land that rides at anchor, and is moored,
- In which they do not live, but go aboard.
-
-
- _POETS_
-
- It is not poetry that makes men poor;
- For few do write that were not so before;
- And those that have writ best, had they been rich,
- Had ne’er been clapp’d with a poetic itch;
- Had loved their ease too well to take the pains
- To undergo that drudgery of brains;
- But, being for all other trades unfit,
- Only t’ avoid being idle, set up wit.
-
-
- _PUFFING_
-
- They that do write in authors’ praises,
- And freely give their friends their voices,
- Are not confined to what is true;
- That’s not to give, but pay a due:
- For praise, that’s due, does give no more
- To worth, than what it had before;
- But to commend, without desert,
- Requires a mastery of art,
- That sets a gloss on what’s amiss,
- And writes what should be, not what is.
-
-Samuel Pepys, whose literary work is in Diary form, is no doubt one of
-the world’s greatest egoists. But the spontaneity and naturalness of
-the account of his daily doings, as told by himself, have a charm all
-their own and a unique and inimitable humor.
-
-
- _EXTRACTS FROM THE DIARY_
-
-Rose early, and put six spoons and a porringer of silver in my pocket
-to give away to-day. To dinner at Sir William Batten’s; and then, after
-a walk in the fine gardens, we went to Mrs. Browne’s, where Sir W. Pen
-and I were godfathers, and Mrs. Jordan and Shipman godmothers to her
-boy. And there, before and after the christening, we were with the
-woman above in her chamber; but whether we carried ourselves well or
-ill, I know not; but I was directed by young Mrs. Batten. One passage
-of a lady that ate wafers with her dog did a little displease me. I did
-give the midwife 10_s._ and the nurse 5_s._ and the maid of
-the house 2_s._ But for as much I expected to give the name to the
-child, but did not (it being called John), I forbore then to give my
-plate.
-
-_December 26th, 1662._--Up, my wife to the making of Christmas
-pies all day, doeing now pretty well again, and I abroad to several
-places about some businesses, among others bought a bake-pan in Newgate
-Market, and sent it home, it cost me 16_s._ So to Dr Williams,
-but he is out of town, then to the Wardrobe. Hither come Mr Battersby;
-and we falling into discourse of a new book of drollery in use, called
-Hudibras, I would needs go find it out, and met with it at the Temple:
-cost me 2_s._ 6_d._ But when I come to read it, it is so
-silly an abuse of the Presbyter Knight going to the warrs, that I am
-ashamed of it; and by and by meeting at Mr Townsend’s at dinner, I sold
-it to him for 18_d._ ...
-
-_February 6th._-- ... Thence to Lincoln’s Inn Fields; and it being
-too soon to go to dinner, I walked up and down, and looked upon the
-outside of the new theatre now a-building in Covent Garden, which will
-be very fine. And so to a bookseller’s in the Strand, and there bought
-Hudibras again, it being certainly some ill-humour to be so against
-that which all the world cries up to be the example of wit; for which
-I am resolved once more to read him, and see whether I can find it or
-no....
-
-_November 28th._-- ... And thence abroad to Paul’s Churchyard, and
-there looked upon the second part of Hudibras, which I buy not, but
-borrow to read, to see if it be as good as the first, which the world
-cry so mightily up, though it hath not a good liking in me, though I
-had tried by twice or three times reading to bring myself to think it
-witty. Back again and home to my office....
-
-_May 11th, 1667._--And so away with my wife, whose being dressed
-this day in fair hair did make me so mad, that I spoke not one word to
-her, though I was ready to burst with anger.... After that ... Creed
-and I into the Park, and walked, a most pleasant evening, and so took
-coach, and took up my wife, and in my way home discovered my trouble
-to my wife for her white locks [false hair], swearing by God several
-times, which I pray God forgive me for, and bending my fist, that I
-would not endure it. She, poor wretch, was surprized with it, and made
-me no answer all the way home; but there we parted, and I to the office
-late, and then home, and without supper to bed, vexed.
-
-_12th_ (Lord’s Day).--Up and to my chamber, to settle some
-accounts there, and by and by down comes my wife to me in her
-night-gown, and we begun calmly, that, upon having money to lace her
-gown for second mourning, she would promise to wear white locks no more
-in my sight, which I, like a severe fool, thinking not enough, began to
-except against, and made her fly out to very high terms and cry, and
-in her heat told me of keeping company with Mrs Knipp, saying, that
-if I would promise never to see her more--of whom she hath more reason
-to suspect than I had heretofore of Pembleton--she would never wear
-white locks more. This vexed me, but I restrained myself from saying
-anything, but do think never to see this woman--at least, to have her
-here more; but by and by I did give her money to buy lace, and she
-promised to wear no more white locks while I lived, and so all very
-good friends as ever, and I to my business, and she to dress herself.
-
-_August 18th_ (Lord’s Day).--Up, and being ready, walked up and
-down to Cree Church, to see it how it is: but I find no alteration
-there, as they say there was, for my Lord Mayor and Aldermen to come
-to sermon, as they do every Sunday, as they did formerly to Paul’s....
-There dined with me Mr Turner and his daughter Betty. Betty is grown
-a fine young lady as to carriage and discourse. I and my wife are
-mightily pleased with her. We had a good haunch of venison, powdered
-and boiled, and a good dinner and merry.... I walked towards Whitehall,
-but, being wearied, turned into St Dunstan’s Church, where I heard an
-able sermon of the minister of the place; and stood by a pretty, modest
-maid, whom I did labour to take by the hand ...; but she would not,
-but got further and further from me; and, at last, I could perceive
-her to take pins out of her pocket to prick me if I should touch her
-again--which seeing, I did forbear, and was glad I did spy her design.
-And then I fell to gaze upon another pretty maid, in a pew close to
-me, and she on me; and I did go about to take her by the hand, which
-she suffered a little, and then withdrew. So the sermon ended, and the
-church broke up.
-
- * * * * *
-
-John Dryden, famous alike for his verse, prose and drama, shows his wit
-in biting, stinging satire.
-
-Equally caustic are his epigrams, save one--the immortal lines on
-Milton.
-
-
- _ON SHADWELL_
-
- All human things are subject to decay,
- And, when Fate summons, monarchs must obey.
- This Flecknoe found, who, like Augustus, young
- Was called to empire, and had governed long.
- In prose and verse was owned, without dispute,
- Through all the realms of Nonsense absolute.
- This aged prince, now flourishing in peace,
- And blest with issue of a large increase,
- Worn out with business, did at length debate
- To settle the succession of the state;
- And pondering which of all his sons was fit
- To reign, and wage immortal war with Wit,
- Cried: “’Tis resolved; for Nature pleads that he
- Should only rule who most resembles me.
- Shadwell alone my perfect image bears,
- Mature in dulness from his tender years;
- Shadwell alone of all my sons is he
- Who stands confirmed in full stupidity.
- The rest to some faint meaning make pretence,
- But Shadwell never deviates into sense.
- Some beams of wit on other souls may fall,
- Strike through, and make a lucid interval,
- But Shadwell’s genuine night admits no ray;
- His rising fogs prevail upon the day.
- Besides, his goodly fabric fills the eye,
- And seems designed for thoughtless majesty--
- Thoughtless as monarch oaks that shade the plain,
- And, spread in solemn state, supinely reign.”
-
-
- _ON THE DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM_
-
- Some of their chiefs were princes of the land:
- In the first rank of these did Zimri stand,
- A man so various, that he seemed to be
- Not one, but all mankind’s epitome:
- Stiff in opinions, always in the wrong,
- Was everything by starts, and nothing long,
- But, in the course of one revolving moon,
- Was chemist, fiddler, statesman, and buffoon,
- Then all for women, painting, rhyming, drinking,
- Besides ten thousand freaks that died in thinking.
- Blest madman, who could every hour employ
- With something new to wish or to enjoy,
- Railing, and praising, were his usual themes;
- And both, to show his judgment, in extremes:
- So over-violent, or over-civil,
- That every man with him was god or devil.
- In squandering wealth was his peculiar art;
- Nothing went unrewarded but desert.
- Beggared by fools, whom still he found too late,
- He had his jest and they had his estate.
- He laughed himself from court, then sought relief
- By forming parties, but could ne’er be chief;
- For spite of him, the weight of business fell
- On Absalom and wise Achitophel.
- Thus, wicked but in will, of means bereft,
- He left not faction, but of that was left.
-
-
- _MILTON COMPARED WITH HOMER AND VIRGIL_
-
- Under a Picture of Milton in the 4th Edition of _Paradise Lost_.
-
- Three Poets, in three distant ages born,
- Greece, Italy, and England did adorn.
- The first, in loftiness of thought surpass’d
- The next, in majesty; in both the last.
- The force of nature could no further go;
- To make a third, she join’d the former two.
-
-The original of these fine lines was probably a Latin distich written
-by Selvaggi at Rome, which has been thus translated:
-
- Greece boasts her Homer, Rome her Virgil’s name,
- But England’s Milton vies with both in fame.
-
-Cowper’s lines on Milton may be compared with Dryden’s:
-
- Ages elapsed ere Homer’s lamp appear’d,
- And ages ere the Mantuan Swan was heard
- To carry Nature lengths unknown before,
- To give a Milton birth, ask’d ages more.
- Thus Genius rose and set at order’d times,
- And shot a day-spring into distant climes,
- Ennobling every region that he chose;
- He sunk in Greece, in Italy he rose;
- And, tedious years of gothic darkness pass’d,
- Emerged all splendour in our isle at last,
- Thus lovely halcyons dive into the main,
- Then show far off their shining plumes again.
-
-In Bishop Gibson’s edition of Camden’s _Britannia_, there is a
-very free translation of some old monkish verses on S. Oswald by Basil
-Kennet, brother of Bishop White Kennet. The last line, to which there
-is nothing corresponding in the Latin, seems to have been copied from
-the last line of Dryden’s epigram:
-
- _Cæsar_ and _Hercules_ applaud thy fame,
- And _Alexander_ owns thy greater name,
- Tho’ one himself, one foes, and one the world o’ercame:
- Great conquests all! but bounteous Heav’n in thee,
- To make a greater, join’d the former three.
-
-The comedies of William Congreve, brilliantly witty though they are,
-offer no suitable passages to quote.
-
-Likewise the works of Daniel Defoe, who, beside the story of
-_Robinson Crusoe_, wrote satirical humor.
-
-
- _FROM ROBINSON CRUSOE_
-
- _Friday’s Conflict with the Bear_
-
-But never was a fight managed so hardily, and in such a surprising
-manner, as that between Friday and the bear, which gave us all--though
-at first we were surprised and afraid for him--the greatest diversion
-imaginable.
-
-My man Friday had delivered our guide, and when we came up to him
-he was helping him off from his horse, for the man was both hurt and
-frightened, and indeed the last more than the first, when on a sudden
-we espied the bear come out of the wood, and a vast, monstrous one it
-was, the biggest by far that ever I saw. We were all a little surprised
-when we saw him; but when Friday saw him, it was easy to see joy and
-courage in the fellow’s countenance. “Oh, oh, oh!” says Friday three
-times, pointing to him; “oh, master! you give me te leave, me shakee te
-hand with him; me makee you good laugh.”
-
-I was surprised to see the fellow so pleased. “You fool!” said I, “he
-will eat you up.” “Eatee me up! eatee me up!” says Friday twice over
-again; “me eatee him up; me makee you good laugh; you all stay here,
-me show you good laugh.” So down he sits, and gets his boots off in a
-moment, and puts on a pair of pumps (as we call the flat shoes they
-wear, and which he had in his pocket), gives my other servant his
-horse, and with his gun away he flew, swift like the wind.
-
-The bear was walking softly on, and offered to meddle with nobody,
-till Friday, coming pretty near, calls to him as if the bear could
-understand him, “Hark ye, hark ye,” says Friday, “me speakee with you.”
-We followed at a distance, for now, being come down to the Gascony
-side of the mountains, we were entered a vast, great forest, where
-the country was plain and pretty open, though it had many trees in it
-scattered here and there. Friday, who had, as we say, the heels of the
-bear, came up with him quickly, and took up a great stone and threw it
-at him, and hit him just on the head, but did him no more harm than if
-he had thrown it against a wall; but it answered Friday’s end, for the
-rogue was so void of fear that he did it purely to make the bear follow
-him and show us some laugh, as he called it. As soon as the bear felt
-the stone, and saw him, he turns about and comes after him, taking very
-long strides, and shuffling on at a strange rate, so as would have put
-a horse to a middling gallop. Away runs Friday, and takes his course
-as if he ran toward us for help; so we all resolved to fire at once
-upon the bear, and deliver my man; though I was angry at him heartily
-for bringing the bear back upon us, when he was going about his own
-business another way; and especially I was angry that he had turned
-the bear upon us and then run away; and I called out, “You dog!” said
-I, “is this your making us laugh? Come away, and take your horse, that
-we may shoot the creature.” He heard me, and cried out, “No shoot! no
-shoot! stand still, you get much laugh.” And as the nimble creature
-ran two feet for the beast’s one, he turned on a sudden on one side of
-us, and seeing a great oak-tree fit for his purpose, he beckoned us to
-follow; and doubling his pace, he got nimbly up the tree, laying his
-gun down upon the ground, at about five or six yards from the bottom of
-the tree.
-
-The bear soon came to the tree, and we followed at a distance. The
-first thing he did, he stopped at the gun, smelled at it, but let it
-lie, and up he scrambles into the tree, climbing like a cat, though so
-monstrous heavy. I was amazed at the folly, as I thought it, of my man,
-and could not for my life see anything to laugh at yet, till, seeing
-the bear get up the tree, we all rode near to him.
-
-When we came to the tree, there was Friday got out to the small end of
-a large limb of the tree, and the bear got about half-way to him. As
-soon as the bear got out to that part where the limb of the tree was
-weaker, “Ha!” says he to us, “now you see me teachee the bear dance”;
-so he began jumping and shaking the bough, at which the bear began to
-totter, but stood still, and began to look behind him, to see how he
-should get back; then, indeed, we did laugh heartily. But Friday had
-not done with him by a great deal. When seeing him stand still, he
-called out to him again, as if he had supposed the bear could speak
-English, “What, you no come farther? Pray you come farther.” So he
-left jumping and shaking the bough; and the bear, just as if he had
-understood what he had said, did come a little farther. Then he began
-jumping again, and the bear stopped again. We thought now was a good
-time to knock him on the head, and called to Friday to stand still, and
-we would shoot the bear; but he cried out earnestly, “Oh, pray! oh,
-pray! no shoot! me shoot by-and-then.” He would have said by-and-by.
-
-However, to shorten the story, Friday danced so much, and the bear
-stood so ticklish, that we had laughing enough indeed, but still could
-not imagine what the fellow would do; for first we thought he depended
-upon shaking the bear off; and we found the bear was too cunning for
-that too; for he would not go out far enough to be thrown down, but
-clung fast with his great broad claws and feet, so that we could not
-imagine what would be the end of it, and what the jest would be at
-last. But Friday put us out of doubt quickly; for, seeing the bear
-cling fast to the bough, and that he would not be persuaded to come any
-farther, “Well, well,” says Friday, “you no come farther, me go; you no
-come to me, me come to you.” And upon this he went out to the smaller
-end of the bough, where it would bend with his weight, and gently let
-himself down by it, sliding down the bough till he came near enough
-to jump down on his feet, and away he ran to his gun, took it up, and
-stood still. “Well,” said I to him, “Friday, what will you do now? Why
-don’t you shoot him?” “No shoot,” says Friday, “no yet; me shoot now,
-me no kill; me stay, give you one more laugh.” And, indeed, so he did,
-as you will see presently. For when the bear saw his enemy gone, he
-came back from the bough where he stood, but did it very cautiously,
-looking behind him every step, and coming backward till he got into
-the body of the tree. Then, with the same hinder end foremost, he came
-down the tree, grasping it with his claws, and moving one foot at a
-time, very leisurely. At this juncture, and just before he could set
-his hind feet upon the ground, Friday stepped up close to him, clapped
-the muzzle of his piece into his ear, and shot him dead as a stone.
-Then the rogue turned about to see if we did not laugh; and when he saw
-we were pleased by our looks, he began to laugh very loud. “So we kill
-bear in my country,” says Friday. “So you kill them?” says I; “why, you
-have no guns.” “No,” says he, “no gun, but shoot great much long arrow.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Matthew Prior was called by Thackeray the most charmingly humorous of
-the English poets, and Cowper speaks of Prior’s charming ease.
-
-
- _AN EPITAPH_
-
- Interred beneath this marble stone
- Lie sauntering Jack and idle Joan.
- While rolling threescore years and one
- Did round this globe their courses run.
- If human things went ill or well,
- If changing empires rose or fell,
- The morning past, the evening came,
- And found this couple just the same.
- They walked and ate, good folks. What then?
- Why, then they walked and ate again;
- They soundly slept the night away;
- They did just nothing all the day,
- Nor sister either had, nor brother;
- They seemed just tallied for each other.
- Their moral and economy
- Most perfectly they made agree;
- Each virtue kept its proper bound,
- Nor trespassed on the other’s ground.
- Nor fame nor censure they regarded;
- They neither punished nor rewarded.
- He cared not what the footman did;
- Her maids she neither praised nor chid;
- So every servant took his course,
- And, bad at first, they all grew worse;
- Slothful disorder filled his stable.
- And sluttish plenty decked her table.
- Their beer was strong, their wine was port;
- Their meal was large, their grace was short.
- They gave the poor the remnant meat,
- Just when it grew not fit to eat.
- They paid the church and parish rate,
- And took, but read not, the receipt:
- For which they claimed their Sunday’s due
- Of slumbering in an upper pew.
- No man’s defects sought they to know,
- So never made themselves a foe.
- No man’s good deeds did they commend,
- So never raised themselves a friend.
- Nor cherished they relations poor,
- That might decrease their present store;
- Nor barn nor house did they repair,
- That might oblige their future heir.
- They neither added nor confounded;
- They neither wanted nor abounded.
- Nor tear nor smile did they employ
- At news of grief or public joy
- When bells were rung and bonfires made,
- If asked, they ne’er denied their aid;
- Their jug was to the ringers carried,
- Whoever either died or married
- Their billet at the fire was found,
- Whoever was deposed or crowned.
- Nor good, nor bad, nor fools, nor wise;
- They would not learn, nor could advise;
- Without love, hatred, joy, or fear,
- They led--a kind of--as it were;
- Nor wished, nor cared, nor laughed, nor cried.
- And so they lived, and so they died.
-
-
- _A SIMILE_
-
- Dear Thomas, didst thou never pop
- Thy head into a tin-man’s shop?
- There, Thomas, didst thou never see
- (’Tis but by way of simile)
- A squirrel spend his little rage,
- In jumping round a rolling cage?
- The cage, as either side turned up,
- Striking a ring of bells a-top?--
- Mov’d in the orb, pleas’d with the chimes,
- The foolish creature thinks he climbs:
- But here or there, turn wood or wire,
- He never gets two inches higher.
- So fares it with those merry blades,
- That frisk it under Pindus’ shades.
- In noble songs, and lofty odes,
- They tread on stars, and talk with gods;
- Still dancing in an airy round,
- Still pleased with their own verses’ sound;
- Brought back, how fast soe’er they go,
- Always aspiring, always low.
-
-
- _PHILLIS’ AGE_
-
- How old may Phillis be, you ask,
- Whose beauty thus all hearts engages?
- To answer is no easy task:
- For she has really two ages.
-
- Stiff in brocade, and pinch’d in stays,
- Her patches, paint and jewels on;
- All day let envy view her face,
- And Phillis is but twenty-one.
-
- Paint, patches, jewels laid aside,
- At night astronomers agree,
- The evening has the day belied;
- And Phillis is some forty-three.
-
-Prior delighted in epigrams on ladies who wore false hair and teeth,
-and who attempted to retain the beauty of youth by means of paint and
-dye. They are generally imitated from Martial.
-
-
- _A REASONABLE AFFLICTION_
-
- In a dark corner of the house
- Poor Helen sits, and sobs, and cries;
- She will not see her loving spouse,
- Nor her more dear picquet allies:
- Unless she find her eye-brows,
- She’ll e’en weep out her eyes.
-
-
-
-
- FRENCH HUMOR
-
-The first French humorist of note in the seventeenth century was Cyrano
-de Bergerac. His History of the Moon and History of the Sun are of the
-nature of _Gulliver’s Travels_.
-
-
- _THE SOUL OF THE CABBAGE_
-
-We laid ourselves along upon very soft quilts, covered with large
-carpets; and a young man that waited on us, taking the oldest of our
-philosophers led him into a little parlor apart, where my Spirit called
-to him to come back to us as soon as he had supped.
-
-This humor of eating separately gave me the curiosity of asking the
-cause of it. “He’ll not relish,” said he, “the steam of meat, nor yet
-of herbs, unless they die of themselves, because he thinks they are
-sensible of pain.” “I wonder not so much,” replied I, “that he abstains
-from flesh, and all things that have had a sensitive life. For in our
-world the Pythagoreans, and even some holy Anchorites, have followed
-that rule; but not to dare, for instance, cut a cabbage, for fear of
-hurting it--that seems to me altogether ridiculous.” “And for my part,”
-answered my Spirit, “I find a great deal of reason in his opinion.
-
-“For, tell me is not that cabbage you speak of a being existent in
-Nature as well as you? Is not she the common mother of you both? Yet
-the opinion that Nature is kinder to mankind than to cabbage-kind,
-tickles and makes us laugh. But, seeing she is incapable of passion,
-she can neither love nor hate anything; and were she susceptible of
-love, she would rather bestow her affection upon this cabbage, which
-you grant cannot offend her, than upon that man who would destroy her
-if it lay in his power.
-
-“And, moreover, man cannot be born innocent, being a part of the
-first offender. But we know very well that the first cabbage did not
-offend its Creator. If it be said that we are made after the image
-of the Supreme Being, and the cabbage is not--grant that to be true;
-yet by polluting our soul, wherein we resembled Him, we have effaced
-that likeness, seeing nothing is more contrary to God than sin. If,
-then, our soul be no longer His image, we resemble Him no more in our
-feet, hands, mouth, forehead, and ears, than a cabbage in its leaves,
-flowers, stalk, pith, and head--do not you really think that if this
-poor plant could speak when one cuts it, it would not say, ‘Dear
-brother man, what have I done to thee that deserves death? I never
-grow but in gardens, and am never to be found in desert places, where
-I might live in security; I disdain all other company but thine, and
-scarcely am I sowed in thy garden when, to show thee my good-will, I
-blossom, stretch out my arms to thee, offer thee my children in grain;
-and, as a requital for my civility, thou causest my head to be chopped
-off.’ Thus would a cabbage discourse if it could speak.
-
-“To massacre a man is not so great sin as to cut and kill a cabbage,
-because one day the man will rise again, but the cabbage has no other
-life to hope for. By putting to death a cabbage, you annihilate it;
-but in killing a man, you make him only change his habitation. Nay,
-I’ll go farther with you still: since God doth equally cherish all His
-works, and hath equally, divided the benefits betwixt us and plants, it
-is but just we should have an equal esteem for them as for ourselves.
-It is true we were born first, but in the family of God there is no
-birthright. If, then, the cabbage share not with us in the inheritance
-of immortality, without doubt that want was made up by some other
-advantage, that may make amends for the shortness of its being--maybe
-by an universal intellect, or a perfect knowledge of all things in
-their causes. And it is for that reason that the wise Mover of all
-things hath not shaped for it organs like ours, which are proper only
-for simple reasoning, not only weak, but often fallacious too; but
-others, more ingeniously framed, stronger, and more numerous, which
-serve to conduct its speculative exercises. You’ll ask me, perhaps,
-whenever any cabbage imparted those lofty conceptions to us? But tell
-me, again, who ever discovered to us certain beings, which we allow
-to be above us, to whom we bear no analogy nor proportion, and whose
-existence it is as hard for us to comprehend as the understanding and
-ways whereby a cabbage expresses itself to its like, though not to us,
-because our senses are too dull to penetrate so far?
-
-“Moses, the greatest of philosophers, who drew the knowledge of nature
-from the fountain-head, Nature herself, hinted this truth to us when
-he spoke of the Tree of Knowledge; and without doubt he intended to
-intimate to us under that figure that plants, in exclusion of mankind,
-possess perfect philosophy. Remember, then, oh, thou proudest of
-animals, that though a cabbage which thou cuttest sayeth not a word,
-yet it pays in thinking. But the poor vegetable has no fit organs to
-howl as you do, nor yet to frisk about and weep. Yet it hath those
-that are proper to complain of the wrong you do it, and to draw a
-judgment from Heaven upon you for the injustice. But if you still
-demand of me how I come to know that cabbages and coleworts conceive
-such pretty thoughts, then will I ask you, how come you to know that
-they do not; and how that some among them, when they shut up at
-night, may not compliment one another as you do, saying, ‘Good-night,
-Master _Cole-Curled-Pate_! Your most humble servant, good Master
-_Cabbage-Round-Head_!’”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Marc-Antoine Gerard, sieur de Saint Amant, was one of the brightest and
-best of the French early poets.
-
-We give a specimen of his lighter verse. The following is “An Address
-to Bacchus:”
-
- In idle rhymes we waste our days,
- With yawning fits for all our praise,
- While Bacchus, god of mirth and wine,
- Invites us to a life divine.
- Apollo, prince of bards and prigs,
- May scrape his fiddle to the pigs;
- And for the Muses, old maids all,
- Why let them twang their lyres, and squall
- Their hymns and odes on classic themes,
- Neglected by their sacred streams.
- As for the true poetic fire,
- What is it but a mad desire?
- While Pegasus himself, at best,
- Only a horse must be confess’d;
- And he must be an ass indeed,
- Who would bestride the winged steed.
-
- Bacchus, thou who watchest o’er
- All feasts of ours, whom I adore
- With each new draught of rosy wine
- That makes my red face like to thine--
- By thy ivied coronet,
- By this glass with rubies set,
- By thy thyrsus--fear of earth--
- By thine everlasting mirth,
- By the honor of the feast,
- By thy triumphs, greatest, least,
- By thy blows, not struck, but drunk,
- With king and bishop, priest and monk,
- By the jesting, keen and sharp,
- By the violin and harp,
- By the bells, which are but flasks,
- By our sighs which are but masks
- Of mirth and sacred mystery,
- By thy panthers fierce to see,
- By this place so fair and sweet,
- By the he-goat at thy feet,
- By Ariadne, buxom lass,
- By Silenus on his ass,
- By this sausage, by this stoup,
- By this rich and thirsty soup,
- By this pipe from which I wave
- All the incense thou dost crave,
- By this ham, well spiced, long hung,
- By this salt and wood-smoked tongue,
- Receive us in the happy band
- Of those who worship glass in hand.
- And, to prove thyself divine,
- Leave us never without wine.
-
-Molière (the stage name of Jean Baptiste Poquelin), the greatest comic
-dramatist of France, wrote thirty or more plays. Though difficult to
-quote significant passages, two are here given:
-
-
- _FROM “THE LEARNED WOMEN”_
-
-_Trissotin._ Your verses have beauties unequaled by any others.
-
-_Vadius._ Venus and the graces reign in all yours.
-
-_Trissotin._ You have an easy style, and a fine choice of words.
-
-_Vadius._ In all your writings one finds _ithos_ and _pathos_.
-
-_Trissotin._ We have seen some eclogues of your composition which
-surpass in sweetness those of Theocritus and Vergil.
-
-_Vadius._ Your odes have a noble, gallant, and tender manner,
-which leaves Horace far behind.
-
-_Trissotin._ Is there anything more lovely than your canzonets?
-
-_Vadius._ Is there anything equal to the sonnets you write?
-
-_Trissotin._ Is there anything more charming than your little
-rondeaus?
-
-_Vadius._ Anything so full of wit as your madrigals?
-
-_Trissotin._ If France could appreciate your value----
-
-_Vadius._ If the age could render justice to a lofty genius----
-
-_Trissotin._ You would ride in the streets in a gilt coach.
-
-_Vadius._ We should see the public erect statues to you. Hem--It
-is a ballad; and I wish you frankly to----
-
-_Trissotin._ Have you heard a certain little sonnet upon the
-Princess Urania’s fever?
-
-_Vadius._ Yes; I heard it read yesterday.
-
-_Trissotin._ Do you know the author of it?
-
-_Vadius._ No, I do not; but I know very well that, to tell him the
-truth, his sonnet is good for nothing.
-
-_Trissotin._ Yet a great many people think it admirable.
-
-_Vadius._ It does not prevent it from being wretched; and if you
-had read it you would think like me.
-
-_Trissotin._ I know that I should differ from you altogether, and
-that few people are able to write such a sonnet.
-
-_Vadius._ Heaven forbid that I should ever write one so bad!
-
-_Trissotin._ I maintain that a better one cannot be made, and my
-reason is that I am the author of it.
-
-_Vadius._ You?
-
-_Trissotin._ Myself.
-
-_Vadius._ I cannot understand how the thing could have happened.
-
-_Trissotin._ It is unfortunate that I had not the power of
-pleasing you.
-
-_Vadius._ My mind must have wandered during the reading, or else
-the reader spoiled the sonnet; but let us leave that subject, and come
-to my ballad.
-
-_Trissotin._ The ballad is, to my mind, an insipid thing; it is no
-longer the fashion, and savors of ancient times.
-
-_Vadius._ Yet a ballad has charms for many people.
-
-_Trissotin._ It does not prevent me from thinking it unpleasant.
-
-_Vadius._ That does not make it worse.
-
-_Trissotin._ It has wonderful attractions for pedants.
-
-_Vadius._ Yet we see that it does not please you.
-
-_Trissotin._ You stupidly impose your qualities on others.
-
-_Vadius._ You very impertinently cast yours upon me.
-
-_Trissotin._ Go, you little dunce, you pitiful quill-driver!
-
-_Vadius._ Go, you penny-a-liner, you disgrace to the profession!
-
-_Trissotin._ Go, you book-manufacturer, you impudent plagiarist!
-
-_Vadius._ Go, you pedantic snob!
-
-_Philosopher._ Ah! gentlemen, what are you about?
-
-_Trissotin_ (_to_ VADIUS). Go, go, and make restitution to the Greeks
-and Romans for all your shameful thefts!
-
-_Vadius._ Go, and do penance on Parnassus for having murdered
-Horace in your verses!
-
-_Trissotin._ Remember your book, and the little stir it made.
-
-_Vadius._ And you, remember your bookseller, reduced to the workhouse.
-
-_Trissotin._ My fame is established; in vain would you endeavor to
-shake it.
-
-_Vadius._ Yes, yes; I’ll send you to the author of the _Satires_.
-
-_Trissotin._ I, too, will send you to him.
-
-_Vadius._ I have the satisfaction of having been honorably treated
-by him; he gives me a passing thrust, and includes me among several
-authors well known at court. But you he never leaves in peace; in all
-his verses he attacks you.
-
-_Trissotin._ By that we see the honorable rank I hold. He leaves
-you in the crowd, and esteems one blow enough to crush you. He has
-never done you the honor of repeating his attacks, whereas he assails
-me separately, as a noble adversary against whom all his efforts are
-necessary. His blows, repeated against me on all occasions, show that
-he never thinks himself victorious.
-
-_Vadius._ My pen will teach you what soft of man I am!
-
-_Trissotin._ And mine will make you know your master!
-
-_Vadius._ I defy you in verse, prose, Greek, and Latin!
-
-_Trissotin._ Very well, we shall meet again at the bookseller’s!
-
-
- _FROM “THE GENTLEMAN CIT”_
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ I will thoroughly explain all these
-curiosities to you.
-
-_M. Jourdain._ Pray do. And now I want to entrust you with a great
-secret. I am in love with a lady of quality, and I should be glad if
-you would help me to write something to her in a short letter which I
-mean to drop at her feet.
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ Very well.
-
-_M. Jourdain._ That will be gallant, will it not?
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ Undoubtedly. Is it verse you wish to
-write to her?
-
-_M. Jourdain._ Oh, no, not verse.
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ You only wish for prose?
-
-_M. Jourdain._ No, I wish neither verse nor prose.
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ It must be one or the other.
-
-_M. Jourdain._ Why?
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ Because, sir, there is nothing by which
-we can express ourselves except prose or verse.
-
-_M. Jourdain._ There is nothing but prose or verse?
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ No, sir. Whatever is not prose is
-verse, and whatever is not verse is prose.
-
-_M. Jourdain._ And when we speak, what is that, then?
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ Prose.
-
-_M. Jourdain._ What! when I say, “Nicole, bring me my slippers,
-and give me my night-cap,” is that prose?
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ Yes, sir.
-
-_M. Jourdain._ Upon my word, I have been talking prose these forty
-years without being aware of it! I am under the greatest obligation to
-you for informing me. Well, then, I wish to write to her in a letter,
-_Fair marchioness, your beautiful eyes make me die of love!_ but I
-would have this worded in a genteel manner, and turned prettily.
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ Say that the fire of her eyes has
-reduced your heart to ashes; that you suffer day and night for her
-tortures----
-
-_M. Jourdain._ No, no, no; I don’t want any of that. I simply wish
-to say what I tell you: _Fair marchioness, your beautiful eyes make
-me die of love_.
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ Still, you might amplify the thing a
-little?
-
-_M. Jourdain._ No, I tell you, I will have nothing but those very
-words in the letter; but they must be put in a fashionable way, and
-arranged as they should be. Pray explain a little, so that I may see
-the different ways in which they can be put.
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ They may be put, first of all, as
-you have said, _Fair marchioness, your beautiful eyes make me die
-of love_; or else, _Of love die make me, fair marchioness, your
-beautiful eyes_; or, _Your beautiful eyes of love make me, fair
-marchioness, die_; or, _Die of love your beautiful eyes, fair
-marchioness, make me_; or else, _Me make your beautiful eyes die,
-fair marchioness, of love_.
-
-_M. Jourdain._ But of all these ways, which is the best?
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._ The one you said--_Fair marchioness,
-your beautiful eyes make me die of love_.
-
-_M. Jourdain._ Yet I have never studied, and I did all that right
-off at the first shot. I thank you with all my heart, and I beg you to
-come early again to-morrow morning.
-
-_Professor of Philosophy._--I shall not fail you.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Paul Scarron, described as a “pure bird of pleasure,” wrote plays,
-novels, epigrams, letters, and best known of all, a classic burlesque
-called _Virgile Travesti_.
-
-Quotations cannot be made from his longer works, but two poems are
-given.
-
-
- _FAREWELL TO CHLORIS_
-
- Adieu, fair Chloris, adieu:
- ’Tis time that I speak,
- After many and many a week,
- (’Tis not thus that at Paris we woo)
- You pay me for all with a smile
- And cheat me the while,
- Speak now. Let me go.
- Close your doors, or open them wide,
- Matters not, so that I am outside;
- Devil take me, if ever I show
- Love or pity for you and your pride.
-
- To laugh in my face,
- It is all that she grants me
- Of pity and grace:
- Can it mean that she wants me?
- This for five or six months is my pay.
- Now hear my command,
- Shut your doors, keep them tight night and day,
- With a porter at hand
- To keep every one in;
- Well, I know my own mind.
- The devil himself, if once you begin
- To go out, couldn’t keep me behind.
-
-The following is better known. It is his description of Paris:
-
- Houses in labyrinthine maze:
- The streets with mud bespattered all;
- Palace and prison, churches, quays,
- Here stately shop, there shabby stall.
- Passengers black, red, gray, and white,
- The pursed-up prude, the light coquette;
- Murder and treason dark as night;
- With clerks, their hands with inkstains wet;
- A gold-laced coat without a sou,
- And trembling at a bailiff’s sight;
- A braggart shivering with fear;
- Pages and lackeys, thieves of night;
- And ’mid the tumult, noise, and stink of it,
- There’s Paris--Pray, what do you think of it?
-
-François de la Rochefoucauld, famous French moralist, is best known
-through the wit and wisdom of his Maxims.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A woman is faithful to her first lover a long time--unless she happens
-to take a second.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He who is pleased with nobody is much more unhappy than he with whom
-nobody is pleased.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We all have sufficient fortitude to bear the misfortunes of our friends.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Had we no faults of our own, we should notice them with less pleasure
-in others.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We promise according to our hopes, and perform according to our fears.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Old men are fond of giving good advice to console themselves for their
-impotence to give bad examples.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We often do good in order that we may do evil with impunity.
-
-If we resist our passions it is more from their weakness than from our
-strength.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We should have very little pleasure if we did not sometimes flatter
-ourselves.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is easier to be wise for others than for ourselves.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Men would not live long in society if they were not dupes to each other.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Virtue would not travel so far if vanity did not keep her company.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Hypocrisy is the homage which vice renders to virtue.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the adversity of our best friends we often find something which does
-not displease us.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gravity is a mystery of the face, invented to conceal the defects of
-the mind.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Affected simplicity is refined imposture.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We often pardon those who weary us, but never those whom we weary.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Blaise Pascal, celebrated geometrician and writer, left a series of
-delightful satires upon the Jesuits.
-
-
- _FROM LES PROVINCIALES_
-
- _ON MENTAL RESERVATIONS_
-
-“I proceed to the facilities we have invented for the avoidance of
-sin in the conversation and intrigues of the world. One of the most
-embarrassing things to provide against is _lying_, when it is
-the object to excite confidence in any false representation. In this
-case, our doctrine of _equivocals_ is of admirable service, by
-which, says Sanchez, ‘it is lawful to use ambiguous terms to give the
-impression a different sense from that which you understand yourself.’”
-“This I am well aware of, father.” “We have,” continued he, “published
-it so frequently, that in fact every body is acquainted with it; but
-pray, do you know what is to be done when no equivocal terms can be
-found?” “No, father.” “Ha, I thought this would be new to you: it is
-the doctrine of _mental reservations_. Sanchez states it in the
-same place: ‘A person may take an oath that he has not done such a
-thing, though in fact he has, by saying to himself, it was not done
-on a certain specified day or before he was born, or by concealing
-any other similar circumstance which gives another meaning to the
-statement. This is in numberless instances extremely convenient, and
-is always justifiable when it is necessary to your welfare, honor, or
-property.’”
-
-“But, father, is not this adding perjury to lying?” “No; Sanchez and
-Filiutius show the contrary: ‘It is the _intention_ which stamps
-the quality of the action’; and the latter furnishes another and surer
-method of avoiding lying. After saying in an audible voice, _I swear
-that I did not do this_, you may add inwardly, _to-day_; or
-after affirming aloud, _I swear_ you may repeat in a whisper, _I
-say_; and then resuming the former tone--_I did not do it_.
-Now this you must admit is telling the truth.” “I own it is,” said I;
-“but it is telling truth in a whisper, and a lie in an audible voice;
-besides, I apprehend that very few people have sufficient presence of
-mind to avail themselves of this deception.” “Our fathers,” answered
-the Jesuit, “have in the same place given directions for those who do
-not know how to manage these niceties, so that they may be indemnified
-against the sin of lying, while plainly declaring they have not done
-what in reality they have, provided ‘that, in general, they intended to
-give the same sense to their assertion which a skilful man would have
-contrived to do.’”
-
-“Now confess,” he asked, “have not you sometimes been embarrassed
-through an ignorance of this doctrine?” “Certainly.” “And will you
-not admit, too, that it would often be very convenient to violate
-your word with a good conscience?” “Surely, one of the most convenient
-things in the world!” “Then, sir, listen to Escobar; he gives this
-general rule: ‘Promises are not obligatory when a man has no intention
-of being bound to fulfil them; and it seldom happens that he has such
-an intention, unless he confirms it by an oath or bond, so that when
-he merely says _I will do it_, it is to be understood _if he do
-not change his mind_; for he did not intend by what he promised to
-deprive himself of his liberty.’ He furnishes some other rules which
-you may read for yourself, and concludes thus: ‘Everything is taken
-from Molina and our other authors--_omnia ex Molina et aliis’_; it
-is, consequently, indisputable.”
-
-“Father,” exclaimed I, “I never knew before that the direction of the
-intention could nullify the obligation of a promise.” “Now, then,”
-said he, “you perceive this very much facilitates the intercourse of
-mankind.”
-
-Jean de la Fontaine, the universally known French Fabulist, was a
-prolific writer, but his wit shows at its best in his _Fables_.
-
-
- _THE COUNCIL HELD BY THE RATS_
-
- Old Rodilard, a certain cat,
- Such havoc of the rats had made,
- ’Twas difficult to find a rat
- With nature’s debt unpaid.
- The few that did remain,
- To leave their holes afraid.
- From usual food abstain,
- Not eating half their fill.
- And wonder no one will,
- That one, who made on rats his revel,
- With rats passed not for cat, but devil.
- Now, on a day, this dread rat-eater,
- Who had a wife, went out to meet her;
- And while he held his caterwauling,
- The unkilled rats, their chapter calling,
- Discussed the point, in grave debate,
- How they might shun impending fate.
- Their dean, a prudent rat,
- Thought best, and better soon than late,
- To bell the fatal cat;
- That, when he took his hunting-round,
- The rats, well cautioned by the sound,
- Might hide in safety under ground;
- Indeed, he knew no other means.
- And all the rest
- At once confessed
- Their minds were with the dean’s.
- No better plan, they all believed,
- Could possibly have been conceived;
- No doubt, the thing would work right well,
- If any one would hang the bell.
- But, one by one, said every rat,
- “I’m not so big a fool as that.”
- The plan knocked up in this respect,
- The council closed without effect.
- And many a council I have seen,
- Or reverend chapter with its dean,
- That, thus resolving wisely,
- Fell through like this precisely.
-
- To argue or refute,
- Wise counsellors abound;
- The man to execute
- Is harder to be found.
-
-
- _THE COCK AND THE FOX_
-
- Upon a tree there mounted guard
- A veteran cock, adroit and cunning;
- When to the roots a fox up running
- Spoke thus, in tones of kind regard:
- “Our quarrel, brother, is at an end;
- Henceforth I hope to live your friend;
- For peace now reigns
- Throughout the animal domains.
- I bear the news. Come down, I pray,
- And give me the embrace fraternal:
- And please, my brother, don’t delay:
- So much the tidings do concern all,
- That I must spread them far to-day.
- Now you and yours can take your walks
- Without a fear or thought of hawks;
- And should you clash with them or others,
- In us you’ll find the best of brothers--
- For which you may, this joyful night,
- Your merry bonfires light.
- But, first, let’s seal the bliss
- With one fraternal kiss.”
- “Good friend,” the cock replied, “upon my word,
- A better thing I never heard;
- And doubly I rejoice
- To hear it from your voice:
- And, really, there must be something in it,
- For yonder come two greyhounds, which I flatter
- Myself, are couriers on this very matter;
- They come so fast, they’ll be here in a minute,
- I’ll down, and all of us will seal the blessing
- With general kissing and caressing.”
- “Adieu,” said the fox; “my errand’s pressing,
- I’ll hurry on my way,
- And we’ll rejoice some other day.”
- So off the fellow scampered, quick and light,
- To gain the fox-holes of the neighboring height--
- Less happy in his stratagem than flight.
- The cock laughed sweetly in his sleeve--
- ’Tis doubly sweet deceiver to deceive.
-
-
- _THE CROW AND THE FOX_
-
- A master crow, perched on a tree one day
- Was holding in his beak a cheese--
- A master fox, by the odor drawn that way,
- Spake unto him in words like these:
- “O, good morning, my Lord Crow!
- How well you look, how handsome you do grow!
- ’Pon my honor, if your note
- Bears a resemblance to your coat,
- You are the phœnix of the dwellers in these woods.”
- At these words does the crow exceedingly rejoice;
- And, to display his beauteous voice,
- He opens a wide beak, lets fall his stolen goods.
- The fox seized on’t, and said, “My good Monsieur,
- Learn that every flatterer
- Lives at the expense of him who hears him out.
- This lesson is well worth a cheese, no doubt.”
- The crow, ashamed, and much in pain,
- Swore, but a little late, they’d not catch him so again.
-
-Nicolas Boileau-Despreaux, commonly called Boileau, was a famous critic
-and poet. His _Art Poétique_ had a decided influence on later
-French verse.
-
-His wit was keen and his satire sharp.
-
-
- _TO PERRAULT_
-
- How comes it, Perrault, I would gladly know,
- That authors of two thousand years ago,
- Whom in their native dress all times revere,
- In your translations should so flat appear?
- ’Tis you divest them of their own sublime,
- By your vile crudities and odious rime.
- They’re thine when suffering thy wretched phrase,
- And then no wonder if they meet no praise.
-
-
- _ON COTIN_
-
- Of all the pens which my poor rimes molest,
- Cotin’s is sharpest, and succeeds the best.
- Others outrageous scold and rail downright,
- With hearty rancor, and true Christian spite.
- But he, a readier method does design,
- Writes scoundrel verses, and then says they’re mine.
-
-Alan René Le Sage, novelist and dramatist, is best known for his
-celebrated work, _Gil Blas_. He also wrote many farce-operettas,
-which offer no opportunity for quotation.
-
-Jean de la Bruyère, is best known for his work called _The
-Characters_, an imitation of Theophrastus.
-
-
- _IPHIS_
-
-Iphis at church sees a new-fashioned shoe; he looks upon his own and
-blushes, and can no longer believe himself dressed. He came to prayers
-only to show himself, and now he hides himself. The foot keeps him in
-his room the rest of the day. He has a soft hand, with which he gives
-you a gentle pat. He is sure to laugh often to show his white teeth.
-He strains his mouth to a perpetual smile. He looks upon his legs, he
-views himself in the glass, and nobody can have so good an opinion of
-another as he has of himself. He has acquired a delicate and clear
-voice, and has a happy manner in talking. He has a turn of the head, a
-sweetness in his glance that he never fails to make use of. His gait is
-slow, and the prettiest he is able to contrive. He sometimes employs a
-little rouge, but seldom; he will not make a habit of it. It is true
-that he wears breeches and a hat, has neither earrings nor necklace,
-therefore I have not put him in the chapter on woman.
-
-
- _THOUGHTS_
-
-The pleasure of criticizing robs us of the pleasure of unconscious
-delight.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The most accomplished work of the age would fail under the hands
-of censors and critics, if the author would listen to all their
-objections, and allow each one to throw out the passage that had
-pleased him least.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This good we get from the perfidiousness of woman, that it cures us of
-jealousy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There are but two ways of rising in the world--by your own industry, or
-by the weakness of others.
-
-If life is miserable, it is painful to live; if happy, it is terrible
-to die; both come to the same thing.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is nothing men are so anxious to preserve, or so careless about,
-as life.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We are afraid of old age, and afraid not to attain it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If some men died, and others did not, death would indeed be a terrible
-affliction.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There are but three events that happen to men--birth, life, and death.
-They know nothing of their birth, suffer when they die, and forget to
-live.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gilles Ménage, a French philologist, is now best known as the Author
-of _Ménagiana_, one of the most excellent and original of the
-celebrated Ana of France. The following poem bears a remarkable
-resemblance to Goldsmith’s _Madame Blaize_, and it is quite
-possible that the latter may have been suggested by it.
-
- La Gallisse now I wish to touch;
- Droll air! if I can strike it,
- I’m sure the song will please you much;
- That is, if you should like it.
-
- La Gallisse was indeed, I grant,
- Not used to any dainty
- When he was born--but could not want,
- As long as he had plenty.
-
- Instructed with the greatest care,
- He always was well bred,
- And never used a hat to wear,
- But when ’twas on his head.
-
- His temper was exceeding good,
- Just of his father’s fashion;
- And never quarrels broil’d his blood,
- Except when in a passion.
-
- His mind was on devotion bent;
- He kept with care each high day,
- And Holy Thursday always spent,
- The day before Good Friday.
-
- He liked good claret very well,
- I just presume to think it;
- For ere its flavour he could tell,
- He thought it best to drink it.
-
- Than doctors more he loved the cook,
- Though food would make him gross;
- And never any physic took,
- But when he took a dose.
-
- O happy, happy is the swain
- The ladies so adore;
- For many followed in his train,
- Whene’er he walk’d before.
-
- Bright as the sun his flowing hair
- In golden ringlets shone;
- And no one could with him compare,
- If he had been alone.
-
- His talents I can not rehearse,
- But every one allows,
- That whatsoe’er he wrote in verse,
- No one could call it prose.
-
- He argued with precision nice,
- The learnèd all declare;
- And it was his decision wise,
- No horse could be a mare.
-
- His powerful logic would surprise,
- Amuse, and much delight:
- He proved that dimness of the eyes
- Was hurtful to the sight.
-
- They liked him much--so it appears
- Most plainly--who preferr’d him;
- And those did never want their ears,
- Who any time had heard him.
-
- He was not always right, ’tis true,
- And then he must be wrong;
- But none had found it out, he knew,
- If he had held his tongue.
-
- Whene’er a tender tear he shed,
- ’Twas certain that he wept;
- And he would lay awake in bed,
- Unless, indeed, he slept.
-
- In tilting everybody knew
- His very high renown;
- Yet no opponents he o’erthrew,
- But those that he knock’d down.
-
- At last they smote him in the head--
- What hero e’er fought all?
- And when they saw that he was dead,
- They knew the wound was mortal.
-
- And when at last he lost his breath,
- It closed his every strife;
- For that sad day that seal’d his death,
- Deprived him of his life.
-
-Italy and Spain offer us little of seventeenth century humor. Their
-comedies are long and verbose, and rather dull. Also, there are few
-satisfactory translations.
-
-The Italian, Francesca Redi, gives us a rollicking song of a
-Bacchanalian order.
-
-
- _DIATRIBE AGAINST WATER_
-
- He who drinks water,
- I wish to observe,
- Gets nothing from me;
- He may eat it and starve.
- Whether it’s well, or whether it’s fountain,
- Or whether it comes foaming white from the mountain,
- I cannot admire it,
- Nor ever desire it.
- ’Tis a fool, and a madman, an impudent wretch,
- Who now will live in a nasty ditch,
- And then grows proud, and full of his whims,
- Comes playing the devil, and cursing his brims,
- And swells, and tumbles, and bothers his margins,
- And ruins the flowers, although they be virgins.
- Wharves and piers, were it not for him,
- Would last forever,
- If they’re built clever;
- But no, it’s all one with him--sink or swim.
-
- Let the people yclept Mameluke
- Praise the Nile without any rebuke;
- Let the Spaniards praise the Tagus;
- I cannot like either, even for negus.
- If any follower of mine
- Dares so far to forget his wine
- As to drink a drop of water,
- Here’s the hand to devote him to slaughter.
- Let your meager doctorlings
- Gather herbs and such like things,
- Fellows who with streams and stills
- Think to cure all sorts of ills;
- I’ve no faith in their washery,
- Nor think it worth a glance of my eye.
- Yes, I laugh at them, for that matter,
- To think how they, with their heaps of water,
- Petrify their skulls profound,
- And make ’em all so thick and so round,
- That Viviana, with all his mathematics,
- Would fail to square the circle of their attics.
-
- Away with all water wherever I come;
- I forbid it ye, gentlemen, all and some.
- Lemonade water,
- Jessamine water,
- Our tavern knows none of ’em--
- Water’s a hum!
- Jessamine makes a pretty crown,
- But as a drink ’twill never go down.
- All your hydromels and flips
- Come not near these prudent lips.
- All your sippings and sherbets,
- And a thousand such pretty sweets,
- Let your mincing ladies take ’em,
- And fops whose little fingers ache ’em.
- Wine, wine is your only drink!
- Grief never dares to look at the brink.
- Six times a year to be mad with wine,
- I hold it no shame, but a very good sign.
- I, for my part, take my can,
- Solely to act like a gentleman,
- And, acting so, I care not, I,
- For all the hail and snow in the sky.
- I never go poking,
- And cowering and cloaking,
- And wrapping myself from head to foot,
- As some people do, with their wigs to boot--
- For example, like dry and shivering Redi,
- Who looks just like a peruk’d old lady.
-
-From the Spanish poet, José Morell we include two quotations.
-
-
- _ADVICE TO AN INNKEEPER_
-
- “‘Mingle the sweet and useful,’ says a sage,
- Whose name, perchance, is lost in history’s page,
- But whose advice withal is good and wise.
- It caught a tavern-keeper’s busy eyes,
- And he exclaimed, ‘Delightful! That’s for me!’
- I see the sense, I read the mystery;
- This is its meaning, I can well divine:
- ‘Mix useful water with your luscious wine.’”
-
-
- _TO A POET_
-
- “You say your verses are of gold.
- And how, my friend? I’d fain inquire.
- But, no--I see the truth you’ve told:
- They must be purified by fire.”
-
-
-
-
- GERMAN HUMOR
-
-Germany in the seventeenth century wakes up to a dim and dawning
-humorous sense, but gives little definite expression to it, unless we
-except Abraham á Sancta Clara, an Augustinian monk and satirical writer
-of repute.
-
-
- _THE DONKEY’S VOICE_
-
-A certain singer was most vain of his voice, thinking it so enchanting
-it might allure the very dolphins, or if not them, the pike, from out
-of the deep. But it is an old custom of the Lord to punish the vain
-ones of the earth, who like nothing better than praise. So the Lord
-made this man sing false at Holy Mass, and the whole congregation was
-utterly displeased. Close by the altar there was kneeling an old woman,
-who wept bitterly during the Mass. The conceited songster, thinking
-that the old woman had been moved to those tears by the sweetness of
-his voice, after Mass approached the dame, asking her, in the presence
-of the congregation, why she had wept so sadly. His mouth watered
-for the expected praise, when, “Sir,” said the woman, “while you were
-singing I remembered my donkey; I lost him, poor soul three days ago,
-and his voice was very natural, like yours. Oh, heavenly Father, if I
-could only find that good and useful beast!”
-
- --_Judas, the Arch-Rogue._
-
-
- _A BURDENSOME WIFE_
-
-A man set sail from Venice for Ancona, with his wife, both being minded
-to offer their devotions at the shrine of Santa Maria di Loreto. But
-during the voyage there arose such a great storm that all thought the
-ship in extreme peril of sinking. The owner of the ship therefore
-gave his command that each traveler should forthwith throw his most
-burdensome possessions into the sea, so that the vessel might be made
-lighter. Some rolled casks of wine overboard, and others bales of
-cloth; the man from Venice, who did not desire to be found tarrying
-behind the rest, seized his wife, exclaiming, “Forgive me, Ursula
-mine, but this day you must drink to my health in salt water!” and
-would throw her into the sea. The frightened wife making a commotion
-with her screams, others ran up, and scolded the husband, asking him
-the cause of his action. “The owner of the ship,” said he, “urgently
-commanded that we all should throw overboard our heaviest burdens. Now,
-throughout my whole life nothing has ever been so burdensome to me
-as this woman; hence I was gladly willing to make her over to Father
-Neptune.”
-
- --_Hie! Fie!_
-
-
- _ST. ANTHONY’S SERMON TO THE FISHES_
-
- Saint Anthony at church
- Was left in the lurch,
- So he went to the ditches
- And preached to the fishes.
- They wriggled their tails,
- In the sun glanced their scales.
-
- The carps with their spawn,
- Are all thither drawn;
- Have opened their jaws,
- Eager for each clause.
- No sermon beside
- Had the carps so edified.
-
- Sharp-snouted pikes,
- Who keep fighting like tikes,
- Now swam up harmonious
- To hear Saint Antonius.
- No sermon beside
- Had the pikes so edified.
-
- And that very odd fish,
- Who loves fast-days, the cod-fish,--
- The stock-fish, I mean,--
- At the sermon was seen.
- No sermon beside
- Had the cods so edified.
-
- Good eels and sturgeon,
- Which aldermen gorge on,
- Went out of their way
- To hear preaching that day.
- No sermon beside
- Had the eels so edified.
-
- Crabs and turtles also,
- Who always move low,
- Make haste from the bottom
- As if the devil had got ’em.
- No sermon beside
- The crabs so edified.
-
- Fish great and fish small,
- Lord, lackeys, and all,
- Each looked at the preacher
- Like a reasonable creature,
- At God’s word,
- They Anthony heard.
-
- The sermon now ended,
- Each turned and descended;
- The pikes went on stealing,
- The eels went on eeling.
- Much delighted were they,
- But preferred the old way.
-
- The crabs are back-sliders,
- The stock-fish thick-siders,
- The carps are sharp-set,
- All the sermon forget.
- Much delighted were they,
- But preferred the old way.
-
-
- THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
-
-Jonathan Swift, the famous author of _Gulliver’s Travels_, wrote
-voluminously. His wit was rather heavy, his satire stinging.
-
-It is unsatisfactory to quote from his longer works, but examples of
-his lighter vein are offered.
-
-
- _AGAINST ABOLISHING CHRISTIANITY_
-
-Another advantage proposed by the abolishing of Christianity is the
-clear gain of one day in seven, which is now entirely lost, and
-consequently the kingdom one-seventh less considerable in trade,
-business, and pleasure; besides the loss to the public of so many
-stately structures now in the hands of the clergy, which might
-be converted into play-houses, exchanges, market-houses, common
-dormitories, and other public edifices.
-
-I hope I shall be forgiven a hard word if I call this a perfect cavil.
-I readily own there hath been an old custom, time out of mind, for
-people to assemble in the churches every Sunday, and that shops are
-still frequently shut, in order, as it is conceived, to preserve the
-memory of that ancient practice; but how this can prove a hindrance to
-business or pleasure is hard to imagine. What if the men of pleasure
-are forced, one day in the week, to game at home instead of the
-chocolate-house? Are not the taverns and coffee-houses open? Can there
-be a more convenient season for taking a dose of physic? Is not that
-the chief day for traders to sum up the accounts of the week, and for
-lawyers to prepare their briefs? But I would fain know how it can be
-pretended that the churches are misapplied? Where are more appointments
-and rendezvouses of gallantry? Where more care to appear in the
-foremost box, with greater advantage of dress? Where more meetings for
-business? Where more bargains driven of all sorts? And where so many
-conveniences or incitements to sleep?...
-
-It may perhaps admit a controversy, whether the banishing all notions
-of religion whatsoever would be inconvenient for the vulgar. Not that
-I am in the least of opinion, with those who hold religion to have
-been the invention of politicians, to keep the lower part of the world
-in awe by the fear of invisible powers, unless mankind were then very
-different from what it is now; for I look upon the mass or body of
-our people here in England to be as Freethinkers--that is to say, as
-staunch unbelievers--as any of the highest rank. But I conceive some
-scattered notions about a superior Power to be of singular use for the
-common people, as furnishing excellent materials to keep children quiet
-when they grow peevish, and providing topics of amusement in a tedious
-winter night.
-
-
- _THE FURNITURE OF A WOMAN’S MIND_
-
- A set of phrases learned by rote;
- A passion for a scarlet coat;
- When at a play, to laugh or cry,
- Yet cannot tell the reason why;
- Never to hold her tongue a minute,
- While all she prates has nothing in it;
- Whole hours can with a coxcomb sit,
- And take his nonsense all for wit.
- Her learning mounts to read a song,
- But half the words pronouncing wrong;
- Has every repartee in store
- She spoke ten thousand times before;
- Can ready compliments supply
- On all occasions, cut and dry;
- Such hatred to a parson’s gown,
- The sight would put her in a swoon;
- For conversation well endued,
- She calls it witty to be rude;
- And, placing raillery in railing,
- Will tell aloud your greatest failing;
- Nor make a scruple to expose
- Your bandy leg or crooked nose;
- Can at her morning tea run o’er
- The scandal of the day before;
- Improving hourly in her skill,
- To cheat and wrangle at quadrille.
- In choosing lace, a critic nice,
- Knows to a groat the lowest price;
- Can in her female clubs dispute
- What linen best the silk will suit,
- What colours each complexion match,
- And where with art to place a patch.
- If chance a mouse creeps in her sight,
- Can finely counterfeit a fright;
- So sweetly screams, if it comes near her,
- She ravishes all hearts to hear her.
- Can dexterously her husband tease,
- By taking fits whene’er she please;
- By frequent practice learns the trick
- At proper season to be sick;
- Thinks nothing gives one airs so pretty,
- At once creating love and pity.
- If Molly happens to be careless,
- And but neglects to warm her hair-lace,
- She gets a cold as sure as death,
- And vows she scarce can fetch her breath;
- Admires how modest woman can
- Be so robustious, like a man.
- In party, furious to her power,
- A bitter Whig, or Tory sour,
- Her arguments directly tend
- Against the side she would defend;
- Will prove herself a Tory plain,
- From principles the Whigs maintain,
- And, to defend the Whiggish cause,
- Her topics from the Tories draws.
-
-
- _SUNT QUI SERVARI NOLUNT_
-
- As Thomas was cudgell’d one day by his wife,
- He took to the street, and he fled for his life.
- Tom’s three dearest friends came by in the squabble
- And sav’d him at once from the shrew and the rabble;
- Then ventur’d to give him some sober advice--
- But Tom is a person of honour so nice,
- Too wise to take counsel, too proud to take warning,
- That he sent to all three a challenge next morning.
- Three duels he fought, thrice ventur’d his life,
- Went home--and was cudgell’d again by his wife.
-
-
- _ON HIS OWN DEAFNESS_
-
- Deaf, giddy, helpless, left alone,
- To all my friends a burden grown;
- No more I hear my church’s bell,
- Than if it rang out for my knell;
- At thunder now no more I start,
- Than at the rumbling of a cart;
- And what’s incredible, alack!
- No more I hear a woman’s clack.
-
-
- _TO MRS. HOUGHTON OF BORMOUNT, UPON PRAISING HER HUSBAND
- TO DR. SWIFT_
-
- You always are making a god of your spouse;
- But this neither reason nor conscience allows:
- Perhaps you will say, ’tis in gratitude due,
- And you adore him, because he adores you.
- Your argument’s weak, and so you will find;
- For you, by this rule, must adore all mankind.
-
-Alexander Pope, a true poet and humorist, sometimes dropped into sheer
-nonsense, and often into satirical epigrammatic writing.
-
-For some inexplicable reason, certain commentators have denied any
-sense of humor to Pope, but the following extracts refute this:
-
-
- _LINES BY A PERSON OF QUALITY_
-
- Fluttering spread thy purple pinions,
- Gentle Cupid, o’er my heart,
- I a slave in thy dominions,
- Nature must give way to art.
-
- Mild Arcadians, ever blooming,
- Nightly nodding o’er your flocks,
- See my weary days consuming,
- All beneath yon flowery rocks.
-
- Thus the Cyprian goddess weeping,
- Mourned Adonis, darling youth:
- Him the boar, in silence creeping,
- Gored with unrelenting tooth.
-
- Cynthia, tune harmonious numbers;
- Fair Discretion, tune the lyre;
- Soothe my ever-waking slumbers;
- Bright Apollo, lend thy choir.
-
- Gloomy Pluto, king of terrors,
- Armed in adamantine chains,
- Lead me to the crystal mirrors,
- Watering soft Elysian plains.
-
- Mournful Cypress, verdant willow,
- Gilding my Aurelia’s brows,
- Morpheus, hovering o’er my pillow,
- Hear me pay my dying vows.
-
- Melancholy, smooth Mæaunder,
- Swiftly purling in a round,
- On thy margin lovers wander
- With thy flowery chaplets crowned.
-
- Thus when Philomela, drooping,
- Softly seeks her silent mate,
- So the bird of Juno stooping;
- Melody resigns to fate.
-
-
- _WORMS_
-
-To the Ingenious Mr. Moore, inventor of the celebrated worm powder.
-
- How much, egregious Moore? are we,
- Deceived by shows and forms?
- Whate’er we think, whate’er we see,
- All human race are worms.
-
- Man is a very worm by birth,
- Proud reptile, vile and vain,
- Awhile he crawls upon the earth,
- Then shrinks to earth again.
-
- That woman is a worm, we find,
- E’er since our grannum’s evil;
- She first conversed with her own kind,
- That ancient worm, the Devil.
-
- The fops are painted butterflies,
- That flutter for a day;
- First from a worm they took their rise,
- Then in a worm decay.
-
- The flatterer an ear-wig grows,
- Some worms suit all conditions;
- Misers are muck-worms; silk-worms, beaus,
- And death-watches, physicians.
-
- That statesmen have a worm, is seen
- By all their winding play;
- Their conscience is a worm within,
- That gnaws them night and day.
-
- Ah, Moore! thy skill were well employ’d,
- And greater gain would rise
- If thou couldst make the courtier void
- That worm that never dies.
-
- Thou only canst our fate adjourn
- Some few short years, no more;
- E’en Button’s wits to worms shall turn,
- Who maggots were before.
-
-
- _EPIGRAM ON MRS. TOFTS_
-
- (_A celebrated Opera Singer._)
-
- So bright is thy beauty, so charming thy song,
- As had drawn both the beasts and their Orpheus along;
- But such is thy avarice, and such is thy pride,
- That the beasts must have starved and the poet have died.
-
-Joseph Addison, whose literary work had a decided influence on English
-letters and manners, contributed much to _The Tatler_ and _The
-Spectator_, from which the following extract is taken.
-
-
- _THE WILL OF A VIRTUOSO_
-
-I, Nicholas Gimcrack, being in sound health of mind, but in great
-weakness of body, do, by this my last will and testament, bestow my
-worldly goods and chattels in manner following:
-
- _Imprimis._--To my dear wife,
- One box of butterflies,
- One drawer of shells,
- A female skeleton,
- A dried cockatrice.
-
- _Item._--To my daughter Elizabeth,
- My receipt for preserving dead caterpillars,
- As also my preparations of winter Maydew and embryo-pickle.
-
- _Item._--To my little daughter Fanny,
- Three crocodile’s eggs,
- And upon the birth of her first child, if she marries with her
- mother’s consent,
- The nest of a humming-bird.
-
- _Item._--To my eldest brother, as an acknowledgment for the lands
- he has vested in my son Charles, I bequeath
- My last year’s collection of grasshoppers.
-
- _Item._--To his daughter Susanna, being his only child, I bequeath
- my English weeds pasted on royal paper,
- With my large folio of Indian cabbage.
-
- Having fully provided for my nephew Isaac, by making over to him
- some years since,
- A horned scarabæus,
- The skin of a rattlesnake, and
- The mummy of an Egyptian king,
- I make no further provision for him in this my will.
-
-My eldest son, John, having spoke disrespectfully of his little sister,
-whom I keep by me in spirits of wine, and in many other instances
-behaved himself undutifully toward me, I do disinherit, and wholly cut
-off from any part of this my personal estate, by giving him a single
-cockle-shell.
-
-To my second son, Charles, I give and bequeath all my flowers, plants,
-minerals, mosses, shells, pebbles, fossils, beetles, butterflies,
-caterpillars, grasshoppers, and vermin, not above specified; as also
-all my monsters, both wet and dry; making the said Charles whole and
-sole executor of this my last will and testament: he paying, or causing
-to be paid, the aforesaid legacies within the space of six months after
-my decease. And I do hereby revoke all other wills whatsoever by me
-formerly made.
-
- * * * * *
-
-John Philips, who was a devoted student and admirer of Milton, wrote a
-poem in which he parodied Milton’s style, and which Addison called the
-finest burlesque in the English language.
-
-
- _THE SPLENDID SHILLING_
-
- “Sing, heavenly Muse.
- Things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme”;
- A shilling, breeches, and chimeras dire.
-
- Happy the man, who, void of acres and strife,
- In silken or in leathern purse retains
- A Splendid Shilling: he nor hears with pain
- New oysters cried, nor sighs for cheerful ale;
- But with his friends, when nightly mists arise,
- To Juniper’s Magpie, or Town Hall repairs;
- Where, mindful of the nymph, whose wanton eye
- Transfixed his soul, and kindled amorous flames,
- Chloe or Phyllis, he each circling glass
- Wisheth her health and joy and equal love.
- Meanwhile he smokes, and laughs at merry tale,
- Or pun ambiguous or conundrum quaint.
- But I, whom griping penury surrounds,
- And hunger, sure attendant upon want,
- With scanty offals, and small acid tiff
- (Wretched repast!) my meagre corpse sustain:
- Then solitary walk, or doze at home
- In garret vile, and with a warming puff
- Regale chilled fingers; or from tube as black
- As winter-chimney or well-polished jet,
- Exhale mundungus, ill-perfuming scent.
- Not blacker tube, nor of a shorter size,
- Smokes Cambro-Briton (versed in pedigree,
- Sprung from Cadwallador and Arthur, kings
- Full famous in romantic tale) when he
- O’er many a craggy hill and barren cliff,
- Upon a cargo of famed Cestrian cheese,
- High overshadowing rides, with a design
- To wend his wares at the Arvonian mart,
- Or Maridunum, or the ancient town
- Ycleped Brechinia, or where Vaga’s stream
- Encircles Ariconium, fruitful soil!
- Whence flow nectareous wines, that well may vie
- With Massic, Setin, or renowned Falern.
- Thus, while my joyless minutes tedious flow,
- With looks demure, and silent pace, a Dun,
- Horrible monster! hated by gods and men,
- To my aerial citadel ascends.
- With vocal heel thrice thundering at my gate,
- With hideous accent thrice he calls; I know
- The voice ill-boding, and the solemn sound,
- What should I do? or whither turn? Amazed,
- Confounded, to the dark recess I fly
- Of wood-hole; straight my bristling hairs erect
- Through sudden fear; a chilly sweat bedews
- My shuddering limbs, and (wonderful to tell!)
- My tongue forgets her faculty of speech;
- So horrible he seems! His faded brow
- Intrenched with many a frown, and conic beard,
- And spreading band, admired by modern saints,
- Disastrous acts forebode; in his right hand
- Long scrolls of paper solemnly he waves,
- With characters and figures dire inscribed,
- Grievous to mortal eyes, (ye gods, avert
- Such plagues from righteous men!) Behind him stalks
- Another monster, not unlike itself,
- Sullen of aspect, by the vulgar called
- A Catchpole, whose polluted hands the gods
- With force incredible, and magic charms,
- First have endued: if he his ample palm
- Should haply on ill-fated shoulder lay
- Of debtor, straight his body to the touch
- Obsequious (as whilom knights were wont)
- To some enchanted castle is conveyed,
- Where gates impregnable, and coercive chains,
- In durance strict detain him, till, in form
- Of money, Pallas sets the captive free.
- Beware, ye debtors! when ye walk, beware,
- Be circumspect; oft with insidious ken
- The caitiff eyes your steps aloof, and oft
- Lies perdue in a nook or gloomy cave,
- Prompt to enchant some inadvertent wretch
- With his unhallowed touch. So (poets sing)
- Grimalkin to domestic vermin sworn
- An everlasting foe, with watchful eye
- Lies nightly brooding o’er a chinky gap,
- Portending her fell claws, to thoughtless mice
- Sure ruin. So her disembowelled web
- Arachne, in a hall or kitchen, spreads
- Obvious to vagrant flies; she secret stands
- Within her woven cell; the humming prey,
- Regardless of their fate, rush on the toils
- Inextricable, nor will aught avail
- Their arts, or arms, or shapes of lovely hue.
- The wasp insidious, and the buzzing drone,
- And butterfly proud of expanded wings
- Distinct with gold, entangled in her snares,
- Useless resistance make; with eager strides,
- She towering flies to her expected spoils:
- Then with envenomed jaws the vital blood
- Drinks of reluctant foes, and to her cave
- Their bulky carcasses triumphant drags.
- So pass my days. But when nocturnal shades
- This world envelop, and the inclement air
- Persuades men to repel benumbing frosts
- With pleasant wines and crackling blaze of wood,
- Me, lonely sitting, nor the glimmering light
- Of make-weight candle, nor the joyous talk
- Of loving friend, delights; distressed, forlorn,
- Amidst the horrors of the tedious night,
- Darkling I sigh, and feed with dismal thoughts
- My anxious mind; or sometimes mournful verse
- Indite, and sing of groves and myrtle shades,
- Or desperate lady near a purling stream,
- Or lover pendent on a willow-tree.
- Meanwhile I labor with eternal drought,
- And restless wish, and rave; my parchèd throat
- Finds no relief, nor heavy eyes repose:
- But if a slumber haply does invade
- My weary limbs, my fancy, still awake,
- Thoughtful of drink, and eager, in a dream,
- Tipples imaginary pots of ale;
- In vain;--awake I find the settled thirst
- Still gnawing, and the pleasant phantom curse.
- Thus do I live, from pleasure quite debarred,
- Nor taste the fruits that the sun’s genial rays
- Mature, john-apple, nor the downy peach,
- Nor walnut in rough-furrowed coat secure,
- Nor medlar fruit delicious in decay;
- Afflictions great! yet greater still remain.
- My galligaskins, that have long withstood
- The winter’s fury and encroaching frosts,
- By time subdued, (what will not time subdue!)
- An horrid chasm disclose with orifice
- Wide, discontinuous; at which the winds
- Eurus and Auster and the dreadful force
- Of Boreas, that congeals the Cronian waves,
- Tumultuous enter with dire chilling blasts,
- Portending agues. Thus a well-fraught ship,
- Long sails secure, or through the Ægean deep,
- Or the Ionian, till cruising near
- The Lilybean shore, with hideous crush
- On Scylla or Charybdis (dangerous rocks)
- She strikes rebounding; whence the shattered oak,
- So fierce a shock unable to withstand,
- Admits the sea. In at the gaping side
- The crowding waves gush with impetuous rage,
- Resistless, overwhelming; horrors seize
- The mariners; Death in their eyes appears,
- They stare, they lave, they pump, they swear, they pray:
- (Vain efforts!) still the battering waves rush in,
- Implacable, till, deluged by the foam,
- The ship sinks foundering in the vast abyss.
-
-John Arbuthnot, celebrated both as a physician and a man of letters,
-leaves us this bit of nonsense.
-
-
- JOHN ARBUTHNOT
-
- _A DISSERTATION ON DUMPLINGS_
-
-The dumpling is, indeed, an ancient institution and of foreign origin;
-but, alas! what were those dumplings? Nothing but a few lentils sodden
-together, moistened and cemented with a little seethed fat, not much
-unlike our grit or oatmeal pudding; yet were they of such esteem among
-the ancient Romans, that a statue was erected to Fulvius Agricola, the
-first inventor of these lentil dumplings. How unlike the gratitude
-shown by the public to our modern projectors!
-
-The Romans, though our conquerors, found themselves much outdone in
-dumplings by our forefathers, the Roman dumplings being no more to
-compare to those made by the Britons than a stone-dumpling is to a
-marrow-pudding; though, indeed, the British dumpling at that time was
-little better than what we call a stone-dumpling, nothing else but
-flour and water. But every generation growing wiser and wiser, the
-project was improved, and dumpling grew to be pudding. One projector
-found milk better than water; another introduced butter; some added
-marrow, others plums; and some found out the use of sugar; so that, to
-speak truth, we know not where to fix the genealogy or chronology of
-any of these pudding projectors; to the reproach of our historians,
-who ate so much pudding, yet have been so ungrateful to the first
-professors of this most noble science as not to find them a place in
-history....
-
-The invention of eggs was merely accidental, two or three of which
-having casually rolled from a shelf into the pudding which a goodwife
-was making, she found herself under the necessity either of throwing
-away her pudding or letting the eggs remain. But concluding, from the
-innocent quality of the eggs, that they would do no hurt, if they did
-no good, she wisely jumbled them all together, after having carefully
-picked out the shells. The consequence is easily imagined: the pudding
-became a pudding of puddings, and the use of eggs from thence took its
-date. The woman was sent for to Court to make puddings for King John,
-who then swayed the scepter, and gained such favour that she was the
-making of the whole family.
-
-I cannot conclude this paragraph without owning I received this
-important part of the history of pudding from Mr. Lawrence, of
-Wilson-Green, the greatest antiquary of the present age....
-
-From that time the English became so famous for puddings, that they are
-called pudding-eaters all over the world to this day.
-
-At her demise, the woman’s son was taken into favour, and made the
-King’s chief cook; and so great was his fame for puddings, that he was
-called Jack Pudding all over the kingdom, though, indeed, his real name
-was John Brand, as by the records of the kitchen you will find. This
-Jack Pudding became yet a greater favourite than his mother, insomuch
-that he had the King’s ear as well as his mouth at command, for the
-King, you must know, was a mighty lover of pudding. It is needless to
-enumerate the many sorts of pudding he made. He made every pudding
-except quaking pudding, which was solely invented by our friends of the
-_Bull and Mouth_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Lord Chesterfield, best known for his _Letters to his Son_, showed
-clever wit in his ideas and Phraseology.
-
-Men who converse only with women are frivolous, effeminate puppies, and
-those who never converse with them are bears.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The desire of being pleased is universal. The desire of pleasing should
-be so too. Misers are not so much blamed for being misers as envied for
-being rich.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Dissimulation to a certain degree is as necessary in business as
-clothes are in the common intercourse of life; and a man would be as
-imprudent who should exhibit his inside naked, as he would be indecent
-if he produced his outside so.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Hymen comes whenever he is called, but Love only when he pleases.
-
- * * * * *
-
-An abject flatterer has a worse opinion of others, and, if possible, of
-himself, than he ought to have.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A woman will be implicitly governed by the man whom she is in love
-with, but will not be directed by the man whom she esteems the most.
-The former is the result of passion, which is her character; the latter
-must be the effect of reasoning, which is by no means of the feminine
-gender.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The best moral virtues are those of which the vulgar are, perhaps, the
-best judges.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A fool never has thought, a madman has lost it; and an absent man is
-for the time without it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Advice is seldom welcome; and those who want it the most always like it
-the least.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of the writers who come next, chronologically, Fielding, Sterne,
-Garrick, Smollett, Foote, and others of lesser degree, we can quote no
-extracts, owing to the continuous character of their work.
-
-At this time, humor was broad and wit coarse, yet the plays and novels
-of the period have lasted and retained their reputation.
-
-Which brings us to Samuel Johnson.
-
-Doctor Johnson’s wit was ponderous, but as his is one of the greatest
-names in Eighteenth Century literature, we give a bit from _The
-Idler_ which is not entirely inappropriate to the present day.
-
-
- _ON LYING NEWS-WRITERS_
-
-No species of literary men has lately been so much multiplied as the
-writers of news. Not many years ago the nation was content with one
-gazette; but now we have not only in the metropolis papers for every
-morning and every evening, but almost every large town has its weekly
-historian, who regularly circulates his periodical intelligence, and
-fills the villages of his district with conjectures on the events of
-war, and with debates on the true interest of Europe.
-
-To write news in its perfection requires such a combination of
-qualities, that a man completely fitted for the task is not always to
-be found. In Sir Henry Wotton’s jocular definition, “An ambassador is
-said to be a man of virtue sent abroad to tell lies for the advantage
-of his country; a news-writer is a man without virtue, who writes lies
-at home for his own profit.” To these compositions is required neither
-genius nor knowledge, neither industry nor sprightliness; but contempt
-of shame and indifference to truth are absolutely necessary. He who
-by a long familiarity with infamy has obtained these qualities, may
-confidently tell to-day what he intends to contradict to-morrow; he may
-affirm fearlessly what he knows that he shall be obliged to recant, and
-may write letters from Amsterdam or Dresden to himself.
-
-In a time of war the nation is always of one mind, eager to hear
-something good of themselves and ill of the enemy. At this time the
-task of news-writers is easy; they have nothing to do but to tell that
-a battle is expected, and afterward that a battle has been fought, in
-which we and our friends, whether conquering or conquered, did all, and
-our enemies did nothing.
-
-Scarcely anything awakens attention like a tale of cruelty. The writer
-of news never fails in the intermission of action to tell how the
-enemies murdered children and ravished virgins; and, if the scene of
-action be somewhat distant, scalps half the inhabitants of a province.
-
-Among the calamities of war may be justly numbered the diminution
-of the love of truth, by the falsehoods which interest dictates and
-credulity encourages. A peace will equally leave the warrior and
-relater of wars destitute of employment; and I know not whether more
-is to be dreaded from the streets filled with soldiers accustomed to
-plunder, or from garrets filled with scribblers accustomed to lie.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Also, lapsing into sheer nonsense verse, Doctor Johnson has left for
-our delectation these delightful rhymes.
-
- As with my hat upon my head
- I walked along the Strand,
- I there did meet another man
- With his hat in his hand.
-
- The tender infant, meek and mild,
- Fell down upon the stone;
- The nurse took up the squealing child,
- But still the child squealed on.
-
- If a man who turnips cries,
- Cry not when his father dies,
- ’Tis a proof that he would rather
- Have a turnip than a father.
-
-Oliver Goldsmith, humorous writer of plays and novels, left many world
-famous books.
-
-His rhymes are often of the nonsense variety, and, as was common in his
-day, abounded in puns, or punning ideas.
-
-
- _AN ELEGY ON THE DEATH OF A MAD DOG_
-
- Good people all, of every sort,
- Give ear unto my song;
- And if you find it wondrous short
- It cannot hold you long.
-
- In Islington there was a man
- Of whom the world might say
- That still a godly race he ran
- Whene’er he went to pray.
-
- A kind and gentle heart he had,
- To comfort friends and foes;
- The naked every day he clad,
- When he put on his clothes.
-
- And in that town a dog was found,
- As many dogs there be,
- Both mongrel, puppy, whelp, and hound,
- And curs of low degree.
-
- This dog and man at first were friends,
- But when a pique began,
- The dog, to gain his private ends,
- Went mad, and bit the man.
-
- Around from all the neighbouring streets
- The wondering neighbours ran,
- And swore the dog had lost his wits
- To bite so good a man.
-
- The wound it seemed both sore and sad
- To every Christian eye;
- And while they swore the dog was mad,
- They swore the man would die.
-
- But soon a wonder came to light,
- That show’d the rogues they lied:
- The man recover’d of the bite,
- The dog it was that died.
-
-
- _AN ELEGY_
-
- ON THE GLORY OF HER SEX, MRS. MARY BLAIZE
-
- Good people all, with one accord,
- Lament for Madam Blaize,
- Who never wanted a good word--
- From those who spoke her praise.
-
- The needy seldom pass’d her door,
- And always found her kind:
- She freely lent to all the poor--
- Who left a pledge behind.
-
- She strove the neighborhood to please
- With manners wondrous winning;
- And never follow’d wicked ways--
- Unless when she was sinning.
-
- At church, in silks and satins new,
- With hoop of monstrous size,
- She never slumber’d in her pew--
- But when she shut her eyes.
-
- Her love was sought, I do aver,
- By twenty beaux and more;
- The King himself has follow’d her--
- When she has walk’d before.
-
- But now, her wealth and finery fled,
- Her hangers-on cut short all;
- The doctors found, when she was dead--
- Her last disorder mortal.
-
- Let us lament, in sorrow sore,
- For Kent Street well may say,
- That had she lived a twelvemonth more
- She had not died to-day.
-
-
- _PARSON GRAY_
-
- A quiet home had Parson Gray,
- Secluded in a vale;
- His daughters all were feminine,
- And all his sons were male.
-
- How faithfully did Parson Gray
- The bread of life dispense--
- Well “posted” in theology,
- And post and rail his fence.
-
- ’Gainst all the vices of the age
- He manfully did battle;
- His chickens were a biped breed,
- And quadruped his cattle.
-
- No clock more punctually went,
- He ne’er delayed a minute--
- Nor ever empty was his purse,
- When he had money in it.
-
- His piety was ne’er denied;
- His truths hit saint and sinner;
- At morn he always breakfasted;
- He always dined at dinner.
-
- He ne’er by any luck was grieved,
- By any care perplexed--
- No filcher he, though when he preached,
- He always “took” a text.
-
- As faithful characters he drew
- As mortal ever saw;
- But, ah! poor parson, when he died,
- His breath he could not draw.
-
-William Cowper for the most part writes with a gentle, genial spirit, a
-love of nature and a joy in the domestic relations
-
-His muse, when humorous, is also a bit stilted.
-
-
- _A FAITHFUL PICTURE OF ORDINARY SOCIETY_
-
- The circle formed, we sit in silent state,
- Like figures drawn upon a dial-plate.
- “Yes, ma’am” and “No, ma’am” uttered softly, show
- Every five minutes how the minutes go.
- Each individual, suffering a constraint--
- Poetry may, but colours cannot, paint--
- As if in close committee on the sky,
- Reports it hot or cold, or wet or dry,
- And finds a changing clime a happy source
- Of wise reflection and well-timed discourse.
- We next inquire, but softly and by stealth,
- Like conservators of the public health,
- Of epidemic throats, if such there are
- Of coughs and rheums, and phthisic and catarrh.
- That theme exhausted, a wide chasm ensues,
- Filled up at last with interesting news:
- Who danced with whom, and who are like to wed;
- And who is hanged, and who is brought to bed,
- But fear to call a more important cause,
- As if ’twere treason against English laws.
- The visit paid, with ecstasy we come,
- As from a seven years’ transportation, home
- And there resume an unembarrassed brow,
- Recovering what we lost we know not how,
- The faculties that seemed reduced to naught,
- Expression, and the privilege of thought.
-
-
- _THE COLUBRIAD_
-
- Close by the threshold of a door nailed fast,
- Three kittens sat; each kitten looked aghast.
- I, passing swift and inattentive by,
- At the three kittens cast a careless eye;
- Not much concerned to know what they did there;
- Not deeming kittens worth a poet’s care.
- But presently, a loud and furious hiss
- Caused me to stop, and to exclaim, “What’s this
- When lo! upon the threshold met my view,
- With head erect, and eyes of fiery hue,
- A viper long as Count de Grasse’s queue.
- Forth from his head his forked tongue he throws,
- Darting it full against a kitten’s nose;
- Who, having never seen, in field or house,
- The like, sat still and silent as a mouse;
- Only projecting, with attention due,
- Her whiskered face, she asked him, “Who are you?”
- On to the hall went I, with pace not slow,
- But swift as lightning, for a long Dutch hoe:
- With which well armed, I hastened to the spot
- To find the viper--but I found him not.
- And, turning up the leaves and shrubs around,
- Found only that he was not to be found;
- But still the kittens, sitting as before,
- Sat watching close the bottom of the door.
- “I hope,” said I, “the villain I would kill
- Has slipped between the door and the door-sill;
- And if I make despatch, and follow hard,
- No doubt but I shall find him in the yard”:
- (For long ere now it should have been rehearsed,
- ’Twas in the garden that I found him first.)
- E’en there I found him: there the full-grown cat
- His head, with velvet paw, did gently pat;
- As curious as the kittens erst had been
- To learn what this phenomenon might mean.
- Filled with heroic ardour at the sight,
- And fearing every moment he would bite,
- And rob our household of our only cat
- That was of age to combat with a rat;
- With outstretched hoe I slew him at the door
- And taught him never to come there no more!
-
-Richard Brinsley Sheridan, brilliant dramatist and gifted political
-orator, wrote many plays, from which it is not possible to quote at
-length.
-
-His epigrammatic style, and his humorous trend are shown in the bits
-here given.
-
-
- _LET THE TOAST PASS_
-
- FROM “THE SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL”
-
- Here’s to the maiden of bashful fifteen;
- Here’s to the widow of fifty;
- Here’s to the flaunting extravagant quean,
- And here’s to the housewife that’s thrifty.
- Let the toast pass,
- Drink to the lass,
- I’ll warrant she’ll prove an excuse for the glass.
-
- Here’s to the charmer whose dimples we prize,
- Now to the maid who has none, sir;
- Here’s to the girl with a pair of blue eyes,
- And here’s to the nymph with but one, sir.
- Let the toast pass, etc.
-
- Here’s to the maid with a bosom of snow;
- Now to her that’s as brown as a berry;
- Here’s to the wife with a face full of woe,
- And now to the damsel that’s merry.
- Let the toast pass, etc.
-
- For let ’em be clumsy, or let ’em be slim,
- Young or ancient, I care not a feather;
- So fill a pint bumper quite up to the brim,
- So fill up your glasses, nay, fill to the brim,
- And let us e’en toast them together.
- Let the toast pass, etc.
-
-
- _LORD ERSKINE’S SIMILE_
-
- Lord Erskine, at woman presuming to rail,
- Called a wife a tin canister tied to one’s tail;
- And fair Lady Anne, while this raillery he carries on,
- Seems hurt at his lordship’s degrading comparison.
- But wherefore degrading, if taken aright?
- A canister’s useful and polished and bright,
- And if dirt its original purity hide,
- ’Tis the fault of the puppy to whom it is tied.
-
-
- _SHERIDAN’S CALENDAR_
-
- January snowy,
- February flowy,
- March blowy,
-
- April showry,
- May flowry,
- June bowery,
-
- July moppy,
- August croppy,
- September poppy,
-
- October breezy,
- November wheezy,
- December freezy.
-
-George Colman, the Younger, best known as a comic dramatist, also wrote
-many poetical travesties, which he published under various titles,
-including the well known one of Broad Grins. These compositions show a
-broad humor, not always in the best taste.
-
-George Canning, among other amusements, chose to ridicule the Sapphic
-rhymes of Southey, and wrote this burlesque upon the humanitarian
-sentiments of Southey in his younger days, as well as of the Sapphic
-stanzas in which he sometimes embodied them.
-
-
- _THE FRIEND OF HUMANITY AND THE KNIFE-GRINDER_
-
- FRIEND OF HUMANITY
-
- Needy knife-grinder! whither are you going?
- Rough is the road; your wheel is out of order.
- Bleak blows the blast;--your hat has got a hole in’t;
- So have your breeches!
-
- Weary knife-grinder! little think the proud ones,
- Who in their coaches roll along the turnpike-
- Road, what hard work ’tis crying all day,
- “Knives and
- Scissors to grind O!”
-
- Tell me, knife-grinder, how came you to grind knives?
- Did some rich man tyrannically use you?
- Was it the squire? or parson of the parish?
- Or the attorney?
-
- Was it the squire for killing of his game? or
- Covetous parson for his tithes distraining?
- Or roguish lawyer made you lose your little
- All in a lawsuit?
-
- (Have you not read the Rights of Man, by Tom Paine?)
- Drops of compassion tremble on my eyelids,
- Ready to fall as soon as you have told your
- Pitiful story.
-
-
- KNIFE-GRINDER
-
- Story! God bless you! I have none to tell, sir;
- Only, last night, a-drinking at the Chequers,
- This poor old hat and breeches, as you see, were
- Torn in a scuffle.
-
- Constables came up for to take me into
- Custody; they took me before the justice;
- Justice Oldmixon put me into the parish
- Stocks for a vagrant.
-
- I should be glad to drink your honor’s health in
- A pot of beer, if you will give me sixpence;
- But for my part, I never love to meddle
- With politics, sir.
-
-
- FRIEND TO HUMANITY
-
- I give thee sixpence! I will see thee damned first,--
- Wretch! whom no sense of wrongs can rouse to vengeance,--
- Sordid, unfeeling, reprobate, degraded,
- Spiritless outcast!
-
-_(Kicks the knife-grinder, overturns his wheel, and exit in a
-transport of republican enthusiasm and universal philanthropy.)_
-
- * * * * *
-
-Robert Burns, one of the chief names in Scottish literature, has been
-called the Dictionary of Poetical Quotations.
-
-Byron said, “The rank of Burns is the very first of his art”; and the
-many-sided Scotchman had both admirers and detractors galore.
-
-It has been noted that the Scotch have a sense of humor, “because
-it is a gift.” Burns’ sense of humor secures for him a high place
-among humorists, and though coarse in his expressions, he is not
-intentionally vulgar.
-
-
- _HOLY WILLIE’S PRAYER_
-
-Holy Willie was a small farmer, leading elder to Dr. Auld, austere in
-speech, scrupulous to all outward appearances, a professing Christian.
-He experienced, however, “a sore fall”; he was “found out” to be a
-hypocrite after Burns’ castigation, and was expelled the church for
-embezzling the money of the poor of the parish. His name was William
-Fisher.
-
- O Thou, wha in the Heavens dost dwell,
- Wha, as it pleases best thysel’,
- Sends ane to Heaven and ten to Hell,
- A’ for thy glory,
- And no for onie guid or ill
- They’ve done afore thee.
-
- I bless and praise thy matchless might,
- Whan thousands thou hast left in night,
- That I am here afore thy sight,
- For gifts and grace,
- A burning an’ a shining light
- To a’ this place.
-
- What was I, or my generation,
- That I should get such exaltation?
- I, wha deserve such just damnation,
- For broken laws,
- Five thousand years ’fore my creation,
- Thro’ Adam’s cause.
-
- When frae my mither’s womb I fell,
- Thou might hae plung’d me into Hell,
- To gnash my gums, to weep and wail
- In burnin’ lake,
- Where damned Devils roar and yell,
- Chain’d to a stake.
-
- Yet I am here a chosen sample,
- To show thy grace is great and ample;
- I’m here a pillar in thy temple,
- Strong as a rock.
- A guide, a buckler, an example,
- To a’ thy flock.
-
- O L--d, thou kens what zeal I bear,
- When drinkers drink, and swearers swear,
- And singin’ here, and dancing there,
- Wi’ great and sma’:
- For I am keepit by thy fear,
- Free frae them a’.
-
- But yet, O L--d! confess I must,
- At times I’m fash’d wi’ fleshly lust,
- An’ sometimes, too, wi’ warldly trust--
- Vile self gets in;
- But thou remembers we are dust,
- Defil’d in sin.
-
- O L--d! yestreen, thou kens, wi’ Meg--
- Thy pardon I sincerely beg,
- O! may it ne’er be a livin’ plague
- To my dishonor,
- An’ I’ll ne’er lift a lawless leg
- Again upon her.
-
- Besides, I farther maun allow,
- Wi’ Lizzie’s lass, three times I trow;
- But, L--d, that Friday I was fou,
- When I came near her,
- Or else thou kens thy servant true
- Wad ne’er hae steer’d her.
-
- May be thou lets this fleshly thorn
- Beset thy servant e’en and morn,
- Lest he owre high and proud should turn,
- ’Cause he’s sae gifted;
- If sae, thy hand maun e’en be borne,
- Until thou lift it.
-
- L--d, bless thy chosen in this place,
- For here thou hast a chosen race;
- But G--d confound their stubborn face,
- And blast their name,
- Wha bring thine elders to disgrace,
- An’ public shame.
-
- L--d, mind Gawn Hamilton’s deserts,
- He drinks, an swears, an’ plays at cartes,
- Yet has sae monie takin’ arts,
- Wi’ great and sma’,
- Frae God’s ain priests the people’s hearts
- He steals awa’.
-
- An’ whan we chasten’d him therefore,
- Thou kens how he bred sic a splore,
- As set the warld in a roar
- O’ laughin’ at us,
- Curse thou his basket and his store,
- Kail and potatoes.
-
- L--d, hear my earnest cry an’ pray’r,
- Against that presbyt’ry o’ Ayr;
- Thy strong right hand, L--d, make it bare,
- Upo’ their heads;
- L--d, weigh it down, and dinna spare,
- For their misdeeds.
-
- O L--d, my G--d, that glib-tongued Aiken,
- My very heart and saul are quakin’,
- To think how we stood sweatin’, shakin’,
- An’ swat wi’ dread,
- While he wi’ hingin’ lips gaed snakin’,
- And hid his head.
-
- L--d, in the day of vengeance try him,
- L--d, visit them wha did employ him,
- And pass not in thy mercy by ’em,
- Nor hear their pray’r;
- But, for thy people’s sake, destroy ’em,
- And dinna spare.
-
- But, L--d, remember me and mine
- Wi’ mercies temp’ral and divine,
- That I for gear and grace may shine,
- Excelled by nane,
- An’ a’ the glory shall be thine,
- Amen, Amen.
-
-
- _ADDRESS TO THE TOOTHACHE_
-
- My curse upon thy venomed stang,
- That shoots my tortured gums alang;
- An’ through my lugs gies mony a twang,
- Wi’ gnawing vengeance!
- Tearing my nerves wi’ bitter pang,
- Like racking engines.
-
- When fevers burn, or ague freezes,
- Rheumatics gnaw, or cholic squeezes;
- Our neighbor’s sympathy may ease us,
- Wi’ pitying moan;
- But thee,--thou hell o’ a’ diseases,
- Aye mocks our groan.
-
- Adown my beard the slavers trickle;
- I throw the wee stools o’er the mickle,
- As round the fire the giglets keckle
- To see me loup;
- While, raving mad, I wish a heckle
- Were in their doup.
-
- O’ a’ the numerous human dools,
- Ill har’sts, daft bargains, cutty-stools,
- Or worthy friends raked i’ the mools,
- Sad sight to see!
- The tricks o’ knaves or fash o’ fools,
- Thou bear’st the gree.
-
- Where’er that place be priests ca’ hell,
- Whence a’ the tones o’ mis’ry yell,
- And rankèd plagues their numbers tell,
- In dreadfu’ raw,
- Thou, Toothache, surely bear’st the bell,
- Among them a’;
-
- O thou grim mischief-making chiel,
- That gars the notes of discord squeal,
- Till daft mankind aft dance a reel
- In gore a shoe-thick!--
- Gie a’ the faes o’ Scotland’s weal
- A fowmond’s Toothache!
-
-
- THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
-
-Quite lately, a well known humorist of the present day was making
-an after dinner speech. A voice from the audience called out,
-“Louder!--and funnier!”
-
-Some such voice must have called out to the World’s Humor at the close
-of the Eighteenth Century, for the beginning of the Nineteenth finds
-the Humorous element in literature decidedly louder and funnier.
-
-The Romantic Revival which at this time affected all literature and art
-has been called both the effect and the cause of the French Revolution.
-
-It has also been called the Renascence of Wonder, and as such it let
-loose hitherto hidebound fancies and imaginations on boundless and
-limitless flights. In these flights Humor showed speed and endurance
-quite equal to those of Romance or Poesy.
-
-Both in energy and methods, Humor came to the front with tremendous
-strides. In quality and quantity it forged ahead, both as a component
-part of more serious writings and also independently.
-
-And while this was a consummation devoutly to be wished, it makes
-harder the task of the Outliner.
-
-Many great writers held to the conviction that in Romantic poetry humor
-has no place. Others were avowed comic writers of verse or prose. But
-others still allowed humor to meet and mingle with their numbers, to a
-greater or less degree.
-
-And the difficulty of selection lies in the fact that the incidental
-humor is often funnier than the entirely humorous concept.
-
-It is hard to omit such as Jane Austen, Sir Walter Scott, William
-Wordsworth, yet quotations from their works, showing their humorous
-vein, would occupy space demanded by the humorists themselves.
-
-So, let us start in boldly with Sydney Smith, one of the most popular
-wits of all ages.
-
-Aside from this author’s epigrams and witty sayings, he wrote with
-great wisdom and insight about the principles of humor itself, from
-which we quote his sapient remarks on punning.
-
-“It is imagined that wit is a sort of inexplicable visitation, that
-it comes and goes with the rapidity of lightning, and that it is
-quite as unattainable as beauty or just proportion. I am so much of a
-contrary way of thinking, that I am convinced a man might sit down as
-systematically and as successfully, to the study of wit as he might to
-the study of mathematics; and I would answer for it that by giving up
-only six hours a day to being witty, he should come on prodigiously
-before midsummer, so that his friends should hardly know him again.
-For what is there to hinder the mind from gradually acquiring a habit
-of attending to the lighter relations of ideas in which wit consists?
-Punning grows upon everybody, and punning is the wit of words. I do not
-mean to say that it is so easy to acquire a habit of discovering new
-relations in _ideas_ as in _words_, but the difficulty is
-not so much greater as to render it insuperable to habit. One man is
-unquestionably much better calculated for it by nature than another;
-but association, which gradually makes a bad speaker a good one, might
-give a man wit who had it not, if any man chose to be so absurd as to
-sit down to acquire it.
-
-“I have mentioned puns. They are, I believe, what I have denominated
-them--the wit of words. They are exactly the same to words which wit
-is to ideas, and consist in the sudden discovery of relations in
-language. A pun, to be perfect in its kind, should contain two distinct
-meanings; the one common and obvious, the other more remote; and in
-the notice which the mind takes of the relation between these two
-sets of words, and in the surprise which that relation excites, the
-pleasure of a pun consists. Miss Hamilton, in her book on Education,
-mentions the instance of a boy so very neglectful that he could never
-be brought to read the word _patriarchs_; but whenever he met with
-it he always pronounced it _partridges_. A friend of the writer
-observed to her that it could hardly be considered as a mere piece
-of negligence, for it appeared to him that the boy, in calling them
-partridges, was _making game_ of the patriarchs. Now here are
-two distinct meanings contained in the same phrase: for to make game
-of the patriarchs is to laugh at them; or to make game of them is by
-a very extravagant and laughable sort of ignorance of words, to rank
-them among pheasants, partridges, and other such delicacies, which the
-law takes under its protection and calls game: and the whole pleasure
-derived from this pun consists in the sudden discovery that two such
-different meanings are referable to one form of expression. I have very
-little to say about puns; they are in very bad repute, and so they
-ought to be. The wit of language is so miserably inferior to the wit of
-ideas that it is very deservedly driven out of good company. Sometimes,
-indeed, a pun makes its appearance which seems for a moment to redeem
-its species; but we must not be deceived by them: it is a radically
-bad race of wit. By unremitting persecution, it has been at last got
-under, and driven into cloisters--from whence it must never again be
-suffered to emerge into the light of the world. One invaluable blessing
-produced by the banishment of punning is an immediate reduction of the
-number of wits. It is a wit of so low an order, and in which some sort
-of progress is so easily made, that the number of those endowed with
-the gift of wit would be nearly equal to those endowed with the gift of
-speech. The condition of putting together ideas in order to be witty
-operates much in the same salutary manner as the condition of finding
-rhymes in poetry;--it reduces the number of performers to those who
-have vigour enough to overcome incipient difficulties, and make a sort
-of provision that that which need not be done at all should be done
-_well_ whenever it _is_ done.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-This quotation from one of Sydney Smith’s Speeches is characteristic of
-his style.
-
-
- _MRS. PARTINGTON_
-
-I do not mean to be disrespectful, but the attempt of the Lords to stop
-the progress of reform reminds me very forcibly of the great storm of
-Sidmouth, and of the conduct of the excellent Mrs. Partington on that
-occasion. In the winter of 1824 there set in a great flood upon that
-town--the tide rose to an incredible height--the waves rushed in upon
-the houses--and everything was threatened with destruction. In the
-midst of this sublime storm, Dame Partington, who lived upon the beach,
-was seen at the door of her house with mop and pattens, trundling her
-mop, and squeezing out the seawater, and vigorously pushing away the
-Atlantic Ocean. The Atlantic was roused; Mrs. Partington’s spirit was
-up; but I need not tell you that the contest was unequal. The Atlantic
-Ocean beat Mrs. Partington. She was excellent at a slop or a puddle,
-but she should not have meddled with a tempest.--(From a Speech at
-Taunton in 1831.)
-
-And we add the ever popular Recipe for a Salad.
-
-
- _SALAD_
-
- To make this condiment, your poet begs
- The pounded yellow of two hard-boiled eggs.
- Two boiled potatoes, passed through kitchen-sieve,
- Smoothness and softness to the salad give.
- Let onion atoms lurk within the bowl,
- And, half-suspected, animate the whole.
- Of mordant mustard add a single spoon,
- Distrust the condiment that bites so soon;
- But deem it not, thou man of herbs, a fault,
- To add a double quantity of salt.
- And, lastly, o’er the flavoured compound toss
- A magic soup-spoon of anchovy sauce.
- Oh, green and glorious! Oh, herbaceous treat!
- ’Twould tempt the dying anchorite to eat;
- Back to the world he’d turn his fleeting soul,
- And plunge his fingers in the salad bowl!
- Serenely full, the epicure would say,
- Fate cannot harm me, I have dined to-day!
-
-Charles Lamb, beloved alike of the humorous and serious minded,
-disagrees with Sydney Smith regarding the pun.
-
-His opinion,
-
-“A pun is a noble thing _per se_. It is a sole digest of
-reflection; it is entire; it fills the mind; it is as perfect as a
-sonnet--better. It limps ashamed in the train and retinue of humour; it
-knows it should have an establishment of its own.”
-
-is shown in this instance.
-
-Lamb was reserved among strangers. A friend, about to introduce him to
-a circle of new faces, said, “Now will you promise, _Lamb_, not to
-be as _sheepish_ as usual?” Charles replied, with a rustic air, “I
-_wool_.”
-
-Such masterpieces as Lamb’s _Dissertation Upon Roast Pig_, and his
-_Farewell to Tobacco_ are too lengthy to quote. We give some of
-his shorter witty allusions.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Coleridge went to Germany, and left word to Lamb that if he wished any
-information on any subject, he might apply to him (i.e., by letter), so
-Lamb sent him the following abstruse propositions, to which, however,
-Coleridge did not deign an answer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Whether God loves a dying angel better than a true man?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Whether the archangel Uriel _could_ knowingly affirm an untruth,
-and whether, if he _could_, he _would_?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Whether the higher order of seraphim illuminati ever _sneeze_?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Whether an immortal and amenable soul may not come _to be damned at
-last_, and the man never suspect it beforehand?
-
-GOOD ACTIONS.--The greatest pleasure I know is to do a good
-action by stealth, and to have it found out by accident.
-
- * * * * *
-
-PAYING FOR THINGS.--One cannot bear to pay for articles he
-used to get for nothing. When Adam laid out his first penny upon
-nonpareils at some stall in Mesopotamia, I think it went hard with
-him, reflecting upon his old goodly orchard, where he had so many for
-nothing.
-
- * * * * *
-
-NOTHING TO DO.--Positively the best thing a man can have to do
-is nothing, and, _next to that_, perhaps, good works.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Robert Southey, though one time Poet Laureate, is not to be too highly
-rated as a writer. His humorous poems are largely of the “jagged
-categorical” type, and are whimseys rather than wit.
-
-Notwithstanding the aspersion even then cast upon the pun, he regards
-it as a legitimate vehicle.
-
-
- _THE TEN LOST TRIBES OF ISRAEL_
-
-That the lost ten tribes of Israel may be found in London, is a
-discovery which any person may suppose he has made, when he walks for
-the first time from the city to Wapping. That the tribes of Judah and
-Benjamin nourish there is known to all mankind; and from them have
-sprung the Scripites, and the Omniumites, and the Threepercentites.
-
-But it is not so well known that many other tribes noticed in the Old
-Testament are to be found in this island of Great Britain.
-
-There are the Hittites, who excel in one branch of gymnastics. And
-there are the Amorites, who are to be found in town and country;
-and there are the Gadites, who frequent watering-places, and take
-picturesque tours.
-
-Among the Gadites I shall have some of my best readers, who being in
-good humour with themselves and with everything else, except on a
-rainy day, will even then be in good humour with me. There will be the
-Amorites in their company; and among the Amorites, too, there will be
-some who in the overflowing of their love, will have some liking to
-spare for the doctor and his faithful memorialist.
-
-The poets, those especially who deal in erotics, lyrics, sentimentals,
-or sonnets, are the Ah-oh-ites.
-
-The gentlemen who speculate in chapels are the Puhites.
-
-The chief seat of the Simeonites is at Cambridge; but they are spread
-over the land. So are the Man-ass-ites, of whom the finest specimens
-are to be seen in St. James’s Street, at the fashionable time of day
-for exhibiting the dress and the person upon the pavement.
-
-The freemasons are of the family of the Jachinites.
-
-The female Haggites are to be seen, in low life wheeling barrows, and
-in high life seated at card-tables.
-
-The Shuhamites are the cordwainers.
-
-The Teamanites attend the sales of the East India Company.
-
-Sir James Mackintosh, and Sir James Scarlett, and Sir James Graham
-belong to the Jim-nites.
-
-Who are the Gazathites, if the people of London are not, where anything
-is to be seen? All of them are the Gettites when they can, all would be
-Havites if they could.
-
-The journalists should be Geshurites, if they answered to their
-profession; instead of this they generally turn out to be Geshuwrongs.
-
-There are, however, three tribes in England, not named in the Old
-Testament, who considerably outnumber all the rest. These are the High
-Vulgarites, who are the children of Rahank and Phashan, the Middle
-Vulgarites, who are the children of Mammon and Terade, and the Low
-Vulgarities, who are the children of Tahag, Rahag, and Bohobtay-il.
- --From “_The Doctor_.”
-
-
- _THE WELL OF ST. KEYNE_
-
- A well there is in the West country,
- And a clearer one never was seen;
- There is not a wife in the West country
- But has heard of the Well of St. Keyne.
-
- An oak and an elm tree stand beside,
- And behind does an ash-tree grow,
- And a willow from the bank above
- Droops to the water below.
-
- A traveller came to the Well of St. Keyne;
- Pleasant it was to his eye,
- For from cock-crow he had been travelling,
- And there was not a cloud in the sky.
-
- He drank of the water so cool and clear,
- For thirsty and hot was he,
- And he sat down upon the bank,
- Under the willow-tree.
-
- There came a man from the neighboring town
- At the well to fill his pail,
- On the well-side he rested it,
- And bade the stranger hail.
-
- “Now art thou a bachelor, stranger?” quoth he,
- “For an if thou hast a wife,
- The happiest draught thou hast drank this day
- That ever thou didst in thy life.
-
- “O has your good woman, if one you have,
- In Cornwall ever been?
- For an if she have, I’ll venture my life
- She has drunk of the Well of St. Keyne.”
-
- “I have left a good woman who never was here,”
- The stranger he made reply;
- “But that my draught should be better for that,
- I pray you answer me why.”
-
- “St. Keyne,” quoth the countryman, “many a time
- Drank of this crystal well,
- And before the angel summoned her
- She laid on the water a spell.
-
- “If the husband of this gifted well
- Shall drink before his wife,
- A happy man thenceforth is he,
- For he shall be master for life.
-
- “But if the wife should drink of it first,
- Heaven help the husband then!”
- The stranger stooped to the Well of St. Keyne,
- And drank of the waters again.
-
- “You drank of the well, I warrant, betimes?”
- He to the countryman said.
- But the countryman smiled as the stranger spake,
- And sheepishly shook his head.
-
- “I hastened, as soon as the wedding was done,
- And left my wife in the porch.
- But i’ faith, she had been wiser than me,
- For she took a bottle to church.”
-
-Theodore Hook, recorded as “a playwright, a punster and a practical
-joker,” also gives a dissertation on puns and a bit of helpful advice.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Personal deformities or constitutional calamities are always to be
-laid hold of. If anybody tells you that a dear friend has lost his
-sight, observe that it will make him more hospitable than ever, since
-now he would be glad _to see anybody_. If a clergyman breaks his
-leg, remark that he is no longer a clergyman, but a _lame man_.
-If a poet is seized with apoplexy, affect to disbelieve it, though you
-know it to be true, in order to say, ‘Poeta nascitur non _fit_’;
-and then, to carry the joke one step farther, add that “it is not a
-_fit_ subject for a jest.” A man falling into a tan-pit you may
-call ‘sinking in the _sublime_’; a climbing boy suffocated in a
-chimney meets with a _sootable_ death; and a pretty girl having
-caught the small-pox is to be much _pitted_. On the subject of
-the ear and its defects, talk first of something in which a _cow
-sticks_, and end by telling the story of the man who, having taken
-great pains to explain something to his companion, at last got into a
-rage at his apparent stupidity, and exclaimed, ‘Why, my dear sir, don’t
-you comprehend? The thing is as plain as A B C.’ ‘I dare say it is,’
-said the other, ‘but I am D E F.’
-
-“It may be as well to give the beginner something of a notion of
-the use he may make of the most ordinary words, for the purposes of
-quibbleism.
-
-“The loss of a hat is always _felt_; if you don’t like sugar you may
-_lump_ it; a glazier is a _panes_-taking man; candles are burnt because
-wick-ed things always come to _light_; a lady who takes you home from a
-party is kind in her _carriage_, and you say “nunc est _ridendum_” when
-you step into it; if it happens to be a chariot, she is a _charitable_
-person; birds’-nests and king-killing are synonymous, because they are
-_high trees on_; a Bill for building a bridge should be sanctioned
-by the Court of _Arches_, as well as the House of _Piers_; when a
-man is dull, he goes to the sea-side to _Brighton_; a Cockney lover,
-when sentimental, should live in _Heigh Hoburn_; the greatest fibber
-is the man most to _re-lie_ upon; a dean expecting a bishopric looks
-_for lawn_; a _sui_cide kills pigs, and not himself; a butcher is a
-gross man, but a fig-seller is a _grocer_; Joshua never had a father
-or mother, because he was the son of _Nun_; your grandmother and your
-great-grandmother were your _aunt’s sisters_; a leg of mutton is better
-than heaven, because nothing is better than heaven, and a leg of mutton
-is better than nothing; races are matters of _course_; an ass can never
-be a horse, although he may be a _mayor_; the Venerable Bede was the
-mother of Pearl; a baker makes bread when he _kneads_ it; a doctor
-cannot be a doctor all at once, because he comes to it by _degrees_;
-a man hanged at Newgate has taken a _drop_ too much; the _bridle_ day
-is that on which a man leads a woman to the halter. Never mind the
-aspirate; punning’s all fair, as the archbishop said in the dream.
-
-“Puns interrogatory are at times serviceable. You meet a man carrying
-a hare; ask him if it is his own _hare_, or a wig--there you stump
-him. Why is Parliament Street like a compendium? Because it goes to
-a _bridge_. Why is a man murdering his mother in a garret a worthy
-person? Because he is _above_ committing a crime. Instances of this
-kind are innumerable. If you want to render your question particularly
-pointed, you are, after asking it once or twice, to say ‘D’ye give it
-up?’ Then favour your friends with the solution.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Richard Harris Barham, author of the _Ingoldsby Legends_, was an
-intimate friend of Hook.
-
-Like many another true humorist he was of the clergy, being a minor
-canon of St. Paul’s cathedral.
-
-His delightful tales are too long to quote, and only some shorter
-pieces may be given.
-
-Barham was among the first to raise parody to a recognized art.
-
-
- _A “TRUE AND ORIGINAL” VERSION_
-
- In the autumn of 1824, Captain Medwin having hinted that certain
- beautiful lines on the burial of Sir John Moore might have been
- the production of Lord Byron’s muse, the late Mr. Sidney Taylor,
- somewhat indignantly, claimed them for their rightful owner,
- the Rev. Charles Wolfe. During the controversy a third claimant
- started up in the person of a _soi-disant_ “Doctor Marshall,”
- who turned out to be a Durham blacksmith, and _his_ pretensions
- a hoax. It was then that a certain “Dr. Peppercorn” put forth
- his pretensions, to what he averred was the only “true and
- original” version, viz.--
-
- Not a _sous_ had he got,--not a guinea or note,
- And he looked confoundedly flurried,
- As he bolted away without paying his shot,
- And the landlady after him hurried.
-
- We saw him again at dead of night,
- When home from the Club returning;
- We twigged the Doctor beneath the light
- Of the gas-lamp brilliantly burning.
-
- All bare, and exposed to the midnight dews,
- Reclined in the gutter we found him;
- And he looked like a gentleman taking a snooze,
- With his _Marshall_ cloak around him.
-
- “The Doctor’s as drunk as the devil,” we said,
- And we managed a shutter to borrow;
- We raised him, and sighed at the thought that his head
- Would “consumedly ache” on the morrow.
-
- We bore him home, and we put him to bed,
- And we told his wife and his daughter
- To give him, next morning a couple of red
- Herrings, with soda water.--
-
- Loudly they talked of his money that’s gone,
- And his Lady began to upbraid him;
- But little he reck’d, so they let him snore on
- ’Neath the counterpane just as we laid him.
-
- We tuck’d him in, and had hardly done
- When, beneath the window calling,
- We heard the rough voice of a son of a gun
- Of a watchman “One o’clock!” bawling.
-
- Slowly and sadly we all walked down
- From his room in the uppermost story;
- A rushlight we placed on the cold hearthstone,
- And we left him alone in his glory.
-
-
- _RAISING THE DEVIL_
-
- A LEGEND OF CORNELIUS AGRIPPA
-
- “And hast thou nerve enough?” he said,
- That gray Old Man, above whose head
- Unnumbered years had rolled,--
- “And hast thou nerve to view,” he cried,
- “The incarnate Fiend that Heaven defied!
- --Art thou indeed so bold?
-
- “Say, canst thou, with unshrinking gaze,
- Sustain, rash youth, the withering blaze
- Of that unearthly eye,
- That blasts where’er it lights,--the breath
- That, like the Simoom, scatters death
- On all that yet _can_ die!
-
- --“Darest thou confront that fearful form
- That rides the whirlwind and the storm,
- In wild unholy revel!
- The terrors of that blasted brow,
- Archangel’s once,--though ruined now--
- --Ay,--dar’st thou face THE DEVIL?”
-
- “I dare!” the desperate youth replied,
- And placed him by that Old Man’s side,
- In fierce and frantic glee,
- Unblenched his cheek, and firm his limb:
- --“No paltry juggling Fiend, but HIM,
- --THE DEVIL! I fain would see!--
-
- “In all his Gorgon terrors clad,
- His worst, his fellest shape!” the Lad
- Rejoined in reckless tone.--
- --“Have then thy wish!” Agrippa said,
- And sighed, and shook his hoary head,
- With many a bitter groan.
-
- He drew the Mystic circle’s bound,
- With skull and cross-bones fenced around;
- He traced full many a sigil there;
- He muttered many a backward pray’r,
- That sounded like a curse--
- “He comes!”--he cried with wild grimace,
- “The fellest of Apollyon’s race!”--
- --Then in his startled pupil’s face
- He dashed--an EMPTY PURSE!!
-
-Thomas De Quincey, one of the best of humorists wrote _Confessions of
-an Opium Eater_, with alas, all the necessary conditions to speak at
-first hand.
-
-His clever essay, _Murder as a Fine Art_, we trust, was not
-founded on facts. This delightful bit of foolery, one of his many witty
-effusions, can be given only in part.
-
-
- _MURDER AS ONE OF THE FINE ARTS_
-
-The first murder is familiar to you all. As the inventor of murder, and
-the father of the art, Cain must have been a man of first-rate genius.
-All the Cains were men of genius. Tubal Cain invented tubes, I think,
-or some such thing. But, whatever might be the originality and genius
-of the artist, every art was then in its infancy, and the works must be
-criticised with the recollection of that fact. Even Tubal’s work would
-probably be little approved at this day in Sheffield; and therefore
-of Cain (Cain senior, I mean) it is no disparagement to say, that his
-performance was but so-so. Milton, however, is supposed to have thought
-differently. By his way of relating the case, it should seem to have
-been rather a pet murder with him, for he retouches it with an apparent
-anxiety for its picturesque effect:
-
- “Whereat he inly raged; and, as they talk’d,
- Smote him into the midriff with a stone
- That beat out life. He fell; and, deadly pale,
- Groan’d out his soul _with gushing blood effused_.”
-
-Upon this, Richardson the painter, who had an eye for effect, remarks
-as follows, in his _Notes on Paradise Lost_, p. 497: “It has been
-thought,” says he, “that Cain beat--as the common saying is--the breath
-out of his brother’s body with a great stone; Milton gives in to this,
-with the addition, however, of a large wound.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-But it is time that I should say a few words about the principles
-of murder, not with a view to regulate your practice, but your
-judgment. As to old women, and the mob of newspaper readers, they are
-pleased with anything, provided it is bloody enough; but the mind of
-sensibility requires something more. _First_, then, let us speak
-of the kind of person who is adapted to the purpose of the murderer;
-_secondly_, of the place where; _thirdly_, of the time when,
-and other little circumstances.
-
-As to the person, I suppose that it is evident that he ought to be a
-good man; because, if he were not, he might himself, by possibility, be
-contemplating murder at the very time; and such “diamond-cut-diamond”
-tussles, though pleasant enough when nothing better is stirring, are
-really not what a critic can allow himself to call murders.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The subject chosen ought to be in good health: for it is absolutely
-barbarous to murder a sick person, who is usually quite unable to
-bear it. On this principle, no tailor ought to be chosen who is above
-twenty-five, for after that age he is sure to be dyspeptic. Or at
-least, if a man will hunt in that warren, he will of course think it
-his duty, on the old established equation, to murder some multiple of
-9--say 18, 27, or 36. And here, in this benign attention to the comfort
-of sick people, you will observe the usual effect of a fine art to
-soften and refine the feelings. The world in general, gentlemen, are
-very bloody-minded; and all they want in a murder is a copious effusion
-of blood; gaudy display in this point is enough for _them_. But
-the enlightened connoisseur is more refined in his taste; and from our
-art, as from all the other liberal arts when thoroughly mastered, the
-result is, to humanise the heart.
-
-A philosophic friend, well known for his philanthropy and general
-benignity, suggests that the subject chosen ought also to have a
-family of young children wholly dependent upon his exertions, by
-way of deepening the pathos. And, undoubtedly, this is a judicious
-caution. Yet I would not insist too keenly on such a condition. Severe
-good taste unquestionably suggests it; but still, where the man was
-otherwise unobjectionable in point of morals and health, I would not
-look with too curious a jealousy to a restriction which might have the
-effect of narrowing the artist’s sphere.
-
-So much for the person. As to the time, the place, and the tools, I
-have many things to say, which at present I have no room for. The
-good sense of the practitioner has usually directed him to night and
-privacy. Yet there have not been wanting cases where this rule was
-departed from with excellent effect.
-
- * * * * *
-
-LORD BYRON, whose works are variously adjudged by the critics,
-owes much to the fact that he was possessed of a distinct and definite
-sense of humor.
-
-It is that which saves many of his long and dull stretches of verse
-from utter unreadability.
-
-His facile rhymes, apparently tossed off with little of or no effort,
-embody in the best possible manner his graceful fun.
-
-The _ottava rima_ of Don Juan, though often careless, even
-slovenly as to technical details, is surely the meter best fitted for
-the theme.
-
- Juan embarked--the ship got under way,
- The wind was fair, the water passing rough;
- A devil of a sea rolls in that bay,
- As I, who’ve crossed it oft, know well enough;
- And, standing upon deck, the dashing spray
- Flies in one’s face, and makes it weather-tough;
- And there he stood to take, and take again,
- His first--perhaps his last--farewell of Spain.
-
- I can’t but say it is an awkward sight
- To see one’s native land receding through
- The growing waters; it unmans one quite,
- Especially when life is rather new.
- I recollect Great Britain’s coast looks white,
- But almost every other country’s blue,
- When gazing on them, mystified by distance,
- We enter on our nautical existence.
-
- So Juan stood, bewildered on the deck:
- The wind sung, cordage strained, and sailors swore,
- And the ship creaked, the town became a speck,
- From which away so fair and fast they bore.
- The best of remedies is a beef-steak
- Against sea-sickness: try it, sir, before
- You sneer, and I assure you this is true,
- For I have found it answer--so may you.
-
- “And oh! if e’er I should forget, I swear--
- But that’s impossible, and cannot be--
- Sooner shall this blue ocean melt to air,
- Sooner shall earth resolve itself to sea,
- Than I resign thine image, oh, my fair!
- Or think of anything excepting thee;
- A mind diseased no remedy can physic.”
- (Here the ship gave a lurch and he grew sea-sick.)
-
- “Sooner shall heaven kiss earth!” (Here he fell sicker.)
- “Oh, Julia! what is every other woe?
- (For God’s sake let me have a glass of liquor;
- Pedro, Battista, help me down below.)
- Julia, my love! (you rascal, Pedro, quicker)
- Oh, Julia! (this curst vessel pitches so)
- Beloved Julia, hear me still beseeching!”
- (Here he grew inarticulate with retching.)
-
- He felt that chilling heaviness of heart,
- Or rather stomach, which, alas! attends,
- Beyond the best apothecary’s art,
- The loss of love, the treachery of friends,
- Or death of those we dote on, when a part
- Of us dies with them as each fond hope ends.
- No doubt he would have been much more pathetic,
- But the sea acted as a strong emetic.
-
-
- _AFTER SWIMMING THE HELLESPONT_
-
- If, in the month of dark December,
- Leander, who was nightly wont
- (What maid will not the tale remember?)
- To cross thy stream, broad Hellespont;
-
- If, when the wint’ry tempest roar’d,
- He sped to Hero nothing loath,
- And thus of old thy current pour’d,
- Fair Venus! how I pity both!
-
- For _me_, degenerate, modern wretch,
- Though in the genial month of May,
- My dripping limbs I faintly stretch,
- And think I’ve done a feat to-day.
-
- But since he crossed the rapid tide,
- According to the doubtful story,
- To woo--and--Lord knows what beside,
- And swam for Love, as I for Glory;
-
- ’Twere hard to say who fared the best:
- Sad mortals, thus the gods still plague you!
- He lost his labour, I my jest;
- For he was drowned, and I’ve the ague.
-
-Thomas Hood, versatile alike in humorous or pathetic vein, was a
-prolific and successful punster. If the form could be forgiven anybody
-it must be condoned in his case. He also was apt at parody and often
-blended pathos and tragedy with his humorous work.
-
-
- _FAITHLESS NELLY GRAY_
-
- A PATHETIC BALLAD
-
- Ben Battle was a soldier bold,
- And used to war’s alarms;
- But a cannon-ball took off his legs,
- So he laid down his arms!
-
- Now, as they bore him off the field,
- Said he, “Let others shoot,
- For here I leave my second leg,
- And the Forty-Second Foot!”
-
- The army-surgeons made him limbs;
- Said he, “they’re only pegs:
- But there’s as wooden Members quite
- As represent my legs!”
-
- Now Ben he loved a pretty maid,
- Her name was Nelly Gray;
- So he went to pay her his devours,
- When he devoured his pay!
-
- But when he called on Nelly Gray,
- She made him quite a scoff;
- And when she saw his wooden legs,
- Began to take them off!
-
- “O, Nelly Gray! O, Nelly Gray!
- Is this your love so warm?
- The love that loves a scarlet coat
- Should be more uniform!”
-
- Said she, “I loved a soldier once,
- For he was blithe and brave;
- But I will never have a man
- With both legs in the grave!
-
- “Before you had those timber toes,
- Your love I did allow;
- But then, you know, you stand upon
- Another footing now!”
-
- “O, Nelly Gray! O, Nelly Gray!
- For all your jeering speeches;
- At duty’s call I left my legs,
- In Badajos’s _breeches_!”
-
- “Why then,” said she, “you’ve lost the feet
- Of legs in war’s alarms,
- And now you cannot wear your shoes
- Upon your feats of arms!”
-
- “O, false and fickle Nelly Gray!
- I know why you refuse:--
- Though I’ve no feet--some other man
- Is standing in my shoes!
-
- “I wish I ne’er had seen your face;
- But now, a long farewell!
- For you will be my death;--alas!
- You will not be my _Nell_!”
-
- Now when he went from Nelly Gray
- His heart so heavy got,
- And life was such a burden grown,
- It made him take a knot!
-
- So round his melancholy neck
- A rope he did entwine,
- And, for his second time in life,
- Enlisted in the Line.
-
- One end he tied around a beam,
- And then removed his pegs,
- And, as his legs were off--of course
- He soon was off his legs!
-
- And there he hung, till he was dead
- As any nail in town--
- For though distress had cut him up,
- It could not cut him down!
-
- A dozen men sat on his corpse,
- To find out why he died--
- And they buried Ben in four cross-roads,
- With a _stake_ in his inside!
-
-
- _NO!_
-
- No sun--no moon!
- No morn--no noon--
- No dawn--no dusk--no proper time of day--
- No sky--no earthly view--
- No distance looking blue--
- No road--no street--no “t’other side the way”--
- No end to any Row--
- No indications where the Crescents go--
- No top to any steeple--
- No recognitions of familiar people--
- No courtesies for showing ’em--
- No knowing ’em!
- To travelling at all--no locomotion,
- No inkling of the way--no notion--
- No go--by land or ocean--
- No mail--no post--
- No news from any foreign coast--
- No park--no ring--no afternoon gentility--
- No company--no nobility--
- No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease,
- No comfortable feel in any member--
- No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees.
- No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds.
- November!
-
-The brothers James and Horace Smith, wrote what was in their day
-considered lively and amusing humor, but which seems a trifle dry to
-us. Their greatest work was the _Rejected Addresses_, a series of
-parodies on the poets, such as Wordsworth, Southey, Coleridge, Scott,
-Moore and many others.
-
-One of these, an imitation of Wordsworth’s most simple style, succeeds
-in parodying his mawkish affectations of childish simplicity and
-nursery stammering.
-
-
- _THE BABY’S DÉBUT_
-
- [_Spoken in the character of Nancy Lake, a girl eight years of
- age, who is drawn upon the stage in a child’s chaise by Samuel
- Hughes, her uncle’s porter._]
-
- My brother Jack was nine in May,
- And I was eight on New-Year’s day;
- So in Kate Wilson’s shop
- Papa (he’s my papa and Jack’s)
- Bought me, last week, a doll of wax,
- And brother Jack a top.
-
- Jack’s in the pouts, and this it is,--
- He thinks mine came to more than his;
- So to my drawer he goes,
- Takes out the doll, and, oh, my stars!
- He pokes her head between the bars,
- And melts off half her nose!
-
- Quite cross, a bit of string I beg,
- And tie it to his peg-top’s peg,
- And bang, with might and main,
- Its head against the parlour-door:
- Off flies the head, and hits the floor,
- And breaks a window-pane.
-
- This made him cry with rage and spite:
- Well, let him cry, it serves him right.
- A pretty thing, forsooth!
- If he’s to melt, all scalding hot,
- Half my doll’s nose, and I am not
- To draw his peg-top’s tooth!
-
- Aunt Hannah heard the window break,
- And cried, “Oh naughty Nancy Lake,
- Thus to distress your aunt:
- No Drury-Lane for you to-day!”
- And while papa said, “Pooh, she may!”
- Mamma said, “No, she sha’n’t!”
-
- Well, after many a sad reproach,
- They get into a hackney coach,
- And trotted down the street.
- I saw them go: one horse was blind,
- The tails of both hung down behind,
- Their shoes were on their feet.
-
- The chaise in which poor brother Bill
- Used to be drawn to Pentonville,
- Stood in the lumber-room:
- I wiped the dust from off the top,
- While Molly mopp’d it with a mop,
- And brush’d it with a broom.
-
- My uncle’s porter, Samuel Hughes,
- Came in at six to black the shoes
- (I always talk to Sam):
- So what does he, but takes, and drags
- Me in the chaise along the flags,
- And leaves me where I am.
-
- My father’s walls are made of brick,
- But not so tall, and not so thick
- As these; and, goodness me!
- My father’s beams are made of wood,
- But never, never half so good
- As those that now I see.
-
- What a large floor! ’tis like a town!
- The carpet, when they lay it down,
- Won’t hide it, I’ll be bound;
- And there’s a row of lamps!--my eye!
- How they do blaze! I wonder why
- They keep them on the ground.
-
- At first I caught hold of the wing,
- And kept away; but Mr. Thing-
- um bob, the prompter man,
- Gave with his hand my chaise a shove,
- And said, “Go on, my pretty love;
- Speak to ’em, little Nan.
-
- “You’ve only got to curtsey, whisp-
- er, hold your chin up, laugh, and lisp,
- And then you’re sure to take:
- I’ve known the day when brats, not quite
- Thirteen, got fifty pounds a night;
- Then why not Nancy Lake?”
-
- But while I’m speaking, where’s papa?
- And where’s my aunt? and where’s mamma?
- Where’s Jack? Oh, there they sit!
- They smile, they nod; I’ll go my ways,
- And order round poor Billy’s chaise,
- To join them in the pit.
-
- And now, good gentlefolks, I go
- To join mamma, and see the show;
- So, bidding you adieu,
- I curtsey, like a pretty miss,
- And if you’ll blow to me a kiss,
- I’ll blow a kiss to you.
-
- [_Blows a kiss, and exit._
-
-
- _THE MILKMAID AND THE BANKER_
-
- A Milkmaid, with a pretty face,
- Who lived at Acton,
- Had a black cow, the ugliest in the place,
- A crooked-backed one,
- A beast as dangerous, too, as she was frightful,
- Vicious and spiteful;
- And so confirmed a truant that she bounded
- Over the hedges daily and got pounded:
- ’Twas in vain to tie her with a tether,
- For then both cow and cord eloped together.
- Armed with an oaken bough--(what folly!
- It should have been of thorn, or prickly holly),
- Patty one day was driving home the beast,
- Which had as usual slipped its anchor,
- When on the road she met a certain Banker,
- Who stopped to give his eyes a feast,
- By gazing on her features crimsoned high
- By a long cow-chase in July.
-
- “Are you from Acton, pretty lass?” he cried;
- “Yes”--with a courtesy she replied.
- “Why, then, you know the laundress, Sally Wrench?”
- “Yes, she’s my cousin, sir, and next-door neighbor.”
- “That’s lucky--I’ve a message for the wench
- Which needs despatch, and you may save my labor.
- Give her this kiss, my dear, and say I sent it:
- But mind, you owe me one--I’ve only lent it.”
- “She shall know,” cried the girl, as she brandished her bough,
- “Of the loving intentions you bore me;
- But since you’re in haste for the kiss, you’ll allow,
- That you’d better run forward and give it my cow,
- For she, at the rate she is scampering now,
- Will reach Acton some minutes before me.”
- HORACE SMITH.
-
-
- _THE JESTER CONDEMNED TO DEATH_
-
- One of the Kings of Scanderoon,
- A royal jester,
- Had in his train a gross buffoon,
- Who used to pester
- The Court with tricks inopportune,
- Venting on the highest folks his
- Scurvy pleasantries and hoaxes.
- It needs some sense to play the fool,
- Which wholesome rule
- Occurred not to our jackanapes,
- Who consequently found his freaks
- Lead to innumerable scrapes,
- And quite as many kicks and tweaks,
- Which only seemed to make him faster
- Try the patience of his master.
-
- Some sin, at last, beyond all measure,
- Incurred the desperate displeasure
- Of his serene and raging highness:
- Whether he twitched his most revered
- And sacred beard,
- Or had intruded on the shyness
- Of the seraglio, or let fly
- An epigram at royalty,
- None knows: his sin was an occult one,
- But records tell us that the Sultan,
- Meaning to terrify the knave,
- Exclaimed, “’Tis time to stop that breath:
- Thy doom is sealed, presumptuous slave!
- Thou stand’st condemned to certain death:
- Silence, base rebel! no replying!
- But such is my indulgence still,
- That, of my own free grace and will,
- I leave to thee the mode of dying.”
-
- “Thy royal will be done--’tis just,”
- Replied the wretch, and kissed the dust;
- “Since, my last moments to assuage,
- Your majesty’s humane decree
- Has deigned to leave the choice to me,
- I’ll die, so please you, of old age!”
- HORACE SMITH.
-
-It is to be regretted that the feminine writers of this period showed
-practically no evidence of humorous scintillation, but we have
-searched in vain through the writings of Ann and Jane Taylor, Mary
-Russell Mitford, Felicia Hemans and Letitia Elizabeth Landon,--finding
-only some unconscious humor, not at all intentional on the part of the
-authoresses, as they were then called.
-
-William Maginn was also adept at parody, but his work was ephemeral.
-
-The rollicking rhyme of the Irishman is among the most interesting of
-his poems.
-
-
- _THE IRISHMAN_
-
- There was a lady lived at Leith,
- A lady very stylish, man,
- And yet, in spite of all her teeth,
- She fell in love with an Irishman,
- A nasty, ugly Irishman,
- A wild, tremendous Irishman,
- A tearing, swearing, thumping, bumping, ranting, roaring Irishman.
-
- His face was no ways beautiful,
- For with small-pox ’twas scarred across,
- And the shoulders of the ugly dog
- Were almost double a yard across.
- Oh, the lump of an Irishman,
- The whisky-devouring Irishman,
- The great he-rogue, with his wonderful brogue, the fighting,
- rioting Irishman!
-
- One of his eyes was bottle-green,
- And the other eye was out, my dear,
- And the calves of his wicked-looking legs
- Were more than two feet about, my dear.
- Oh, the great big Irishman,
- The rattling, battling Irishman,
- The stamping, ramping, swaggering, staggering, leathering swash of
- an Irishman!
-
- He took so much of Lundy-foot
- That he used to snort and snuffle, oh,
- And in shape and size the fellow’s neck
- Was as bad as the neck of a buffalo.
- Oh, the horrible Irishman,
- The thundering, blundering Irishman,
- The slashing, dashing, smashing, lashing, thrashing, hashing
- Irishman!
-
- His name was a terrible name indeed,
- Being Timothy Thady Mulligan;
- And whenever he emptied his tumbler of punch,
- He’d not rest till he’d filled it full again.
- The boozing, bruising Irishman,
- The ’toxicated Irishman,
- The whisky, frisky, rummy, gummy, brandy, no-dandy Irishman.
-
- This was the lad the lady loved,
- Like all the girls of quality;
- And he broke the skulls of the men of Leith,
- Just by the way of jollity.
- Oh, the leathering Irishman,
- The barbarous, savage Irishman!
- The hearts of the maids and the gentlemen’s heads were bothered,
- I’m sure, by this Irishman.
-
-Thomas Haynes Bayly, though not especially a humorist, showed the
-influence of a witty muse in his songs, which were numerous and popular.
-
-_She Wore a Wreath of Roses_, _Oh, No, We Never Mention Her_
-and _Gaily the Troubadour Touched his Guitar_ are among the best
-remembered.
-
-He was the author of many bright bits of Society Verse, and wrote some
-deep and very real satire.
-
-
- _WHY DON’T THE MEN PROPOSE?_
-
- Why don’t the men propose, mamma?
- Why don’t the men propose?
- Each seems just coming to the point,
- And then away he goes;
- It is no fault of yours, mamma,
- _That_ everybody knows;
- You _fête_ the finest men in town,
- Yet, oh! they won’t propose.
-
- I’m sure I’ve done my best, mamma,
- To make a proper match;
- For coronets and eldest sons,
- I’m ever on the watch;
- I’ve hopes when some _distingué_ beau
- A glance upon me throws;
- But though he’ll dance and smile and flirt,
- Alas! he won’t propose.
-
- I’ve tried to win by languishing,
- And dressing like a blue;
- I’ve bought big books and talked of them
- As if I’d read them through!
- With hair cropp’d like a man I’ve felt
- The heads of all the beaux;
- But Spurzheim could not touch their hearts,
- And oh! they won’t propose.
-
- I threw aside the books, and thought
- That ignorance was bliss;
- I felt convinced that men preferred
- A simple sort of Miss;
- And so I lisped out nought beyond
- Plain “yesses” or plain “noes,”
- And wore a sweet unmeaning smile;
- Yet, oh! they won’t propose.
-
- Last night at Lady Ramble’s rout
- I heard Sir Henry Gale
- Exclaim, “Now I _propose_ again----”
- I started, turning pale;
- I really thought my time was come,
- I blushed like any rose;
- But oh! I found ’twas only at
- _Ecarté_ he’d propose.
-
- And what is to be done, mamma?
- Oh, what is to be done?
- I really have no time to lose,
- For I am thirty-one;
- At balls I am too often left
- Where spinsters sit in rows;
- Why don’t the men propose, mamma?
- Why _won’t_ the men propose?
-
-Frederick Marryat, oftener spoken of as Captain Marryat was among the
-most renowned writers of sea stories, and easily the most humorous of
-the authors who chose the sea for their fictional setting.
-
-His books are well known in all households, and after Dickens there is
-probably no English novelist who has caused more real chuckles.
-
-
- _NAUTICAL TERMS_
-
-All the sailors were busy at work, and the first lieutenant cried out
-to the gunner, “Now, Mr. Dispart, if you are ready, we’ll breech these
-guns.”
-
-“Now, my lads,” said the first lieutenant, “we must slug (the part the
-breeches cover) more forward.” As I never had heard of a gun having
-breeches, I was very curious to see what was going on, and went up
-close to the first lieutenant, who said to me, “Youngster, hand me that
-_monkey’s tail_.” I saw nothing like a _monkey’s tail_, but I was so
-frightened that I snatched up the first thing that I saw, which was
-a short bar of iron, and it so happened that it was the very article
-which he wanted. When I gave it to him, the first lieutenant looked at
-me, and said, “So you know what a monkey’s tail is already, do you? Now
-don’t you ever sham stupid after that.”
-
-Thought I to myself, I’m very lucky, but if that’s a monkey’s tail,
-it’s a very stiff one!
-
-I resolved to learn the names of everything as fast as I could, that I
-might be prepared, so I listened attentively to what was said; but I
-soon became quite confused, and despaired of remembering anything.
-
-“How is this to be finished off, sir?” inquired a sailor of the
-boatswain.
-
-“Why, I beg leave to hint to you, sir, in the most delicate manner
-in the world,” replied the boatswain, “that it must be with a
-_double-wall_--and be damned to you--don’t you know that yet?
-Captain of the foretop,” said he, “up on your _horses_, and take
-your _stirrups_ up three inches.” “Aye, aye, sir.” I looked and
-looked, but I could see no horses.
-
-“Mr. Chucks,” said the first lieutenant to the boatswain, “what blocks
-have we below--not on charge?”
-
-“Let me see, sir. I’ve one _sister_, t’other we split in half the other
-day, and I think I have a couple of _monkeys_ down in the store-room. I
-say, you Smith, pass that brace through the _bull’s eye_, and take the
-_sheep-shank_ out before you come down.”
-
-And then he asked the first lieutenant whether something should
-not be fitted with a _mouse_ or only a _Turk’s-head_--told him the
-_goose-neck_ must be spread out by the armourer as soon as the forge
-was up. In short, what with _dead-eyes_ and _shrouds_, _cats_ and
-_cat-blocks_, _dolphins_ and _dolphin-strikers, whips_ and _puddings_,
-I was so puzzled with what I heard, that I was about to leave the deck
-in absolute despair.
-
-“And, Mr. Chucks, recollect this afternoon that you _bleed_ all the
-_buoys_.”
-
-Bleed the boys, thought I; what can that be for? At all events, the
-surgeon appears to be the proper person to perform that operation.
- --_Peter Simple._
-
-Douglas Jerrold was an infant prodigy and later a noted playwright;
-beside being the author of the world famous Caudle lectures.
-
-He was a celebrated wit and punster and though many epigrammatic
-sayings are wrongly attributed to him, yet he was the originator of as
-many more.
-
-
- _COLD MUTTON, PUDDING, PANCAKES_
-
-“What am I grumbling about, now? It’s very well for you to ask that!
-I’m sure I’d better be out of the world than--there now, Mr Caudle;
-there you are again! I _shall_ speak, sir. It isn’t often I open my
-mouth, Heaven knows! But you like to hear nobody talk but yourself. You
-ought to have married a negro slave, and not any respectable woman.
-
-“You’re to go about the house looking like thunder all the day, and
-I’m not to say a word. Where do you think pudding’s to come from every
-day? You show a nice example to your children, you do; complaining, and
-turning your nose up at a sweet piece of cold mutton, because there’s
-no pudding! You go a nice way to make ’em extravagant--teach ’em nice
-lessons to begin the world with. Do you know what puddings cost; or do
-you think they fly in at the window?
-
-“You hate cold mutton. The more shame for you, Mr. Caudle. I’m sure
-you’ve the stomach of a lord, you have. No, sir; I didn’t choose to
-hash the mutton. It’s very easy for you to say hash it; but _I_
-know what a joint loses in hashing: it’s a day’s dinner the less, if
-it’s a bit. Yes, I dare say; other people may have puddings with cold
-mutton. No doubt of it; and other people become bankrupts. But if ever
-you get into the _Gazette_, it sha’n’t be _my_ fault--no;
-I’ll do my duty as a wife to you, Mr. Caudle; you shall never have it
-to say that it was _my_ housekeeping that brought you to beggary.
-No; you may sulk at the cold meat--ha! I hope you’ll never live to want
-such a piece of cold mutton as we had to-day! and you may threaten
-to go to a tavern to dine; but, with our present means, not a crumb
-of pudding do you get from me. You shall have nothing but the cold
-joint--nothing, as I’m a Christian sinner.
-
-“Yes; there you are, throwing those fowls in my face again! I know you
-once brought home a pair of fowls; I know it; but you were mean enough
-to want to stop ’em out of my week’s money! Oh, the selfishness--the
-shabbiness of men! They can go out and throw away pounds upon pounds
-with a pack of people who laugh at ’em afterward; but if it’s anything
-wanted for their own homes, their poor wives may hunt for it. I wonder
-you don’t blush to name those fowls again! I wouldn’t be so little for
-the world, Mr. Caudle!
-
-“What are you going to do? _Going to get up?_ Don’t make yourself
-ridiculous, Mr. Caudle; I can’t say a word to you like any other wife,
-but you must threaten to get up. _Do_ be ashamed of yourself.
-
-“Puddings, indeed! Do you think I’m made of puddings? Didn’t you have
-some boiled rice three weeks ago? Besides, is this the time of the
-year for puddings? It’s all very well if I had money enough allowed
-me like any other wife to keep the house with; then, indeed, I might
-have preserves like any other woman; now, it’s impossible; and it’s
-cruel--yes, Mr. Caudle, cruel--of you to expect it.
-
-“_Apples ar’n’t so dear, are they?_ I know what apples are, Mr.
-Caudle, without your telling me. But I suppose you want something more
-than apples for dumplings? I suppose sugar costs something, doesn’t it?
-And that’s how it is. That’s how one expense brings on another, and
-that’s how people go to ruin.
-
-“_Pancakes?_ What’s the use of your lying muttering there about
-pancakes? Don’t you always have ’em once a year--every Shrove Tuesday?
-And what would any moderate, decent man want more?
-
-“Pancakes, indeed! Pray, Mr. Caudle--no, it’s no use your saying fine
-words to me to let you go to sleep; I sha’n’t. Pray, do you know the
-price of eggs just now? There’s not an egg you can trust to under seven
-and eight a shilling; well, you’ve only just to reckon up how many
-eggs--don’t lie swearing there at the eggs in that manner, Mr. Caudle;
-unless you expect the bed to let you fall through. You call yourself a
-respectable tradesman, I suppose? Ha! I only wish people knew you as
-well as I do! Swearing at eggs, indeed! But I’m tired of this usage,
-Mr. Caudle; quite tired of it; and I don’t care how soon it’s ended!
-
-“I’m sure I do nothing but work and labour, and think how to make the
-most of everything; and this is how I’m rewarded.”
-
- --_Mrs. Caudle’s Curtain Lectures._
-
-“Call that a kind man,” said an actor of an absent acquaintance; “a man
-who is away from his family, and never sends them a farthing! Call that
-kindness!” “Yes, unremitting kindness,” Jerrold replied.
-
-Some member of “Our Club,” hearing an air mentioned, exclaimed: “That
-always carries me away when I hear it.” “Can nobody whistle it?”
-exclaimed Jerrold.
-
-A friend said to Jerrold: “Have you heard about poor R---- [a lawyer]?
-His business is going to the devil.” Jerrold answered: “That’s all
-right: then he is sure to get it back again.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-If an earthquake were to engulf England to-morrow, the English would
-meet and dine somewhere just to celebrate the event.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of a man who had pirated one of his jests, and who was described in his
-hearing as an honest fellow, he said, “Oh yes, you can trust him with
-untold jokes.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Jerrold met Alfred Bunn one day in Piccadilly. Bunn stopped Jerrold,
-and said, “I suppose you’re strolling about, picking up character.”
-“Well, not exactly,” said Jerrold, “but there’s plenty lost hereabouts.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Jerrold was seriously disappointed with a certain book written by
-one of his friends. This friend heard that he had expressed his
-disappointment. _Friend_ (to Jerrold): “I heard you said it was
-the worst book I ever wrote.” _Jerrold_: “No, I didn’t. I said it
-was the worst book anybody ever wrote.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some one was talking with him about a gentleman as celebrated for
-the intensity as for the shortness of his friendships. “Yes,” said
-Jerrold, “his friendships are so warm, that he no sooner takes them up
-than he puts them down again.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thomas Moore, called the most successful Irishman of letters of the
-nineteenth century, early developed a taste for music and a talent for
-versification. To this add his native wit, and we have a humorist of no
-mean order.
-
-He wrote epistles, odes, satires and songs with equal facility, and to
-these he added books of travel and biography and history.
-
-His quick wit is shown in his lighter verse and epigrams.
-
-
- _NONSENSE_
-
- Good reader, if you e’er have seen,
- When Phœbus hastens to his pillow,
- The mermaids with their tresses green
- Dancing upon the western billow;
- If you have seen at twilight dim,
- When the lone spirit’s vesper hymn
- Floats wild along the winding shore,
- The fairy train their ringlets weave
- Glancing along the spangled green;--
- If you have seen all this, and more,
- God bless me! what a deal you’ve seen!
-
-
- _LYING_
-
- I do confess, in many a sigh,
- My lips have breath’d you many a lie,
- And who, with such delights in view,
- Would lose them for a lie or two?
-
- Nay--look not thus, with brow reproving:
- Lies are, my dear, the soul of loving!
- If half we tell the girls were true,
- If half we swear to think and do,
- Were aught but lying’s bright illusion,
- The world would be in strange confusion!
- If ladies’ eyes were, every one,
- As lovers swear, a radiant sun,
- Astronomy should leave the skies,
- To learn her lore in ladies’ eyes!
- Oh no!--believe me, lovely girl,
- When nature turns your teeth to pearl,
- Your neck to snow, your eyes to fire,
- Your yellow locks to golden wire,
- Then, only then, can heaven decree,
- That you should live for only me,
- Or I for you, as night and morn,
- We’ve swearing kiss’d, and kissing sworn.
- And now, my gentle hints to clear,
- For once, I’ll tell you truth, my dear!
- Whenever you may chance to meet
- A loving youth, whose love is sweet,
- Long as you’re false and he believes you,
- Long as you trust and he deceives you,
- So long the blissful bond endures;
- And while he lies, his heart is yours:
- But, oh! you’ve wholly lost the youth
- The instant that he tells you truth!
-
-
- _WHAT’S MY THOUGHT LIKE?_
-
- _Quest._--Why is a Pump like Viscount Castlereagh?
- _Answ._--Because it is a slender thing of wood,
- That up and down its awkward arm doth sway,
- And coolly spout, and spout, and spout away,
- In one weak, washy, everlasting flood!
-
-
- _OF ALL THE MEN_
-
- Of all the men one meets about,
- There’s none like Jack--he’s everywhere:
- At church--park--auction--dinner--rout--
- Go when and where you will, he’s there.
- Try the West End, he’s at your back--
- Meets you, like Eurus, in the East--
- You’re call’d upon for “How do, Jack?”
- One hundred times a day, at least.
- A friend of his one evening said,
- As home he took his pensive way,
- “Upon my soul, I fear Jack’s dead--
- I’ve seen him but three times to-day!”
-
-
- _ON TAKING A WIFE_
-
- “Come, come,” said Tom’s father, “at your time of life,
- There’s no longer excuse for thus playing the rake.--
- It is time you should think, boy, of taking a wife.”--
- “Why, so it is, father,--whose wife shall I take?”
-
-
- _UPON BEING OBLIGED TO LEAVE A PLEASANT PARTY_
-
- FROM THE WANT OF A PAIR OF BREECHES TO DRESS FOR DINNER IN
-
- Between Adam and me the great difference is,
- Though a paradise each has been forced to resign,
- That he never wore breeches till turn’d out of his,
- While, for want of my breeches, I’m banish’d from mine.
-
-Samuel Lover and Charles James Lever are two more versatile Irish
-authors, the latter being the most eminent of the Irish novelists.
-
-Both wrote delightful light verse and many popular songs.
-
-
- _RORY O’MORE_
-
- Young Rory O’More courted young Kathleen Bawn.
- He was bold as a hawk, and she soft as the dawn.
- He wished in his heart pretty Kathleen to please,
- And he thought the best way to do that was to tease.
- “Now, Rory, be aisy,” sweet Kathleen would cry,
- Reproof on her lips, but a smile in her eye;
- “With your tricks I don’t know in troth what I’m about!
- Faith! you’ve teased till I’ve put on my cloak inside out.”
- “Oh, jewel,” says Rory, “that same is the way
- You’ve thrated my heart for this many a day;
- And ’tis plased that I am, and why not, to be sure,
- For ’tis all for good luck,” says bold Rory O’More.
-
- “Indeed, then,” says Kathleen, “don’t think of the like,
- For I half gave a promise to soothering Mike;
- The ground that I walk on he loves, I’ll be bound.”
- “Faith,” says Rory, “I’d rather love you than the ground.”
- “Now, Rory, I’ll cry if you don’t let me go,
- Sure, I dream every night that I’m hating you so.”
- “Oh!” says Rory, “that same I’m delighted to hear,
- For dhrames always go by conthrairies, my dear;
- Oh! jewel, keep dhraming that same till you die,
- And bright morning will give dirty night the black lie.
- And ’tis plased that I am, and why not, to be sure,
- Since ’tis all for good luck,” says bold Rory O’More.
-
- “Arrah, Kathleen, my darlint, you’ve teased me enough,
- And I’ve thrashed for your sake Dinny Grimes and Jim Duff;
- And I’ve made myself, drinking your health, quite a baste,
- So, I think, after that, I may talk to the praste.”
- Then Rory, the rogue, stole his arm round her neck,
- So soft and so white, without freckle or speck!
- And he looked in her eyes that were beaming with light;
- And he kissed her sweet lips. Don’t you think he was right?
- “Now, Rory, leave off, sir--you’ll hug me no more--
- There’s eight times to-day that you’ve kissed me before.”
- “Then here goes another,” says he, “to make sure.
- For there’s luck in odd numbers,” says Rory O’More.
- SAMUEL LOVER.
-
-
- _LANTY LEARY_
-
- Lanty was in love, you see,
- With lovely, lively Rosie Carey;
- But her father can’t agree
- To give the girl to Lanty Leary.
- Up to fun, “Away we’ll run,”
- Says she; “my father’s so conthrairy.
- Won’t you follow me? Won’t you follow me?”
- “Faith, I will!” says Lanty Leary.
-
- But her father died one day
- (I hear ’twas not by dhrinkin’ wather);
- House and land and cash, they say,
- He left by will to Rose his daughter;
- House and land and cash to seize,
- Away she cut so light and airy.
- “Won’t you follow me? Won’t you follow me?”
- “Faith, I will!” says Lanty Leary.
-
- Rose, herself, was taken bad,
- The fayver worse each day was growin’;
- “Lanty, dear,” says she, “’tis sad,
- To th’ other world I’m surely goin’.
- You can’t survive my loss, I know,
- Nor long remain in Tipperary.
- Won’t you follow me? Won’t you follow me?”
- “Faith, I won’t!” says Lanty Leary.
- SAMUEL LOVER.
-
-
- _WIDOW MALONE_
-
- Did you hear of the Widow Malone, ohone!
- Who lived in the town of Athlone, ohone?
- Oh! she melted the hearts of the swains in them parts,
- So lovely the Widow Malone, ohone!
- So lovely the Widow Malone.
-
- Of lovers she had a full score, or more,
- And fortunes they all had galore, in store;
- From the minister down to the clerk of the crown,
- All were courting the Widow Malone, ohone!
- All were courting the Widow Malone.
-
- But so modest was Mistress Malone, ’twas known,
- That no one could see her alone, ohone!
- Let them ogle and sigh, they could ne’er catch her eye,
- So bashful the Widow Malone, ohone!
- So bashful the Widow Malone.
-
- Till one Mister O’Brien, from Clare--how quare!
- It’s little for blushing they care down there,
- Put his arm round her waist--gave ten kisses at laste--
- “Oh,” says he, “you’re my Molly Malone, my own!
- Oh,” says he, “you’re my Molly Malone.”
-
- And the widow they all thought so shy, my eye!
- Ne’er thought of a simper or sigh, for why?
- “But, Lucius,” says she, “since you’ve now made so free,
- You may marry your Mary Malone, ohone!
- You may marry your Mary Malone.”
- CHARLES LEVER.
-
-Winthrop Mackworth Praed belongs to the small group of Londoners which
-also included Calverley and Locker-Lampson. At least one great critic
-considers Praed the greatest of this band, and so far as metric skill
-and finished execution are concerned, he may well be called so. Also,
-his taste is impeccable, and his society verse ranks among the best.
-
-
- _A SONG OF IMPOSSIBILITIES_
-
- Lady, I loved you all last year,
- How honestly and well--
- Alas! would weary you to hear,
- And torture me to tell;
- I raved beneath the midnight sky,
- I sang beneath the limes--
- Orlando in my lunacy,
- And Petrarch in my rhymes.
- But all is over! When the sun
- Dries up the boundless main,
- When black is white, false-hearted one,
- I may be yours again!
-
- When passion’s early hopes and fears
- Are not derided things;
- When truth is found in falling tears,
- Or faith in golden rings;
- When the dark Fates that rule our way
- Instruct me where they hide
- One woman that would ne’er betray,
- One friend that never lied;
- When summer shines without a cloud,
- And bliss without a pain;
- When worth is noticed in a crowd,
- I may be yours again!
-
- When science pours the light of day
- Upon the lords of lands;
- When Huskisson is heard to say
- That Lethbridge understands;
- When wrinkles work their way in youth,
- Or Eldon’s in a hurry;
- When lawyers represent the truth,
- Or Mr. Sumner Surrey;
- When aldermen taste eloquence
- Or bricklayers champagne;
- When common law is common sense,
- I may be yours again!
-
- When Pole and Thornton honour cheques,
- Or Mr. Const a rogue;
- When Jericho’s in Middlesex,
- Or minuets in vogue;
- When Highgate goes to Devonport,
- Or fashion to Guildhall;
- When argument is heard at Court,
- Or Mr. Wynn at all;
- When Sydney Smith forgets to jest,
- Or farmers to complain;
- When kings that are are not the best,
- I may be yours again!
-
- When peers from telling money shrink,
- Or monks from telling lies;
- When hydrogen begins to sink,
- Or Grecian scrip to rise;
- When German poets cease to dream,
- Americans to guess;
- When Freedom sheds her holy beam
- On Negroes, and the Press;
- When there is any fear of Rome,
- Or any hope of Spain;
- When Ireland is a happy home,
- I may be yours again!
-
- When you can cancel what has been,
- Or alter what must be,
- Or bring once more that vanished scene,
- Those withered joys to me;
- When you can tune the broken lute,
- Or deck the blighted wreath,
- Or rear the garden’s richest fruit,
- Upon a blasted heath;
- When you can lure the wolf at bay
- Back to his shattered chain,
- To-day may then be yesterday--
- I may be yours again!
-
-William Makepeace Thackeray, combining all the highest mental and moral
-qualities in his work, adds thereto a delicate and subtle humor, never
-broad, but always forcible and original.
-
-This permeates all his novels, which, of course, may not be quoted
-here, even in excerpts.
-
-But Thackeray was equally happy in verse, and his contributions to
-London _Punch_ are among the treasures of that journal’s history.
-
-
- _LITTLE BILLEE_
-
- There were three sailors of Bristol City
- Who took a boat and went to sea,
- But first with beef and captain’s biscuits,
- And pickled pork they loaded she.
-
- There was gorging Jack, and guzzling Jimmy,
- And the youngest he was little Billee.
- Now when they’d got as far as the Equator
- They’d nothing left but one split pea.
-
- Says gorging Jack to guzzling Jimmy,
- “I am extremely hungaree.”
- To gorging Jack says guzzling Jimmy,
- “We’ve nothing left, us must eat we.”
-
- Says gorging Jack to guzzling Jimmy,
- “With one another we shouldn’t agree!
- There’s little Bill, he’s young and tender,
- We’re old and tough, so let’s eat he.”
-
- “O Billy! we’re going to kill and eat you,
- So undo the button of your chemie.”
- When Bill received this information,
- He used his pocket-handkerchie.
-
- “First let me say my catechism,
- Which my poor mother taught to me.”
- “Make haste! make haste!” says guzzling Jimmy,
- While Jack pulled out his snicker-snee.
-
- Then Bill went up to the main-top-gallant-mast,
- And down he fell on his bended knee,
- He scarce had come to the Twelfth Commandment
- When up he jumps--“There’s land I see!”
-
- “Jerusalem and Madagascar,
- And North and South Amerikee,
- There’s the British flag a-riding at anchor,
- With Sir Admiral Napier, K. C. B.”
-
- So when they got aboard of the Admiral’s,
- He hanged fat Jack and flogged Jimmee,
- But as for little Bill, he made him
- The captain of a Seventy-three.
-
-
- _THE WOLFE NEW BALLAD OF JANE RONEY AND MARY BROWN_
-
- An igstrawnary tail I vill tell you this veek--
- I stood in the Court of A’Beckett the Beak,
- Vere Mrs. Jane Roney, a vidow, I see,
- Who charged Mary Brown with a robbin’ of she.
-
- This Mary was pore and in misery once,
- And she came to Mrs. Roney it’s more than twelve monce
- She adn’t got no bed, nor no dinner, nor no tea,
- And kind Mrs. Roney gave Mary all three.
-
- Mrs. Roney kep Mary for ever so many veeks
- (Her conduct disgusted the best of all Beax),
- She kept her for nothink, as kind as could be,
- Never thinking that this Mary was a traitor to she.
-
- “Mrs. Roney, O Mrs. Roney, I feel very ill;
- Will you jest step to the doctor’s for to fetch me a pill?”
- “That I will, my pore Mary,” Mrs. Roney says she:
- And she goes off to the doctor’s as quickly as may be.
-
- No sooner on this message Mrs. Roney was sped,
- Than hup gits vicked Mary, and jumps out a bed;
- She hopens all the trunks without never a key--
- She bustes all the boxes, and vith them makes free.
-
- Mrs. Roney’s best linning gownds, petticoats, and close,
- Her children’s little coats and things, her boots and her hose,
- She packed them, and she stole ’em, and avay vith them did flee
- Mrs. Roney’s situation--you may think vat it vould be!
-
- Of Mary, ungrateful, who had served her this vay,
- Mrs. Roney heard nothink for a long year and a day,
- Till last Thursday, in Lambeth, ven whom should she see?
- But this Mary, as had acted so ungrateful to she.
-
- She was leaning on the helbo of a worthy young man;
- They were going to be married, and were walkin’ hand in hand;
- And the church-bells was a ringing for Mary and he,
- And the parson was ready, and a waitin’ for his fee.
-
- When up comes Mrs. Roney, and faces Mary Brown,
- Who trembles, and castes her eyes upon the ground.
- She calls a jolly pleaseman, it happens to be me;
- I charge this young woman, Mr. Pleaseman, says she.
-
- Mrs. Roney, o, Mrs. Roney, o, do let me go,
- I acted most ungrateful I own, and I know,
- But the marriage bell is ringin’ and the ring you may see,
- And this young man is a waitin’ says Mary, says she.
-
- I don’t care three fardens for the parson and clark,
- And the bell may keep ringing from noon day to dark.
- Mary Brown, Mary Brown, you must come along with me.
- And I think this young man is lucky to be free.
-
- So, in spite of the tears which bejewed Mary’s cheek,
- I took that young gurl to A’Beckett the Beak;
- That exlent justice demanded her plea--
- But never a sullable said Mary said she.
-
- On account of her conduck so base and so vile,
- That wicked young gurl is committed for trile,
- And if she’s transpawted beyond the salt sea,
- It’s a proper reward for such willians as she.
-
- Now, you young gurls of Southwark for Mary who veep,
- From pickin’ and stealin’ your ’ands you must keep,
- Or it may be my dooty, as it was Thursday veek
- To pull you all hup to A’Beckett the Beak.
-
-
- _WHEN MOONLIKE ORE THE HAZURE SEAS_
-
- When moonlike ore the hazure seas
- In soft effulgence swells,
- When silver jews and balmy breaze
- Bend down the Lily’s bells;
- When calm and deap, the rosy sleap
- Has lapt your soal in dreems,
- R Hangeline! R lady mine!
- Dost thou remember Jeames?
-
- I mark thee in the Marble ’all,
- Where England’s loveliest shine--
- I say the fairest of them hall
- Is Lady Hangeline.
- My soul, in desolate eclipse,
- With recollection teems--
- And then I hask, with weeping lips,
- Dost thou remember Jeames?
-
- Away! I may not tell thee hall
- This soughring heart endures--
- There is a lonely sperrit-call
- That Sorrow never cures;
- There is a little, little Star,
- That still above me beams;
- It is the Star of Hope--but ar!
- Dost thou remember Jeames?
-
-
- _SORROWS OF WERTHER_
-
- Werther had a love for Charlotte
- Such as words could never utter.
- Would you know how first he met her?
- She was cutting bread and butter.
-
- Charlotte was a married lady,
- And a moral man was Werther,
- And, for all the wealth of Indies,
- Would do nothing for to hurt her.
-
- So he sighed and pined and ogled,
- And his passion boiled and bubbled,
- Till he blew his silly brains out,
- And no more was by it troubled.
-
- Charlotte, having seen his body
- Borne before her on a shutter,
- Like a well-conducted person
- Went on cutting bread and butter.
-
-Charles Dickens, in some senses the world’s greatest humorist, is too
-much of a household word, to need either introduction or quotation.
-
-Nor is it easy to quote from his books, which must be read in their
-entirety or in long instalments to get their message.
-
-One short extract is given, from _Martin Chuzzlewit_.
-
-
- _MRS. GAMP’S APARTMENT_
-
-Mrs. Gamp’s apartment in Kingsgate Street, High Holborn, wore,
-metaphorically speaking, a robe of state. It was swept and garnished
-for the reception of a visitor. That visitor was Betsy Prig; Mrs.
-Prig of Bartlemy’s; or, as some said, Barklemy’s; or, as some said,
-Bardlemy’s; for by all these endearing and familiar appellations had
-the hospital of St. Bartholomew become a household word among the
-sisterhood which Betsy Prig adorned.
-
-Mrs. Gamp’s apartment was not a spacious one, but, to a contented mind,
-a closet is a palace; and the first-floor front at Mr. Sweedlepipe’s
-may have been, in the imagination of Mrs. Gamp, a stately pile. If it
-were not exactly that to restless intellects, it at least comprised as
-much accommodation as any person not sanguine to insanity could have
-looked for in a room of its dimensions. For only keep the bedstead
-always in your mind, and you were safe. That was the grand secret.
-Remembering the bedstead, you might even stoop to look under the little
-round table for anything you had dropped, without hurting yourself
-much against the chest of drawers, or qualifying as a patient of St.
-Bartholomew by falling into the fire. Visitors were much assisted in
-their cautious efforts to preserve an unflagging recollection of this
-piece of furniture by its size, which was great. It was not a turn-up
-bedstead, nor yet a French bedstead, nor yet a four-post bedstead,
-but what is poetically called a tent; the sacking whereof was low and
-bulgy, insomuch that Mr. Gamp’s box would not go under it, but stopped
-half way, in a manner which, while it did violence to the reason,
-likewise endangered the legs of a stranger. The frame, too, which
-would have supported the canopy and hangings, if there had been any,
-was ornamented with divers pippins carved in timber, which, on the
-slightest provocation, and frequently on none at all, came tumbling
-down, harassing the peaceful guest with inexplicable terrors. The bed
-itself was decorated with a patchwork quilt of great antiquity; and
-at the upper end, upon the side nearest to the door, hung a scanty
-curtain of blue check, which prevented the zephyrs that were abroad in
-Kingsgate Street from visiting Mrs. Gamp’s head too roughly.
-
-The chairs in Mrs. Gamp’s apartment were extremely large and
-broad-backed, which was more than a sufficient reason for their being
-but two in number. They were both elbow-chairs of ancient mahogany,
-and were chiefly valuable for the slippery nature of their seats,
-which had been originally horsehair, but were now covered with a shiny
-substance of a bluish tint, from which the visitor began to slide away,
-with a dismayed countenance, immediately after sitting down. What Mrs.
-Gamp wanted in chairs she made up in band-boxes, of which she had a
-great collection, devoted to the reception of various miscellaneous
-valuables, which were not, however, as well protected as the good
-woman, by a pleasant fiction, seemed to think; for though every
-band-box had a carefully-closed lid, not one among them had a bottom,
-owing to which cause the property within was merely, as it were,
-extinguished. The chest of drawers having been originally made to stand
-upon the top of another chest, had a dwarfish, elfin look alone; but,
-in regard of security, it had a great advantage over the band-boxes,
-for as all the handles had been long ago pulled off, it was very
-difficult to get at its contents. This, indeed, was only to be done
-by one of two devices; either by tilting the whole structure forward
-until all the drawers fell out together, or by opening them singly with
-knives, like oysters.
-
-Mrs. Gamp stored all her household matters in a little cupboard by the
-fireplace; beginning below the surface (as in nature) with the coals,
-and mounting gradually upwards to the spirits, which, from motives
-of delicacy, she kept in a teapot. The chimney-piece was ornamented
-with an almanac; it was also embellished with three profiles; one,
-in colors, of Mrs. Gamp herself in early life; one, in bronze, of a
-lady in feathers, supposed to be Mrs. Harris, as she appeared when
-dressed for a ball; and one, in black, of Mr. Gamp deceased. The last
-was a full-length, in order that the likeness might be rendered more
-obvious and forcible, by the introduction of the wooden leg. A pair
-of bellows, a pair of pattens, a toasting-fork, a kettle, a spoon for
-the administration of medicine to the refractory, and lastly, Mrs.
-Gamp’s umbrella, which, as something of great price and rarity, was
-displayed with particular ostentation, completed the decorations of the
-chimney-piece and adjacent wall.
-
- * * * * *
-
-William Edmonstoune Aytoun and Theodore Martin, two young men of
-brilliant brains, produced together the collection of burlesque and
-parodies known as _The Bon Gaultier Ballads_.
-
-At this time, the middle of the eighteenth century, parody was greatly
-in vogue. The Ballads were whimsical, and as a whole, kindly. They were
-extremely popular, as much so as the Rejected Addresses, but today they
-seem dull and rather futile.
-
-Another vogue of the day was Bathos, of which the following is a fair
-example.
-
-
- _THE HUSBAND’S PETITION_
-
- Come hither, my heart’s darling,
- Come, sit upon my knee,
- And listen, while I whisper
- A boon I ask of thee.
- You need not pull my whiskers
- So amorously, my dove;
- ’T is something quite apart from
- The gentle cares of love.
-
- I feel a bitter craving--
- A dark and deep desire,
- That glows beneath my bosom
- Like coals of kindled fire.
- The passion of the nightingale,
- When singing to the rose,
- Is feebler than the agony
- That murders my repose!
-
- Nay, dearest! do not doubt me,
- Though madly thus I speak--
- I feel thy arms about me,
- Thy tresses on my cheek:
- I know the sweet devotion
- That links thy heart with mine,--
- I know my soul’s emotion
- Is doubly felt by thine:
-
- And deem not that a shadow
- Hath fallen across my love:
- No, sweet, my love is shadowless,
- As yonder heaven above.
- These little taper fingers--
- Ah, Jane! how white they be!--
- Can well supply the cruel want
- That almost maddens me.
-
- Thou wilt not sure deny me
- My first and fond request;
- I pray thee, by the memory
- Of all we cherish best--
- By all the dear remembrance
- Of those delicious days,
- When, hand in hand, we wandered
- Along the summer braes:
-
- By all we felt, unspoken,
- When ’neath the early moon,
- We sat beside the rivulet,
- In the leafy month of June;
- And by the broken whisper
- That fell upon my ear,
- More sweet than angel-music,
- When first I woo’d thee, dear!
-
- By that great vow which bound thee
- For ever to my side,
- And by the ring that made thee
- My darling and my bride!
- Thou wilt not fail nor falter,
- But bend thee to the task--
- A BOILED SHEEP’S-HEAD ON SUNDAY
- Is all the boon I ask!
-
-This extract is from a long poem, called:
-
-
- _THE LAY OF THE LOVELORN_
-
- PARODY ON TENNYSON’S “LOCKSLEY HALL”
-
- Comrades, you may pass the rosy. With permission of the chair,
- I shall leave you for a little, for I’d like to take the air
-
- Whether ’t was the sauce at dinner, or that glass of ginger beer,
- Or these strong cheroots, I know not, but I feel a little queer.
-
- Let me go. Now, Chuckster, blow me, ’pon my soul, this is too bad!
- When you want me, ask the waiter, he knows where I’m to be had!
-
- Whew! This is a great relief now! Let me but undo my stock,
- Resting here beneath the porch, my nerves will steady like a rock.
-
- In my ears I hear the singing of a lot of favorite tunes--
- Bless my heart, how very odd! Why, surely there’s a brace of moons!
-
- See! the stars! how bright they twinkle, winking with a frosty
-  glare,
- Like my faithless cousin Amy when she drove me to despair.
-
- O, my cousin, spider-hearted! Oh, my Amy! No, confound it!
- I must wear the mournful willow,--all around my hat I’ve bound it.
-
- Falser than the Bank of Fancy,--frailer than a shilling glove,
- Puppet to a father’s anger,--minion to a nabob’s love!
-
- Is it well to wish thee happy? Having known me, could you ever
- Stoop to marry half a heart, and little more than half a liver?
-
- Happy! Damme! Thou shalt lower to his level day by day,
- Changing from the best of China to the commonest of clay.
-
- As the husband is, the wife is,--he is stomach-plagued and old;
- And his curry soups will make thy cheek the color of his gold.
-
- When his feeble love is sated, he will hold thee surely then
- Something lower than his hookah,--something less than his cayenne.
-
- What is this? His eyes are pinky. Was’t the claret? Oh, no, no,--
- Bless your soul, it was the salmon,--salmon always makes him so.
-
- Take him to thy dainty chamber--soothe him with thy lightest
- fancies,
- He will understand thee, won’t he?--pay thee with a lover’s glances?
-
- Louder than the loudest trumpet, harsh as harshest ophicleide,
- Nasal respirations answer the endearments of his bride.
-
- Sweet response, delightful music! Gaze upon thy noble charge
- Till the spirit fill thy bosom that inspired the meek Laffarge.
-
- Better thou wert dead before me,--better, better that I stood
- Looking on thy murdered body, like the injured Daniel Good!
-
- Better, thou and I were lying, cold and limber-stiff and dead,
- With a pan of burning charcoal underneath our nuptial bed!
-
- Cursed be the bank of England’s notes, that tempt the soul to sin!
- Cursed be the want of acres,--doubly cursed the want of tin!
-
- Cursed be the marriage contract, that enslaved thy soul to greed!
- Cursed be the sallow lawyer, that prepared and drew the deed!
-
- Cursed be his foul apprentice, who the loathsome fees did earn!
- Cursed be the clerk and parson,--cursed be the whole concern!
-
-Charles Kingsley, a clergyman of attainments, possessed the same type
-of whimsical humor as the later and greater Lewis Carroll.
-
-His _Water Babies_ from which a short extract is given, is a
-classic in child literature.
-
-
- _THE PROFESSOR’S MALADY_
-
-They say that no one has ever yet seen a water-baby. For my part, I
-believe that the naturalists get dozens of them when they are out
-dredging, but they say nothing about them and throw them overboard
-again, for fear of spoiling their theories. But you see the professor
-was found out, as every one is in due time. A very terrible old fairy
-found the professor out. She felt his bumps, and cast his nativity, and
-took the lunars of him carefully inside and out; and so she knew what
-he would do as well as if she had seen it in a print book, as they say
-in the dear old west country. And he did it. And so he was found out
-beforehand, as everybody always is; and the old fairy will find out the
-naturalists some day, and put them in the _Times_; and then on
-whose side will the laugh be?
-
-So all the doctors in the country were called in to make a report on
-his case; and of course every one of them flatly contradicted the
-other: else what use is there in being men of science? But at last the
-majority agreed on a report, in the true medical language, one half
-bad Latin, the other half worse Greek, and the rest what might have
-been English, if they had only learned to write it. And this is the
-beginning thereof:
-
-“The subanhypaposupernal anastomoses of peritomic diacellurite in the
-encephalo-digital region of the distinguished individual of whose
-symptomatic phenomena we had the melancholy honour (subsequent to a
-preliminary diagnostic inspection) of making an inspectorial diagnosis,
-presenting the interexclusively quadrilateral and antinomian diathesis
-known as Bumpsterhausen’s blue follicles, we proceeded----”
-
-But what they proceeded to do my lady never knew, for she was so
-frightened at the long words that she ran for her life, and locked
-herself into her bedroom, for fear of being squashed by the words and
-strangled by the sentence. A boa-constrictor, she said, was bad company
-enough; but what was a boa-constrictor made of paving-stones?
-
-“It was quite shocking! What can they think is the matter with him?”
-said she to the old nurse.
-
-“That his wit’s just addled; maybe wi’ unbelief and heathenry,” quoth
-she.
-
-“Then why can’t they say so?”
-
-And the heaven, and the sea, and the rocks and vales re-echoed, “Why,
-indeed?” But the doctors never heard them.
-
-So she made Sir John write to the _Times_ to command the
-chancellor of the exchequer for the time being to put a tax on long
-words:
-
-A light tax on words over three syllables, which are necessary evils,
-like rats, but, like them, must be kept down judiciously.
-
-A heavy tax on words over four syllables, as heterodoxy, spontaneity,
-spiritualism, spuriosity, etc.
-
-And on words over five syllables (of which I hope no one will wish to
-see any examples), a totally prohibitory tax.
-
-And a similar prohibitory tax on words derived from three or more
-languages at once, words derived from two languages, having become so
-common that there was no more hope of rooting out them than of rooting
-out peth-winds.
-
-The chancellor of the exchequer, being a scholar and a man of sense,
-jumped at the notion, for he saw in it the one and only plan for
-abolishing Schedule D. But when he brought in his bill, most of the
-Irish members, and (I am sorry to say) some of the Scotch likewise,
-opposed it most strongly, on the ground that in a free country no man
-was bound either to understand himself or to let others understand him.
-So the bill fell through on the first reading, and the chancellor,
-being a philosopher, comforted himself with the thought that it was
-not the first time that a woman had hit off a grand idea, and the men
-turned up their stupid noses thereat.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Alfred, Lord Tennyson, is conceded the gift of humor by some, but his
-other attributes so far outshine it that his amusing bits are hard to
-find. A moderately funny poem is:
-
-
- _THE GOOSE_
-
- I knew an old wife lean and poor,
- Her rags scarce held together;
- There strode a stranger to the door,
- And it was windy weather.
-
- He held a goose upon his arm,
- He utter’d rhyme and reason,
- “Here, take the goose, and keep you warm,
- It is a stormy season.”
-
- She caught the white goose by the leg,
- A goose--’twas no great matter.
- The goose let fall a golden egg
- With cackle and with clatter.
-
- She dropt the goose, and caught the pelf,
- And ran to tell her neighbours;
- And bless’d herself, and cursed herself,
- And rested from her labours.
-
- And feeding high and living soft,
- Grew plump and able-bodied;
- Until the grave churchwarden doff’d,
- The parson smirk’d and nodded.
-
- So sitting, served by man and maid,
- She felt her heart grow prouder:
- But, ah! the more the white goose laid
- It clack’d and cackled louder.
-
- It clutter’d here, it chuckled there;
- It stirr’d the old wife’s mettle;
- She shifted in her elbow-chair,
- And hurl’d the pan and kettle.
-
- “A quinsy choke thy cursed note!”
- Then wax’d her anger stronger.
- “Go, take the goose, and wring her throat,
- I will not bear it longer.”
-
- Then yelp’d the cur, and yawl’d the cat;
- Ran Gaffer, stumbled Gammer.
- The goose flew this way and flew that,
- And fill’d the house with clamour.
-
- As head and heels upon the floor
- They flounder’d all together,
- There strode a stranger to the door,
- And it was windy weather:
-
- He took the goose upon his arm,
- He utter’d words of scorning;
- “So keep you cold, or keep you warm,
- It is a stormy morning.”
-
- The wild wind rang from park and plain,
- And round the attics rumbled,
- Till all the tables danced again,
- And half the chimneys tumbled.
-
- The glass blew in, the fire blew out,
- The blast was hard and harder.
- Her cap blew off, her gown blew up,
- And a whirlwind cleared the larder.
-
- And while on all sides breaking loose,
- Her household fled the danger,
- Quoth she, “The devil take the goose,
- And God forget the stranger!”
-
-Robert Browning, though scarcely to be called a humorous poet, had a
-fine wit and a quick and agile sense of whimsey.
-
-His _Pied Piper of Hamelin_, written to amuse a sick child of
-Macready’s, is a masterpiece of quiet humor. His satiric vein is shown
-in:
-
-
- _THE POPE AND THE NET_
-
- What, he on whom our voices unanimously ran,
- Made Pope at our last Conclave? Full low his life began:
- His father earned the daily bread as just a fisherman.
-
- So much the more his boy minds book, gives proof of mother-wit,
- Becomes first Deacon, and then Priest, then Bishop: see him sit
- No less than Cardinal ere long, while no one cries “Unfit!”
-
- But some one smirks, some other smiles, jogs elbow and nods head;
- Each wings at each: “I’ faith, a rise! Saint Peter’s net, instead
- Of sword and keys, is come in vogue!” You think he blushes red?
-
- Not he, of humble holy heart! “Unworthy me!” he sighs:
- “From fisher’s drudge to Church’s prince--it is indeed a rise:
- So, here’s my way to keep the fact forever in my eyes!”
-
- And straightway in his palace-hall, where commonly is set
- Some coat-of-arms, some portraiture ancestral, lo, we met
- His mean estate’s reminder in his fisher-father’s net!
-
- Which step conciliates all and some, stops cavil in a trice:
- “The humble holy heart that holds of new-born pride no spice!
- He’s just the saint to choose for Pope!” Each adds, “’Tis my
-  advice.”
-
- So Pope he was: and when we flocked--its sacred slipper on--
- To kiss his foot, we lifted eyes, alack, the thing was gone--
- That guarantee of lowlihead,--eclipsed that star which shone!
-
- Each eyed his fellow, one and all kept silence. I cried “Pish!
- I’ll make me spokesman for the rest, express the common wish.
- Why, Father, is the net removed?” “Son, it hath caught the fish.”
-
-Frederick Locker-Lampson, though following in the footsteps of Praed,
-was a more famous writer of the rhymes known as Vers de Société.
-
-There is no English equivalent for the French term, and attempts
-to coin one are usually failures. Society verse, Familiar Verse,
-Occasional verse,--each lacks somewhat of the real implication.
-
-Locker-Lampson, himself a discerning and severe critic, instructs us
-that the rhymes should be short, graceful, refined and fanciful, not
-seldom distinguished by chastened sentiment, and often playful.
-
-But, really, playfulness and light, bright humor are more a distinctive
-quality of Vers de Société than that dictum stipulates.
-
-Wit is the keynote, fun the undercurrent of the best of the material
-so often collected under this name; and Locker-Lampson made the
-first and perhaps the best collection, under the title of _Lyra
-Elegantiarum_.
-
-Typical of all that goes to make up the best form of Vers de Société is
-his poem,
-
-
- _MY MISTRESS’S BOOTS_
-
- They nearly strike me dumb,
- And I tremble when they come
- Pit-a-pat;
- This palpitation means
- These boots are Geraldine’s--
- Think of that!
-
- Oh, where did hunter win
- So delectable a skin
- For her feet?
- You lucky little kid,
- You perished, so you did,
- For my sweet!
-
- The faëry stitching gleams
- On the sides, and in the seams,
- And it shows
- The Pixies were the wags
- Who tipt those funny tags
- And these toes.
-
- What soles to charm an elf!
- Had Crusoe, sick of self,
- Chanced to view
- _One_ printed near the tide,
- Oh, how hard he would have tried
- For the two!
-
- For Gerry’s debonair
- And innocent, and fair
- As a rose;
- She’s an angel in a frock,
- With a fascinating cock
- To her nose.
-
- The simpletons who squeeze
- Their extremities to please
- Mandarins,
- Would positively flinch
- From venturing to pinch
- Geraldine’s.
-
- Cinderella’s _lefts and rights_,
- To Geraldine’s were frights;
- And I trow,
- The damsel, deftly shod,
- Has dutifully trod
- Until now.
-
- Come, Gerry, since it suits
- Such a pretty Puss (in Boots)
- These to don;
- Set this dainty hand awhile
- On my shoulder, dear, and I’ll
- Put them on.
-
-
- _ON A SENSE OF HUMOUR_
-
- He cannot be complete in aught
- Who is not humorously prone;
- A man without a merry thought
- Can hardly have a funny-bone.
-
-
- _SOME LADIES_
-
- Some ladies now make pretty songs,
- And some make pretty nurses;
- Some men are great at righting wrongs
- And some at writing verses.
-
-
- _A TERRIBLE INFANT_
-
- I recollect a nurse call’d Ann,
- Who carried me about the grass,
- And one fine day a fine young man
- Came up, and kiss’d the pretty lass.
- She did not make the least objection!
- Thinks I, “_Aha!
- When I can talk I’ll tell Mamma_”
- --And that’s my earliest recollection.
-
-Charles Stuart Calverley is called the Prince of Parodists, but his
-genius deserves far higher praise than that.
-
-His serious work is of a high order but it is for his humorous verse
-that he is most loved and praised.
-
-His parodies while showing the best and finest burlesque qualities, are
-also poems in themselves, and are of an exquisite wit and a spontaneous
-humor rarely excelled.
-
-One of the best is the ballad in which Rossetti’s manner is parodied in
-very spirit.
-
-
- _BALLAD_
-
-
- PART I
-
- The auld wife sat at her ivied door,
- (_Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_)
- A thing she had frequently done before;
- And her spectacles lay on her apron’d knees.
-
- The piper he piped on the hilltop high,
- (_Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_)
- Till the cow said “I die,” and the goose asked “Why?”
- And the dog said nothing, but search’d for fleas.
-
- The farmer he strode through the square farmyard;
- (_Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_)
- His last brew of ale was a trifle hard--
- The connection of which the plot one sees.
-
- The farmer’s daughter hath frank blue eyes;
- (_Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_)
- She hears the rooks caw in the windy skies.
- As she sits at her lattice and shells her peas.
-
- The farmer’s daughter hath ripe red lips;
- (_Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_)
- If you try to approach her, away she skips
- Over tables and chairs with apparent ease.
-
- The farmer’s daughter hath soft brown hair;
- (_Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_)
- And I met with a ballad, I can’t say where,
- Which wholly consisted of lines like these.
-
-
- PART II
-
- She sat with her hands ’neath her dimpled cheeks,
- (_Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_)
- And spake not a word. While a lady speaks
- There is hope, but she didn’t even sneeze.
-
- She sat, with her hands ’neath her crimson cheeks;
- (_Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_)
- She gave up mending her father’s breeks,
- And let the cat roll in her new chemise.
-
- She sat with her hands ’neath her burning cheeks,
- (_Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_)
- And gazed at the piper for thirteen weeks;
- Then she follow’d him o’er the misty leas.
-
- Her sheep follow’d her, as their tails did them,
- (_Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_)
- And this song is consider’d a perfect gem,
- And as to the meaning, it’s what you please.
-
-Equally marvelous in its assured touch and utter lack of mere burlesque
-exaggeration is his parody of Browning.
-
-
- _THE COCK AND THE BULL_
-
- You see this pebble-stone? It’s a thing I bought
- Of a bit of a chit of a boy i’ the mid o’ the day.
- I like to dock the smaller parts o’ speech,
- As we curtail the already cur-tail’d cur--
- (You catch the paronomasia, play ’po’ words?)
- Did, rather, i’ the pre-Landseerian days.
- Well, to my muttons. I purchased the concern,
- And clapt it i’ my poke, having given for same
- By way o’ chop, swop, barter or exchange--
- “Chop” was my snickering dandiprat’s own term--
- One shilling and fourpence, current coin o’ the realm.
- O-n-e one, and f-o-u-r four
- Pence, one and fourpence--you are with me, sir?--
- What hour it skills not: ten or eleven o’ the clock,
- One day (and what a roaring day it was
- Go shop or sight-see--bar a spit o’ rain!)
- In February, eighteen, sixty-nine,
- Alexandria Victoria, Fidei--
- Hm--hm--how runs the jargon? being on the throne.
- Such, sir, are all the facts, succinctly put,
- The basis or substratum--what you will--
- Of the impending eighty thousand lines.
- “Not much in ’em either,” quoth perhaps simple Hodge.
- But there’s a superstructure. Wait a bit.
- Mark first the rationale of the thing:
- Hear logic rivel and levigate the deed.
- That shilling--and for matter o’ that, the pence--
- I had o’ course upo’ me--wi’ me say--
- (_Mecum’s_ the Latin, make a note o’ that)
- When I popp’d pen i’ stand, scratch’d ear, wiped snout,
- (Let everybody wipe his own himself)
- Sniff’d--tch!--at snuff-box; tumbled up, teheed,
- Haw-haw’d (not hee-haw’d, that’s another guess thing),
- Then fumbled at and stumbled out of, door.
- I shoved the timber ope wi’ my omoplat;
- And _in vestibulo_, i’ the lobby to wit
- (Iacobi Facciolati’s rendering, sir),
- Donn’d galligaskins, antigropeloes,
- And so forth; and, complete with hat and gloves,
- One on and one a-dangle i’ my hand,
- And ombrifuge (Lord love you!), case o’ rain,
- I flopp’d forth, ’sbuddikins! on my own ten toes
- (I do assure you there be ten of them),
- And went clump-clumping up hill and down dale
- To find myself o’ the sudden i’ front o’ the boy.
- But case I hadn’t ’em on me, could I ha’ bought
- This sort-o’-kind-o’-what-you-might-call toy,
- This pebble thing, o’ the boy-thing? Q. E. D.
- That’s proven without aid from mumping Pope,
- Sleek proporate or bloated Cardinal.
- (Isn’t it, old Fatchaps? You’re in Euclid now.)
- So, having the shilling--having i’ fact a lot--
- And pence and halfpence, ever so many o’ them,
- I purchased, as I think I said before,
- The pebble (_lapis, lapidis,-di,-dem,-de--_
- What nouns ’crease short i’ the genitive, Fatchaps, eh?)
- O’ the boy, a bare-legg’d beggarly son of a gun,
- For one and fourpence. Here we are again.
- Now Law steps in, bigwigg’d, voluminous-jaw’d;
- Investigates and re-investigates.
- Was the transaction illegal? Law shakes head
- Perpend, sir, all the bearings of the case.
-
- At first the coin was mine, the chattel his.
- But now (by virtue of the said exchange
- And barter) _vice versa_ all the coin,
- _Per juris operationem_, vests
- I’ the boy and his assigns till ding o’ doom;
- (_In sæcula sæculo-o-o-rum_;
- I think I hear the Abate mouth out that.)
- To have and hold the same to him and them.
- _Confer_ some idiot on Conveyancing.
-
- Whereas the pebble and every part thereof,
- And all that appertaineth thereunto,
- _Quodcunque pertinet ad eam rem_
- (I fancy, sir, my Latin’s rather pat),
- Or shall, will, may, might, can, could, would or should
- (_Subaudi cætera_--clap we to the close--
- For what’s the good of Law in a case o’ the kind),
- Is mine to all intents and purposes.
- This settled, I resume the thread o’ the tale.
-
- Now for a touch o’ the vendor’s quality.
- He says a gen’lman bought a pebble of him
- (This pebble i’ sooth, sir, which I hold i’ my hand),
- And paid for’t, _like_ a gen’lman, on the nail.
- “Did I o’ercharge him a ha’penny? Devil a bit.
- Fiddlepin’s end! Get out, you blazing ass!
- Gabble o’ the goose. Don’t bugaboo-baby _me_!
- Go double or quits? Yah! tittup! what’s the odds?”
- There’s the transaction view’d i’ the vendor’s light.
-
- Next ask that dumpled hag, stood snuffling by,
- With her three frowsy blowsy brats o’ babes,
- The scum o’ the kennel, cream o’ the filth-heap--Faugh!
- Aie, aie, aie, aie! οτοτοτοτοτοι
- (’Stead which we blurt out Hoighty toighty now),
- And the baker and candlestickmaker, and Jack and Jill,
- Blear’d Goody this and queasy Gaffer that.
- Ask the schoolmaster. Take schoolmaster first.
-
- He saw a gentleman purchase of a lad
- A stone, and pay for it _rite_, on the square,
- And carry it off _per saltum_, jauntily,
- _Propria quae maribus_, gentleman’s property now
- (Agreeably to the law explain’d above),
- _In proprium usum_, for his private ends,
- The boy he chuck’d a brown i’ the air, and bit
- I’ the face the shilling; heaved a thumping stone
- At a lean hen that ran cluck clucking by
- (And hit her, dead as nail i’ post o’ door),
- Then _abiit_--what’s the Ciceronian phrase?--
- _Excessit_, _evasit_, _erupit_--off slogs boy;
- Off like bird, _avi similis_--you observed
- The dative? Pretty i’ the Mantuan!)--_Anglice_
- Off in three flea skips. _Hactenus_, so far,
- So good, _tam bene_. _Bene_, _satis_, _male_,--
- Where was I with my trope ’bout one in a quag?
- I did once hitch the syntax into verse:
- _Verbum personale_, a verb personal,
- _Concordat_--ay, “agrees,” old Fatchaps--_cum_
- _Nominativo_, with its nominative,
- _Genere_, i’ point o’ gender, _numero_,
- O’ number, _et persona_, and person. _Ut_,
- Instance: _Sol ruit_, down flops sun, _et_, and,
- _Montes umbrantur_, out flounce mountains. Pah!
- Excuse me, sir, I think I’m going mad.
- You see the trick on ’t though, and can yourself
- Continue the discourse _ad libitum_.
- It takes up about eighty thousand lines,
- A thing imagination boggles at;
- And might, odds-bobs, sir! in judicious hands,
- Extend from here to Mesopotamy.
-
-While the style of Jean Ingelow is thus genially made fun of.
-
-
- _LOVERS, AND A REFLECTION_
-
- In moss-prankt dells which the sunbeams flatter
- (And heaven it knoweth what that may mean;
- Meaning, however, is no great matter)
- Where woods are a-tremble, with rifts atween;
-
- Through God’s own heather we wonned together,
- I and my Willie (O love my love):
- I need hardly remark it was glorious weather,
- And flitterbats wavered alow, above:
-
- Boats were curtseying, rising, bowing
- (Boats in that climate are so polite),
- And sands were a ribbon of green endowing,
- And O the sun-dazzle on bark and bight!
-
- Through the rare red heather we danced together,
- (O love my Willie!) and smelt for flowers:
- I must mention again it was glorious weather,
- Rhymes are so scarce in this world of ours:--
-
- By rises that flushed with their purple favors,
- Through becks that brattled o’er grasses sheen,
- We walked or waded, we two young shavers,
- Thanking our stars we were both so green.
-
- We journeyed in parallels, I and Willie,
- In “fortunate parallels!” Butterflies,
- Hid in weltering shadows of daffodilly
- Or marjoram, kept making peacock’s eyes:
-
- Song-birds darted about, some inky
- As coal, some snowy (I ween) as curds;
- Or rosy as pinks, or as roses pinky--
- They reck of no eerie To-come, those birds!
-
- But they skim over bents which the mill-stream washes,
- Or hang in the lift ’neath a white cloud’s hem;
- They need no parasols, no galoshes;
- And good Mrs. Trimmer she feedeth them.
-
- Then we thrid God’s cowslips (as erst his heather)
- That endowed the wan grass with their golden blooms;
- And snapt--(it was perfectly charming weather)--
- Our fingers at Fate and her goddess-glooms:
-
- And Willie ’gan sing--(O, his notes were fluty;
- Wafts fluttered them out to the white-winged sea)--
- Something made up of rhymes that have done much duty,
- Rhymes (better to put it) of “ancientry”:
-
- Bowers of flowers encountered showers
- In William’s carol (O love my Willie!)
- When he bade sorrow borrow from blithe To-morrow
- I quite forget what--say a daffodilly:
-
- A nest in a hollow, “with buds to follow,”
- I think occurred next in his nimble strain;
- And clay that was “kneaden” of course in Eden--
- A rhyme most novel, I do maintain:
-
- Mists, bones, the singer himself, love-stories,
- And all least furlable things got “furled”;
- Not with any design to conceal their glories,
- But simply and solely to rhyme with “world.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- O, if billows and pillows and hours and flowers,
- And all the brave rhymes of an elder day,
- Could be furled together this genial weather,
- And carted, or carried on wafts away,
- Nor ever again trotted out--ah me!
- How much fewer volumes of verse there’d be!
-
-
- _ODE TO TOBACCO_
-
- Thou who, when fears attack,
- Bid’st them avaunt, and Black
- Care, at the horseman’s back
- Perching, unseatest;
- Sweet when the morn is gray;
- Sweet, when they’ve cleared away
- Lunch; and at close of day
- Possibly sweetest:
-
- I have a liking old
- For thee, though manifold
- Stories, I know, are told,
- Not to thy credit;
- How one (or two at most)
- Drops make a cat a ghost--
- Useless, except to roast--
- Doctors have said it:
-
- How they who use fusees
- All grow by slow degrees
- Brainless as chimpanzees,
- Meagre as lizards;
- Go mad, and beat their wives;
- Plunge (after shocking lives)
- Razors and carving-knives
- Into their gizzards.
-
- Confound such knavish tricks!
- Yet know I five or six
- Smokers who freely mix
- Still with their neighbors;
- Jones--(who, I’m glad to say,
- Asked leave of Mrs. J.)--
- Daily absorbs a clay
- After his labors.
-
- Cats may have had their goose
- Cooked by tobacco-juice;
- Still why deny its use
- Thoughtfully taken?
- We’re not as tabbies are:
- Smith, take a fresh cigar!
- Jones, the tobacco-jar!
- Here’s to thee, Bacon!
-
-Charles Lutwidge Dodgson is better known as Lewis Carroll, though
-during his lifetime, the author of _Alice_ was extremely careful
-to preserve a decided distinction between the College Don and the
-writer of nonsense.
-
-Lewis Carroll was the first to produce coherent humor in the form of
-sheer nonsense, and his work, often imitated, has never been equaled.
-
-Beside the _Alice_ books he wrote several volumes only a degree
-less wise and witty in the nonsense vein.
-
-But few selections can be given.
-
-
- _JABBERWOCKY_
-
- (From _Through the Looking-Glass_)
-
- ’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
- Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;
- All mimsy were the borogoves,
- And the mome raths outgrabe.
-
- “Beware the Jabberwock, my son!
- The jaws that bite, the claws that catch
- Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun
- The frumious Bandersnatch!”
-
- He took his vorpal sword in hand:
- Long time the manxome foe he sought--
- So rested he by the Tumtum tree,
- And stood awhile in thought.
-
- And, as in uffish thought he stood,
- The Jabberwock, with eyes of flame,
- Came whiffling through the tulgey wood,
- And burbled as it came!
-
- One, two! One, two! And through and through
- The vorpal blade went snicker-snack!
- He left it dead, and with its head
- He went galumphing back.
-
- “And hast thou slain the Jabberwock?
- Come to my arms, my beamish boy!
- O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!”
- He chortled in his joy.
-
- ’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
- Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;
- All mimsy were the borogoves,
- And the mome raths outgrabe.
-
-
- _WAYS AND MEANS_
-
- I’ll tell thee everything I can;
- There’s little to relate.
- I saw an aged aged man,
- A-sitting on a gate.
- “Who are you, aged man?” I said,
- “And how is it you live?”
- His answer trickled through my head
- Like water through a sieve.
-
- He said, “I look for butterflies
- That sleep among the wheat:
- I make them into mutton-pies,
- And sell them in the street.
- I sell them unto men,” he said,
- “Who sail on stormy seas;
- And that’s the way I get my bread--
- A trifle, if you please.”
-
- But I was thinking of a plan
- To dye one’s whiskers green,
- And always use so large a fan
- That they could not be seen.
- So, having no reply to give
- To what the old man said,
- I cried, “Come, tell me how you live!”
- And thumped him on the head.
-
- His accents mild took up the tale;
- He said, “I go my ways
- And when I find a mountain-rill
- I set it in a blaze;
- And thence they make a stuff they call
- Rowland’s Macassar Oil--
- Yet twopence-halfpenny is all
- They give me for my toil.”
-
- But I was thinking of a way
- To feed oneself on batter,
- And so go on from day to day
- Getting a little fatter.
- I shook him well from side to side,
- Until his face was blue;
- “Come, tell me how you live,” I cried,
- “And what it is you do!”
-
- He said, “I hunt for haddock’s eyes
- Among the heather bright,
- And work them into waistcoat-buttons
- In the silent night.
- And these I do not sell for gold
- Or coin of silvery shine,
- But for a copper halfpenny
- And that will purchase nine.
-
- “I sometimes dig for buttered rolls,
- Or set limed twigs for crabs;
- I sometimes search the grassy knolls
- For wheels of Hansom cabs.
- And that’s the way” (he gave a wink)
- “By which I get my wealth--
- And very gladly will I drink
- Your Honor’s noble health.”
-
- I heard him then, for I had just
- Completed my design
- To keep the Menai Bridge from rust
- By boiling it in wine.
- I thanked him much for telling me
- The way he got his wealth,
- But chiefly for his wish that he
- Might drink my noble health.
-
- And now if e’er by chance I put
- My fingers into glue,
- Or madly squeeze a right-hand foot
- Into a left-hand shoe,
- Or if I drop upon my toe
- A very heavy weight,
- I weep, for it reminds me so
- Of that old man I used to know--
- Whose look was mild, whose speech was slow,
- Whose hair was whiter than the snow,
- Whose face was very like a crow,
- With eyes, like cinders, all aglow,
- Who seemed distracted with his woe,
- Who rocked his body to and fro,
- And muttered mumblingly, and low,
- As if his mouth were full of dough,
- Who snorted like a buffalo--
- That summer evening, long ago,
- A-sitting on a gate.
-
-
- _SOME HALLUCINATIONS_
-
- He thought he saw an Elephant,
- That practised on a fife:
- He looked again, and found it was
- A letter from his wife.
- “At length I realize,” he said,
- “The bitterness of Life!”
-
- He thought he saw a Buffalo
- Upon the chimney-piece:
- He looked again, and found it was
- His Sister’s Husband’s Niece.
- “Unless you leave this house,” he said,
- “I’ll send for the Police!”
-
- He thought he saw a Rattlesnake
- That questioned him in Greek:
- He looked again, and found it was
- The Middle of Next Week.
- “The one thing I regret,” he said,
- “Is that it cannot speak!”
-
- He thought he saw a Banker’s Clerk
- Descending from the ’bus:
- He looked again, and found it was
- A Hippopotamus:
- “If this should stay to dine,” he said,
- “There won’t be much for us!”
-
-Edward Lear, contemporary of Lewis Carroll, is the only peer of the
-great writer of nonsense.
-
-Lear’s nonsense is in different vein, but his verses are equally facile
-and felicitous and his prose quite as delightfully extravagant.
-
-If Carroll’s imagination was more exquisitely fanciful, Lear’s had
-a broader scope, and both writers are masters of that peculiar
-combination of paradox and reasoning that makes for delightful surprise.
-
-Lear was the first to make popular the style of stanza since called
-a Limerick, though the derivation of this name has never been
-satisfactorily determined.
-
- There was an old man of Thermopylæ,
- Who never did anything properly;
- But they said: “If you choose
- To boil eggs in your shoes,
- You cannot remain in Thermopylæ.”
-
- There was an Old Man who said, “Hush!
- I perceive a young bird in this bush!”
- When they said, “Is it small?”
- He replied, “Not at all;
- It is four times as big as the bush!”
-
- There was an Old Man who supposed
- That the street door was partially closed;
- But some very large Rats
- Ate his coats and his hats,
- While that futile Old Gentleman dozed.
-
- There was an Old Man of Leghorn,
- The smallest that ever was born;
- But quickly snapt up he
- Was once by a Puppy,
- Who devoured that Old Man of Leghorn.
-
- There was an Old Man of Kamschatka
- Who possessed a remarkably fat Cur;
- His gait and his waddle
- Were held as a model
- To all the fat dogs in Kamschatka.
-
-
- _THE TWO OLD BACHELORS_
-
- Two old Bachelors were living in one house
- One caught a Muffin, the other caught a Mouse.
- Said he who caught the Muffin to him who caught the Mouse,
- “This happens just in time, for we’ve nothing in the house,
- Save a tiny slice of lemon and a teaspoonful of honey,
- And what to do for dinner,--since we haven’t any money?
- And what can we expect if we haven’t any dinner
- But to lose our teeth and eyelashes and keep on growing thinner?”
-
- Said he who caught the Mouse to him who caught the Muffin,
- “We might cook this little Mouse if we only had some Stuffin’!
- If we had but Sage and Onions we could do extremely well,
- But how to get that Stuffin’ it is difficult to tell!”
-
- And then these two old Bachelors ran quickly to the town
- And asked for Sage and Onions as they wandered up and down;
- They borrowed two large Onions, but no Sage was to be found
- In the Shops or in the Market or in all the Gardens round.
-
- But some one said, “A hill there is, a little to the north,
- And to its purpledicular top a narrow way leads forth;
- And there among the rugged rocks abides an ancient Sage,--
- An earnest Man, who reads all day a most perplexing page.
- Climb up and seize him by the toes,--all studious as he sits,--
- And pull him down, and chop him into endless little bits!
- Then mix him with your Onion (cut up likewise into scraps),
- And your Stuffin’ will be ready, and very good--perhaps.”
-
- And then these two old Bachelors, without loss of time,
- The nearly purpledicular crags at once began to climb;
- And at the top among the rocks, all seated in a nook,
- They saw that Sage a-reading of a most enormous book.
- “You earnest Sage!” aloud they cried, “your book you’ve read enough
- in!
- We wish to chop you into bits and mix you into Stuffin’!”
-
- But that old Sage looked calmly up, and with his awful book
- At those two Bachelors’ bald heads a certain aim he took;
- And over crag and precipice they rolled promiscuous down,--
- At once they rolled, and never stopped in lane or field or town;
- And when they reached their house, they found (besides their want
- of Stuffin’)
- The Mouse had fled--and previously had eaten up the Muffin.
-
- They left their home in silence by the once convivial door;
- And from that hour those Bachelors were never heard of more.
-
-Algernon Charles Swinburne, whose marvelous mastery of the lyric is
-well known, is not so noted as a humorist.
-
-Yet his parodies are among the finest in the language. His day was the
-Golden Age of Parody, and the writers who achieved it were true poets
-and true wits.
-
-This parody of Tennyson is alike a perfect mimicry of sound and sense.
-
-
- _THE HIGHER PANTHEISM IN A NUTSHELL_
-
- One, who is not, we see: but one, whom we see not, is;
- Surely this is not that: but that is assuredly this.
-
- What, and wherefore, and whence? for under is over and under;
- If thunder could be without lightning, lightning could be without
- thunder.
-
- Doubt is faith in the main: but faith, on the whole, is doubt;
- We cannot believe by proof: but could we believe without?
-
- Why, and whither, and how? for barley and rye are not clover;
- Neither are straight lines curves: yet over is under and over.
-
- Two and two may be four: but four and four are not eight;
- Fate and God may be twain: but God is the same thing as fate.
-
- Ask a man what he thinks, and get from a man what he feels;
- God, once caught in the fact, shews you a fair pair of heels.
-
- Body and spirit are twins: God only knows which is which;
- The soul squats down in the flesh, like a tinker drunk in a ditch.
-
- One and two are not one: but one and nothing is two;
- Truth can hardly be false, if falsehood cannot be true.
-
- Once the mastodon was: pterodactyls were common as cocks;
- Then the mammoth was God: now is He a prize ox.
-
- Parallels all things are: yet many of these are askew.
- You are certainly I: but certainly I am not you.
-
- Springs the rock from the plain, shoots the stream from the rock;
- Cocks exist for the hen: but hens exist for the cock.
-
- God, whom we see not, is: and God, who is not, we see;
- Fiddle, we know, is diddle: and diddle, we take it, is dee.
-
-Swinburne’s parody of his own work is beautifully done in
-
-
- _NEPHELIDIA_
-
- From the depth of the dreamy decline of the dawn through a notable
- nimbus of nebulous moonshine,
- Pallid and pink as the palm of the flag-flower that flickers with
- fear of the flies as they float,
- Are they looks of our lovers that lustrously lean from a marvel of
- mystic miraculous moonshine,
- These that we feel in the blood of our blushes that thicken and
- threaten with throbs through the throat?
- Thicken and thrill as a theatre thronged at appeal of an actor’s
- appalled agitation,
- Fainter with fear of the fires of the future than pale with the
- promise of pride in the past;
- Flushed with the famishing fulness of fever that reddens with
- radiance of rathe recreation,
- Gaunt as the ghastliest of glimpses that gleam through the gloom
- of the gloaming when ghosts go aghast?
- Nay, for the nick of the tick of the time is a tremulous touch on
- the temples of terror,
- Strained as the sinews yet strenuous with strife of the dead who
- is dumb as the dust-heaps of death;
- Surely no soul is it, sweet as the spasm of erotic emotional
- exquisite error,
- Bathed in the balms of beatified bliss, beatific itself by
- beatitude’s breath.
- Surely no spirit or sense of a soul that was soft to the spirit and
- soul of our senses
- Sweetens the stress of surprising suspicion that sobs in the
- semblance and sound of a sigh;
- Only this oracle opens Olympian, in mystical moods and triangular
- tenses,--
- “Life is the lust of a lamp for the light that is dark till the
- dawn of the day when we die.”
- Mild is the mirk and monotonous music of memory, melodiously mute
- as it may be,
- While the hope in the heart of a hero is bruised by the breach of
- men’s rapiers, resigned to the rod;
- Made meek as a mother whose bosom-beats bound with the
- bliss-bringing bulk of a balm-breathing baby,
- As they grope through the grave-yard of creeds, under skies
- growing green at a groan for the grimness of God.
- Blank is the book of his bounty beholden of old, and its binding is
- blacker than bluer:
- Out of blue into black is the scheme of the skies, and their dews
- are the wine of the bloodshed of things:
- Till the darkling desire of delight shall be free as a fawn that is
- freed from the fangs that pursue her,
- Till the heart-beats of hell shall be hushed by a hymn from the
- hunt that has harried the kennel of kings.
-
-Henry Austin Dobson, better known without his first name, was a
-skillful writer of beautiful _vers de société_.
-
-He also wrote much in the French Forms and seemed to find them in no
-way trammeling.
-
-
- _ON A FAN_
-
- THAT BELONGED TO THE MARQUISE DE POMPADOUR
-
- (Ballade)
-
- Chicken-skin, delicate, white,
- Painted by Carlo Vanloo,
- Loves in a riot of light,
- Roses and vaporous blue;
- Hark to the dainty _frou-frou_
- Picture above, if you can,
- Eyes that could melt as the dew,--
- This was the Pompadour’s fan!
-
- See how they rise at the sight,
- Thronging the _Œil de Bœuf_ through,
- Courtiers as butterflies bright,
- Beauties that Fragonard drew,
- _Talon-rouge_, falaba, queue,
- Cardinal, duke,--to a man,
- Eager to sigh or to sue,--
- This was the Pompadour’s fan!
-
- Ah, but things more than polite
- Hung on this toy, _voyez-vous_
- Matters of state and of might,
- Things that great ministers do;
- Things that, maybe, overthrew
- Those in whose brains they began;--
- Here was the sign and the cue,--
- This was the Pompadour’s fan!
-
-
- Envoy
-
- Where are the secrets it knew?
- Weavings of plot and of plan?
- --But where is the Pompadour, too?
- _This_ was the Pompadour’s _fan_!
-
-
- _THE ROUNDEAU_
-
- You bid me try, Blue-eyes, to write
- A Rondeau. What! forthwith?--tonight?
- Reflect? Some skill I have, ’tis true;
- But thirteen lines!--and rhymed on two!--
- “Refrain,” as well. Ah, hapless plight!
- Still there are five lines--ranged aright.
- These Gallic bonds, I feared, would fright
- My easy Muse. They did, till you--
- You bid me try!
-
- That makes them eight.--The port’s in sight;
- ’Tis all because your eyes are bright!
- Now just a pair to end in “oo,”--
- When maids command, what can’t we do?
- Behold! The Rondeau--tasteful, light--
- You bid me try!
-
-Andrew Lang was perhaps the most versatile writer among English bookmen
-of his day. Verse or prose, religious research or translations, to each
-and all he gives his individual touch,--light, airy, humorous.
-
-Fairies, Dreams and Ghosts are all his happy hunting ground, and he was
-one of the first to experiment with the old French Forms, in which he
-gave his own delightful fancy free play, while adhering strictly to the
-inflexible rules.
-
-
- _BALLAD OF THE PRIMITIVE JEST_
-
- I am an ancient Jest!
- Paleolithic man
- In his arboreal nest
- The sparks of fun would fan;
- My outline did he plan,
- And laughed like one possessed,
- ’Twas thus my course began,
- I am a Merry Jest.
-
- I am an early Jest!
- Man delved and built and span;
- Then wandered South and West
- The peoples Aryan,
- _I_ journeyed in their van;
- The Semites, too, confessed,--
- From Beersheba to Dan,--
- I am a Merry Jest.
-
- I am an ancient Jest,
- Through all the human clan,
- Red, black, white, free, oppressed,
- Hilarious I ran!
- I’m found in Lucian,
- In Poggio, and the rest,
- I’m dear to Moll and Nan!
- I am a Merry Jest!
-
- Prince, you may storm and ban--
- Joe Millers _are_ a pest,
- Suppress me if you can!
- I am a Merry Jest!
-
-
- _BALLADE OF LITERARY FAME_
-
- Oh, where are the endless Romances
- Our grandmothers used to adore?
- The knights with their helms and their lances,
- Their shields and the favours they wore?
- And the monks with their magical lore?
- They have passed to Oblivion and _Nox_,
- They have fled to the shadowy shore,--
- They are all in the Fourpenny Box!
-
- And where the poetical fancies
- Our fathers rejoiced in, of yore?
- The lyric’s melodious expanses,
- The epics in cantos a score,
- They have been and are not: no more
- Shall the shepherds drive silvery flocks,
- Nor the ladies their languors deplore,--
- They are all in the Fourpenny Box!
-
- And the music! The songs and the dances?
- The tunes that time may not restore?
- And the tomes where Divinity prances?
- And the pamphlets where heretics roar?
- They have ceased to be even a bore,--
- The Divine, and the Sceptic who mocks,--
- They are “cropped,” they are “foxed” to the core,
- They are all in the Fourpenny Box!
-
-
- Envoy
-
- Suns beat on them; tempests downpour,
- On the chest without cover or locks,
- Where they lie by the Bookseller’s door,--
- They are _all_ in the Fourpenny Box!
-
-William Schwenck Gilbert began as a youth his humorous contributions to
-magazines, which included the immortal _Bab Ballads_.
-
-Ten years later he joined forces with the composer, Arthur Sullivan,
-and the result of this collaboration was the well known series of
-operas of which _Trial By Jury_ was the first.
-
-Gilbert is second to none in humorous paradoxical thought and sprightly
-and clever versification. His themes, subtle and fantastic, are worked
-out with a serious absurdity as truly witty as it is charming.
-
-
- _THE MIGHTY MUST_
-
- Come mighty Must!
- Inevitable Shall!
- In thee I trust.
- Time weaves my coronal!
- Go mocking Is!
- Go disappointing Was!
- That I am this
- Ye are the cursed cause!
- Yet humble second shall be first,
- I ween;
- And dead and buried be the curst
- Has Been!
-
- Of weak Might Be!
- Oh, May, Might, Could, Would, Should!
- How powerless ye
- For evil or for good!
- In every sense
- Your moods I cheerless call,
- Whate’er your tense
- Ye are imperfect, all!
- Ye have deceived the trust I’ve shown
- In ye!
- Away! The Mighty Must alone
- Shall be!
-
-
- _TO THE TERRESTRIAL GLOBE_
-
- By a Miserable Wretch.
-
- Roll on, thou ball, roll on!
- Through pathless realms of Space
- Roll on!
- What though I’m in a sorry case?
- What though I cannot meet my bills?
- What though I suffer toothache’s ills?
- What though I swallow countless pills?
- Never _you_ mind!
- Roll on!
-
- Roll on, thou ball, roll on!
- Through seas of inky air,
- Roll on!
- It’s true I have no shirts to wear;
- It’s true my butcher’s bill is due;
- It’s true my prospects all look blue--
- But don’t let that unsettle you:
- Never _you_ mind!
- Roll on!
- (_It rolls on_).
-
-
- _GENTLE ALICE BROWN_
-
- It was a robber’s daughter, and her name was Alice Brown,
- Her father was the terror of a small Italian town;
- Her mother was a foolish, weak, but amiable old thing;
- But it isn’t of her parents that I’m going for to sing.
-
- As Alice was a-sitting at her window-sill one day
- A beautiful young gentleman he chanced to pass that way;
- She cast her eyes upon him, and he looked so good and true,
- That she thought, “I could be happy with a gentleman like you!”
-
- And every morning passed her house that cream of gentlemen;
- She knew she might expect him at a quarter unto ten,
- A sorter in the Custom House it was his daily road
- (The Custom House was fifteen minutes’ walk from her abode).
-
- But Alice was a pious girl and knew it was not wise
- To look at strange young sorters with expressive purple eyes,
- So she sought the village priest to whom her family confessed--
- The priest by whom their little sins were carefully assessed.
-
- “Oh holy father,” Alice said, “’twould grieve you, would it not?
- To discover that I was a most disreputable lot!
- Of all unhappy sinners I’m the most unhappy one!”
- The padre said “Whatever have you been and gone and done?”
-
- “I have helped mamma to steal a little kiddy from its dad,
- I’ve assisted dear papa in cutting up a little lad.
- I’ve planned a little burglary and forged a little cheque,
- And slain a little baby for the coral on its neck!”
-
- The worthy pastor heaved a sigh, and dropped a silent tear--
- And said “You mustn’t judge yourself too heavily, my dear--
- It’s wrong to murder babies, little corals for to fleece;
- But sins like these one expiates at half-a-crown apiece.
-
- “Girls will be girls--you’re very young and flighty in your mind;
- Old heads upon young shoulders we must not expect to find:
- We mustn’t be too hard upon these little girlish tricks--
- Let’s see--five crimes at half a crown--exactly twelve-and six.”
-
- “Oh father,” little Alice cried, “your kindness makes me weep,
- You do these little things for me so singularly cheap--
- Your thoughtful liberality I never can forget;
- But, oh, there is another crime I haven’t mentioned yet!
-
- “A pleasant-looking gentleman, with pretty purple eyes,--
- I’ve noticed at my window, as I’ve sat a-catching flies;
- He passes by it every day as certain as can be--
- I blush to say I’ve winked at him, and he has winked at me!”
-
- “For shame,” said Father Paul, “my erring daughter! On my word
- This is the most distressing news that I have ever heard.
- Why, naughty girl, your excellent papa has pledged your hand
- To a promising young robber, the lieutenant of his band!
-
- “This dreadful piece of news will pain your worthy parents so!
- They are the most remunerative customers I know;
- For many, many years they’ve kept starvation from my doors,
- I never knew so criminal a family as yours!
-
- “The common country folk in this insipid neighbourhood
- Have nothing to confess, they’re so ridiculously good;
- And if you marry anyone respectable at all,
- Why, you’ll reform, and what will then become of Father Paul?”
-
- The worthy priest, he up and drew his cowl upon his crown,
- And started off in haste to tell the news to Robber Brown;
- To tell him how his daughter, who was now for marriage fit,
- Had winked upon a sorter, who reciprocated it.
-
- Good Robber Brown he muffled up his anger pretty well,
- He said, “I have a notion, and that notion I will tell;
- I will nab this gay young sorter, terrify him into fits,
- And get my gentle wife to chop him into little bits.
-
- “I’ve studied human nature, and I know a thing or two;
- Though a girl may fondly love a living gent, as many do,
- A feeling of disgust upon her senses there will fall
- When she looks upon his body chopped particularly small.”
-
- He traced that gallant sorter to a still suburban square;
- He watched his opportunity and seized him unaware;
- He took a life preserver and he hit him on the head,
- And Mrs. Brown dissected him before she went to bed.
-
- And pretty little Alice grew more settled in her mind,
- She never more was guilty of a weakness of the kind,
- Until at length good Robber Brown bestowed her pretty hand
- On the promising young robber, the lieutenant of his band.
-
-Francis C. Burnand, writer of many comedies and burlesques, was a long
-time editor of _Punch_ and wrote much of his best work for that
-paper.
-
-One of his most delightful songs, so successfully sung by the Vokes
-family is:
-
-
- _TRUE TO POLL_
-
- I’ll sing you a song, not very long,
- But the story somewhat new
- Of William Kidd, who, whatever he did,
- To his Poll was always true.
- He sailed away in a galliant ship
- From the port of old Bris_tol_,
- And the last words he uttered,
- As his hankercher he fluttered,
- Were, “My heart is true to Poll.”
-
- His heart was true to Poll,
- His heart was true to Poll.
- It’s no matter what you do
- If your heart be only true:
- And his heart _was_ true to Poll.
-
- ’Twas a wreck. Willi_am_, on shore he swam,
- And looked about for an inn;
- When a noble savage lady, of a colour rather shady,
- Came up with a kind of grin:
- “Oh, marry _me_, and a king you’ll be,
- And in a palace loll;
- Or we’ll eat you willy-nilly.”
- So he gave his _hand_, did Billy,
- But his _heart_ was true to Poll.
-
- Away a twelvemonth sped, and a happy life he led
- As the King of the Kikeryboos;
- His paint was red and yellar, and he used a big umbrella,
- And he wore a pair of over-_shoes_!
- He’d corals and knives, and twenty-six wives,
- Whose beauties I cannot here extol;
- One day they all revolted,
- So he back to Bristol bolted,
- For his _heart_ was true to Poll.
-
- His heart was true to Poll,
- His heart was true to Poll.
- It’s no matter what you do,
- If your heart be only true:
- And his _heart_ was true to Poll.
-
-William Ernest Henley, though better known for his serious work, waxed
-humorous, especially when making excursions into the artificial verse
-forms.
-
-
- _VILLANELLE_
-
- Now ain’t they utterly too-too
- (She ses, my Missus mine, ses she)
- Them flymy little bits of Blue.
-
- Joe, just you kool ’em--nice and skew
- Upon our old meogginee,
- Now ain’t they utterly too-too?
-
- They’re better than a pot’n’ a screw,
- They’re equal to a Sunday spree,
- Them flymy little bits of Blue!
-
- Suppose I put ’em up the flue,
- And booze the profits, Joe? Not me.
- Now ain’t they utterly too-too?
-
- I do the ’Igh Art fake, I do.
- Joe, I’m consummate; and I _see_
- Them flymy little bits of Blue.
-
- Which, Joe, is why I ses to you--
- Æsthetic-like, and limp, and free--
- Now _ain’t_ they utterly too-too,
- Them flymy little bits of Blue?
-
-Robert Louis Stevenson’s humor consists in an extravagance and
-whimsicality of thought and expression and is usually subservient to a
-greater intent.
-
-His delightful _Child’s Verses_ show quiet roguery and humorous
-conceits.
-
- The lovely cow, all red and white,
- I love with all my heart;
- She gives me milk with all her might
- To eat on apple tart.
-
- The world is so full of a number of things,
- I’m sure we should all be as happy as kings.
-
-This original style of Juvenile verse, often imitated, has rarely been
-successful in the hands of lesser artists.
-
-James Matthew Barrie, one of the finest English humorists, may not be
-quoted successfully because his work is only found in sustained stories
-or plays, and few brief extracts will bear separation from their
-contexts.
-
-A short passage from _A Window in Thrums_ will hint at the
-delightfulness of Barrie’s humor.
-
-
- _A HUMOURIST ON HIS CALLING_
-
-Tammas put his foot on the pail.
-
-“I tak no credit,” he said modestly, on the evening, I remember, of
-Willie Pyatt’s funeral, “in bein’ able to speak wi’ a sort o’ faceelity
-on topics ’at I’ve made my ain.”
-
-“Aye,” said T’nowhead, “but it’s no faceelity o’ speakin’ ’at taks me.
-There’s Davit Lunan ’at can speak like as if he had learned if aff a
-paper, an’ yet I canna thole ’im.”
-
-“Davit,” said Hendry, “doesna speak in a wy ’at a body can follow ’im.
-He doesna gae even on. Jess says he’s juist like a man aye at the
-cross-roads, an’ no sure o’ his way. But the stock has words, an’ no
-ilka body has that.”
-
-“If I was bidden to put Tammas’s gift in a word,” said T’nowhead, “I
-would say ’at he had a wy. That’s what I would say.”
-
-“Weel, I suppose I have,” Tammas admitted, “but, wy or no wy, I couldna
-put a point on my words if it wasna for my sense o’ humour. Lads,
-humour’s what gies the nip to speakin’.”
-
-“It’s what maks ye a sarcesticist, Tammas,” said Hendry; “but what I
-wonder at is yer sayin’ the humorous things sae aisy-like. Some says ye
-mak them up aforehand, but I ken that’s no true.”
-
-“No, only is’t no true,” said Tammas, “but it couldna be true. Them ’at
-says sic things, an’ weel I ken you’re meanin’ Davit Lunan, hasna nae
-idea o’ what humour is. It’s a thing ’at spouts oot o’ its ain accord.
-Some o’ the maist humorous things I’ve ever said cam oot, as a body may
-say, by themselves.”
-
-“I suppose that’s the case,” said T’nowhead; “an’ yet it maun be you
-’at brings them up?”
-
-“There’s no nae doubt about its bein’ the case,” said Tammas; “for
-I’ve watched mysel’ often. There was a vera guid instance occurred
-sune after I married Easie. The earl’s son met me one day, aboot that
-time, i’ the Tenements, an’ he didna ken ’at Chirsty was deid, an’ I’d
-married again. ‘Well, Haggart,’ he says, in his frank wy, ‘and how is
-your wife?’ ‘She’s vera weel, sir,’ I maks answer, ‘but she’s no the
-ane you mean.’”
-
-“Na, he meant Chirsty,” said Hendry.
-
-“Is that a’ the story?” asked T’nowhead
-
-Tammas had been looking at us queerly.
-
-“There’s no nane o’ ye lauchin’,” he said, “but I can assure ye the
-earl’s son gaed east the toon lauchin’ like onything.”
-
-“But what was’t he lauched at?”
-
-“Ou,” said Tammas, “a humourist doesna tell whaur the humour comes in.”
-
-“No, but when you said that, did ye mean it to be humourous?”
-
-“Am no sayin’ I did, but as I’ve been tellin’ ye humour spouts oot by
-itsel’.”
-
-“Aye, but do ye ken noo what the earl’s son gaed awa lauchin’ at?”
-
-Tammas hesitated.
-
-“I dinna exactly see’t,” he confessed, “but that’s no an oncommon
-thing. A humourist would often no ken ’at he was are if it wasna by the
-wy he maks other fowk lauch. A body canna be expeckit baith to mak the
-joke an’ to see’t. Na, that would be doin’ twa fowks’ wark.”
-
-“Weel, that’s reasonable enough, but I’ve often seen ye lauchin’,” said
-Hendry, “lang afore other fowk lauched.”
-
-“Nae doubt,” Tammas explained, “an’ that’s because humour has twa
-sides, juist like a penny piece. When I say a humorous thing mysel’ I’m
-dependent on other fowk to tak note o’ the humour o’t, bein’ mysel’
-taen up wi’ the makkin’ o’t. Aye, but there’s things I see an’ hear at’
-maks me laucht, an’ that’s the other side o’ humour.”
-
-“I never heard it put sae plain afore,” said T’nowhead, “an’, sal, am
-no nane sure but what am a humourist too.”
-
-“Na, na, no you, T’nowhead,” said Tammas hotly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sir Owen Seaman, present editor of _Punch_, is also one of the
-finest parodists of all time. His humorous verse of all varieties is in
-the first rank.
-
-
- _A NOCTURNE AT DANIELI’S_
-
- (Suggested by Browning’s _A Toccata of Galuppi’s_.)
-
- _Caro mio, Pulcinello_, kindly hear my wail of woe
- Lifted from a noble structure--late Palazzo Dandolo.
-
- This is Venice, you will gather, which is full of precious “stones,”
- Tintorettos, picture-postcards, and remains of Doges’ bones.
-
- Not of these am I complaining; they are mostly seen by day,
- And they only try your patience in an inoffensive way.
-
- But at night, when over Lido rises Dian (that’s the moon),
- And the vicious _vaporetti_ cease to vex the still lagoon;
-
- When the final _trovatore_, singing something old and cheap,
- Hurls his _tremolo crescendo_ full against my beauty sleep;
-
- When I hear the Riva’s loungers in debate beneath my bower
- Summing up (about 1.30) certain questions of the hour;
-
- Then across my nervous system falls the shrill mosquito’s boom,
- And it’s “O, to be in England,” where the may is on the bloom.
-
- I admit the power of Music to inflate the savage breast--
- There are songs devoid of language which are quite among the best;
-
- But the present orchestration, with its poignant oboe part,
- Is, in my obscure opinion, barely fit to rank as Art.
-
- Will it solace me to-morrow, being hit in either eye,
- To be told that this is nothing to the season in July?
-
- Shall I go for help to Ruskin? Would it ease my pimply brow
- If I found the doges suffered much as I am suffering now?
-
- If identical probosces pinked the lovers who were bored
- By the sentimental tinkling of Galuppi’s clavichord?
-
- That’s from Browning (Robert Browning)--I have left his works at
- home,
- And the poem I allude to isn’t in the Tauchnitz tome;
-
- But, if memory serves me rightly, he was very much concerned
- At the thought that in the sequel Venice reaped what Venice earned.
-
- Was he thinking of mosquitoes? Did he mean _their_ poisoned crop?
- Was it through ammonia tincture that “the kissing had to stop”?
-
- As for later loves--for Venice never quite mislaid her spell--
- Madame Sand and dear De Musset occupied my own hotel!
-
- On the very floor below me, I have heard the patron say,
- They were put in No. 13 (No. 36, to-day).
-
- But they parted--“_elle et lui_” did--and it now occurs to me
- That mosquitoes came between them in this “kingdom by the sea.”
-
- Poor dead lovers, and such brains, too! What am I that I should
- swear
- When the creatures munch my forehead, taking more than I can spare?
-
- Should I live to meet the morning, should the climate readjust
- Any reparable fragments left upon my outer crust,
-
- Why, at least I still am extant, and a dog that sees the sun
- Has the pull of Danieli’s den of “lions,” dead and done.
-
- Courage! I will keep my vigil on the balcony till day
- Like a knight in full pyjamas who would rather run away.
-
- Courage! let me ope the casement, let the shutters be withdrawn;
- Let scirocco, breathing on me, check a tendency to yawn;
- There’s the sea! and--_Ecco l’alba!_ Ha! (in other words) the Dawn!
-
-
- _TO JULIA UNDER LOCK AND KEY_
-
-(A form of betrothal gift in America is an anklet secured by a padlock,
-of which the other party keeps the key.)
-
- When like a bud my Julia blows
- In lattice-work of silken hose,
- Pleasant I deem it is to note
- How, ’neath the nimble petticoat,
- Above her fairy shoe is set
- The circumvolving zonulet.
- And soothly for the lover’s ear
- A perfect bliss it is to hear
- About her limb so lithe and lank
- My Julia’s ankle-bangle clank.
- Not rudely tight, for ’twere a sin
- To corrugate her dainty skin;
- Nor yet so large that it might fare
- Over her foot at unaware;
- But fashioned nicely with a view
- To let her airy stocking through:
- So as, when Julia goes to bed,
- Of all her gear disburdenèd,
- This ring at least she shall not doff
- Because she cannot take it off.
- And since thereof I hold the key,
- She may not taste of liberty,
- Not though she suffer from the gout,
- Unless I choose to let her out.
-
-
- _AT THE SIGN OF THE COCK_
-
- (FRENCH STYLE, 1898)
-
- (_Being an Ode in further “Contribution to the Song of French
- History,” dedicated, without malice or permission, to Mr. George
- Meredith_)
-
-
- I
-
- Rooster her sign,
- Rooster her pugnant note, she struts
- Evocative, amazon spurs aprick at heel;
- Nid-nod the authentic stump
- Of the once ensanguined comb vermeil as wine;
- With conspuent doodle-doo
- Hails breach o’ the hectic dawn of yon New Year,
- Last issue up to date
- Of quiverful Fate
- Evolved spontaneous; hails with tonant trump
- The spiriting prime o’ the clashed carillon-peal;
- Ruffling her caudal plumes derisive of scuts;
- Inconscient how she stalks an immarcessibly absurd
- Bird.
-
-
- II
-
- Mark where her Equatorial Pioneer
- Delirant on the tramp goes littoralwise.
- His Flag at furl, portmanteaued; drains to the dregs
- The penultimate brandy-bottle, coal-on-the-head-piece gift
- Of who avenged the Old Sea-Rover’s smirch.
- Marchant he treads the all-along of inarable drift
- On dubiously connivent legs,
- The facile prey of predatory flies;
- Panting for further; sworn to lurch
- Empirical on to the Menelik-buffered, enhavened blue,
- Rhyming--see Cantique I.--with doodle-doo.
-
-
- III
-
- Infuriate she kicked against Imperial fact;
- Vulnant she felt
- What pin-stab should have stained Another’s pelt
- Puncture her own Colonial lung-balloon,
- Volant to nigh meridian. Whence rebuffed,
- The perjured Scythian she lacked
- At need’s pinch, sick with spleen of the rudely cuffed
- Below her breath she cursed; she cursed the hour
- When on her spring for him the young Tyrannical broke
- Amid the unhallowed wedlock’s vodka-shower,
- She passionate, he dispassionate; tricked
- Her wits to eye-blind; borrowed the ready as for dower;
- Till from the trance of that Hymettus-moon
- She woke,
- A nuptial-knotted derelict;
- Pensioned with Rescripts other aid declined
- By the plumped leech saturate urging Peace
- In guise of heavy-armed Gospeller to men,
- Tyrannical unto fraternal equal liberal, her. Not she;
- Not till Alsace her consanguineous find
- What red deteutonising artillery
- Shall shatter her beer-reek alien police
- The just-now pluripollent; not till then.
-
-
- IV
-
- More pungent yet the esoteric pain
- Squeezing her pliable vitals nourishes feud
- Insanely grumous, grumously insane.
- For lo!
- Past common balmly on the Bordereau,
- Churns she the skim o’ the gutter’s crust
- With Anti-Judaic various carmagnole,
- Whooped praise of the Anti-just;
- Her boulevard brood
- Gyratory in convolvements militant-mad;
- Theatrical of faith in the Belliform,
- Her Og,
- Her Monstrous. Fled what force she had
- To buckle the jaw-gape, wide agog
- For the Preconcerted One,
- The Anticipated, ripe to clinch the whole;
- Queen-bee to hive the hither and thither volant swarm.
- Bides she his coming; adumbrates the new
- Expurgatorial Divine,
- Her final effulgent Avatar,
- Postured outside a trampling mastodon
- Black as her Baker’s charger; towering; visibly gorged
- With blood of traitors. Knee-grip stiff,
- Spine straightened, on he rides;
- Embossed the Patriot’s brow with hieroglyph
- Of martial _dossiers_, nothing forged
- About him save his armour. So she bides
- Voicing his advent indeterminably far,
- Rooster her sign,
- Rooster her conspuent doodle-doo.
-
-
- V
-
- Behold her, pranked with spurs for bloody sport,
- How she acclaims,
- A crapulous chanticleer,
- Breach of the hectic dawn of yon New Year.
- Not yet her fill of rumours sucked;
- Inebriate of honour; blushfully wroth;
- Tireless to play her old primeval games;
- Her plumage preened the yet unplucked
- Like sails of a galleon, rudder hard amort
- With crepitant mast
- Fronting the hazard to dare of a dual blast
- The intern and the extern, blizzards both.
-
-Anthony C. Deane is also among the best of the modern parodists.
-
-
- _HERE IS THE TALE_
-
- (AFTER RUDYARD KIPLING)
-
- _Here is the tale--and you must make the most of it:
- Here is the rhyme--ah, listen and attend:
- Backwards--forwards--read it all and boast of it
- If you are anything the wiser at the end!_
-
- Now Jack looked up--it was time to sup, and the bucket was yet to
- fill,
- And Jack looked round for a space and frowned, then beckoned his
- sister Jill,
- And twice he pulled his sister’s hair, and thrice he smote her
- side;
- “Ha’ done, ha’ done with your impudent fun--ha’ done with your
- games!” she cried;
- “You have made mud-pies of a marvellous size--finger and face are
- black,
- You have trodden the Way of the Mire and Clay--now up and wash you,
- Jack!
- Or else, or ever we reach our home, there waiteth an angry dame--
- Well you know the weight of her blow--the supperless open shame!
- Wash, if you will, on yonder hill--wash, if you will, at the
- spring,--
- Or keep your dirt, to your certain hurt, and an imminent
- walloping!”
-
- “You must wash--you must scrub--you must scrape!” growled Jack,
- “you must traffic with cans and pails,
- Nor keep the spoil of the good brown soil in the rim of your
- finger-nails!
- The morning path you must tread to your bath--you must wash ere the
- night descends,
- And all for the cause of conventional laws and the soapmakers’
- dividends!
- But if ’tis sooth that our meal in truth depends on our washing,
- Jill,
- By the sacred right of our appetite--haste--haste to the top of the
- hill!”
-
- They have trodden the Way of the Mire and Clay, they have toiled
- and travelled far,
- They have climbed to the brow of the hill-top now, where the
- bubbling fountains are,
- They have taken the bucket and filled it up--yea, filled it up to
- the brim;
- But Jack he sneered at his sister Jill, and Jill she jeered at him:
- “What, blown already!” Jack cried out (and his was a biting mirth!)
- “You boast indeed of your wonderful speed--but what is the boasting
- worth?
- Now, if you can run as the antelope runs and if you can turn like a
- hare,
- Come, race me, Jill, to the foot of the hill--and prove your
- boasting fair!”
- “Race? What is a race” (and a mocking face had Jill as she spake
- the word)
- “Unless for a prize the runner tries? The truth indeed ye heard,
- For I can run as the antelope runs, and I can turn like a hare:--
- The first one down wins half-a-crown--and I will race you there!”
- “Yea, if for the lesson that you will learn (the lesson of humbled
- pride)
- The price you fix at two-and-six, it shall not be denied;
- Come, take your stand at my right hand, for here is the mark we
- toe:
- Now, are you ready, and are you steady? Gird up your petticoats!
- Go!”
-
- And Jill she ran like a winging bolt, a bolt from the bow released,
- But Jack like a stream of the lightning gleam, with its pathway
- duly greased;
- He ran down hill in front of Jill like a summer-lightning flash--
- Till he suddenly tripped on a stone, or slipped, and fell to the
- earth with a crash.
- Then straight did rise on his wondering eyes the constellations
- fair,
- Arcturus and the Pleiades, the Greater and Lesser Bear,
- The swirling rain of a comet’s train he saw, as he swiftly fell--
- And Jill came tumbling after him with a loud triumphant yell:
- “You have won, you have won, the race is done! And as for the wager
- laid--
- You have fallen down with a broken crown--the half-crown debt is
- paid!”
-
- They have taken Jack to the room at the back where the family
- medicines are,
- And he lies in bed with a broken head in a halo of vinegar;
- While, in that Jill had laughed her fill as her brother fell to
- earth,
- She had felt the sting of a walloping--she hath paid the price of
- her mirth!
-
- _Here is the tale--and now you have the whole of it,
- Here is the story, well and wisely-planned,
- Beauty--Duty--these make up the soul of it--
- But, ah, my little readers, will you mark and understand?_
-
-Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch, writing often over the pseudonym of Q, is
-most versatile and talented. He, too, loved to dally with the muse of
-Imitation.
-
-
- _DE TEA FABULA_
-
- _Plain Language from Truthful James_
-
- Do I sleep? Do I dream?
- Am I hoaxed by a scout?
- Are things what they seem,
- Or is Sophists about?
- Is our το τι ηυ ειναι a failure, or is Robert Browning played out?
-
- Which expressions like these
- May be fairly applied
- By a party who sees
- A Society skied
- Upon tea that the Warden of Keble had biled with legitimate pride.
-
- ’Twas November the third,
- And I says to Bill Nye,
- “Which it’s true what I’ve heard:
- If you’re, so to speak, fly,
- There’s a chance of some tea and cheap culture, the sort recommended
- as High.”
-
- Which I mentioned its name,
- And he ups and remarks:
- “If dress-coats is the game
- And pow-wow in the Parks,
- Then I’m nuts on Sordello and Hohenstiel-Schwangau and similar
- Snarks.”
-
- Now the pride of Bill Nye
- Cannot well be express’d;
- For he wore a white tie
- And a cut-away vest:
- Says I, “Solomon’s lilies ain’t in it, and they was reputed well
- dress’d.”
-
- But not far did we wend,
- When we saw Pippa pass
- On the arm of a friend
- --Dr. Furnivall ’t was,
- And he wore in his hat two half-tickets for London, return,
- second-class.
-
- “Well,” I thought, “this is odd.”
- But we came pretty quick
- To a sort of a quad
- That was all of red brick,
- And I says to the porter,--“R. Browning: free passes; and kindly
- look slick.”
-
- But says he, dripping tears
- In his check handkerchief,
- “That symposium’s career’s
- Been regrettably brief,
- For it went all its pile upon crumpets and busted on gunpowder
- leaf!”
-
- Then we tucked up the sleeves
- Of our shirts (that were biled),
- Which the reader perceives
- That our feelings were riled,
- And we went for that man till his mother had doubted the traits of
- her child.
-
- Which emotions like these
- Must be freely indulged
- By a party who sees
- A Society bulged
- On a reef the existence of which its prospectus had never divulged.
-
- But I ask,--Do I dream?
- Has it gone up the spout?
- Are things what they seem,
- Or is Sophists about?
- Is our τὸ τι ἦυ εἶναι a failure, or is Robert Browning played out?
-
-James Kenneth Stephen, like so many of the English minor poets,
-expresses his humorous vein best in parody.
-
-Stephen’s light verse belongs mostly to his undergraduate days.
-
-
- _A SONNET_
-
- Two voices are there: one is of the deep;
- It learns the storm-cloud’s thunderous melody,
- Now roars, now murmurs with the changing sea,
- Now bird-like pipes, now closes soft in sleep:
- And one is of an old half-witted sheep
- Which bleats articulate monotony.
- And indicates that two and one are three,
- That grass is green, lakes damp, and mountains steep:
- And, Wordsworth, both are thine: at certain times
- Forth from the heart of thy melodious rhymes,
- The form and pressure of high thoughts will burst:
- At other times--good Lord! I’d rather be
- Quite unacquainted with the A B C
- Than write such hopeless rubbish as thy worst.
-
-
- _A THOUGHT_
-
- If all the harm that women have done
- Were put in a bundle and rolled into one,
- Earth would not hold it,
- The sky could not enfold it,
- It could not be lighted nor warmed by the sun;
- Such masses of evil
- Would puzzle the devil,
- And keep him in fuel while Time’s wheels run.
-
- But if all the harm that’s been done by men
- Were doubled, and doubled, and doubled again,
- And melted and fused into vapour, and then
- Were squared and raised to the power of ten,
- There wouldn’t be nearly enough, not near,
- To keep a small girl for the tenth of a year.
-
-
- _THE MILLENNIUM_
-
- TO R. K.
-
- _As long I dwell on some stupendous
- And tremendous (Heaven defend us!)
- Monstr’-inform’-ingens-horrendous
- Demoniaco-seraphic
- Penman’s latest piece of graphic._
- ROBERT BROWNING.
-
- Will there never come a season
- Which shall rid us from the curse
- Of a prose which knows no reason
- And an unmelodious verse:
- When the world shall cease to wonder
- At the genius of an Ass,
- And a boy’s eccentric blunder
- Shall not bring success to pass:
-
- When mankind shall be delivered
- From the clash of magazines,
- And the inkstand shall be shivered
- Into countless smithereens:
- When there stands a muzzled stripling,
- Mute, beside a muzzled bore:
- When the Rudyards cease from Kipling
- And the Haggards Ride no more?
-
-
- _SCHOOL_
-
- If there is a vile, pernicious,
- Wicked and degraded rule,
- Tending to debase the vicious,
- And corrupt the harmless fool;
- If there is a hateful habit
- Making man a senseless tool,
- With the feelings of a rabbit
- And the wisdom of a mule;
- It’s the rule which inculcates,
- It’s the habit which dictates
- The wrong and sinful practice of going into school.
-
- If there’s anything improving
- To an erring sinner’s state,
- Which is useful in removing
- All the ills of human fate;
- If there’s any glorious custom
- Which our faults can dissipate,
- And can casually thrust ’em
- Out of sight and make us great;
- It’s the plan by which we shirk
- Half our matu-ti-nal work,
- The glorious institution of always being late.
-
-Barry Pain, journalist and author, following the trend of the hour,
-produced this amusing set of parodies.
-
-
- _THE POETS AT TEA_
-
-
- 1--(_Macaulay, who made it_)
-
- Pour, varlet, pour the water,
- The water steaming hot!
- A spoonful for each man of us,
- Another for the pot!
- We shall not drink from amber,
- Nor Capuan slave shall mix
- For us the snows of Athos
- With port at thirty-six;
- Whiter than snow the crystals,
- Grown sweet ’neath tropic fires,
- More rich the herbs of China’s field,
- The pasture-lands more fragrance yield;
- For ever let Britannia wield
- The tea-pot of her sires!
-
-
- 2--(_Tennyson, who took it hot_)
-
- I think that I am drawing to an end:
- For on a sudden came a gasp for breath.
- And stretching of the hands, and blinded eyes,
- And a great darkness falling on my soul.
- O Hallelujah!... Kindly pass the milk.
-
-
- 3--(_Swinburne, who let it get cold_)
-
- As the sin that was sweet in the sinning
- Is foul in the ending thereof,
- As the heat of the summer’s beginning
- Is past in the winter of love:
- O purity, painful and pleading!
- O coldness, ineffably gray!
- Oh, hear us, our handmaid unheeding,
- And take it away!
-
-
- 4--(_Cowper, who thoroughly enjoyed it_)
-
- The cosy fire is bright and gay,
- The merry kettle boils away
- And hums a cheerful song.
- I sing the saucer and the cup;
- Pray, Mary, fill the tea-pot up,
- And do not make it strong.
-
-
- 5--(_Browning, who treated it allegorically_)
-
- Tut! Bah! We take as another case--
- Pass the bills on the pills on the window-sill; notice the capsule
- (A sick man’s fancy, no doubt, but I place
- Reliance on trade-marks, Sir)--so perhaps you’ll
- Excuse the digression--this cup which I hold
- Light-poised--Bah, it’s spilt in the bed!--well, let’s on go--
- Hold Bohea and sugar, Sir; if you were told
- The sugar was salt, would the Bohea be Congo?
-
-
- 6--(_Wordsworth, who gave it away_)
-
- “Come, little cottage girl, you seem
- To want my cup of tea;
- And will you take a little cream?
- Now tell the truth to me.”
-
- She had a rustic, woodland grin,
- Her cheek was soft as silk,
- And she replied, “Sir, please put in
- A little drop of milk.”
-
- “Why, what put milk into your head?
- ’Tis cream my cows supply”;
- And five times to the child I said,
- “Why, pig-head, tell me, why?”
-
- “You call me pig-head,” she replied;
- “My proper name is Ruth.
- I called that milk”--she blushed with pride--
- “You bade me speak the truth.”
-
-
- 7--(_Poe, who got excited over it_)
-
- Here’s a mellow cup of tea, golden tea!
- What a world of rapturous thought its fragrance brings to me!
- Oh, from out the silver cells
- How it wells!
- How it smells!
- Keeping tune, tune, tune
- To the tintinnabulation of the spoon.
- And the kettle on the fire
- Boils its spout off with desire,
- With a desperate desire
- And a crystalline endeavour
- Now, now to sit, or never,
- On the top of the pale-faced moon,
- But he always came home to tea, tea, tea, tea, tea,
- Tea to the n--th.
-
-
- 8--(_Rossetti, who took six cups of it_)
-
- The lilies lie in my lady’s bower
- (O weary mother, drive the cows to roost),
- They faintly droop for a little hour;
- My lady’s head droops like a flower.
-
- She took the porcelain in her hand
- (O weary mother, drive the cows to roost);
- She poured; I drank at her command;
- Drank deep, and now--you understand!
- (O weary mother, drive the cows to roost.)
-
-
- 9--(_Burns, who liked it adulterated_)
-
- Weel, gin ye speir, I’m no inclined,
- Whusky or tay--to state my mind,
- Fore ane or ither;
- For, gin I tak the first, I’m fou,
- And gin the next, I’m dull as you,
- Mix a’ thegither.
-
-
- 10--(_Walt Whitman, who didn’t stay more than a minute_)
-
- One cup for myself-hood,
- Many for you. Allons, camerados, we will drink together,
- O hand-in-hand! That tea-spoon, please, when you’ve done with it.
- What butter-colour’d hair you’ve got. I don’t want to be personal.
- All right, then, you needn’t. You’re a stale-cadaver.
- Eighteen-pence if the bottles are returned.
- Allons, from all bat-eyed formula.
-
-F. Anstey (pen name of J. B. Guthrie) wrote many novels and short skits
-as well as verses. Like many of his contemporaries he is especially
-happy in a parody vein.
-
-
- _SELECT PASSAGES FROM A COMING POET_
-
-
- _Disenchantment_
-
- My Love has sicklied unto Loath,
- And foul seems all that fair I fancied--
- The lily’s sheen’s a leprous growth,
- The very buttercups are rancid.
-
-
- _Abasement_
-
- With matted head a-dabble in the dust,
- And eyes tear-sealèd in a saline crust
- I lie all loathly in my rags and rust--
- Yet learn that strange delight may lurk in self-disgust.
-
-
- _Stanza Written in Depression Near Dulwich_
-
- The lark soars up in the air;
- The toad sits tight in his hole;
- And I would I were certain which of the pair
- Were the truer type of my soul!
-
-
- _To My Lady_
-
- Twine, lanken fingers, lily-lithe,
- Gleam, slanted eyes, all beryl-green,
- Pout, blood-red lips that burst a-writhe,
- Then--kiss me, Lady Grisoline!
-
-
- _The Monster_
-
- Uprears the monster now his slobberous head,
- Its filamentous chaps her ankles brushing;
- Her twice-five roseal toes are cramped in dread,
- Each maidly instep mauven-pink is flushing.
-
-
- _A Trumpet Blast_
-
- Pale Patricians, sunk in self-indulgence,
- Blink your blearèd eyes. Behold the Sun--
- Burst proclaim in purpurate effulgence,
- Demos dawning, and the Darkness done!
-
-Hilaire Belloc, in addition to wiser matters, wrote most amusing
-nonsense animal verses.
-
-
- _THE PYTHON_
-
- A python I should not advise,--
- It needs a doctor for its eyes,
- And has the measles yearly.
-
- However, if you feel inclined
- To get one (to improve your mind,
- And not from fashion merely),
- Allow no music near its cage;
- And when it flies into a rage
- Chastise it most severely.
-
- I had an Aunt in Yucatan
- Who bought a Python from a man
- And kept it for a pet.
- She died because she never knew
- These simple little rules and few;--
- The snake is living yet.
-
-
- _THE BISON_
-
- The Bison is vain, and (I write it with pain)
- The Door-mat you see on his head
- Is not, as some learned professors maintain,
- The opulent growth of a genius’ brain;
- But is sewn on with needle and thread.
-
-
- _THE MICROBE_
-
- The Microbe is so very small
- You cannot make him out at all,
- But many sanguine people hope
- To see him through a microscope.
- His jointed tongue that lies beneath
- A hundred curious rows of teeth;
- His seven tufted tails with lots
- Of lovely pink and purple spots
- On each of which a pattern stands,
- Composed of forty separate bands;
- His eyebrows of a tender green;
- All these have never yet been seen--
- But Scientists, who ought to know,
- Assure us that they must be so....
- Oh! let us never, never doubt
- What nobody is sure about!
-
-
- _THE FROG_
-
- Be kind and tender to the Frog,
- And do not call him names,
- As “Slimy-Skin,” or “Polly-wog,”
- Or likewise, “Uncle James,”
- Or “Gape-a-grin,” or “Toad-gone-wrong,”
- Or “Billy-Bandy-knees”;
- The Frog is justly sensitive
- To epithets like these.
-
- No animal will more repay,
- A treatment kind and fair,
- At least, so lonely people say
- Who keep a frog (and, by the way,
- They are extremely rare).
-
-Gilbert K. Chesterton, England’s great humorist of today, is cleverly
-gay in his French Forms.
-
-
- _A BALLADE OF SUICIDE_
-
- The gallows in my garden, people say,
- Is new and neat and adequately tall.
- I tie the noose on in a knowing way
- As one that knots his necktie for a ball;
- But just as all the neighbours--on the wall--
- Are drawing a long breath to shout “Hurray!”
- The strangest whim has seized me.... After all
- I think I will not hang myself to-day.
-
- To-morrow is the time I get my pay--
- My uncle’s sword is hanging in the hall--
- I see a little cloud all pink and grey--
- Perhaps the rector’s mother will _not_ call--
- I fancy that I heard from Mr. Gall
- That mushrooms could be cooked another way--
- I never read the works of Juvenal--
- I think I will not hang myself to-day.
-
- The world will have another washing day;
- The decadents decay; the pedants pall;
- And H. G. Wells has found that children play,
- And Bernard Shaw discovered that they squall;
- Rationalists are growing rational--
- And through thick woods one finds a stream astray,
- So secret that the very sky seems small--
- I think I will not hang myself to-day.
-
-
- _Envoi_
-
- Prince, I can hear the trump of Germinal,
- The tumbrils toiling up the terrible way;
- Even today your royal head may fall--
- I think I will not hang myself to-day.
-
-
- _A BALLADE OF AN ANTI-PURITAN_
-
- They spoke of Progress spiring round,
- Of Light and Mrs. Humphry Ward--
- It is not true to say I frowned,
- Or ran about the room and roared;
- I might have simply sat and snored--
- I rose politely in the club
- And said, “I feel a little bored;
- Will someone take me to a pub?”
-
- The new world’s wisest did surround
- Me; and it pains me to record
- I did not think their views profound,
- Or their conclusions well assured;
- The simple life I can’t afford,
- Besides, I do not like the grub--
- I want a mash and sausage, “scored”--
- Will someone take me to a pub?
-
- I know where Men can still be found,
- Anger and clamorous accord,
- And virtues growing from the ground,
- And fellowship of beer and board,
- And song, that is a sturdy cord,
- And hope, that is a hardy shrub,
- And goodness, that is God’s last word--
- Will someone take me to a pub?
-
-
- _Envoi_
-
- Prince, Bayard would have smashed his sword
- To see the sort of knights you dub--
- Is that the last of them--O Lord!
- Will someone take me to a pub?
-
-
-
-
- FRENCH HUMOR
-
-Voltaire, the assumed name of François Marie Arouet, was one of the
-most famous of French writers. Plays, fiction, criticism and letters
-are among his celebrated works.
-
-We can quote but a short bit from his novel of _Candide_:
-
- * * * * *
-
-The tutor Pangloss was the oracle of the house, and little Candide
-listened to his lessons with all the ready faith natural to his age and
-disposition.
-
-Pangloss used to teach the science of
-metaphysico-theologo-cosmologo-noodleology. He demonstrated most
-admirably that there is no effect without a cause, and that, in this
-best of all possible worlds, the castle of my lord baron was the most
-magnificent of castles, and my lady the best of all possible baronesses.
-
-“It has been proved,” said he, “that things cannot be otherwise than
-they are; for, everything being made for a certain end, the end for
-which everything is made is necessarily the best end. Observe how noses
-were made to carry spectacles, and spectacles we have accordingly. Our
-legs are clearly intended for shoes and stockings, so we have them.
-Stone has been formed to be hewn and dressed for building castles, so
-my lord has a very fine one, for it is meet that the greatest baron in
-the province should have the best accommodation. Pigs were made to be
-eaten, and we eat pork all the year round. Consequently those who have
-asserted that all is well have said what is silly; they should have
-said of everything that is, that it is the best that could possibly be.”
-
-Candide listened attentively, and innocently believed all that he
-heard; for he thought Mlle. Cunégonde extremely beautiful, though he
-never had the boldness to tell her so. He felt convinced that, next
-to the happiness of being born Baron of Thundertentronckh, the second
-degree of happiness was to be Mlle. Cunégonde, the third to see her
-every day, and the fourth to hear Professor Pangloss, the greatest
-philosopher in the province, and therefore in all the world.
-
-One day Mlle. Cunégonde, while taking a walk near the castle, in the
-little wood which was called the park, saw through the bushes Dr.
-Pangloss giving a lesson in experimental physics to her mother’s
-chambermaid, a little brunette, very pretty and very willing to learn.
-As Mlle. Cunégonde had a great taste for science, she watched with
-breathless interest the repeated experiments that were carried on under
-her eyes; she clearly perceived that the doctor had sufficient reason
-for all he did; she saw the connection between causes and effects, and
-returned home much agitated, though very thoughtful, and filled with
-a yearning after scientific pursuits, for sharing in which she wished
-that young Candide might find sufficient reason in her, and that she
-might find the same in him.
-
-She met Candide as she was on her way back to the castle, and blushed;
-the youth blushed likewise. She bade him good morning in a voice
-that struggled for utterance; and Candide answered her without well
-knowing what he was saying. Next day, as the company were leaving the
-table after dinner, Cunégonde and Candide found themselves behind a
-screen. Cunégonde let fall her handkerchief; Candide picked it up; she
-innocently took hold of his hand, and the young man, as innocently,
-kissed hers with an ardor, a tenderness, and a grace quite peculiar;
-their lips met and their eyes sparkled. His lordship, the Baron of
-Thundertentronckh, happened to pass by the screen, and, seeing that
-particular instance of cause and effect, drove Candide out of the
-castle with vigorous kicks. Cunégonde swooned away, but, as soon as she
-recovered, my lady the baroness boxed her ears, and all was confusion
-and consternation in that most magnificent and most charming of all
-possible castles.
-
-Marc Antoine Desaugiers was a Parisian song writer and author of
-vaudeville.
-
-His wit was cynical and his versification of a facile sort.
-
-
- _THE ETERNAL YAWNER_
-
- Ah! well-a-day, in all the earth
- What can one do?
- Where for amusement seek, or mirth?
- Ah! well-a-day, in all the earth
- What can one do
- To cease from yawning here below?
-
- Of mortal man, what is the rôle?
- To bustle, eat, and labor ply;
- To plot, grow old, and then to die?
- Not very lively this, or droll.
- Ah! well-a-day, etc.
-
- No wonder in my mind begets
- The sun, which poets call sublime;
- Not this the first or second time
- He rises, runs his race, and sets.
- Ah! well-a-day, etc.
-
- To one dull course the seasons cling:
- For full five thousand years we view
- The summer following after spring,
- And winter autumn’s close pursue.
- Ah! well-a-day, etc.
-
- My watch (a friend of little use),
- Whose hands their tedious circuit ply,
- Tells me how slow the hours fly,
- Not how I may my hours amuse.
- Ah! well-a-day, etc.
-
- I half the world have traveled o’er,
- To see if men diversion found;
- But everywhere, on every ground,
- I saw what I had seen before.
- Ah! well-a-day, etc.
-
- In weariness which I abhorred,
- Wishing to know how sped the great,
- I dined with men of high estate,
- And murmured as I left their board,
- Ah! well-a-day, etc.
-
- Wishing to see if, when in love,
- Life some unworn amusement has,
- Love I attempted, but alas!
- Love in all climes the same doth prove.
- Ah! well-a-day, etc.
-
- Thus being, at this early age,
- Of all things sick, both night and day,
- In hopes to be more blithe and gay
- I did in settled life engage.
- Ah! well-a-day, etc.
-
- The street where now my life I led,
- By neighborhood my steps brought on
- To th’ Institute and Odéon,
- Which every day I visited.
- Ah! well-a-day, etc.
-
- By writing this (hope quickly gone),
- To cheer my spirits I essayed;
- But yawned the while this song was made,
- And now I sing it, still I yawn:
- Ah! well-a-day, etc.
-
-Pierre Jean de Béranger was one of France’s greatest lyric poets.
-His versatility compassed songs of every sort from political to
-bacchanalian, from amatory to philosophical.
-
-
- _THE EDUCATION OF YOUNG LADIES_
-
- What! this Monsieur de Fénélon
- The girls pretend to school!
- Of Mass and needlework he prates;
- Mama, he’s but a fool.
- Balls, concerts, and the piece just out,
- Can teach us better far, no doubt:
- Tra la la la, tra la la la,
- Thus are young ladies taught, Mama!
-
- Let others mind their work; I’ll play,
- Mama, the sweet duet,
- That for my master’s voice and mine
- Is from Armida set.
- If Rénaud felt love’s burning flame,
- I feel some shootings of the same:
- Tra la la la, tra la la la,
- Thus are young ladies taught, Mama!
-
- Let others keep accounts; I’ll dance,
- Mama, an hour or two;
- And from my master learn a step
- Voluptuous and new.
- At this long skirt my feet rebel;
- To loop it up a bit were well.
- Tra la la la, tra la la la,
- Thus are young ladies taught, Mama!
-
- Let others o’er my sister watch;
- Mama, I’d rather trace--
- I’ve wondrous talent--at the Louvre
- The Apollo’s matchless grace:
- Throughout his figure what a charm!
- ’Tis naked, true--but that’s no harm
- Tra la la la, tra la la la,
- Thus are young ladies taught, Mama!
-
- Mama, I must be married soon,
- Even fashion says no less;
- Besides, there is an urgent cause,
- I must, Mama, confess.
- The world my situation sees--
- But there they laugh at scrapes like these.
- Tra la la la, tra la la la,
- Thus are young ladies taught, Mama!
-
-
- _THE DEAD ALIVE_
-
- When a bore gets hold of me,
- Dull and overbearing,
- Be so kind as pray for me,
- I’m as dead as herring.
- When the thrusts of pleasure glib
- In my sides are sticking,
- Poking fun at every rib,
- I’m alive and kicking.
-
- When a snob his £ s. d.
- Jingles in his breeches,
- Be so kind as pray for me,
- I’m as dead as ditches.
- When a birthday’s champagne-corks
- Round my ears are clicking,
- Marking time with well-oil’d works,
- I’m alive and kicking.
-
- Kings and their supremacy
- Occupy the table,
- Be so kind as pray for me,
- I’m as dead as Abel.
- Talk about the age of wine
- (Bought by cash or ticking),
- So you bring a sample fine,
- I’m alive and kicking.
-
- When a trip to Muscovy
- Tempts a conquest glutton,
- Be so kind as pray for me,
- I’m as dead as mutton.
- Match me with a tippling foe,
- See who first wants picking
- From the dead man’s field below,
- I’m alive and kicking.
-
- When great scribes to poetry
- March, by notions big led,
- Be so kind as pray for me,
- I’m as dead as pig-lead.
- When you start a careless song,
- Not at grammar sticking,
- Good to push the wine along.
- I’m alive and kicking.
-
- When a bigot, half-hours three,
- Spouts in canting gloom’s tones,
- Be so kind as pray for me,
- I’m as dead as tombstones.
- When in cloisters underground,
- Built of stone or bricking,
- Orders of the screw you found,
- I’m alive and kicking.
-
- Bourbons back in France we see
- (Sure we don’t much need ’em),
- Be so kind as pray for me,
- I’m as dead as freedom.
- Bess returns, and still our throats
- Find us here a-slicking,
- Sitting free without our coats--
- I’m alive and kicking.
-
- Forced to leave this company,
- Bottle-wine and horn-ale,
- Be so kind as pray for me,
- I’m as dead as door-nail.
- Pledging, though, a quick return,
- Soon my anchor sticking
- On the shore for which I yearn--
- I’m alive and kicking.
-
-A great name that ushers in the Nineteenth century is that of Honoré de
-Balzac, chief of the realistic school of French novelists. His humor is
-keen and is never lacking in his somewhat diversified writings.
-
-From his well known _Contes Drolatiques_ we give two stories.
-
-
- _A SLIGHT MISUNDERSTANDING_
-
-Louis XI had given the Abbey of Turpenay to a gentleman who, enjoying
-the revenue, had called himself M. de Turpenay. It happened that the
-king being at Plessis-les-Tours, the real abbot, who was a monk, came
-and presented himself before the king, and presented a petition,
-remonstrating with him that, canonically and monastically, he was
-entitled to the abbey, and the usurping gentleman wronged him of his
-right, and therefore he called upon his Majesty to have justice done
-to him. Nodding his peruke, the king promised to render him contented.
-This monk, importunate as are all hooded animals, came often at the end
-of the king’s meals, who, bored with the holy water of the convent,
-called friend Tristan and said to him, “Old fellow, there is here a
-Turpenay who annoys me; rid the world of him for me.”
-
-Tristan, taking a frock for a monk, or a monk for a frock, came to
-this gentleman, whom all the court called M. de Turpenay, and, having
-accosted him, managed to lead him on one side, then, taking him by the
-button-hole, gave him to understand that the king desired he should
-die. He tried to resist, supplicating and supplicating to escape,
-but in no way could he obtain a hearing. He was delicately strangled
-between the head and shoulders, so that he expired; and, three hours
-afterwards, Tristan told the king that he was despatched. It happened
-five days later, which is the space in which souls come back again,
-that the monk came into the room where the king was, and when he saw
-him he was much astonished. Tristan was present; the king called him,
-and whispered into his ear:
-
-“You have not done what I told you to.”
-
-“Saving your Majesty, I have done it. Turpenay is dead.”
-
-“Eh? I meant this monk.”
-
-“I understood the gentleman!”
-
-“What, it is done, then?”
-
-“Yes, your Majesty.”
-
-“Very well, then”--turning toward the monk--“come here, monk.” The monk
-approached. The king said to him, “Kneel down.” The poor monk began to
-shiver in his shoes. But the king said to him, “Thank God that He has
-not willed that you should be executed as I had ordered. He who took
-your estates has been instead. God has done you justice. Go and pray to
-God for me, and don’t stir out of your convent.”
-
-This proves the good-heartedness of Louis XI. He might very well
-have hanged the monk, the cause of the error. As for the aforesaid
-gentleman, it was given out that he had died in the king’s service.
-
-
- _INNOCENCE_
-
-When Queen Catherine was princess royal, to make herself welcome to
-the king, her father-in-law, who at that time was very ill indeed, she
-presented him from time to time with Italian pictures, knowing that he
-liked them much, being a friend of Sire Raphael d’Urbino and of the
-Sires Primaticcio and Leonardo da Vinci, to whom he sent large sums
-of money. She obtained from her family a precious picture, painted by
-a Venetian named Titian (painter to the Emperor Charles, and in very
-high favor), in which there were portraits of Adam and Eve at the
-moment when God left them to wander about the terrestrial paradise.
-They were painted full height, in the costume of the period, in which
-it is difficult to make a mistake, because they were attired in their
-ignorance, and caparisoned with the divine grace which enveloped
-them--a difficult thing to execute on account of the color, but one
-in which the said Sire Titian excelled. The picture was put into the
-room of the poor king, who was then ill with the disease of which he
-eventually died. It had a great success at the Court of France, where
-every one wished to see it; but no one was able to until after the
-king’s death, since at his desire it was allowed to remain in his room
-as long as he lived.
-
-One day Catherine took with her to the king’s room her son Francis and
-little Margy, who began to talk at random, as children will. Now here,
-now there, these children had heard this picture of Adam and Eve spoken
-about, and had tormented their mother to take them to see it. Since
-the two little ones sometimes amused the old king, the princess royal
-complied with their request.
-
-“You wished to see Adam and Eve, who were our first parents; there they
-are,” said she.
-
-Then she left them in great astonishment before Titian’s picture, and
-seated herself by the bedside of the king, who delighted to watch the
-children.
-
-“Which of the two is Adam?” said Francis, nudging his sister Margaret’s
-elbow.
-
-“You silly,” replied she, “they would have to be dressed for one to
-know that!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Louis Charles Alfred de Musset was a celebrated French poet and man of
-letters. Though he died in early middle age, he left many volumes of
-wise and witty writings.
-
-
- _THE SUPPER-PARTY OF THE THREE CAVALIERS_
-
-“Be silent, all of you!” cried Mimi. “I want to talk a little now.
-Since the magnificent M. Marcel does not care for fables, I am going to
-relate a true story, _et quorum pars magna fui_.”
-
-“Do you speak Latin?” asked Eugène.
-
-“As you perceive,” Mlle. Pinson answered. “I have inherited that
-sentence from my uncle, who served under the great Napoleon, and who
-always repeated it before he gave us an account of a battle. If you
-don’t know the meaning of the words, I’ll teach you free of charge.
-They mean, ‘I give you my word of honor.’ Well, then, you are to know
-that one night last week I went with two of my friends, Blanchette and
-Rougette, to the Odéon theater----”
-
-“Watch me cut the cake,” interrupted Marcel.
-
-“Cut ahead, but listen,” Mlle. Pinson continued. “As I was saying,
-I went with Blanchette and Rougette to the Odéon to see a tragedy.
-Rougette, as you know, has just lost her grandmother, and has inherited
-four hundred francs. We had taken a box, opposite to which, in the
-pit, sat three students. These young men liked our looks, and, on the
-pretext that we were alone and unprotected, invited us to supper.”
-
-“Immediately?” asked Marcel. “That was gallant indeed. And you refused,
-I suppose?”
-
-“By no means,” said Mimi. “We accepted the invitation, and in the
-intermission, without waiting for the end of the play, we all went off
-to Viot’s restaurant.”
-
-“With your cavaliers?”
-
-“With our cavaliers. The leader, of course, began by telling us that
-he had nothing, but such little obstacles did not disconcert us.
-We ordered everything we wanted. Rougette took pen and paper, and
-ordered a veritable marriage-feast: shrimps, an omelet with sugar,
-fritters, mussels, eggs with whipped cream--in fact, all the delicacies
-imaginable. To tell the truth, our young gentlemen pulled wry
-faces----”
-
-“I have no doubt of it!” said Marcel.
-
-“We didn’t care. When everything was brought in we began to act the
-part of great ladies. We approved of nothing, but found everything
-disgusting. Hardly was any dish brought in but we sent it out again.
-‘Waiter, take this away; it’s intolerable; where did you get the
-horrible stuff?’ Our unknown gentlemen wanted to eat, but found it
-impossible. In a word, we supped as Sancho dined, and in our vigor
-nearly broke several dishes.”
-
-“Nice conduct! And who was to pay for it all?”
-
-“That is precisely the question that our three unknown gentlemen
-asked one another. To judge by what we overheard of their whispered
-conversation, one of them owned six francs, the second a good deal
-less, and the third had only his watch, which he generously pulled
-out of his pocket. So the three unfortunates went up to the cashier,
-intending to gain a delay of some sort. What answer do you suppose they
-received?”
-
-“I imagine that you would be kept there, and your gentlemen sent to
-jail.”
-
-“You are wrong,” said Mlle. Pinson. “Before going in Rougette had
-taken her precautions, and had paid for everything in advance. You can
-imagine the scene when Viot answered, ‘Gentlemen, everything is paid.’
-Our three unknown gentlemen looked at us as never three dogs looked at
-three bishops, with pitiful stupefaction mixed with pure tenderness.
-But we, without seeming to notice anything unusual, went down-stairs
-and ordered a cab. ‘Dear Marquise,’ said Rougette to me, ‘we ought to
-take these gentlemen home.’ ‘Certainly, dear Countess,’ answered I. Our
-poor young gallants did not know what to say, they looked so sheepish.
-They wanted to get rid of our politeness, and asked not to be taken
-home, even refusing to give their address. No wonder, either, because
-they felt sure that they were having to do with great ladies, and they
-lived in Fish-Cat Street!”
-
-The two students, the friends of Marcel, who, up to this time, had done
-nothing but smoke their pipes and drink in silence, appeared little
-pleased with this story. Their faces grew red, and they seemed to know
-as much about this unfortunate supper as Mimi herself, at whom they
-glanced restlessly. Marcel, laughing, said:
-
-“Tell us who they were, Mlle. Mimi. Since it happened last week it does
-not matter.”
-
-“Never!” cried the girl. “Play a trick on a man--yes. But ruin his
-career--never!”
-
-“You are right,” said Eugène, “and are acting even more wisely than you
-yourself are aware of. There is not a single young fellow at college
-who has not some such mistake or folly behind him, and yet it is from
-among these very people that France draws her most distinguished men.”
-
-“Yes,” said Marcel, “that’s true. There are peers of France who now
-dine at Flicoteau’s, but who once could not pay their bills. But,” he
-added, and winked, “haven’t you seen your unknown gentlemen again?”
-
-“What do you take us for?” answered Mlle. Pinson in a severe and almost
-offended tone. “You know Blanchette and Rougette, and do you suppose
-that I----?”
-
-“Very well,” said Marcel, “don’t be angry. But isn’t this a nice state
-of affairs? Here are three giddy girls, who may not be able to pay
-their next day’s dinner, and who throw away their money for the sake of
-mystifying three poor unoffending devils!”
-
-“But why did they invite us to supper?” asked Mlle. Pinson.--“_Mimi
-Pinson._”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Charles Paul de Kock was a novelist and dramatist. A short quotation
-from _A Much Worried Gentleman_ shows the ubiquitous mother-in-law
-jest.
-
-
- _THÉOPHILE’S MOTHER-IN-LAW_
-
-“Son-in-law, you will offer me your arm; your wife will take her
-cousin’s.”
-
-“Yes, mother-in-law.”
-
-“Furthermore, when we get to the caterer’s for dinner, you must not
-whisper to your wife. People might suspect something unrefined.”
-
-“Yes, mother-in-law.”
-
-“Neither must you kiss her.”
-
-“Why, you object to me kissing my wife?”
-
-“Before people, yes. It’s very bad form. Haven’t you time enough for it
-at home?”
-
-“True.”
-
-“At table you will not sit next to your wife, but next to me.”
-
-“That’s agreed.”
-
-“During the meal you will take care that no comic songs on your
-marriage are sung. Those who write them usually permit themselves
-indelicate jokes, so that the ladies are put out. That is the worst
-taste possible.”
-
-“I’ll see that none are sung.”
-
-“You will dance only once with your wife during the evening. Understand
-me--only once.”
-
-“But, why, why?”
-
-“Because it is proper to let the bride accept the invitations of
-relatives, friends, and strangers.”
-
-“But I didn’t marry in order that my wife should dance with everybody
-except myself!”
-
-“Do you wish to insinuate, son-in-law, that you can instruct me
-concerning the usages of polite society? You are beginning well.”
-
-“I assure you, mother-in-law, that I had no intention----”
-
-“That will do. I accept your excuses. We now come to a more delicate
-matter, to--but, of course, you must understand me.”
-
-“I confess that I do not at all.”
-
-“Listen, son-in-law. Some newly married young men, on their
-wedding-night, when the ball is at its gayest, take the liberty of
-carrying off their wives, and disappearing with them about twelve
-o’clock.”
-
-“And you object to that?”
-
-“Fie, sir, fie! If you were to be guilty of such a thing, I would make
-your wife sue for a divorce the day after your marriage.”
-
-“Be easy, then; I will not disappear. But when may I go away with my
-wife?”
-
-“I shall take my daughter with me, and arrange an opportune time when
-the decencies of the situation may be observed.”
-
-“And who will take me?”
-
-“You will go alone, but you will not go, understand me well, until
-there isn’t a cat left at the ball.”
-
-“I shall be getting to bed very late, then. Some of the people will
-want square dances and country dances, and----”
-
-“You will get to bed soon enough, son-in-law.”
-
-“But why all this, mother-in-law?”
-
-“That will do, M. Tamponnet! It is not becoming that this conversation
-be prolonged.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Alexandre Dumas, the Elder, was a noted novelist and dramatist. His
-output was enormous, and the wit, though always discernible, was
-subordinate to matters of heroism, adventure and the like.
-
-
- _CHAPTER TOUCHING THE OLFACTORY ORGAN_
-
-Has it ever occurred to you, dear reader, how admirable an organ the
-nose is?
-
-The nose; yes, the nose.
-
-And how useful an article this very nose is to every creature which, as
-Ovid says, lifts its face to heaven?
-
-Well, strange as it may seem, monstrous ingratitude that it is, no poet
-has yet thought of addressing an ode to the nose!
-
-So it has been left to me, who am not a poet, or who, at least, claim
-to rank only after our greatest poets, to conceive such an idea.
-
-Truly, the nose is unfortunate.
-
-So many things have been invented for the eyes:
-
-Songs and compliments and kaleidoscopes, pictures and scenery and
-spectacles.
-
-And for the ears:
-
-Ear-rings, of course, and _Robert the Devil_, _William Tell_,
-and _Fra Diavolo_, Stradivarius violins and Érard pianos and Sax
-trumpets.
-
-And for the mouth:
-
-Lent, plain cooking, _The Gastronomists’ Calendar_, _The
-Gormand’s Dictionary_. Soups of every kind have they made for it,
-from Russian broth to French cabbage-soup; dishes for it are connected
-with the reputations of the greatest men, from Soubise cutlets to
-Richelieu puddings; its lips have been compared to coral, its teeth to
-pearls, its breath to perfume. Before it have been set plumed peacocks
-and undrawn snipes; and, for the future, it has been promised whole
-roast larks.
-
-But what has been invented for the nose?
-
-Attar of roses and snuff.
-
-You have not done well, oh, my masters the philanthropists; oh, my
-brothers the poets!
-
-And yet how faithfully this limb----
-
-“It is not a limb!” cry the scientists.
-
-I beg your pardon, gentlemen, and retract. This appendage--Ah yes, I
-was saying with what touching fidelity this appendage has done service
-for you.
-
-The eyes sleep, the mouth closes, the ears are deaf.
-
-The nose is always on duty.
-
-It watches over your repose and contributes to your health. Feet,
-hands, all other parts of the body are stupid. The hands are often
-caught in foolish acts; the feet stumble, and in their clumsiness allow
-the body to fall. And when they do, they get off free, and the poor
-nose is punished for their misdeeds.
-
-How often do you not hear it said: “Mr. So-and-So has broken his nose.”
-
-There have been a great many broken noses since the creation of the
-world.
-
-Can any one give a single instance of a nose broken through any fault
-of its own?
-
-No; but, nevertheless, the poor nose is always being scolded.
-
-Well, it endures it all with angelic patience. True, it sometimes has
-the impertinence to snore. But where and when did you ever hear it
-complain?...
-
-But let us forget for a moment the utility of the nose, and regard it
-only from the esthetic point of view.
-
-A cedar of Lebanon, it tramples underfoot the hyssop of the mustache;
-a central column, it provides a support for the double arch of the
-eyebrows. On its capital perches the eagle of thought. It is enwreathed
-with smiles. With what boldness did the nose of Ajax confront the storm
-when he said, “I will escape in spite of the gods.” With what courage
-did the nose of the great Condé--whose greatness really derived from
-his nose--with what courage did the nose of the great Condé enter
-before all others, before the great Condé himself, the entrenchments
-of the Spanish at Lens and Rocroy, where their conqueror boldly
-flourished the staff of command? With what assurance was Dugazon’s
-nose thrust before the public, that nose which knew how to wriggle in
-forty-two different ways, and each way funnier than the last?
-
-No, I do not believe that the nose should be permitted to remain in the
-obscurity into which man’s ingratitude has hitherto forced it.
-
-I suggest as one reason why the nose has submitted to this injustice
-the fact that Occidental noses are so small.
-
-But the deuce is to pay if the noses of the West are the only noses.
-
-There are the Oriental noses, which are very handsome noses.
-
-Do you question the superiority of these noses to your own, gentlemen
-of Paris, of Vienna, of St. Petersburg?
-
-In that case, my Viennese friends, go by the Danube; you Parisians,
-take the steamer; Petersburgers, the sledge; and say these simple words:
-
-“To Georgia.”
-
-But I forewarn you of deep humiliation. Should you bring to Georgia one
-of the largest noses in Europe, at the gate of Tiflis they would gaze
-at you in astonishment and exclaim:
-
-“What a pity that this gentleman has lost his nose on the way.” ...
-
-Ah, sweet Heaven! those beautiful Georgian noses! Robust noses,
-magnificent noses!
-
-They are all shapes:
-
-Round, fat, long, large.
-
-There is every color:
-
-White, pink, crimson, violet.
-
-Some are set with rubies, others with pearls. I saw one set with
-turquoises.
-
-In Georgia, Vakhtang IV abolished the fathom, the meter, and the yard,
-keeping only the nose.
-
-Goods are measured off by the nose.
-
-They say, “I bought seventeen noses of flannel for a dressing-gown,
-seven noses of cloth for a pair of breeches, a nose and a half of satin
-for a cravat.”
-
-Let us add, finally, that the Georgian ladies find this more convenient
-than European measures.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Théophile Gautier, poet, artist and novelist was identified with the
-romantic movement in French literature.
-
-A charming art of description was his, as may be seen in the story of
-the _Lap Dog_.
-
-
- _FANFRELUCHE_
-
-To write in praise of this marvelous lap-dog, one should pluck a quill
-from the wing of Love himself; the hands of the Graces alone would be
-light enough to trace his picture; nor would the touch of Latour be too
-soft.
-
-His name was Fanfreluche, a pretty name for a dog, and one that he bore
-with honor.
-
-Fanfreluche was no larger than his mistress’s hand, and it is well
-known that the marquise has the smallest hand in the world; and yet he
-seemed larger to the eye, assuming almost the proportions of a small
-sheep, for he had silky hair a foot in length, and so fine and soft and
-lustrous that the tresses of Minette were a mere mop by contrast. When
-he presented his paw, and one pressed it a little, one was astonished
-to feel nothing at all. Fanfreluche was rather a ball of silk, from
-which two beautiful brown eyes and a little red nose glittered, than an
-actual dog. Such a dog could only have belonged to the mother of Love,
-who lost him in Cytherea, where the marquise, on one of her occasional
-visits, found him. Look for a moment at this fascinatingly exquisite
-face. Would not Roxalana herself have been jealous of that delicately
-tipped-up nose, divided in the middle by a little furrow just like Anne
-of Austria’s?
-
-What vivacity in that quick eye! And that double row of white teeth,
-no larger than grains of rice, which, at the least emotion, sparkled
-in all their brilliance--what duchess would not envy them? And this
-charming Fanfreluche, apart from his physical attractions, possessed
-a thousand social graces: he danced the minuet with exquisite grace,
-knew how to give his paw and tell the hour, capered before the queen
-and great ladies of France, and distinguished his right paw from his
-left. And Fanfreluche was learned, and knew more than the members of
-the Academy. If he was not a member of that body it was because he did
-not desire it, thinking, no doubt, to shine rather by his absence. The
-abbé declared that he was as strong as a Turk in the dead languages,
-and that, if he did not talk, it was from pure malice and to vex his
-mistress.
-
-Then, too, Fanfreluche had not the vivacity of common dogs. He was
-very dainty, and very hard to please. He absolutely refused to eat
-anything but little pies of calves’ brains made especially for him;
-he would drink nothing but cream from a little Japanese saucer. Only
-when his mistress dined in town would he consent to nibble at the wing
-of a chicken, and to take sweets for dessert; but he did not grant
-this favor to every one, and one had to have an excellent cook to gain
-it. Fanfreluche had only one little fault. But who is perfect in this
-world? He loved cherries in brandy and Spanish snuff, of which he took
-a little pinch from time to time. But the latter is a weakness he
-shared with the Prince of Condé.
-
-When he heard the cover of the general’s golden snuff-box click, it
-was a treat to see him sit up on his little hind legs and brush the
-carpet with his silken tail; and, if the marquise was engrossed in the
-pleasures of whist, and did not watch him closely, he would jump on the
-abbé’s lap, who fed him with brandied cherries. And Fanfreluche, whose
-head was not strong, would become as tipsy as a Swiss guard and two
-choristers, would perform the queerest little tricks on the carpet, and
-become extraordinarily ferocious on the subject of the calves of the
-chevalier, who, to preserve what little was left of them, would draw
-up his legs on his chair. Then Fanfreluche was no longer a little dog,
-but a little lion, and the marquise alone could manage him. His picture
-would not be complete without mentioning the droll little naughtinesses
-that he was guilty of before being stowed away into his muff, and put
-to bed in his niche of rosewood, padded with white satin and edged with
-blue silk cord.
-
-Henri Murger, a noted litterateur, wrote on themes both gloomy and
-merry. More than most, he ran the gamut from grave to gay, from lively
-to severe.
-
-Among his best known works are his Bohemian Life Sketches. From the
-subjoined bit, it may be seen that boresome parties obtain in all times
-and nations.
-
-
- _AN EVENING RECEPTION_
-
-Toward the end of the month of December the messengers of Bidault’s
-agency received for distribution about a hundred copies of a circular
-of which we certify the following to be a true and genuine copy:
-
- * * * * *
-
-Messieurs Rodolphe and Marcel request the honor of your company at a
-reception, on Christmas Eve, Saturday next. There is going to be some
-fun.
-
-P. S. We only live once!
-
-
- _Program_
-
-
- I
-
-7 P.M. The rooms will open: lively and animated conversation.
-
-8 P.M. The ingenious authors of _The Mountain in Labor_,
-a comedy rejected by the Odéon, will take a turn round the rooms.
-
-8.30 P.M. M. Alexandre Schaunard, the distinguished artist,
-will execute his Imitative Symphony for the piano, called _The
-Influence of Blue in Art_.
-
-9 P.M. First reading of a memoir on the abolition of the
-penalty of tragedy.
-
-9.30 P.M. M. Gustave Colline, hyperphysical philosopher, and
-M. Schaunard will commence a debate on comparative philosophy and
-metapolitics. In order to prevent any possible collision, the two
-disputants will be tied together.
-
-10 P.M. M. Tristan, a literary man, will relate the story of his first
-love. M. Alexandre Schaunard will play a pianoforte accompaniment.
-
-10.30 P.M. Second reading of the memoir on the abolition of the penalty
-of tragedy.
-
-11 P.M. _The Story of a Cassowary Hunt_, by a foreign prince.
-
-
- II
-
-At midnight M. Marcel, historical painter, will make a white chalk
-drawing, with his eyes bandaged. Subject: The interview between
-Napoleon and Voltaire in the Champs Élysées. At the same time M.
-Rodolphe will improvise a parallel between the author of _Zaïre_
-and the author of _The Battle of Austerlitz_.
-
-12.30 A.M. M. Gustave Colline, in modest undress, will give a
-revival of the athletic sports of the Fourth Olympiad.
-
-1 A.M. Third reading of the memoir on the abolition of the
-penalty of tragedy, followed by a collection in aid of authors of
-tragedies likely to be thrown out of employment.
-
-2 A.M. Sports and quadrilles, which will be kept up till
-morning.
-
-6 A.M. Rise of the sun upon the scene. Final chorus.
-
-The ventilators will be open during the whole of the reception.
-
- * * * * *
-
-N. B. Any person attempting to read or recite poetry will be
-immediately ejected from the rooms and taken into custody; you are also
-requested not to take away candle-ends.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Victor Marie Hugo, celebrated poet, novelist and dramatist, was a
-recognized leader of the Romantic school of Nineteenth century France.
-
-Quotation from his works is hard to do in brief, but an amusing story
-is given from _Tales of a Grandfather_.
-
-
- _THE GOOD FLEA AND THE WICKED KING_
-
-Once upon a time there was a wicked king, who made his people very
-unhappy. Everybody detested him, and those whom he had put in prison
-and beheaded would have liked to whip him. But how? He was the
-strongest, he was the master, he did not have to give account to any
-one, and when he was told his subjects were not content, he replied:
-
-“Well, what of it? I don’t care a rap!” Which was an ugly answer.
-
-As he continued to act like a king, and as every day he became a little
-more wicked than the day before, this set a certain little flea to
-thinking over the matter. It was a little bit of a flea, who was of no
-consequence at all, but full of good sentiments. This is not the nature
-of fleas in general; but this one had been very well brought up; it bit
-people with moderation, and only when it was very hungry.
-
-“What if I were to bring the king to reason?” it said to itself. “It is
-not without danger. But no matter--I will try.”
-
-That night the wicked king, after having done all sorts of naughty
-things during the day, was calmly going to sleep when he felt what
-seemed to be the prick of a pin.
-
-“Bite!”
-
-He growled, and turned over on the other side.
-
-“Bite! Bite! Bite!”
-
-“Who is it that bites me so?” cried the king in a terrible voice.
-
-“It is I,” replied a very little voice.
-
-“You? Who are you?”
-
-“A little flea who wishes to correct you.”
-
-“A flea? Just you wait! Just you wait, and you shall see!”
-
-And the king sprang from his bed, twisted his coverings, and shook the
-sheets, all of which was quite useless, for the good flea had hidden
-itself in the royal beard.
-
-“Ah,” said the king, “it has gone now, and I shall be able to get a
-sound sleep.”
-
-But scarcely had he laid his head on the pillow, when--
-
-“Bite!”
-
-“How? What? Again?”
-
-“Bite! Bite!”
-
-“You dare to return, you abominable little flea? Think for a moment
-what you are doing! You are no bigger than a grain of sand, and you
-dare to bite one of the greatest kings on earth!”
-
-“Well, what of it? I don’t care a rap!” answered the flea in the very
-words of the king.
-
-“Ah, if I only had you!”
-
-“Yes, but you haven’t got me!”
-
-The wicked king did not sleep all that night, and he arose the next
-morning in a killing ill humor. He resolved to destroy his enemy.
-By his orders, they cleaned the palace from top to bottom, and
-particularly his bedroom; his bed was made by ten old women very
-skilful in the art of catching fleas. But they caught nothing, for the
-good flea had hidden itself under the collar of the king’s coat.
-
-That night, this frightful tyrant, who was dying for want of sleep, lay
-back on both his ears, though this is said to be very difficult. But he
-wished to sleep double, and he knew no better way. I wish you may find
-a better. Scarcely had he put out his light, when he felt the flea on
-his neck.
-
-“Bite! Bite!”
-
-“Ah, zounds! What is this?”
-
-“It is I--the flea of yesterday.”
-
-“But what do you want, you rascal--you tiny pest?”
-
-“I wish you to obey me, and to make your people happy.”
-
-“Ho, there, my soldiers, my captain of the guard, my ministers, my
-generals! Everybody! The whole lot of you!”
-
-The whole lot of them came in. The king was in a rage, which made
-everybody tremble. He found fault with all the servants of the palace.
-Everybody was in consternation. During this time the flea, quite calm,
-kept itself hid in the king’s nightcap.
-
-The guards were doubled; laws and decrees were made; ordinances were
-published against all fleas; there were processions and public prayers
-to ask of Heaven the extermination of the flea, and sound sleep for the
-king. It was all of no avail. The wretched king could not lie down,
-even on the grass, without being attacked by his obstinate enemy, the
-good flea, who did not let him sleep a single minute.
-
-“Bite! Bite!”
-
-It would take too long to tell the many hard knocks the king gave
-himself in trying to crush the flea; he was covered with bruises and
-contusions. As he could not sleep, he wandered about like an uneasy
-spirit. He grew thinner. He would certainly have died if, at last, he
-had not made up his mind to obey the good flea.
-
-“I surrender,” he said at last, when it began to bite him again. “I ask
-for quarter. I will do what you wish.”
-
-“So much the better. On that condition only shall you sleep,” replied
-the flea.
-
-“Thank you. What must I do?”
-
-“Make your people happy!”
-
-“I have never learned how. I do not know how----”
-
-“Nothing more easy: you have only to go away.”
-
-“Taking my treasures with me?”
-
-“Without taking anything.”
-
-“But I shall die if I have no money,” said the king.
-
-“Well, what of it? I don’t care!” replied the flea.
-
-But the flea was not hard-hearted, and it let the king fill his pockets
-with money before he went away. And the people were able to be very
-happy by setting up a republic.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Alphonse Daudet, humorist and story writer, created the character of
-Tartarin, a gasconading humbug, and a satire on the typical character
-attributed to Southern France.
-
-A bit from _Tartarin in the Alps_ will show the type of humor.
-
-
- _WILLIAM TELL_
-
-The party of travelers now came to the Lake of Lucerne, with its dark
-waters overshadowed by high and menacing mountains. To their right they
-saw that Ruetli meadow where Melchthal, Fuerst, and Stauffacher had
-sworn the oath to deliver their country.
-
-Tartarin, deeply moved, took off his cap, and even threw it into the
-air three times to render homage to the shades of the departed heroes.
-Some of the tourists mistook this for a salutation, and bowed in
-return. At last they reached Tell’s Chapel. This chapel is situated at
-the edge of the lake, on the very rock upon which, during the storm,
-William Tell jumped from Gessler’s boat. And it was a delicious emotion
-to Tartarin, while he followed the travelers along the lake, to tread
-this historic ground, to recall and revive the various scenes of this
-great drama, which he knew as well as his own biography.
-
-For William Tell had always been his ideal man. When at Bézuquet’s
-pharmacy the game of Preferences was being played, and each one wrote
-on his slip of paper the name of the poet, the tree, the odor, the
-hero, and the woman that he preferred to all others of their kind, one
-slip invariably bore this inscription:
-
-“Favorite tree?--The baobab.
-
-“Favorite odor?--Gunpowder.
-
-“Favorite author?--Fenimore Cooper.
-
-“Who would you like to have been?--William Tell.”
-
-And then everybody would exclaim, “That’s Tartarin!”
-
-Imagine, then, how happy he was, and how his heart beat when he stood
-before the chapel commemorative of the gratitude of a whole nation. It
-seemed to him as if William Tell must come in person to open the door,
-still dripping from the waters of the lake, and holding in his hand his
-bolts and crossbow.
-
-“Don’t come in here. I’m working. This is not the day on which tourists
-are allowed,” sounded a strong voice from the interior, reechoing
-against the walls.
-
-“M. Astier-Réhu, of the French Academy!”
-
-“Herr Professor Doctor Schwanthaler!”
-
-“Tartarin of Tarascon!”
-
-The painter, who was standing on a scaffolding within, stretched out
-half of his body clad in his working-blouse, and holding his palette in
-his hand.
-
-“My pupil will come down and open the door for you, gentlemen,” he said
-in a respectful tone.
-
-“I was sure of it; of course,” said Tartarin to himself, “I have only
-to mention my name.”
-
-For all that, he had the good taste to fall into line and modestly
-enter the chapel behind the others.
-
-The painter, a splendid fellow, with a magnificent golden head of
-an artist of the Renaissance, received his visitors on the wooden
-staircase which led to the temporary scaffolding from which the mural
-paintings were being done. All the frescos, representing scenes from
-Tell’s life, were complete, except the one in which the scene of
-the apple at Altorf was to be shown. Upon that the painter was now
-working....
-
-“I find it all very characteristically done,” said the great
-Astier-Réhu.
-
-And Schwanthaler, folding his arms, recited two of Schiller’s verses,
-half of which was lost in his beard. Then the ladies delivered their
-opinions, and for some minutes one would have thought oneself in a
-confectioner’s shop. “Beautiful!” they cried. “Lovely! Exquisite!
-Delicious!”
-
-Suddenly came a voice, tearing the silence like a trumpet’s blare:
-
-“Badly shouldered, that blunderbuss, I tell you! He never held it in
-that way!”
-
-Imagine the stupefaction of the painter when this tourist, stick in
-hand and bundle on his back, undertook to demonstrate to him as clearly
-as that two and two are four, that the position of Tell in the picture
-was incorrect.
-
-“And I understand these matters, I would have you know!”
-
-“And who are you?”
-
-“Who am I?” said our Tarasconian hero, deeply astonished. And so it
-was not at his name that the door had opened. Drawing himself up, he
-answered, “Ask the panthers of Zaccar, or the lions of Atlas, and
-perhaps they will answer you.”
-
-Every one drew away from Tartarin in fright and consternation.
-
-“But then,” asked the painter, “in what respect is Tell’s position
-incorrect?”
-
-“Look at me!”
-
-Falling back with a double step that made the planks creak, Tartarin,
-using his cane to represent the “blunderbuss,” threw himself into
-position.
-
-“Superb! He is right! Don’t move!” cried the painter. Then to his pupil:
-
-“Quick, bring me paper and charcoal!”
-
-
-
-
- GERMAN HUMOR
-
-Christian F. Gellert, a German poet of the early Eighteenth century,
-was also a lecturer and professor of philosophy.
-
-His literary fame rests upon his sacred songs and his fables. One of
-the latter we quote.
-
-
- _THE PATIENT CURED_
-
- A man long plagued with aches in joint and limb
- Did all his neighbors recommended him,
- But, despite that, could nowise gain
- Deliverance from his pain.
- An ancient dame, to whom he told his case,
- Cut an oracular grimace,
- And thus announced a magic remedy:
- “You must,” said she,
- Mysteriously hissing in his ear,
- And calling him “My dear,”
- “Sit on a good man’s grave at early light,
- And with the dew fresh-fallen over night
- Thrice bathe your hands, your knee-joints thrice:
- ’Twill cure you in a trice.
- Remember her who gave you this advice.”
-
- The patient did just as the grandam said.
- (What will not mortals do to be
- Relieved of misery?)
- He went right early to the burying-ground,
- And on a tombstone--’twas the first he found--
- These words, delighted, read:
- “Stranger, what man he was who sleeps below,
- This monument and epitaph may show.
- The wonder of his time was he,
- The pattern of most genuine piety;
- And that thou all in a few words may’st learn,
- Him church and school and town and country mourn.”
-
- Here the poor cripple takes his seat,
- And bathes his hands, his joints, his feet;
- But all his labor’s worse than vain:
- It rather aggravates his pain.
-
- With troubled mind he grasps his staff,
- Turns from the good man’s grave, and creeps
- On to the next, where lowly sleeps
- One honored by no epitaph.
- Scarce had he touched the nameless stone,
- When lo! each racking pain had flown;
- His useless staff forgotten on the ground,
- He leaves this holy grave, erect and sound.
-
- “Ah!” he exclaimed, “is there no line to tell
- Who was this holy man that makes me well?”
- Just then the sexton did appear,
- Of him he asked, “Pray, who lies buried here?”
- The sexton waited long, and seemed quite shy
- Of making any sort of a reply.
- “Well,” he began at last with mournful sigh,
- “The Lord forgive him, ’twas a man
- Placed by all honest circles under ban;
- Whom scarcely they allowed a decent grave;
- Whose soul naught but a miracle might save;
- A heretic, and, what is worse,
- Wrote plays and verse!
- In short, to speak my full conviction,
- And without fear of contradiction,
- He was an innovator and a scound--”
- “No!” cried the man. “No, I’ll be bound!
- Not so, though all the world the lie repeat!
- But that chap there, who sleeps hard by us,
- Whom you and all the world call pious,
- He was, for sure, a scoundrel and a cheat!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gotthold Ephraim Lessing was a celebrated German dramatist and critic.
-His collected works fill many volumes.
-
-We quote a few of his Fables and Epigrams.
-
-
- _THE RAVEN_
-
-The raven remarked that the eagle sat thirty days upon her eggs. “That,
-undoubtedly,” said she, “is the reason why the young of the eagle are
-so all-seeing and strong. Good! I will do the same.”
-
-And, since then, the raven actually sits thirty days upon
-her eggs; but, as yet, she has hatched nothing but miserable
-ravens.--_Fables._
-
-
- _THE DECORATED BOW_
-
-A man had an excellent bow of ebony, with which he shot very far and
-very sure, and which he valued at a great price. But once, after
-considering it attentively, he said:
-
-“A little too rude still! Your only ornament is your polish. It is a
-pity! However, that can be remedied,” thought he. “I will go and let a
-first-rate artist carve something on the bow.”
-
-He went, and the artist carved an entire hunting-scene upon the bow.
-And what more fitting for a bow than a hunting-scene?
-
-The man was delighted. “You deserve this embellishment, my beloved
-bow.” So saying, he wished to try it.
-
-He drew the string. The bow broke!--_Fables._
-
-
- _EPIGRAMS_
-
- From the grave where dead Gripeall, the miser, reposes,
- What a villainous odor invades all our noses!
- It can’t be his _body_ alone--in the hole
- They have certainly buried the usurer’s _soul_.
-
- * * * * *
-
- While Fell was reposing himself on the hay,
- A reptile conceal’d bit his leg as he lay;
- But all venom himself, of the wound he made light,
- And got well, while the scorpion died of the bite.
-
- * * * * *
-
- So vile your grimace, and so croaking your speech,
- One scarcely can tell if you’re laughing or crying;
- Were you fix’d on one’s funeral sermon to preach,
- The bare apprehension would keep one from dying.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Quoth gallant Fritz, “I ran away
- To fight again another day.”
- The meaning of his speech is plain,
- He only fled to fly again.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “How strange, a deaf wife to prefer!”
- “True, but she’s also dumb, good sir.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Rudolph Erich Raspe was a German author who was also an Archæologist of
-note.
-
-His best known work is the celebrated _History of Baron Münchausen_.
-
-
- _A HORSE TIED TO A STEEPLE_
-
-I set off from Rome on a journey to Russia, in the midst of winter,
-from a just notion that frost and snow must of course improve the
-roads, which every traveler had described as uncommonly bad through
-the northern parts of Germany, Poland, Courland, and Livonia. I went
-on horseback, as the most convenient manner of traveling. I was but
-lightly clothed, and of this I felt the inconvenience the more I
-advanced northeast. What must not a poor old man have suffered in that
-severe weather and climate, whom I saw on a bleak common in Poland,
-lying on the road, helpless, shivering, and hardly having wherewithal
-to cover his nakedness? I pitied the poor soul. Though I felt the
-severity of the atmosphere myself, I threw my mantle over him, and
-immediately I heard a voice from the heavens, blessing me for that
-piece of charity, saying:
-
-“You will be rewarded, my son, for this in time.”
-
-I went on. Night and darkness overtook me. No village was to be seen.
-The country was covered with snow, and I was unacquainted with the road.
-
-Tired out, I alighted, and fastened my horse to something like the
-pointed stump of a tree which appeared above the snow. For the sake
-of safety I placed my pistols under my arm, and laid down on the
-snow, where I slept so soundly that I did not open my eyes till full
-daylight. It is not easy to conceive my astonishment at finding myself
-in the midst of a village, lying in a churchyard. Nor was my horse
-to be seen; but I heard him soon after neigh somewhere above me. On
-looking upward, I beheld him hanging by his bridle to the weathercock
-of the steeple. Matters were now quite plain to me. The village had
-been covered with snow overnight; a sudden change in the weather had
-taken place; I had sunk down to the churchyard while asleep at the same
-rate as the snow had melted away; and what in the dark I had taken to
-be a stump of a little tree appearing above the snow, to which I had
-tied my horse, proved to have been the cross or weathercock of the
-steeple!
-
-Without long consideration, I took one of my pistols, shot the
-bridle in two, brought down the horse, and proceeded on my
-journey.--_Adventures of Baron Münchausen._
-
-
- _A RATHER LARGE WHALE_
-
-I embarked at Portsmouth, in a first-rate English man-of-war of one
-hundred guns and fourteen hundred men, for North America. Nothing worth
-relating happened till we arrived within three hundred leagues of the
-river St. Lawrence, when the ship struck with amazing force against (as
-we supposed) a rock. However, upon heaving the lead, we could find no
-bottom, even with three hundred fathoms. What made this circumstance
-the more wonderful, and indeed beyond all comprehension, was, that
-the violence of the shock was such that we lost our rudder, broke our
-bowsprit in the middle, and split all our masts from top to bottom,
-two of which went by the board. A poor fellow, who was aloft furling
-the main-sheet, was flung at least three leagues from the ship; but
-he fortunately saved his life by laying hold of the tail of a large
-sea-gull, which brought him back and lodged him on the very spot whence
-he was thrown. Another proof of the violence of the shock was the force
-with which the people between decks were driven against the floors
-above them. My head particularly was pressed into my stomach, where it
-continued some months before it returned to its natural situation.
-
-While we were all in a state of astonishment at the general and
-unaccountable confusion in which we were involved, the whole was
-suddenly explained by the appearance of a large whale, which had been
-basking, asleep, within sixteen feet of the surface of the water. This
-animal was so much displeased with the disturbance which our ship had
-given him--for in our passage we had with our rudder scratched his
-nose--that he beat in all the gallery and part of the quarter-deck with
-his tail, and almost at the same instant took the main-sheet anchor,
-which was suspended, as it usually is, from the head, between his
-teeth, and ran away with the ship at least sixty leagues, at the rate
-of twelve leagues an hour, when, fortunately, the cable broke, and we
-lost both the whale and the anchor. However, upon our return to Europe,
-some months after, we found the same whale within a few leagues of the
-same spot, floating dead upon the water. It measured above half a mile
-in length. As we could take only a small quantity of such a monstrous
-animal on board, we got our boats out, and with much difficulty cut off
-his head, where, to our great joy, we found the anchor, and above forty
-fathoms of the cable, concealed on the left side of his mouth, just
-under his tongue. Perhaps this was the cause of his death, as that side
-of his tongue was much swelled with severe inflammation.
-
-This was the only extraordinary circumstance that happened on this
-voyage. One part of our distress, however, I had like to have forgot.
-While the whale was running away with the ship she sprang a leak, and
-the water poured in so fast that all our pumps could not keep us from
-sinking. It was, however, my good fortune to discover it first. I found
-a large hole about a foot in diameter, and you will naturally suppose
-this circumstance gives me infinite pleasure, when I inform you that
-this noble vessel was preserved, with all its crew, by a most happy
-thought of mine. In short I sat down over it, and could have covered
-it had it been even larger. Nor will you be surprised at this when I
-inform you that I am descended from Dutch parents.
-
-My situation, while I sat there, was rather cool, but the carpenter’s
-art soon relieved me.
-
- --_Adventures of Baron Münchausen._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Matthias Claudius was another maker of Poetical Fables and Folk Songs.
-
-
- _THE HEN AND THE EGG_
-
- A famous hen’s my story’s theme,
- Who ne’er was known to tire
- Of laying eggs, but then she’d scream
- So loud o’er every egg, ’twould seem
- The house must be on fire.
- A turkey-cock, who ruled the walk,
- A wiser bird, and older,
- Could bear’t no more, so off did stalk
- Right to the hen, and told her:
- “Madam, that scream, I apprehend,
- Does not affect the matter;
- It surely helps the eggs no whit;
- So, lay your egg--and done with it!
- I pray you, madam, as a friend,
- Cease that superfluous clatter.
- You know not how’t goes through my head!”
- “Humph! Very likely!” madam said,
- Then, proudly putting forth a leg:
- “Uneducated barnyard fowl,
- You know no more than any owl
- The noble privilege and praise
- Of authorship in modern days!
- I’ll tell you why I do it:
- First, you perceive, I lay my egg,
- And then--review it.”
-
-Friedrich von Schiller was among the most famous of Germany’s writers.
-Poet, dramatist and historian he left numerous works of varied value.
-
-His humor, like that of all his countrymen, is heavy and rather labored.
-
-
- _PEGASUS IN THE YOKE_
-
- Into a public fair--a cattle-fair, in short,
- Where other things are bought and sold--ah, sad to tell!
- A hungry poet one day brought
- The Muse’s Pegasus to sell.
-
- Shrill neighed the hippogriff and clear,
- And pranced, and reared, displaying his proud frame,
- Till all exclaimed in wonder, who stood near,
- “The noble, royal beast! But what a shame
- His slender form by such a hateful pair
- Of wings is spoiled! He’d set off a fine post-team well.”
- “The race,” say others, “would be rare;
- But who’s go posting through the air?”
- And lose his money no one will.
- A farmer mustered courage, though, at length,
- “The wings, indeed,” he says, “will be no profit;
- But them one might tie down, or crop them off; it
- Then were a good horse for drawing--it has strength.
- I’ll give you twenty pounds, sir, win or lose.”
- The seller, too delighted to refuse,
- Cried out, “Agreed!” and eagerly the offer seized.
- Hans with his bargain trudged off home, well pleased.
-
- The noble beast was harnessed in,
- But felt th’ unwonted burden to be light,
- And off he set with appetite for flight,
- And soon his wild careering would begin,
- And hurled the cart in proudest rage
- Over a precipice’s edge.
- “Well done!” thought Hans. “We wisdom from experience borrow;
- I’ll trust the mad beast with no loads again.
- I’ve passengers to take to-morrow;
- He shall be put in leader of the train.
- By using him, two horses I shall spare;
- He’ll learn in time the collar, too, to bear.”
-
- They went on well awhile. The horse was fleet,
- And quickened up the rest; and arrow-swift the carriage flies.
- But now, what next? With look turned to the skies,
- And unaccustomed with firm hoof the ground to beat,
- He leaves the sure track of the wheels,
- True to the stronger nature which he feels,
- And runs through marsh and moor, o’er planted field and plain;
- And the same fury seizes all the train.
- No call will help, no bridle hold them in,
- Till, to the mortal fright of all within,
- The coach, well shaken and well smashed, brings up
- In sad plight on a steep hill’s top.
-
- “This is not quite the thing! No, no!”
- Says Hans, considering, with a frown.
- “In this way I shall never make it go.
- Let’s see if ’twill not tame the wild-fire down,
- To work him hard, and keep him low.”
- The trial’s made. The beast, so fair and trim,
- Before three days are gone looks gaunt and grim,
- And to a shadow shrunk. “I have it! I have found it now!”
- Cries Hans. “Come on, now. Yoke me him
- Beside my strongest ox before the plow.”
-
- So said, so done. In droll procession now,
- See ox and wingèd horse before the plow.
- Unwilling steps the griffin, strains what little might
- Of longing’s left in him, to take his fond old flight.
- In vain: deliberately steps his neighbor,
- And Phœbus’ high-souled steed must bend to his slow labor,
- Till now, by long resistance spent his force,
- His trembling limbs he can no longer trust,
- And, bowed with shame, the noble, godlike horse
- Falls to the ground, and rolls him in the dust.
-
- “You cursèd beast!” Hans breaks out furious now,
- And scolds and blusters, while he lays the blows on;
- “You are too poor, then, even for the plow!
- You rascal, so my ignorance to impose on!”
-
- And while in this way angrily he goes on,
- And swings the lash, behold! upon the way
- A pleasant youth steps up so smart and gay.
- A harp shakes ringing in his hand,
- And through his glossy, parted hair
- Winds glittering a golden band.
- “Where now, friend, with that wondrous pair?”
- From far off to the boor he spoke.
- “The bird and ox together in that style?
- I pray you, man, why, what a yoke!
- But come, to try a little while,
- Will you entrust your horse to me?
- Look well: a wonder you shall see.”
-
- The hippogriff’s unyoked, and with a smile
- The youth springs lightsomely upon his back.
- Scarce feels the beast the master’s certain hand,
- But gnashes at his wings’ confining band,
- And mounts, with lightning-look, the airy track.
- No more the being that he was, but royally,
- A spirit now, a god, up mounteth he;
- Unfurls at once, as for their far storm-flight,
- His splendid wings, and shoots to heaven with fierce, wild neigh;
- And ere the eye can follow him, away
- He melts into the clear blue height.
-
-Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, the greatest name in German literature, is
-hardly to be classed among the humorists.
-
-But a short extract from his Reynard the Fox is quoted.
-
- “But I am rather bad in my inside.
- By what I’ve eaten I am quite upset,
- And nowise fitted for a journey yet.”
- “What was it?” asked Sir Bruin, quite prepared,
- For Reynard had not thrown him off his guard.
- “Ah,” quoth the Fox, “what boots it to explain?
- E’en your kind pity could not ease my pain.
- Since flesh I have abjured, for my soul’s weal,
- I’m often sadly put to’t for a meal.
- I bear my wretched life as best I can;
- A hermit fares not like an alderman.
- But yesterday, as other viands failed,
- I ate some honey--see how I am swelled!
- Of that there’s always to be had enough.
- Would I had never touched the cursed stuff!
- I ate it out of sheer necessity;
- Physic is not so nauseous near to me.”
- “Honey!” exclaimed the Bear; “did you say honey!
- Would I could any get for love or money!
- How can you speak so ill of what’s so good?
- Honey has ever been my fav’rite food;
- It is so wholesome, and so sweet and luscious,
- I can’t conceive how you can call it nauseous.
- Do get me some o’t, and you may depend
- You’ll make me evermore your steadfast friend.”
- “You’re surely joking, uncle!” Reynard cried.
- “No, on my sacred word!” the Bear replied;
- “I’d not, though jokes as blackberries were rife,
- Joke upon such a subject for my life.”
- “Well, you surprise me!” said the knavish beast.
- “There’s no accounting, certainly, for taste;
- And one man’s meat is oft another’s poison.
- I’ll wager that you never set your eyes on
- Such store of honey as you soon shall spy
- At Gaffer Joiner’s, who lives here hard by.”
- In fancy o’er the treat did Bruin gloat,
- While his mouth fairly watered at the thought.
- “Oh, take me, take me there, dear coz,” quoth he,
- “And I will ne’er forget your courtesy!
- Oh, let me have a taste, if not my fill;
- Do, cousin.” Reynard grinned, and said, “I will.
- Honey you shall not long time be without.
- ’Tis true just now I’m rather sore of foot;
- But what of that? The love I bear to you
- Shall make the road seem short, and easy too
- Not one of all my kith or kin is there
- Whom I so honor as th’ illustrious Bear.
- Come, then, and in return I know you’ll say
- A good word for me on the council day.
- You shall have honey to your heart’s content,
- And wax, too, if your fancy’s that way bent.”
- Whacks of a different sort the sly rogue meant.
- Off starts the wily Fox, in merry trim,
- And Bruin blindly follows after him.
- “If you have luck,” thought Reynard, with a titter,
- “I guess you’ll find our honey rather bitter.”
- When they at length reached Goodman Joiner’s yard,
- The joy that Bruin felt he might have spared.
- But hope, it seems, by some eternal rule,
- Beguiles the wisest as the merest fool.
- ’Twas ev’ning now, and Reynard knew, he said,
- The goodman would be safe and sound in bed.
- A good and skilful carpenter was he;
- Within his yard there lay an old oak-tree,
- Whose gnarled and knotted trunk he had to split.
- A stout wedge had he driven into it;
- The cleft gaped open a good three foot wide;
- Toward this spot the crafty Reynard hied.
- “Uncle,” quoth he, “your steps this way direct;
- You’ll find more honey here than you suspect.
- In at this fissure boldly thrust your pate;
- But I beseech you to be moderate.
- Remember, sweetest things the soonest cloy,
- And temperance enhances every joy.”
- “What!” said the Bear, a shock’d look as he put on
- Of self-restraint; “d’ye take me for a glutton?
- With thanks I use the gifts of Providence,
- But to abuse them count a grave offense.”
- And so Sir Bruin let himself be fooled--
- As strength will be whene’er by craft ’tis ruled.
- Into the cleft he thrust his greedy maw
- Up to the ears, and either foremost paw.
- Reynard drew near, and tugging might and main
- Pulled forth the wedge, and the trunk closed again.
- By head and foot was Bruin firmly caught,
- Nor threats nor flatt’ry could avail him aught.
- He howled, he raved, he struggled, and he tore,
- Till the whole place re-echoed with his roar,
- And Goodman Joiner, wakened by the rout,
- Jumped up, much wond’ring what ’twas all about.
- He seized his ax, that he might be prepared,
- And danger, if it came, might find him on his guard.
- Still howled the Bear, and struggled to get free
- From the accursed grip of that cleft tree.
- He strove and strained, but strained and strove in vain;
- His mightiest efforts but increased his pain;
- He thought he never should get loose again.
- And Reynard thought the same, for his own part,
- And wished it, too, devoutly from his heart
- And as the joiner coming he espied,
- Armed with his ax, the jesting ruffian cried:
- “Uncle, what cheer? Is th’ honey to your taste?
- Don’t eat too quick; there’s no such need of haste.
- The joiner’s coming, and I make no question,
- He brings you your dessert, to help digestion.”
- Then, deeming ’twas not longer safe to stay,
- To Malepartus back he took his way.
-
-Carl Arnold Kortum, a German poet, wrote a long rigmarole of burlesque,
-called _The Jobsiad_. This was exceedingly popular and became a
-German classic. It is dull for the most part, but shows flashes of real
-drollery.
-
-
-_Contains the copy of a letter, which, among many others, the student
-Hieronimus did write to his parents:_
-
- Dear and Honored Parents,
- I lately
- Have suffered for want of money greatly;
- Have the goodness, then, to send without fail,
- A trifle or two by return of mail.
-
- I want about twenty or thirty ducats;
- For I have not at present a cent in my pockets;
- Things are so tight with us this way,
- Send me the money at once, I pray.
-
- And everything is growing higher,
- Lodging and washing, and lights and fire,
- And incidental expenses every day--
- Send me the ducats without delay.
-
- You can hardly perceive the enormous expenses
- The college imposes on all pretenses,
- For text-books and lectures so much to pay--
- I wish the ducats were on their way!
-
- I devote to my studies unremitting attention--
- One thing I must not forget to mention:
- The thirty ducats, pray send them straight
- For my purse is in a beggarly state.
-
- Boots and shoes, and stockings and breeches,
- Tailoring, washing, and extra stitches,
- Pen, ink and paper, are all so dear,
- I wish the thirty ducats were here!
-
- The money--(I trust you will speedily send it!)
- I promise faithfully to spend it;
- Yes, dear parents, you never need fear,
- I live very strictly and frugally here.
-
- When other students revel and riot,
- I steal away into perfect quiet,
- And shut myself up with my books and light
- In my study-chamber, till late at night.
-
- Beyond the needful supply of my table,
- I spare, dear parents, all I am able;
- Take tea but rarely, and nothing more,
- For spending money afflicts me sore.
-
- Other students, who’d fain be called _mellow_,
- Set me down for a niggardly fellow,
- And say: there goes the _dig_, just look!
- How like a parson he eyes his book!
-
- With jibes and jokes they daily beset me,
- But none of these things do I suffer to fret me;
- I smile at all they can do or say--
- Don’t forget the ducats, I pray!
-
- Ten hours each day I spend at the college,
- Drinking at the fount of knowledge,
- And when the lectures come to an end,
- The rest in private study I spend.
-
- The Professors express great gratification
- Only they hope I will use moderation,
- And not wear out in my studiis
- Philosophicis et theologicis.
-
- It would savor, dear parents, of self-laudation,
- To enter on an enumeration
- Of all my studies--in brief, there is none
- More exemplary than your dear son.
-
- My head seems ready to burst asunder,
- Sometimes, with its learned load, and I wonder
- Where so much knowledge is packed away:
- (Apropos! don’t forget the ducats, I pray!)
-
- Yes, dearest parents, my devotion to study
- Consumes the best strength of mind and body,
- And generally even the night is spent
- In meditation deep and intent.
-
- In the pulpit soon I shall take my station
- And try my hand at the preacher’s vocation
- Likewise I dispute in the college-hall
- On learned subjects with one and all.
-
- But don’t forget to send me the ducats,
- For I long so much to replenish my pockets;
- The money one day shall be returned
- In the shape of a son right wise and learn’d.
-
- Then my _Privatissimum_ (I’ve been thinking on it
- For a long time--and in fact begun it)
- Will cost me twenty Rix-dollars more,
- Please send with the ducats I mentioned before.
-
- I also, dear parents, inform you sadly,
- I have torn my coat of late very badly,
- So please enclose with the rest in your note
- Twelve dollars to purchase a new coat.
-
- New boots are also necessary,
- Likewise my night-gown is ragged, very;
- My hat and pantaloons, too, alas!
- And the rest of my clothes are going to grass.
-
- Now, as all these things are needed greatly,
- Please enclose me four Louis d’ors separately,
- Which, joined to the rest, perhaps will be
- Enough for the present emergency.
-
- My recent sickness you may not have heard of;
- In fact, for some time, my life was despaired of,
- But I haste to assure you, on my word,
- That now my health is nearly restored.
-
- The Medicus, for services rendered,
- A bill of eighteen guilders has tendered,
- And then the apothecary’s will be,
- In round numbers, about twenty-three.
-
- Now that physician and apothecary
- May get their dues, it is necessary
- These forty-one guilders be added to the rest,
- But, as to my health, don’t be distressed.
-
- The nurse would also have some compensation,
- Who attended me in my critical situation,
- I, therefore, think it would be best
- To enclose seven guilders for her with the rest.
-
- For citrons, jellies and things of that nature,
- To sustain and strengthen the feeble creature,
- The confectioner, too, has a small account,
- Eight guilders is about the amount.
-
- These various items of which I’ve made mention,
- Demand immediate attention;
- For order, to me, is very dear,
- And I carefully from debts keep clear.
-
- I also rely on your kind attention,
- To forward the ducats of which I made mention
- So soon as it can possibly be--
- One more small item occurs to me:--
-
- Two weeks ago I unluckily stumbled,
- And down the length of the stairway tumbled,
- As in at the college door I went,
- Whereby my right arm almost double was bent.
-
- The Chirurgus who attended on the occasion,
- For his balsams, plasters and preparation
- Of spirits, and other things needless to name,
- Charges twelve dollars; please forward the same.
-
- But, that your minds may be acquiescent,
- I am, thank God, now convalescent;
- Both shoulder and shin are in a very good way,
- And I go to lecture every day.
-
- My stomach is still in a feeble condition,
- A circumstance owing, so thinks the physician,
- To sitting so much, when I read and write,
- And studying so long and so late at night.
-
- He, therefore, earnestly advises
- Burgundy wine, with nutmeg and spices,
- And every morning, instead of tea,
- For the stomach’s sake, to drink sangaree.
-
- Please send, agreeably to these advices,
- Two pistoles for the wine and spices,
- And be sure, dear parents, I only take
- Such things as these for the stomach’s sake.
-
- Finally, a few small debts, amounting
- To thirty or forty guilders (loose counting),
- Be pleased, in your letter, without fail,
- Dear parents, to enclose this bagatelle.
-
- And could you, for sundries, send me twenty
- Or a dozen Louis d’or (that would be plenty),
- ’Twould be a kindness seasonably done,
- And very acceptable to your son.
-
- This letter, dear parents, comes hoping to find you
- In usual health--I beg to remind you
- How much I am for money perplexed,
- Please, therefore, to remit in your next.
-
- Herewith I close my letter, repeating
- To you and all my friendly greeting,
- And subscribe myself, without further fuss,
- Your obedient son,
- HIERONIMUS.
-
- I add in a postscript what I neglected
- To say, beloved and highly respected
- Parents, I beg most filially,
- That you’ll forward the money as soon as may be.
-
- For I had, dear father (I say it weeping),
- Fourteen French Crowns laid by in safe keeping
- (As I thought) for a day of need--but the whole
- An anonymous person yesterday stole:
-
- I know you’ll make good, unasked, each shilling,
- Your innocent son has lost by this villain;
- For a man so considerate must be aware
- That I such a loss can nowise bear.
-
- Meanwhile, I’ll take care that, to-day or to-morrow,
- Mr. Anonymous shall, to his sorrow
- And your satisfaction, receive the reward
- Of his graceless trick with the hempen cord.
-
-Adelbert von Chamisso, German author and poet, came of an old French
-family. His principal work is in prose, _The Wonderful History of
-Peter Schlemihl_, the man who sold his shadow.
-
-An amusing poem is in nonsense vein.
-
-
- _THE PIGTAIL_
-
- There lived a sage in days of yore,
- And he a handsome pigtail wore;
- But wondered much, and sorrowed more,
- Because it hung behind him.
-
- He mused upon this curious case,
- And swore he’d change the pigtail’s place,
- And have it hanging at his face,
- Not dangling there behind him.
-
- Says he, “The mystery I’ve found;
- I’ll turn me round.” He turned him round,
- But still it hung behind him.
-
- Then round, and round, and out, and in,
- All day the puzzled sage did spin;
- In vain--it mattered not a pin--
- The pigtail hung behind him.
-
- And right, and left, and round about,
- And up, and down, and in, and out
- He turned. But still the pigtail stout
- Hung steadily behind him.
-
- And though his efforts never slack,
- And though he twist, and whirl, and tack,
- Alas! still faithful to his back
- The pigtail hangs behind him!
-
-Wilhelm Müller, a lyric poet of promise, died young. Many of his songs
-were set to music by Schubert. His humorous verse was rollicking and
-popular.
-
-
- _THE DRUNKARD’S FANCY_
-
- Straight from the tavern door
- I am come here;
- Old road, how odd to me
- Thou dost appear!
- Right and left changing sides,
- Rising and sunk;
- Oh, I can plainly see,
- Road, thou art drunk!
-
- Oh, what a twisted face
- Thou hast, oh, moon!
- One eye shut, t’other eye
- Wide as a spoon.
- Who could have dreamed of this?
- Shame on thee, shame!
- Thou hast been fuddling,
- Jolly old dame!
-
- Look at the lamps again:
- See how they reel!
- Nodding and flickering
- Round as they wheel.
- Not one among them all
- Steady can go;
- Look at the drunken lamps
- All in a row.
-
- All in an uproar seem
- Great things and small;
- I am the only one
- Sober at all.
- But there’s no safety here
- For sober men;
- So I’ll turn back to
- The tavern again.
-
-The brothers, Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm, wrote much in collaboration
-beside their well-known _Märchen_ or _Fairy Tales_.
-
-Their humor is of the heavier sort, but their versatile erudition found
-opportunities for witty conceits.
-
-
- _EXCERPT FROM CLEVER GRETHEL_
-
-One day her master said to her, “Grethel, I have invited some friends
-to dinner to-day; cook me some of your best chickens.”
-
-“That I will, master,” she replied.
-
-So she went out, and killed two of the best fowls and prepared them for
-roasting.
-
-In the afternoon she placed them on the spit before the fire, and they
-were all ready, and beautifully hot and brown by the proper time, but
-the visitors had not arrived. So she went to her master, and said, “The
-fowls will be quite spoiled if I keep them at the fire any longer. It
-will be a pity and a shame if they are not eaten soon!”
-
-Then said her master, “I will go and fetch the visitors myself,” and
-away he went.
-
-As soon as his back was turned Grethel put the spit with the birds on
-one side, and thought, “I have been standing by the fire so long that
-it has made me quite thirsty. Who knows when they will come? While I
-am waiting I may as well run into the cellar and have a little drop.”
-So she seized a jug, and said, “All right, Grethel, you shall have a
-good draft. Wine is so tempting!” she continued, “and it does not do
-to spoil your draft.” And she drank without stopping till the jug was
-empty.
-
-After this she went into the kitchen, and placed the fowls again before
-the fire, basted them with butter, and rattled the spit round so
-furiously that they browned and frizzled with the heat. “They would
-never miss a little piece if they searched for it ever so carefully,”
-she said to herself. Then she dipped her finger in the dripping-pan
-to taste, and cried, “Oh, how nice these fowls are! It is a sin and a
-shame that there is no one here to eat them!”
-
-She ran to the window to see if her master and the guests were coming;
-but she could see no one. So she went and stood again by the fowls, and
-thought, “The wing of that fowl is a little burned. I had better eat it
-out of the way.” She cut it off as she thought this, and ate it up, and
-it tasted so nice that when she had finished it she thought, “I must
-have the other. Master will never notice that anything is missing.”
-
-After the two wings were eaten, Grethel again went to look for her
-master, but there were no signs of his appearance.
-
-“Who knows?” she said to herself; “perhaps the visitors are not coming
-at all, and they have kept my master to dinner, so he won’t be back.
-Hi, Grethel! there are lots of good things left for you; and that piece
-of fowl has made me thirsty. I must have another drink before I come
-back and eat up all these good things.”
-
-So she went into the cellar, took a large draft of wine, and returning
-to the kitchen, sat down and ate the remainder of the fowl with great
-relish.
-
-There was now only one fowl left, and as her master did not return,
-Grethel began to look at the other with longing eyes. At last she said,
-“Where one is, there the other must be; for the fowls belong to each
-other, and what is right for one is also fair and right for the other.
-I believe, too, I want some more to drink. It won’t hurt me.”
-
-The last draft gave her courage. She came back to the kitchen and let
-the second fowl go after the first.
-
-As she was enjoying the last morsel, home came her master.
-
-“Make haste, Grethel!” he cried. “The guests will be here in a few
-minutes.”
-
-“Yes, master,” she replied. “It will soon be all ready.”
-
-Meanwhile the master saw that the cloth was laid and everything in
-order. So he took up the carving-knife with which he intended to carve
-the fowl, and went out to sharpen it on the stones in the passage.
-
-While he was doing so, the guests arrived and knocked gently and
-courteously at the house door. Grethel ran out to see who it was, and
-when she caught sight of the visitors she placed her finger on her
-lips, and whispered, “Hush! Hush! Go back again as quickly as you came!
-If my master should catch you it would be unfortunate. He did invite
-you to dinner this evening, but with no other intention than to cut off
-both the ears of each of you. Listen; you can hear him sharpening his
-knife.”
-
-The guests heard the sound, and hastened as fast as they could down the
-steps, and were soon out of sight.
-
-Grethel was not idle. She ran screaming to her master, and cried, “You
-have invited fine visitors, certainly!”
-
-“Hi! Why, Grethel, what do you mean?”
-
-“Oh!” she exclaimed, “they came here just now, and have taken my two
-beautiful fowls from the dish that I was going to bring up for dinner,
-and have run away with them.”
-
-“What strange conduct!” said her master, who was so sorry to lose his
-nice dinner that he rushed out to follow the thieves. “If they had only
-left me one, or at least enough for my own dinner!” he cried, running
-after them. But the more he cried to them to stop the faster they
-ran; and when they saw him with the knife in his hand, and heard him
-say, “Only one! only one!”--he meant, if they had left him “only one
-fowl,” but they thought he spoke of “only one ear,” which he intended
-to cut off--they ran as if fire were burning around them, and were
-not satisfied till they found themselves safe at home with both ears
-untouched.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Friedrich Rückert was a prolific writer and left many volumes of his
-collected poems.
-
-A scathing bit of satire is here quoted.
-
-
- _ARTIST AND PUBLIC_
-
- The dumb man asked the blind man:
- “Canst do a favor, pray?
- Could I the harper find, man?
- Hast seen him pass to-day?
- I take, myself, small pleasure
- In harp-tones--almost none--
- Yet much I’d like a measure
- Played for my deaf young son.”
-
- The blind man quick made answer:
- “I saw him pass my gate;
- I’ll send my lame young man, sir,
- To overtake him straight.”
- At one look from his master,
- Away the cripple ran,
- And faster, ever faster,
- He chased the harper-man.
-
- The harper came, elated,
- And straight to work he went;
- His arms were amputated;
- His toes to work he bent.
- All hearts his playing captured;
- The deaf man was all ear;
- The blind man gazed, enraptured;
- The dumb man shouted, “Hear!”
-
- The lame boy fell to dancing,
- And leaped with all his might;
- The scene was so entrancing,
- They stayed till late at night.
- And when the concert ended,
- The public, justly proud,
- The artist’s powers commended,
- Who, deeply grateful, bowed.
-
-Heinrich Heine, the celebrated lyric poet, rarely showed any humor in
-his poetry. But some of his prose works are broadly ludicrous, and his
-observations witty and cynical.
-
-
- _THE TOWN OF GÖTTINGEN_
-
-The town of Göttingen, famous by reason of its university and its
-sausages, belongs to the kingdom of Hanover, and contains 999
-fire-stations, divers churches, a lying-in hospital, an observatory,
-an academic prison, a library, and an underground tavern--where the
-beer is excellent. The brook that flows past the town is called the
-Leine, and serves for bathing in summer; the water is very cold, and
-at some places the brook is so wide that one cannot jump across it
-without some exertion. The town is very handsome, and pleases me best
-when my back is turned to it. It must be very old, for I remember that
-when I matriculated (and was soon afterward rusticated), five years
-ago, it had the same gray, ancient appearance, and was as thoroughly
-provided, as it is now, with poodle dogs, dissertations, laundresses,
-anthologies, roast pigeon, Guelph decorations, pipe-bowls, court
-councilors, privy councilors and silly counts....
-
-In general, the inhabitants of Göttingen may be divided into students,
-professors, Philistines, and cattle. The cattle class is numerically
-the strongest. To place on record here the names of all professors
-and students would take me too far afield, nor can I even, at this
-moment, remember the name of every student; while among the professors
-there are many who have as yet made none. The number of Philistines in
-Göttingen must be like that of the sands--or rather the mud--of the
-sea. Truly, when they appear in the morning with their dirty faces and
-their white bills at the gates of the academic court, one wonders how
-God could have had the heart to create such a pack of scoundrels!
-
-More thorough information concerning Göttingen is easily obtainable by
-reference to the “Topography” of the town, by K. F. H. Marx. Although
-I am under the deepest obligations to the author, who was my physician
-and did me many kindnesses, I cannot praise his work without reserve. I
-must blame him for not having opposed in terms sufficiently strong the
-heresy that the ladies of Göttingen have feet of spacious dimensions.
-I have been engaged for a long time upon a work which is to destroy
-this erroneous idea once and forever. For this purpose I have studied
-comparative anatomy, have made excerpts from the rarest books in the
-library, and have for hours and hours observed the feet of the passing
-ladies in Weender Street. In my learned treatise I intend to deal with
-the subject as follows:
-
- 1. Of Feet in General.
- 2. Of the Feet of the Ancients.
- 3. Of the Feet of Elephants.
- 4. Of the Feet of the Fair Inhabitants of Göttingen.
- 5. Summing up of Opinions delivered upon Feet in Göttingen Taverns.
- 6. Connection and Comparison of Feet with Calves, Knees, etc.
- 7. Facsimile Charts (if sheets of paper sufficiently large are
- obtainable) of Specimen Feet of Göttingen Ladies.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I am the most peaceable of mortals. My wishes are: A modest dwelling, a
-thatched roof, but a good bed, good fare, milk and butter (the latter
-very fresh), flowers at the window, and a few fine trees before my
-gate. And if the Lord would fill the cup of my happiness, He would let
-me live to see the day when six or seven of my enemies are hung on the
-trees. With softened heart I would then forgive them all the evil they
-have done me. Yes, one must forgive one’s enemies, but not before they
-are hung.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A. If I were of the race of Christ, I should boast of it, and not be
-ashamed.
-
-B. So would I, if Christ were the only member of the race. But so many
-miserable scamps belong to it that one hesitates to acknowledge the
-relationship.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gervinus, the literary historian, set himself the following problem: To
-repeat in a long and witless book what Heinrich Heine said in a short
-and witty one. He solved the problem.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_De mortuis nil nisi bene_. One should speak only evil of the
-living.
-
-Heinrich Hoffman, a Frankfort doctor, wrote the popular tales for
-children about Struwelpeter, which are nursery classics in many
-languages. These stories have an added interest from the clever
-illustrations by their author.
-
-Wilhelm Busch, also a comic artist, born near Hanover, is the creator
-of the Max and Maurice stories and pictures.
-
-He was a well-known contributor to the _Fliegende Blätter_, the
-popular comic paper of Germany.
-
-A distinct type of German humor is found in their Student Songs. These,
-oftener than not, are in praise of merrymaking and good cheer.
-
-
- _POPE AND SULTAN_
-
- The Pope he leads a happy life;
- He fears not married care nor strife;
- He drinks the best of Rhenish wine--
- I would the Pope’s gay lot were mine.
-
-
- CHORUS
-
- He drinks the best of Rhenish wine--
- I would the Pope’s gay lot were mine.
-
- But then, all happy’s not his life;
- He has not maid nor blooming wife,
- Nor child has he to raise his hope--
- I would not wish to be the Pope.
-
- The Sultan better pleases me;
- His is a life of jollity;
- His wives are many as his will--
- I would the Sultan’s throne then fill.
-
- But even he’s a wretched man;
- He must obey his Alcoran;
- And dares not drink one drop of wine--
- I would not change his lot for mine.
-
- So, then, I’ll hold my lowly stand,
- And live in German fatherland;
- I’ll kiss my maiden fair and fine,
- And drink the best of Rhenish wine.
-
- Whene’er my maiden kisses me,
- I’ll think that I the Sultan be;
- And when my cheery glass I tope,
- I’ll fancy then I am the Pope.
-
-
- _CREDO_
-
- For the sole edification
- Of this decent congregation,
- Goodly people, by your grant
- I will sing a holy chant,
- I will sing a holy chant.
- If the ditty sound but oddly,
- ’Twas a father, wise and godly,
- Sang it so long ago.
- Then sing as Martin Luther sang:
- “Who loves not woman, wine, and song,
- Remains a fool his whole life long!”
-
- He, by custom patriarchal,
- Loved to see the beaker sparkle;
- And he thought the wine improved,
- Tasted by the lips he loved,
- By the kindly lips he loved.
- Friends, I wish this custom pious
- Duly were observed by us,
- To combine love, song, wine,
- And sing as Martin Luther sang,
- As Doctor Martin Luther sang:
- “Who loves not woman, wine and song,
- Remains a fool his whole life long!”
-
- Who refuses this our _Credo_,
- And who will not sing as we do,
- Were he holy as John Knox,
- I’d pronounce him heterodox,
- I’d pronounce him heterodox,
- And from out this congregation,
- With a solemn commination,
- Banish quick the heretic,
- Who’ll not sing as Luther sang,
- As Doctor Martin Luther sang:
- “Who loves not woman, wine and song,
- Remains a fool his whole life long!”
-
-
-
-
- ITALIAN HUMOR
-
-The humorists of Italy in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries are
-few and far between. Carlo Goldoni and Count Carlo Gozzi were both
-dramatists, the latter also a novelist, whose works show humor, but are
-not available for quotation.
-
-Count Giacomo Leopardi, though himself a gloomy sort of person, left
-some satirical writings tinged with wit.
-
-
- _THE ACADEMY OF SYLLOGRAPHS_
-
-The Academy of Syllographs, hold that it would be in the highest
-degree expedient that men should retire as far as possible from the
-conduct of the business of the world, and should gradually give
-place to mechanical agency for the direction of human affairs.
-Accordingly, resolved to contribute as far as lies in its power to this
-consummation, it has determined to offer three prizes, to be awarded to
-the persons who shall invent the best examples of the three machines
-now to be described.
-
-The scope and object of the first of these automata shall be to
-represent the person and discharge the functions of a friend who shall
-not calumniate or jeer at his absent associate; who shall not fail to
-take his part when he hears him censured or ridiculed; who shall not
-prefer a reputation for wit, and the applause of men, to his duty to
-friendship; who shall never, from love of gossip or mere ostentation
-of superior knowledge, divulge a secret committed to his keeping; who
-shall not abuse the intimacy or confidence of his fellow in order to
-supplant or surpass him; who shall harbor no envy against his friend;
-who shall guard his interests and help to repair his losses, and
-shall be prompt to answer his call, and minister to his needs more
-substantially than by empty professions.
-
-In the construction of this piece of mechanism it will be well to
-study, among other things, the treatise on friendship by Cicero, as
-well as that of Madame de Lambert. The Academy is of opinion that the
-manufacture of such a machine ought not to prove impracticable or even
-particularly difficult, for, besides the automata of Regiomontanus
-and Vaucanson, there was at one time exhibited in London a mechanical
-figure which drew portraits, and wrote to dictation; while there have
-been more than one example of such machines capable of playing at
-chess. Now, in the opinion of many philosophers human life is but a
-game; nay, some hold that it is more shallow and more frivolous than
-many other games, and that the principles of chess, for example, are
-more in accordance with reason, and that its various moves are more
-governed by wisdom, than are the actions of mankind; while we have it
-on the authority of Pindar that human action is no more substantial
-than the shadow of a dream; and this being so, the intelligence of an
-automaton ought to prove quite equal to the discharge of the functions
-which have just been described.
-
-As to the power of speech, it seems unreasonable to doubt that men
-should have the power of communicating it to machines constructed by
-themselves, seeing that this may be said to have been established by
-sundry precedents, such, for example, as in the case of the statue
-of Memnon, and of the human head manufactured by Albertus Magnus,
-which actually became so loquacious that Saint Thomas Aquinas, losing
-all patience with it, smashed it to pieces. Then, too, there was the
-instance of the parrot Ver-Vert, though it was a living creature; but
-if it could be taught to converse reasonably how much more may it be
-supposed that a machine devised by the mind of man, and constructed
-by his hands, should do as much; while it would have this advantage
-that it might be made less garrulous than this parrot, or the head of
-Albertus, and therefore it need not irritate its acquaintances and
-provoke them to smash it.
-
-The inventor of the best example of such a machine shall be decorated
-with a gold medallion of four hundred sequins in weight, bearing on its
-face the images of Pylades and Orestes, and on the reverse the name of
-the successful competitor, surrounded by the legend, FIRST REALIZER
-OF THE FABLES OF ANTIQUITY.
-
-The second machine called for by the Academy is to be an artificial
-steam man, so constructed and regulated as to perform virtuous and
-magnanimous actions. The Academy is of opinion that in the absence of
-all other adequate motive power to that end, the properties of steam
-might prove effective to inspire an automaton, and direct it to the
-attainment of virtue and true glory. The inventor who shall undertake
-the construction of such a machine should study the poets and the
-writers of romance, who will best guide him as to the qualities and
-functions most essential to such a piece of mechanism. The prize shall
-be a gold medal weighing four hundred and fifty sequins, bearing on its
-obverse a figure symbolical of the golden age, and on its reverse the
-name of the inventor.
-
-The third automaton should be so constituted as to perform the duties
-of woman such as she was conceived by the Count Baldassar Castiglione,
-and described by him in his treatise entitled _The Courtier_, as
-well as by other writers in other works on the subject, which will be
-readily found, and which, as well as that of the count, will have to
-be carefully consulted and followed. The construction of a machine
-of this nature, too, ought not to appear impossible to the inventors
-of our time, when they reflect on the fact that in the most ancient
-times, and times destitute of science, Pygmalion was able to fabricate
-for himself, with his own hands, a wife of such rare gifts that she
-has never since been equaled down to the present day. The successful
-inventor of this machine shall be rewarded with a gold medal weighing
-five hundred sequins, bearing on one face the figure of the Arabian
-Phenix of Metastasio, couched on a tree of a European species, while
-its other side will bear the name of the inventor, with the title,
-INVENTOR OF FAITHFUL WOMEN AND OF CONJUGAL HAPPINESS.
-
-Finally, the Academy has resolved that the funds necessary to defray
-the expenses incidental to this competition shall be supplemented by
-all that was found in the purse of Diogenes, its first secretary,
-together with one of the three golden asses which were the property
-of three of its former members--namely, Apuleius, Firenzuola, and
-Machiavelli, but which came into the possession of the Academy by the
-last wills and testaments of the aforementioned, as duly recorded in
-its minutes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Antonio Ghislanzoni, an Italian journalist was possessed of a sort of
-humor that would be a credit to any nation. It is not far removed from
-the style of the early American jocularists.
-
-Ghislanzoni was an opera singer, but, losing his voice, he quitted the
-stage, and founded a comic paper, _L’Uomo di Pietra._
-
-His paper on Musical Instruments is so entertaining we quote it all.
-
-
- _ON MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS_
-
-
- _The Clarinet_
-
-This instrument consists of a severe cold in the head, contained in a
-tube of yellow wood.
-
-The clarinet was not invented by the Conservatory, but by Fate.
-
-A chiropodist may be produced by study and hard work; but the
-clarinet-player is born, not made.
-
-The citizen predestined to the clarinet has an intelligence which is
-almost obtuse up to the age of eighteen--a period of incubation, when
-he begins to feel in his nose the first thrills of his fatal vocation.
-
-After that his intellect--limited even then--ceases its development
-altogether; but his nasal organ, in revenge, assumes colossal
-dimensions.
-
-At twenty he buys his first clarinet for fourteen francs; and three
-months later his landlord gives him notice. At twenty-five he is
-admitted into the band of the National Guard.
-
-He dies of a broken heart on finding that not one of his three sons
-shows the slightest inclination for the instrument through which he has
-blown all his wits.
-
-
- _The Trombone_
-
-The man who plays on this instrument is always one who seeks oblivion
-in its society--oblivion of domestic troubles, or consolation for love
-betrayed.
-
-The man who has held a metal tube in his mouth for six months finds
-himself proof against every illusion.
-
-At the age of fifty he finds that, of all human passions and feelings,
-nothing is left him but an insatiable thirst.
-
-Later on, if he wants to obtain the position of porter in a gentleman’s
-house, or aspires to the hand of a woman with a delicate ear, he tries
-to lay aside his instrument, but the taste for loud notes and strong
-liquors only leaves him with life.
-
-
- _The Harmoniflute_
-
-This instrument, on account of the nature of its monotonous sounds and
-its tremendous plaintiveness, acts on the nerves of those who hear it,
-and predisposes to melancholy those who play it.
-
-The harmoniflautist is usually tender and lymphatic of constitution,
-with blue eyes, and eats only white meats and farinaceous food.
-
-If a man, he is called Oscar; those of the other sex are named Adelaide.
-
-At home, he or she is in the habit of bringing out the instrument at
-dessert, and dinner being over, and the spirits of the family therefore
-more or less cheerfully disposed, will entertain the company with the
-“Miserere” in _Il Trovatore_, or some similar melody.
-
-The harmoniflautist weeps easily. After practising on the instrument
-for fifteen years or so, he or she dissolves altogether, and is
-converted into a brook.
-
-
- _The Organ_
-
-This complicated and majestic instrument is of a clerical character,
-and destined, by its great volume of sound, to drown the flat singing
-of clergy and congregation in church.
-
-The organist is usually a person sent into the world for the purpose
-of making a great noise without undue expenditure of strength, one who
-wants to blow harder than others without wearing out his own bellows.
-
-At forty he becomes the intimate friend of the parish priest, and the
-most influential person connected with the church. By dint of repeating
-the same refrains every day at matins and vespers, he acquires a
-knowledge of Latin, and gets all the anthems, hymns, and masses by
-heart. At fifty he marries a devout spinster recommended by the priest.
-
-He makes a kind and good-tempered husband, his only defect in that
-capacity being his habit of dreaming out loud on the eve of every
-church festival. On Easter Eve, for instance, he nearly always
-awakens his wife by intoning, with the full force of his lungs,
-_Resurrexit_. The good woman, thus abruptly aroused, never fails
-to answer him with the orthodox _Alleluia_.
-
-At the age of sixty he becomes deaf, and then begins to think his own
-playing perfection. At seventy he usually dies of a broken heart,
-because the new priest, who knows not Joseph, instead of asking him
-to dine at the principal table with the clergy and other church
-authorities, has relegated him to an inferior place, and the society of
-the sacristan and the grave-digger.
-
-
- _The Flute_
-
-The unhappy man who succumbs to the fascinations of this instrument is
-never one who has attained the full development of his intellectual
-faculties. He always has a pointed nose, marries a short-sighted woman,
-and dies run over by an omnibus.
-
-The flute is the most deadly of all instruments. It requires a
-peculiar conformation and special culture of the thumb-nail, with a
-view to those holes which have to be only half closed.
-
-The man who plays the flute frequently adds to his other infirmities a
-mania for keeping tame weasels, turtle-doves, or guinea-pigs.
-
-
- _The Violoncello_
-
-To play the ’cello, you require to have long, thin fingers; but it is
-still more indispensable to have very long hair falling over a greasy
-coat-collar.
-
-In case of fire, the ’cellist who sees his wife and his ’cello in
-danger will save the latter first.
-
-His greatest satisfaction, as a general thing, is that of “making
-the strings weep.” Sometimes, indeed, he succeeds in making his wife
-and family do the same thing in consequence of a diet of excessive
-frugality. Sometimes, too, he contrives to make people laugh or yawn,
-but this, according to him, is the result of atmospheric influences.
-
-He can express, through his loftily attuned strings, all possible
-griefs and sorrows, except those of his audience and his creditors.
-
-
- _The Drum_
-
-An immense apparatus of wood and sheepskin, full of air and of sinister
-presages. In melodrama the roll of the drum serves to announce the
-arrival of a fatal personage, an agent of Destiny, in most cases an
-ill-used husband. Sometimes this funereal rumbling serves to describe
-silence--sometimes to indicate the depths of the operatic heroine’s
-despair.
-
-The drummer is a serious man, possessed with the sense of his high
-dramatic mission. He is able, however, to conceal his conscious pride,
-and sleep on his instrument when the rest of the orchestra is making
-all the noise it can. In such cases he commissions the nearest of his
-colleagues to awaken him at the proper moment.
-
-On awaking, he seizes the two drumsticks and begins to beat; but,
-should his neighbor forget to rouse him, he prolongs his slumbers
-till the fall of the curtain. Then he shakes himself, perceives that
-the opera is over, and rubs his eyes. If it happens that the conductor
-reprimands him for his remissness at the _attack_, he shrugs his
-shoulders and replies, “Never mind, the tenor died, all the same. A
-roll of the drum, more or less, what difference would it have made?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Edmondo de Amicis, soldier and writer of books of travel, often gives
-amusing descriptions of scenes or incidents.
-
-
- _TOOTH FOR TOOTH_
-
-An English merchant of Mogador was returning to the city on the evening
-of a market-day, at the moment when the gate by which he was entering
-was barred by a crowd of country people driving camels and asses.
-Although the Englishman called out as loud as he could, “Make way!”
-an old woman was struck by his horse and knocked down, falling with
-her face upon a stone. Ill fortune would have it that in the fall she
-broke her last two front teeth. She was stunned for an instant, and
-then rose convulsed with rage, and broke out into insults and ferocious
-maledictions, following the Englishman to his door. She then went
-before the governor, and demanded that in virtue of the law of talion
-he should order the English merchant’s two front teeth to be broken.
-The governor tried to pacify her, and advised her to pardon the injury;
-but she would listen to nothing, and he sent her away with a promise
-that she should have justice, hoping that when her anger should be
-exhausted she would herself desist from her pursuit. But, three days
-having passed, the old woman came back more furious than ever, demanded
-justice, and insisted that a formal sentence should be pronounced
-against the Christian.
-
-“Remember,” said she to the governor, “thou didst promise me!”
-
-“What!” responded the governor; “dost thou take me for a Christian,
-that I should be the slave of my word?”
-
-Every day for a month the old woman, athirst for vengeance, presented
-herself at the door of the citadel, and yelled and cursed and made such
-a noise, that the governor, to be rid of her, was obliged to yield.
-He sent for the merchant, explained the case, the right which the law
-gave the woman, the duty imposed upon himself, and begged him to put an
-end to the matter by allowing two of his teeth to be removed--any two,
-although in strict justice they should be two incisors. The Englishman
-refused absolutely to part with incisors, or eye-teeth, or molars; and
-the governor was obliged to send the old woman packing, ordering the
-guard not to let her put her foot in the palace again.
-
-“Very well,” said she, “since there are none but degenerate Mussulmans
-here, since justice is refused to a Mussulman woman against an infidel
-dog, I will go to the sultan, and we shall see whether the prince of
-the faithful will deny the law of the Prophet.”
-
-True to her determination, she started on her journey alone, with an
-amulet in her bosom, a stick in her hand, and a bag round her neck, and
-made on foot the hundred miles which separate Mogador from the sacred
-city of the empire. Arrived at Fez, she sought and obtained audience of
-the sultan, laid her case before him, and demanded the right accorded
-by the Koran, the application of the law of retaliation. The sultan
-exhorted her to forgive. She insisted. All the serious difficulties
-which opposed themselves to the satisfaction of her petition were laid
-before her. She remained inexorable. A sum of money was offered her,
-with which she could live in comfort for the rest of her days. She
-refused it.
-
-“What do I want with your money?” said she; “I am old, and accustomed
-to live in poverty. What I want is the two teeth of the Christian. I
-want them; I demand them in the name of the Koran. The sultan, prince
-of the faithful, head of our religion, father of his subjects, cannot
-refuse justice to a true believer.”
-
-Her obstinacy put the sultan in a most embarrassing position. The
-law was formal, and her right incontestable; and the ferment of the
-populace, stirred up by the woman’s fanatical declamations, rendered
-refusal perilous. The sultan, who was Abd-er-Rahman, wrote to the
-English consul, asking as a favor that he would induce his countryman
-to allow two of his teeth to be broken. The merchant answered the
-consul that he would never consent. Then the sultan wrote again, saying
-that if he would consent he would grant him, in compensation, any
-commercial privilege that he chose to ask. This time, touched in his
-purse, the merchant yielded. The old woman left Fez, blessing the name
-of the pious Abd-er-Rahman, and went back to Mogador, where, in the
-presence of many people, the two teeth of the Nazarene were broken.
-When she saw them fall to the ground she gave a yell of triumph,
-and picked them up with a fierce joy. The merchant, thanks to the
-privileges accorded him, made in the two following years so handsome a
-fortune that he went back to England toothless, but happy.
-
-
-
-
- SPANISH HUMOR
-
-The only illustrious name of a writer of humor in Spain in the
-eighteenth century is that of the justly celebrated Thomas Yriarte.
-
-He is best known to English readers through his Literary Fables, which
-have been frequently translated.
-
-
- _THE ASS AND THE FLUTE_
-
- You must know that this ditty,
- This little romance,
- Be it dull, be it witty,
- Arose from mere chance.
-
- Near a certain inclosure,
- Not far from my manse,
- An ass, with composure,
- Was passing by chance.
-
- As he went along prying,
- With sober advance,
- A shepherd’s lute lying,
- He found there by chance.
-
- Our amateur started,
- And eyed it askance,
- Drew nearer, and snorted
- Upon it by chance.
-
- The breath of the brute, sir,
- Drew music for once;
- It entered the flute, sir,
- And blew it by chance.
-
- “Ah!” cried he, in wonder,
- How comes this to pass?
- Who will now dare to slander
- The skill of an ass?
-
- And asses in plenty
- I see at a glance,
- Who, one time in twenty,
- Succeed by mere chance.
-
-
- _THE EGGS_
-
- Beyond the sunny Philippines
- An island lies, whose name I do not know;
- But that’s of little consequence, if so
- You understand that there they had no hens;
- Till, by a happy chance, a traveler,
- After a while, carried some poultry there.
- Fast they increased as any one could wish;
- Until fresh eggs became the common dish.
- But all the natives ate them boiled--they say--
- Because the stranger taught no other way.
- At last the experiment by one was tried--
- Sagacious man!--of having his eggs fried.
- And, O! what boundless honors for his pains,
- His fruitful and inventive fancy gains!
- Another, now, to have them baked devised--
- Most happy thought!--and still another, spiced.
- Who ever thought eggs were so delicate!
- Next, some one gave his friends an omelette:
- “Ah!” all exclaimed, “what an ingenious feat!”
- But scarce a year went by, an artiste shouts,
- “I have it now--ye’re all a pack of louts!--
- With nice tomatoes all my eggs are stewed.”
- And the whole island thought the mode so good,
- That they would so have cooked them to this day,
- But that a stranger wandered out that way,
- Another dish the gaping natives taught,
- And showed them eggs cooked _à la Huguenot_.
- Successive cooks thus proved their skill diverse;
- But how shall I be able to rehearse
- All of the new, delicious condiments
- That luxury, from time to time, invents?
- Soft, hard, and dropped, and now with sugar sweet,
- And now boiled up with milk, the eggs they eat;
- In sherbet, in preserves; at last they tickle
- Their palates fanciful with eggs in pickle.
- All had their day--the last was still the best.
- But a grave senior thus, one day, addressed
- The epicures: “Boast, ninnies, if you will,
- These countless prodigies of gastric skill--
- But blessings on the man who brought the hens!”
-
- Beyond the sunny Philippines
- Our crowd of modern authors need not go
- New-fangled modes of cooking eggs to show.
-
-
- _THE COUNTRY SQUIRE_
-
- A country squire, of greater wealth than wit
- (For fools are often bless’d with fortune’s smile),
- Had built a splendid house, and furnish’d it
- In splendid style.
-
- “One thing is wanted,” said a friend; “for, though
- The rooms are fine, the furniture profuse,
- You lack a library, dear sir, for show,
- If not for use.”
-
- “’Tis true; but, zounds!” replied the squire with glee,
- “The lumber-room in yonder northern wing
- (I wonder I ne’er thought of it) will be
- The very thing.
-
- “I’ll have it fitted up without delay
- With shelves and presses of the newest mode
- And rarest wood, befitting every way
- A squire’s abode.
-
- “And when the whole is ready, I’ll despatch
- My coachman--a most knowing fellow--down,
- To buy me, by admeasurement, a batch
- Of books in town.”
-
- But ere the library was half supplied
- With all its pomp of cabinet and shelf,
- The booby Squire repented him, and cried,
- Unto himself:--
-
- “This room is much more roomy than I thought;
- Ten thousand volumes hardly would suffice
- To fill it, and would cost, however bought,
- A plaguy price.
-
- “Now, as I only want them for their looks,
- It might, on second thoughts, be just as good,
- And cost me next to nothing, if the books
- Were made of wood.
-
- “It shall be so. I’ll give the shaven deal
- A coat of paint--a colourable dress,
- To look like calf or vellum and conceal
- Its nakedness.
-
- “And gilt and letter’d with the author’s name,
- Whatever is most excellent and rare
- Shall be, or seem to be (’tis all the same)
- Assembled there.”
-
- The work was done; the simulated hoards
- Of wit and wisdom round the chamber stood,
- In bindings some; and some, of course, in _boards_,
- Where all were wood.
-
- From bulky folios down to slender twelves,
- The choicest tomes in many an even row,
- Display’d their letter’d backs upon the shelves,
- A goodly show.
-
- With such a stock, which seemingly surpass’d
- The best collection ever form’d in Spain,
- What wonder if the owner grew at last
- Supremely vain?
-
- What wonder, as he paced from shelf to shelf,
- And conn’d their titles, that the Squire began,
- Despite his ignorance, to think himself
- A learned man?
-
- Let every amateur, who merely looks
- To backs and bindings, take the hint and sell
- His costly library; for painted books
- Would serve as well.
-
-There were other Spaniards, doubtless, who possessed humor or wit, but
-the only available translations of their plays or stories are too long
-for quotation.
-
-
-
-
- RUSSIAN HUMOR
-
-A glance at Russia in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries shows
-the great popularity of the Fable as a means of expressing the wit and
-wisdom of the philosophers.
-
-The two greatest Fabulists were Ivan Chemnitzer or Khemnitzer and Ivan
-Kryloff.
-
-Alexander Griboyedoff was a writer of comedies.
-
-
- IVAN CHEMNITZER
-
-
- _THE PHILOSOPHER_
-
-A certain rich man, who had heard it was an advantage to have been at
-school abroad, sent his son to study in foreign parts. The son, who
-was an utter fool, came back more stupid than ever, having been taught
-all sorts of elaborate explanations of the simplest things by a lot of
-academical windbags. He expressed himself only in scientific terms, so
-that no one understood him, and everyone became very tired of him.
-
-One day, while walking along a road, and gazing at the sky in
-speculating upon some problem of the universe to which the answer had
-never been found (because there was none), the young man stepped over
-the edge of a deep ditch. His father, who chanced to be near by, ran
-to get a rope. The son, however, sitting at the bottom of the ditch,
-began to meditate on the cause of his fall. He concluded that _an
-earthquake had superinduced a momentary displacement of his corporeal
-axis, thus destroying his equilibrium, and, in obedience to the law of
-gravity as established by Newton, precipitating him downward until he
-encountered an immovable obstacle_--namely, the bottom of the ditch.
-
-When his father arrived with the rope, the following dialogue took
-place between them:
-
-“I have brought a rope to pull you out with. There, now, hold on tight
-to that end, and don’t let go while I pull.”
-
-“A rope? Please inform me what a rope is before you pull.”
-
-“A rope is a thing to get people out of ditches with, when they have
-fallen in and can’t get out by themselves.”
-
-“But how is it that no mechanical device has been constructed for that
-purpose?”
-
-“That would take time; but you will not have to wait until then. Now,
-then----”
-
-“Time? Please explain first what you mean by time.”
-
-“Time is something that I am not going to waste on a fool like you. So
-you may stay where you are until I come back.”
-
-Upon which the man went off, and left his foolish son to himself.
-
-Now, would it not be a good thing if all eloquent windbags were
-gathered together and thrown into the ditch, to keep him company? Yes,
-surely. Only it would take a much larger ditch than that to hold them.
- --_The Fables._
-
-
- _THE LION’S COUNCIL OF STATE_
-
- A Lion held a court for state affairs.
- Why? That is not your business, sir--’twas theirs.
- He called the elephants for councilors. Still
- The council-board was incomplete,
- And the king deemed it fit
- With asses all the vacancies to fill.
- Heaven help the state, for lo! the bench of asses
- The bench of elephants by far surpasses.
- “He was a fool, th’ aforesaid king,” you’ll say;
- “Better have kept those places vacant, surely,
- Than to have filled ’em up so very poorly.”
-
- Oh, no, that’s not the royal way;
- Things have been done for ages thus, and we
- Have a deep reverence for antiquity.
- Naught worse, sir, than to be, or to appear,
- Wiser and better than our fathers were!
- The list must be complete, e’en though you make it
- Complete with asses--for the lion saw
- Such had through all the ages been the law.
- He was no radical to break it;
-
- “Besides,” said he, “my elephants’ good sense
- Will soon my asses’ ignorance diminish,
- For wisdom has a mighty influence.”
- They made a pretty finish!
- The asses’ folly soon obtained the sway:
- The elephants became as dull as they!
-
-
- IVAN KRYLOV
-
-
- _THE SWAN, THE PIKE, AND THE CRAB_
-
- Whene’er companions don’t agree,
- They work without accord;
- And naught but trouble doth result,
- Although they all work hard.
-
- One day a swan, a pike, a crab,
- Resolved a load to haul;
- All three were harnessed to the cart,
- And pulled together all.
- But though they pulled with all their might,
- The cart-load on the bank stuck tight.
- The swan pulled upward to the skies;
- The crab did backward crawl;
- The pike made for the water straight--
- It proved no use at all!
-
- Now, which of them was most to blame,
- ’Tis not for me to say;
- But this I know: the load is there
- Unto this very day.
-
-
- _THE MUSICIANS_
-
-The tricksy monkey, the goat, the ass, and bandy-legged Mishka, the
-bear, determined to play a quartet. They provided themselves with the
-necessary instruments--two fiddles, an alto, and a bass. Then they all
-settled down under a large tree, with the object of dazzling the world
-by their artistic performance. They fiddled away lustily for some time,
-but only succeeded in making a noise, and no music.
-
-“Stop, my friends!” said the monkey, “this will not do; our music does
-not sound as it ought. It is plain that we are in the wrong positions.
-You, Mishka, take your bass and face the alto; I will go opposite the
-second fiddle. Then we shall play altogether differently, so that the
-very hills and forests will dance.”
-
-So they changed places, and began over again. But they produced only
-discords, as before.
-
-“Wait a moment!” exclaimed the ass; “I know what the matter is. We must
-get in a row, and then we shall play in tune.”
-
-This advice was acted upon. The four animals placed themselves in a
-straight line, and struck up once more.
-
-The quartet was as unmusical as ever. Then they stopped again, and
-began squabbling and wrangling about the proper positions to be taken.
-It happened that a nightingale came flying by that way, attracted by
-their din. They begged the nightingale to solve their difficulty for
-them.
-
-“Pray be so kind,” they said, “as to stay a moment, so that we may get
-our quartet in order. We have music and we have instruments; only tell
-us how to place ourselves.”
-
-To which the nightingale replied:
-
-“To be a musician, one must have a better ear and more intelligence
-than any of you. Place yourselves any way you like; it will make no
-difference. You will never become musicians.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Fedor Dostoevsky was a celebrated Russian novelist and journalist.
-
-We quote a small extract, which, it may be, depends in part for its fun
-on its excellent English rendition of the German patter.
-
-
- _FROM KARLCHEN, THE CROCODILE_
-
-At this moment an appalling, I may even say supernatural, shriek
-suddenly shook the room. Not knowing what to think, I stood for a
-moment rooted to the spot; then, hearing Elyona Ivanovna shrieking,
-too, I turned hastily round; and what did I see! I saw--oh, heavens!--I
-saw the unhappy Ivan Matvyeich in the fearful jaws of the crocodile,
-seized across the middle, lifted horizontally in the air, and kicking
-despairingly. Then--a moment--and he was gone!
-
-I cannot even attempt to describe the agitation of Elyona Ivanovna.
-After her first cry she stood for some time as petrified, and stared
-at the scene before her, as if indifferently, though her eyes were
-starting out of her head; then she suddenly burst into a piercing
-shriek. I caught her by the hands. At this moment the keeper, who
-until now had also stood petrified with horror, clasped his hands, and
-raising his eyes to heaven cried aloud:
-
-“Oh, my crocodile! Oh, mein allerliebstes Karlchen! Mutter! Mutter!
-Mutter!”
-
-At this cry the back door opened, and “Mutter,” a red-cheeked, untidy,
-elderly woman in a cap, rushed with a yell toward her son.
-
-Then began an awful tumult. Elyona Ivanovna, beside herself, reiterated
-one single phrase, “Cut it! Cut it!” and rushed from the keeper to the
-“Mutter,” and back to the keeper, imploring them (evidently in a fit
-of frenzy) to “cut” something or some one for some reason. Neither the
-keeper nor “Mutter” took any notice of either of us; they were hanging
-over the tank, and shrieking like stuck pigs.
-
-“He is gone dead; he vill sogleich burst, because he von ganz official
-of der government eat up haf!” cried the keeper.
-
-“Unser Karlchen, unser allerliebstes Karlchen wird sterben!” wailed the
-mother.
-
-“Ve are orphans, vitout bread!” moaned the keeper.
-
-“Cut it! Cut it! Cut it open!” screamed Elyona Ivanovna, hanging on to
-the German’s coat.
-
-“He did teaze ze crocodile! Vy your man teaze ze crocodile?” yelled the
-German, wriggling away. “You vill pay me if Karlchen wird bersten! Das
-war mein Sohn, das war mein einziger Sohn!”
-
-“Cut it!” shrieked Elyona Ivanovna.
-
-“How! You vill dat my crocodile shall be die? No, your man shall be
-die first, and denn my crocodile. Mein Vater show von crocodile, mein
-Grossvater show von crocodile, mein Sohn shall show von crocodile, and
-I shall show von crocodile. All ve shall show crocodile. I am ganz
-Europa famous, and you are not ganz Europa famous, and you do be me von
-fine pay shall!”
-
-“Ja, ja!” agreed the woman savagely; “ve you not let out; fine ven
-Karlchen vill bersten.”
-
-“For that matter,” I put in calmly, in the hope of getting Elyona
-Ivanovna home without further ado, “there’s no use in cutting it open,
-for in all probability our dear Ivan Matvyeich is now soaring in the
-empyrean.”
-
-“My dear,” remarked at this moment the voice of Ivan Matvyeich, with
-startling suddenness, “my advice, my dear, is to act through the bureau
-of police, for the German will not comprehend the truth without the
-assistance of the police.”
-
-These words, uttered with firmness and gravity, and expressing
-astonishing presence of mind, at first so much amazed us that we could
-not believe our ears. Of course, however, we instantly ran to the
-crocodile’s tank and listened to the speech of the unfortunate captive
-with a mixture of reverence and distrust. His voice sounded muffled,
-thin, and even squeaky, as though coming from a long distance.
-
-“Ivan Matvyeich, my dearest, are you alive?” lisped Elyona Ivanovna.
-
-“Alive and well,” answered Ivan Matvyeich; “and, thanks to the
-Almighty, swallowed whole without injury. I am only disturbed by
-doubt as to how the superior authorities will regard this episode;
-for, after having taken a ticket to go abroad, to go into a crocodile
-instead is hardly sensible.”
-
-“Oh, my dear, don’t worry about sense now; first of all we must somehow
-or other dig you out,” interrupted Elyona Ivanovna.
-
-“Tig!” cried the German. “I not vill let you to tig ze crocodile! Now
-shall bery mush Publikum be come, and I shall fifety copeck take, and
-Karlchen shall leave off to burst.”
-
-“Gott sei Dank!” added the mother.
-
-“They are right,” calmly remarked Ivan Matvyeich; “the economic
-principle before everything.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Nikolai Nekrasov wrote light verse of a whimsical trend.
-
-
- _A MORAL MAN_
-
- A strictly moral man have I been ever,
- And never injured anybody--never.
- I lent my friend a sum he could not pay;
- I jogged his memory in a friendly way,
- Then took the law of him th’ affair to end;
- The law to prison sent my worthy friend.
- He died there--not a farthing for poor me!
- I am not angry, though I’ve cause to be;
- His debt that very moment I forgave,
- And shed sad tears of sorrow o’er his grave.
- A strictly moral man have I been ever,
- And never injured anybody--never.
-
- I sent a serf of mine to learn the dressing
- Of meat. He learned it--a good cook’s a blessing--
- But strangely did neglect his occupation,
- And gained a taste not suited to his station:
- He liked to read, to reason, to discuss.
- I, tired of scolding, without further fuss
- Had the rogue flogged--all for the love of him.
- He went and drowned himself--what a strange whim!
- A strictly moral man have I been ever,
- And never injured anybody--never.
-
- My silly daughter fell in love, one day,
- And with a tutor wished to run away.
- I threatened curses, and pronounced my ban;
- She yielded, and espoused a rich old man.
- Their house was splendid, brimming o’er with wealth,
- But suddenly the poor child lost her health,
- And in a year consumption wrought her doom;
- She left us mourning o’er her early tomb.
- A strictly moral man have I been ever,
- And never injured anybody--never.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ivan Turgenieff, the celebrated novelist, wrote also delightfully witty
-_Poems in Prose_.
-
-
- _BENEFICENCE AND GRATITUDE_
-
-One day the Supreme Being took it into His head to give a great banquet
-in His azure palace.
-
-All the virtues were invited. Men He did not ask--only ladies.
-
-There was a large number of them, great and small. The lesser virtues
-were more agreeable and genial than the great ones; but they all
-appeared to be in good-humor, and chatted amiably together, as was only
-becoming for near relations and friends.
-
-But the Supreme Being noticed two charming ladies who seemed to be
-totally unacquainted.
-
-The Host gave one of the ladies His arm, and led her up to the other.
-
-“Beneficence!” He said, indicating the first.
-
-“Gratitude!” He added, indicating the second.
-
-Both the virtues were amazed beyond expression. Ever since the world
-had stood--and it had been standing a long time--this was the first
-time they had met.
-
-
- _PRAYER_
-
-Whatever a man prays for, he prays for a miracle. Every prayer reduces
-itself to this: “Great God, grant that twice two be not four.”
-
-Anton Chekov, writer of humorous stories, is also happy in epigrammatic
-wit.
-
-
- _PROVERBIAL WISDOM_
-
-The worst brandy is better than water.
-
-The path to the law court is wide; the path away from it is narrow.
-
-Even when drowning, a man wants company.
-
-Cherish your wife as you would your salvation, and beat her as you
-would your coat.
-
-A bad peace is superior to a good quarrel.
-
-Spare the peasant your lash, but not his rubles.
-
-Poverty is not a sin, but it’s a great deal worse.
-
-In a storm, pray to the Lord and keep on rowing as hard as you can.
-
-A sparrow is small; still, it’s a bird.
-
-If your wife were a guitar, you could hang her up after playing.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Casting about for other foreign countries that might offer bits of
-humor written in the eighteenth or nineteenth century, we come across
-this from a Polish author named Kajetan Wengierski.
-
-
- _THE DREAM-WIFE_
-
- Strangely ’wildered must I seem;
- I was married--in a dream.
- Oh, the ecstasy of bliss!
- Brother, what a joy is this!
- Think about it, and confess
- ’Tis a storm of happiness,
- And the memory is to me
- Sunbeams. But fifteen was she:
- Cheeks of roses red and white;
- Mouth like Davia’s; eyes of light,
- Fiery, round, of raven hue,
- Swimming, but coquettish too;
- Ivory teeth; lips fresh as dew;
- Bosom beauteous; hand of down;
- Fairy foot. She stood alone
- In her graces. She was mine,
- And I drank her charms divine.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Yet, in early years our schemes
- Are, alas! but shadowy dreams.
- For a season they deceive,
- Then our souls in darkness leave.
- Oft the bowl the water bears,
- But ’tis useless soon with years;
- First it cracks, and then it leaks,
- And at last--at last it breaks.
- All things with beginning tend
- To their melancholy end:
- So her beauty fled.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Then did anger, care, and malice
- Mingle up their bitter chalice.
- Riches like the whirlwind flew,
- Honors, gifts, and friendships too;
- And my lovely wife, so mild,
- Fortune’s frail and flattered child,
- Spent our wealth, as if the day
- Ne’er would dim or pass away;
- And--oh, monstrous thought!--the fair
- Scratched my eyes and tore my hair.
- Naught but misery was our guest.
- Then I sought the parish priest:
- “Father, grant me a divorce.
- Nay, you’ll grant it me, of course;
- Reasons many can be given--
- Reasons both of earth and heaven.”
-
- “I know all you wish to say.
- Have you wherewithal to pay?
- Money is a thing, of course--
- Money may obtain divorce.”
- “Reverend father, hear me, please ye--
- ’Tis not an affair so easy.”
- “Silence, child! Where money’s needed,
- Eloquence is superseded.”
- Then I talked of morals, but
- The good father’s ears were shut.
- With a fierce and frowning look
- Off he drove me--And I woke.
-
-And lacking adequate translation for any more of the humorous
-literature of far away lands, we conclude this portion of our Outline
-with some Epigrams of the people of Hayti.
-
-You can’t catch a flea with one finger.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The snake that wants to live does not keep to the highroad.
-
- * * * * *
-
-You should never blame the owner of a goat for claiming it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The ears do not weigh more than the head.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Wait till you are across the river before you call the alligator names.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If the tortoise that comes up from the bottom of the water tells you an
-alligator is blind, you may believe him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A frog in want of a shirt will ask for a pair of drawers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The ox never says “Thank you” to the pasture.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Joke with a monkey as much as you please, but don’t play with its tail.
-
-What business have eggs dancing with stones?
-
- * * * * *
-
-If you insist on punishing an enemy, do not make him fetch water in a
-basket.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The wild hog knows what tree he is rubbing against.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Hang your knapsack where you can reach it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The pumpkin vine does not yield calabashes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Every jack-knife found on the highway will be lost on the highway.
-
- * * * * *
-
-All wood is wood, but deal is not cedar.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is the frog’s own tongue that betrays him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The spoon goes to the tray’s house, but the tray never goes to the
-spoon’s house.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If you want your eggs hatched, sit on them yourself.
-
-
-
-
- AMERICAN HUMOR
-
-There may have been previous mute, inglorious Miltons, but doubtless
-the first American to be recognized as a true humorist was Benjamin
-Franklin.
-
-In fact, one of the foremost essayists of the present day opines that
-the reason Franklin was not called upon to write the Declaration of
-Independence was because he was too fond of his joke.
-
-“They were acute,” our essayist remarks, “those leaders of the
-Continental Congress, and they knew that every man has the defect
-of his qualities, and that a humorist is likely to be lacking in
-reverence, and that the writer of the Declaration of Independence had a
-theme which demanded most reverential treatment.”
-
-It is generally conceded that the Americans are a humorous nation, is
-even said that we have a way of living humorously, and are conscious of
-the fact.
-
-Aside from the annual work known as _Poor Richard’s Almanack_, Franklin
-wrote much prose and verse of a witty character.
-
-A letter of his gave rise to the well known saying, “He paid too much
-for his whistle.”
-
-Part of the letter is here given.
-
-“When I was a child of seven years old, my friends on a holiday filled
-my pocket with coppers. I went directly to a shop where they sold toys
-for children; and, being charmed with the sound of a _whistle_ that I
-met by the way in the hands of another boy, I voluntarily offered and
-gave all my money for one. I then came home, and went whistling all
-over the house, much pleased with my _whistle_, but disturbing all
-the family. My brothers and sisters and cousins, understanding the
-bargain I had made, told me I had given four times as much for it as
-it was worth; put me in mind what good things I might have bought with
-the rest of the money, and laughed at me so much for my folly, that I
-cried with vexation; and the reflection gave me more chagrin than the
-_whistle_ gave me pleasure.
-
-“This, however, was afterward of use to me, the impression continuing
-on my mind, so that often, when I was tempted to buy some unnecessary
-thing, I said to myself, _Don’t give too much for the whistle_; and I
-saved my money.
-
-“As I grew up, came into the world, and observed the actions of men, I
-thought I met with many, very many, who _gave too much for the whistle_.
-
-“When I saw one too ambitious to court favor, sacrificing his time in
-attendance on levees, his repose, his liberty, his virtue, and perhaps
-his friends, to attain it, I have said to myself, _This man gives too
-much for his whistle_.
-
-“When I saw another fond of popularity, constantly employing himself in
-political bustles, neglecting his own affairs and ruining them by that
-neglect, _He pays, indeed_, said I, _too much for his whistle_.
-
-“If I knew a miser, who gave up any kind of a comfortable living,
-all the pleasure of doing good to others, all the esteem of his
-fellow-citizens, and the joys of benevolent friendship, for the sake
-of accumulating wealth, _Poor man_, said I, _you pay too much for your
-whistle_.
-
-“When I met with a man of pleasure, sacrificing every laudable
-improvement of the mind, or of his fortune, to mere corporal
-sensations, and ruining his health in their pursuit, _Mistaken man_,
-said I, _you are providing pain for yourself instead of pleasure! you
-give too much for your whistle_.
-
-“If I see one fond of appearance, or fine clothes, fine houses,
-fine furniture, fine equipages, all above his fortune, for which he
-contracts debts, and ends his career in a prison, _Alas!_ say I, _he
-has paid dear, very dear, for his whistle_.
-
-“When I see a beautiful, sweet-tempered girl married to an ill-natured
-brute of a husband, _What a pity_, say I, _that she should pay so much
-for a whistle_!
-
-“In short, I conceive that great part of the miseries of mankind are
-brought upon them by the false estimates they have made of the value of
-things, and by their _giving too much for their whistles_.
-
-“Yet I ought to have charity for these unhappy people, when I consider,
-that with all this wisdom of which I am boasting, there are certain
-things in the world so tempting, for example, the apples of King John,
-which happily are not to be bought; for if they were put up to sale by
-auction, I might very easily be led to ruin myself in the purchase, and
-find that I had once more given too much for the _whistle_.
-
-“Adieu, my dear friend, and believe me ever yours, very sincerely and
-with unalterable affection.”
-
- B. FRANKLIN.
-
-
- _PAPER_
-
- Some wit of old--such wits of old there were--
- Whose hints show’d meaning, whose allusions care,
- By one brave stroke to mark all human kind,
- Call’d clear blank paper every infant mind;
- Where still, as opening sense her dictates wrote,
- Fair virtue put a seal, or vice a blot.
-
- The thought was happy, pertinent, and true;
- Methinks a genius might the plan pursue.
- I (can you pardon my presumption?) I--
- No wit, no genius, yet for once will try.
-
- Various the papers various wants produce,
- The wants of fashion, elegance, and use.
- Men are as various; and if right I scan,
- Each sort of _paper_ represents some man.
-
- Pray note the fop--half powder and half lace--
- Nice as a band-box were his dwelling-place:
- He’s the _gilt paper_, which apart you store,
- And lock from vulgar hands in the ’scrutoire.
-
- Mechanics, servants, farmers, and so forth,
- Are _copy-paper_, of inferior worth;
- Less prized, more useful, for your desk decreed,
- Free to all pens, and prompt at every need.
-
- The wretch, whom avarice bids to pinch and spare,
- Starve, cheat, and pilfer, to enrich an heir,
- Is coarse _brown paper!_ such as pedlars choose
- To wrap up wares, which better men will use.
-
- Take next the miser’s contrast, who destroys
- Health, fame, and fortune, in a round of joys.
- Will any paper match him? Yes, throughout,
- He’s true _sinking-paper_, past all doubt.
-
- The retail politician’s anxious thought
- Deems _this_ side always right, and _that_ stark naught;
- He foams with censure; with applause he raves--
- A dupe to rumors, and a tool of knaves;
- He’ll want no type his weakness to proclaim,
- While such a thing as _foolscap_ has a name.
-
- The hasty gentleman, whose blood runs high,
- Who picks a quarrel, if you step awry,
- Who can’t a jest, or hint, or look endure:
- What is he? What? _Touch-paper_ to be sure.
-
- What are our poets, take them as they fall,
- Good, bad, rich, poor, much read, not read at all?
- Them and their works in the same class you’ll find;
- They are the mere _waste-paper_ of mankind.
-
- Observe the maiden, innocently sweet,
- She’s fair _white-paper_, an unsullied sheet;
- On which the happy man, whom fate ordains,
- May write his _name_, and take her for his pains.
-
- One instance more, and only one I’ll bring;
- ’Tis the _great man_ who scorns a little thing,
- Whose thoughts, whose deeds, whose maxims are his own,
- Form’d on the feelings of his heart alone:
- True genuine _royal-paper_ is his breast:
- Of all the kinds most precious, purest, best.
-
-Francis Hopkinson, a writer of miscellaneous essays, wrote “The Battle
-of the Keys,” which was founded upon a real historic incident.
-
-
- _THE BATTLE OF THE KEYS_
-
- Gallants attend and hear a friend
- Trill forth harmonious ditty,
- Strange things I’ll tell which late befell
- In Philadelphia city.
-
- ’Twas early day, as poets say,
- Just when the sun was rising,
- A soldier stood on a log of wood,
- And saw a thing surprising.
-
- As in amaze he stood and gazed,
- The truth can’t be denied, sir,
- He spied a score of kegs or more
- Come floating down the tide, sir.
-
- A sailor, too, in jerkin blue,
- This strange appearance viewing,
- First damned his eyes, in great surprise,
- Then said, “Some mischief’s brewing.
-
- “These kegs, I’m told, the rebles hold,
- Packed up like pickled herring;
- And they’re come down to attack the town,
- In this new way of ferrying.”
-
- The soldier flew, the sailor too,
- And scared almost to death, sir,
- Wore out their shoes, to spread the news,
- And ran till out of breath, sir.
-
- Now up and down throughout the town,
- Most frantic scenes were acted;
- And some ran here, and others there,
- Like men almost distracted.
-
- Some “fire” cried, which some denied,
- But said the earth had quaked;
- And girls and boys, with hideous noise,
- Ran through the streets half-naked.
-
- Sir William he, snug as a flea,
- Lay all this time a-snoring,
- Nor dreamed of harm as he lay warm,
- In bed with Mrs. Loring.
-
- Now in a fright he starts upright,
- Awaked by such a clatter;
- He rubs both eyes, and boldly cries,
- “For God’s sake, what’s the matter?”
-
- At his bedside he then espied,
- Sir Erskine at command, sir,
- Upon one foot he had one boot,
- And th’ other in his hand, sir.
-
- “Arise, arise!” Sir Erskine cries,
- “The rebels--more’s the pity,
- Without a boat are all afloat,
- And ranged before the city.
-
- “The motley crew, in vessels new,
- With Satan for their guide, sir,
- Packed up in bags, or wooden kegs,
- Come driving down the tide, sir.
-
- “Therefore prepare for bloody war,
- The kegs must all be routed,
- Or surely we despised shall be,
- And British courage doubted.”
-
- The royal band now ready stand,
- All ranged in dead array, sir,
- With stomach stout to see it out,
- And make a bloody day, sir.
-
- The cannons roar from shore to shore,
- The small arms make a rattle;
- Since wars began I’m sure no man
- E’er saw so strange a battle.
-
- The rebel dales, the rebel vales,
- With rebel trees surrounded,
- The distant woods, the hills and floods,
- With rebel echoes sounded.
-
- The fish below swam to and fro,
- Attacked from every quarter;
- Why sure, thought they, the devil’s to pay
- ’Mongst folks above the water.
-
- The kegs, ’tis said, though strongly made
- Of rebel staves and hoops, sir,
- Could not oppose their powerful foes,
- And conquering British troops, sir.
-
- From morn to night these men of might
- Displayed amazing courage;
- And when the sun was fairly down,
- Retired to sup their porridge.
-
- A hundred men with each a pen,
- Or more, upon my word, sir,
- It is most true would be too few,
- Their valor to record, sir.
-
- Such feats did they perform that day,
- Against these wicked kegs, sir,
- That, years to come, if they get home,
- They’ll make their boasts and brags, sir.
- --_Miscellaneous Essays and Occasional Writings._
-
-Elizabeth Graeme Ferguson, one of the earliest women writers of our
-country, like many of her contemporaries, kept the style and effect of
-English poetry. Her lines on the Country Parson, show a fine vein of
-satire.
-
-
- _THE COUNTRY PARSON_
-
- How happy is the country parson’s lot!
- Forgetting bishops, as by them forgot;
- Tranquil of spirit, with an easy mind,
- To all his vestry’s votes he sits resigned:
- Of manners gentle, and of temper even,
- He jogs his flocks, with easy pace, to heaven.
- In Greek and Latin, pious books he keeps;
- And, while his clerk sings psalms, he--soundly sleeps.
- His garden fronts the sun’s sweet orient beams,
- And fat church-wardens prompt his golden dreams.
- The earliest fruit, in his fair orchard, blooms;
- And cleanly pipes pour out tobacco’s fumes.
- From rustic bridegroom oft he takes the ring;
- And hears the milkmaid plaintive ballads sing.
- Back-gammon cheats whole winter nights away,
- And Pilgrim’s Progress helps a rainy day.
-
- President John Quincy Adams so far relaxed from his political
- dignity as to write light verse.
-
-
- _TO SALLY_
-
- The man in righteousness arrayed,
- A pure and blameless liver,
- Needs not the keen Toledo blade,
- Nor venom-freighted quiver.
- What though he winds his toilsome way
- O’er regions wild and weary--
- Through Zara’s burning desert stray,
- Or Asia’s jungles dreary:
-
- What though he plough the billowy deep
- By lunar light, or solar,
- Meet the resistless Simoon’s sweep,
- Or iceberg circumpolar!
- In bog or quagmire deep and dank
- His foot shall never settle;
- He mounts the summit of Mont Blanc,
- Or Popocatapetl.
-
- On Chimborazo’s breathless height
- He treads o’er burning lava;
- Or snuffs the Bohan Upas blight,
- The deathful plant of Java.
- Through every peril he shall pass,
- By Virtue’s shield protected;
- And still by Truth’s unerring glass
- His path shall be directed.
-
- Else wherefore was it, Thursday last,
- While strolling down the valley,
- Defenceless, musing as I passed
- A canzonet to Sally,
- A wolf, with mouth-protruding snout,
- Forth from the thicket bounded--
- I clapped my hands and raised a shout--
- He heard--and fled--confounded.
-
- Tangier nor Tunis never bred
- An animal more crabbed;
- Nor Fez, dry-nurse of lions, fed
- A monster half so rabid;
- Nor Ararat so fierce a beast
- Has seen since days of Noah;
- Nor stronger, eager for a feast,
- The fell constrictor boa.
-
- Oh! place me where the solar beam
- Has scorched all verdure vernal;
- Or on the polar verge extreme,
- Blocked up with ice eternal--
- Still shall my voice’s tender lays
- Of love remain unbroken;
- And still my charming Sally praise,
- Sweet smiling and sweet spoken.
-
-About this time, Clement C. Moore wrote the Christmas story which has
-since become a national classic.
-
-
- _A VISIT FROM ST. NICHOLAS_
-
- ’Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house
- Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse;
- The stockings were hung by the chimney with care,
- In hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there;
- The children were nestled all snug in their beds,
- While visions of sugar-plums danced in their heads;
- And mamma in her ’kerchief, and I in my cap
- Had just settled our brains for a long winter’s nap,
- When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter,
- I sprang from the bed to see what was the matter.
- Away to the window I flew like a flash,
- Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash.
- The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow
- Gave the lustre of mid-day to objects below,
- When, what to my wondering eyes should appear,
- But a miniature sleigh, and eight tiny reindeer,
- With a little old driver, so lively and quick,
- I knew in a moment it must be St. Nick.
- More rapid than eagles his coursers they came,
- And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name;
- “Now, _Dasher!_ now, _Dancer!_ now, _Prancer_ and _Vixen!_
- On, _Comet!_ on, _Cupid!_ on, _Dunder_ and _Blitzen!_
- To the top of the porch! to the top of the wall!
- Now dash away! dash away! dash away all!”
- As dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly,
- When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky;
- So up to the house-top the coursers they flew,
- With the sleigh full of Toys, and St. Nicholas too.
- And then, in a twinkling, I heard on the roof
- The prancing and pawing of each little hoof.
- As I drew in my head, and was turning around,
- Down the chimney St. Nicholas came with a bound.
- He was dressed all in fur, from his head to his foot,
- And his clothes were all tarnished with ashes and soot;
- A bundle of Toys he had flung on his back,
- And he looked like a pedler just opening his pack.
- His eyes--how they twinkled! his dimples how merry!
- His cheeks were like roses, his nose like a cherry!
- His droll little mouth was drawn up like a bow,
- And the beard of his chin was as white as the snow;
- The stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth,
- And the smoke it encircled his head like a wreath;
- He had a broad face and a little round belly,
- That shook when he laughed, like a bowlful of jelly.
- He was chubby and plump, a right jolly old elf,
- And I laughed when I saw him, in spite of myself;
- A wink of his eye and a twist of his head,
- Soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread;
- He spoke not a word, but went straight to his work,
- And filled all the stockings; then turned with a jerk,
- And laying his finger aside of his nose,
- And giving a nod, up the chimney he rose;
- He sprang to his sleigh, to his team gave a whistle,
- And away they all flew like the down of a thistle.
- But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight,
- _“Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good-night_.”
-
-Washington Irving, though his work is besprinkled with humor cannot be
-quoted at length.
-
-A bit of his gay verse is given.
-
-
- _A CERTAIN YOUNG LADY_
-
- There’s a certain young lady,
- Who’s just in her heyday,
- And full of all mischief, I ween;
- So teasing! so pleasing!
- Capricious! delicious!
- And you know very well whom I mean.
-
- With an eye dark as night,
- Yet than noonday more bright,
- Was ever a black eye so keen?
- It can thrill with a glance,
- With a beam can entrance,
- And you know very well whom I mean.
-
- With a stately step--such as
- You’d expect in a duchess--
- And a brow might distinguish a queen,
- With a mighty proud air,
- That says “touch me who dare,”
- And you know very well whom I mean.
-
- With a toss of the head
- That strikes one quite dead,
- But a smile to revive one again;
- That toss so appalling!
- That smile so enthralling!
- And you know very well whom I mean.
-
- Confound her! devil take her!--
- A cruel heart-breaker--
- But hold! see that smile so serene.
- God love her! God bless her!
- May nothing distress her!
- You know very well whom I mean.
-
- Heaven help the adorer
- Who happens to bore her,
- The lover who wakens her spleen;
- But too blest for a sinner
- Is he who shall win her,
- And you know very well whom I mean.
-
-William Cullen Bryant, like most of the New England poets, was not
-often humorous in his work. Perhaps the nearest he came to it was in
-his _Lines to a Mosquito_.
-
-
- _TO A MOSQUITO_
-
- Fair insect! that with threadlike legs spread out,
- And blood-extracting bill and filmy wing,
- Dost murmur, as thou slowly sail’st about,
- In pitiless ears, full many a plaintive thing,
- And tell how little our large veins should bleed,
- Would we but yield them to thy bitter need?
-
- Unwillingly, I own, and, what is worse,
- Full angrily men harken to thy plaint;
- Thou gettest many a brush and many a curse,
- For saying thou art gaunt and starved and faint.
- Even the old beggar, while he asks for food,
- Would kill thee, hapless stranger, if he could.
-
- I call thee stranger, for the town, I ween,
- Has not the honor of so proud a birth--
- Thou com’st from Jersey meadows, fresh and green,
- The offspring of the gods, though born on earth;
- For Titan was thy sire, and fair was she,
- The ocean nymph that nursed thy infancy.
-
- Beneath the rushes was thy cradle swung,
- And when at length thy gauzy wings grew strong,
- Abroad to gentle airs their folds were flung,
- Rose in the sky, and bore thee soft along;
- The south wind breathed to waft thee on thy way,
- And danced and shone beneath the billowy bay.
-
- Calm rose afar the city spires, and thence
- Came the deep murmur of its throng of men,
- And as its grateful odors met thy sense,
- They seemed the perfumes of thy native fen.
- Fair lay its crowded streets, and at the sight
- Thy tiny song grew shriller with delight.
-
- At length thy pinion fluttered in Broadway--
- Ah, there were fairy steps, and white necks kissed
- By wanton airs, and eyes whose killing ray
- Shone through the snowy veils like stars through mist;
- And fresh as morn, on many a cheek and chin,
- Bloomed the bright blood through the transparent skin.
-
- Sure these were sights to tempt an anchorite!
- What! do I hear thy slender voice complain?
- Thou wailest when I talk of beauty’s light,
- As if it brought the memory of pain.
- Thou art a wayward being--well--come near,
- And pour thy tale of sorrow in mine ear.
-
- What say’st thou, slanderer! rouge makes thee sick?
- And China Bloom at best is sorry food?
- And Rowland’s Kalydor, if laid on thick,
- Poisons the thirsty wretch that bores for blood.
- Go! ’Twas a just reward that met thy crime--
- But shun the sacrilege another time.
-
- That bloom was made to look at--not to touch;
- To worship--not approach--that radiant white;
- And well might sudden vengeance light on such
- As dared, like thee, most impiously to bite.
- Thou shouldst have gazed at distance and admired--
- Murmur’d thy admiration and retired.
-
- Thou’rt welcome to the town--but why come here
- To bleed a brother poet, gaunt like thee?
- Alas! the little blood I have is dear,
- And thin will be the banquet drawn from me.
- Look round--the pale-eyed sisters in my cell,
- Thy old acquaintance, Song and Famine, dwell.
-
- Try some plump alderman, and suck the blood
- Enrich’d by gen’rous wine and costly meat;
- On well-filled skins, sleek as thy native mud,
- Fix thy light pump, and press thy freckled feet.
- Go to the men for whom, in ocean’s halls,
- The oyster breeds and the green turtle sprawls.
-
- There corks are drawn, and the red vintage flows,
- To fill the swelling veins for thee, and now
- The ruddy cheek, and now the ruddier nose
- Shall tempt thee, as thou flittest round the brow;
- And when the hour of sleep its quiet brings,
- No angry hand shall rise to brush thy wings.
-
-Fitz-Greene Halleck wrote much in collaboration with Joseph Rodman
-Drake, and it is often difficult to separate their work.
-
-
- _ODE TO FORTUNE_
-
- Fair lady with the bandaged eye!
- I’ll pardon all thy scurvy tricks,
- So thou wilt cut me, and deny
- Alike thy kisses and thy kicks:
- I’m quite contented as I am,
- Have cash to keep my duns at bay,
- Can choose between beefsteaks and ham,
- And drink Madeira every day.
-
- My station is the middle rank,
- My fortune--just a competence--
- Ten thousand in the Franklin Bank,
- And twenty in the six per cents;
- No amorous chains my heart enthrall,
- I neither borrow, lend, nor sell;
- Fearless I roam the City Hall,
- And bite my thumb at Sheriff Bell.
-
- The horse that twice a week I ride
- At Mother Dawson’s eats his fill;
- My books at Goodrich’s abide,
- My country-seat is Weehawk hill;
- My morning lounge is Eastburn’s shop,
- At Poppleton’s I take my lunch,
- Niblo prepares my mutton-chop,
- And Jennings makes my whiskey-punch.
-
- When merry, I the hours amuse
- By squibbing Bucktails, Guards, and Balls,
- And when I’m troubled with the blues
- Damn Clinton and abuse cards:
- Then, Fortune, since I ask no prize,
- At least preserve me from thy frown!
- The man who don’t attempt to rise
- ’Twere cruelty to tumble down.
-
-Albert Gorton Greene also wrote in the manner of his English forebears,
-indeed, his _Old Grimes_ is quite in line with Tom Hood or
-Goldsmith.
-
-
- _OLD CHIMES_
-
- Old Grimes is dead; that good old man
- We never shall see more:
- He used to wear a long, black coat,
- All buttoned down before.
-
- His heart was open as the day,
- His feelings all were true;
- His hair was some inclined to gray--
- He wore it in a queue.
-
- Whene’er he heard the voice of pain,
- His breast with pity burn’d;
- The large, round head upon his cane
- From ivory was turn’d.
-
- Kind words he ever had for all;
- He knew no base design:
- His eyes were dark and rather small,
- His nose was aquiline.
-
- He lived at peace with all mankind.
- In friendship he was true:
- His coat had pocket-holes behind,
- His pantaloons were blue.
-
- Unharm’d, the sin which earth pollutes
- He pass’d securely o’er,
- And never wore a pair of boots
- For thirty years or more.
-
- But good old Grimes is now at rest,
- Nor fears misfortune’s frown:
- He wore a double-breasted vest--
- The stripes ran up and down.
-
- He modest merit sought to find,
- And pay it its desert:
- He had no malice in his mind,
- No ruffles on his shirt.
-
- His neighbors he did not abuse--
- Was sociable and gay:
- He wore large buckles on his shoes
- And changed them every day.
-
- His knowledge, hid from public gaze,
- He did not bring to view,
- Nor made a noise, town-meeting days,
- As many people do.
-
- His worldly goods he never threw
- In trust to fortune’s chances,
- But lived (as all his brothers do)
- In easy circumstances.
-
- Thus undisturb’d by anxious cares,
- His peaceful moments ran;
- And everybody said he was
- A fine old gentleman.
-
-Ralph Waldo Emerson is seldom humorous or even in lighter vein. His
-Fable about the squirrel shows a graceful wit.
-
-
- _FABLE_
-
- The mountain and the squirrel
- Had a quarrel,
- And the former called the latter “Little Prig”;
- Bun replied,
- “You are doubtless very big;
- But all sorts of things and weather
- Must be taken in together,
- To make up a year
- And a sphere,
- And I think it no disgrace
- To occupy my place.
- If I’m not so large as you,
- You are not so small as I,
- And not half so spry.
- I’ll not deny you make
- A very pretty squirrel track;
- Talents differ; all is well and wisely put;
- If I cannot carry forests on my back,
- Neither can you crack a nut.”
-
-Nathaniel Parker Willis was a popular writer of society satire in both
-prose and verse.
-
-
- _LOVE IN A COTTAGE_
-
- They may talk of love in a cottage,
- And bowers of trellised vine--
- Of nature bewitchingly simple,
- And milkmaids half-divine;
- They may talk of the pleasure of sleeping
- In the shade of a spreading tree,
- And a walk in the fields at morning,
- By the side of a footstep free!
-
- But give me a sly flirtation
- By the light of a chandelier--
- With music to play in the pauses,
- And nobody very near;
- Or a seat on a silken sofa,
- With a glass of pure old wine,
- And mama too blind to discover
- The small white hand in mine.
-
- Your love in a cottage is hungry,
- Your vine is a nest for flies--
- Your milkmaid shocks the Graces,
- And simplicity talks of pies!
- You lie down to your shady slumber
- And wake with a bug in your ear,
- And your damsel that walks in the morning
- Is shod like a mountaineer.
-
- True love is at home on a carpet,
- And mightily likes his ease--
- And true love has an eye for a dinner,
- And starves beneath shady trees.
- His wing is the fan of a lady.
- His foot’s an invisible thing,
- And his arrow is tipp’d with a jewel
- And shot from a silver string.
-
-Seba Smith, among the first to break away from English traditions,
-wrote over the pen name of Major Jack Downing. He was a pioneer in the
-matter of dialect writing and the first to poke fun at New England
-speech and manners.
-
-Follows a part of his skit called
-
-
- _MY FIRST VISIT TO PORTLAND_
-
-After I had walked about three or four hours, I come along towards the
-upper end of the town, where I found there were stores and shops of all
-sorts and sizes. And I met a feller, and says I,--
-
-“What place is this?”
-
-“Why, this,” says he, “is Huckler’s Row.”
-
-“What!” says I, “are these the stores where the traders in Huckler’s
-Row keep?”
-
-And says he, “Yes.”
-
-“Well, then,” says I to myself, “I have a pesky good mind to go in
-and have a try with one of these chaps, and see if they can twist my
-eye-teeth out. If they can get the best end of a bargain out of me,
-they can do what there ain’t a man in our place can do; and I should
-just like to know what sort of stuff these ’ere Portland chaps are made
-of.” So in I goes into the best-looking store among ’em. And I see some
-biscuit lying on the shelf, and says I,--
-
-“Mister, how much do you ax apiece for them ’ere biscuits?”
-
-“A cent apiece,” says he.
-
-“Well,” says I, “I shan’t give you that, but, if you’ve a mind to, I’ll
-give you two cents for three of them, for I begin to feel a little as
-though I would like to take a bite.”
-
-“Well,” says he, “I wouldn’t sell ’em to anybody else so, but, seeing
-it’s you, I don’t care if you take ’em.”
-
-I knew he lied, for he never seen me before in his life. Well, he
-handed down the biscuits, and I took ’em, and walked round the store
-awhile, to see what else he had to sell. At last says I,--
-
-“Mister, have you got any good cider?”
-
-Says he, “Yes, as good as ever ye see.”
-
-“Well,” says I, “what do you ax a glass for it?”
-
-“Two cents,” says he.
-
-“Well,” says I, “seems to me I feel more dry than I do hungry now.
-Ain’t you a mind to take these ’ere biscuits again and give me a glass
-of cider?” and says he:
-
-“I don’t care if I do.”
-
-So he took and laid ’em on the shelf again and poured out a glass of
-cider. I took the glass of cider and drinkt it down and, to tell you
-the truth about it, it was capital good cider Then says I:
-
-“I guess it’s about time for me to be a-going,” and so I stept along
-toward the door; but he ups and says, says he:
-
-“Stop, mister, I believe you haven’t paid me for the cider.’
-
-“Not paid you for the cider!” says I; “what do you mean by that? Didn’t
-the biscuits that I give you just come to the cider?”
-
-“Oh, ah, right!” says he.
-
-So I started to go again, but before I had reached the door he says,
-says he:
-
-“But stop, mister, you didn’t pay me for the biscuit.”
-
-“What!” says I, “do you mean to impose upon me? Do you think I am going
-to pay you for the biscuits, and let you keep them, too? Ain’t they
-there now on your shelf? What more do you want? I guess, sir, you don’t
-whittle me in that way.”
-
-So I turned about and marched off and left the feller staring and
-scratching his head as tho’ he was struck with a dunderment.
-
-Howsomeever, I didn’t want to cheat him, only jest to show ’em it
-wa’n’t so easy a matter to pull my eye-teeth out; so I called in next
-day and paid him two cents.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And now humor began to creep into the newspapers, and it came about
-that American humorists, almost without exception, have been newspaper
-men.
-
-Following Seba Smith’s plan each author created a character, usually
-of homely type, and through him as a mouthpiece gave to the world his
-own wit and wisdom.
-
-Mrs. Frances Miriam Whitcher wrote the Widow Bedott papers, and
-Frederick Swartout Cozzens the Sparrowgrass Papers, but best known
-today is the Mrs. Partington, the American Mrs. Malaprop, created by
-Benjamin Penhallow Shillaber.
-
-
- _AFTER A WEDDING_
-
-“I like to tend weddings,” said Mrs. Partington, as she came back
-from a neighboring church where one had been celebrated, and hung
-up her shawl, and replaced the black bonnet in her long-preserved
-band-box. “I like to see young people come together with the promise
-to love, cherish, and nourish each other. But it is a solemn thing,
-is matrimony--a very solemn thing--where the pasture comes into the
-chancery, with his surplus on, and goes through with the cerement of
-making ’em man and wife. It ought to be husband and wife; for it ain’t
-every husband that turns out a man. I declare I shall never forget how
-I felt when I had the nuptial ring put on to my finger, when Paul said,
-‘With my goods I thee endow.’ He used to keep a dry-goods store then,
-and I thought he was going to give me all there was in it. I was young
-and simple, and didn’t know till arterwards that it only meant one
-calico gound in a year. It is a lovely sight to see the young people
-plighting their trough, and coming up to consume their vows.”
-
-She bustled about and got tea ready, but abstractedly she put on the
-broken teapot, that had lain away unused since Paul was alive, and
-the teacups, mended with putty, and dark with age, as if the idea had
-conjured the ghost of past enjoyment to dwell for the moment in the
-home of present widowhood.
-
-A young lady, who expected to be married on Thanksgiving night,
-wept copiously at her remarks, but kept on hemming the veil that
-was to adorn her brideship, and Ike sat pulling bristles out of the
-hearth-brush in expressive silence.
-
-Yet not all the wits of the day were newspaper men, for Oliver Wendell
-Holmes left his essays and novels now and then to give his native humor
-full play.
-
-The “Deacon’s Masterpiece,” often called “The One Hoss Shay” is a
-classic, and many short poems are among our best witty verses, while
-Holmes’ genial humor pervades his Breakfast Table books.
-
-
- _THE HEIGHT OF THE RIDICULOUS_
-
- I wrote some lines once on a time,
- In wondrous merry mood,
- And thought, as usual, men would say
- They were exceeding good.
-
- They were so queer, so very queer,
- I laughed as I would die;
- Albeit, in the general way,
- A sober man am I.
-
- I called my servant, and he came;
- How kind it was of him,
- To mind a slender man like me,
- He of the mighty limb!
-
- “These to the printer,” I exclaimed,
- And, in my humorous way,
- I added (as a trifling jest),
- “There’ll be the devil to pay.”
-
- He took the paper, and I watched,
- And saw him peep within;
- At the first line he read, his face
- Was all upon the grin.
-
- He read the next: the grin grew broad,
- And shot from ear to ear;
- He read the third: a chuckling noise
- I now began to hear.
-
- The fourth: he broke into a roar;
- The fifth: his waistband split;
- The sixth: he burst five buttons off,
- And tumbled in a fit.
-
- Ten days and nights, with sleepless eye,
- I watched that wretched man,
- And since, I never dare to write
- As funny as I can.
-
-
- _ÆSTIVATION_
-
- In candent ire the solar splendor flames;
- The foles, languescent, pend from arid rames;
- His humid front the cive, anheling, wipes,
- And dreams of erring on ventiferous ripes.
-
- How dulce to vive occult to mortal eyes,
- Dorm on the herb with none to supervise,
- Carp the suave berries from the crescent vine,
- And bibe the flow from longicaudate kine.
-
- To me also, no verdurous visions come
- Save you exiguous pool’s confervascum,--
- No concave vast repeats the tender hue
- That laves my milk-jug with celestial blue.
-
- Me wretched! Let me curr to quercine shades!
- Effund your albid hausts, lactiferous maids!
- Oh, might I vole to some umbrageous chump,--
- Depart,--be off,--excede,--evade,--erump!
-
-Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is charged with the perpetration of certain
-nonsense verses. His authorship of these has been stoutly denied as
-well as positively asseverated.
-
-The two poems in question are appended, and if Longfellow did write
-them they are in no wise to his discredit.
-
-
- _THERE WAS A LITTLE GIRL_
-
- There was a little girl,
- And she had a little curl
- Right in the middle of her forehead.
- When she was good
- She was very, very good,
- And when she was bad she was horrid.
-
- One day she went upstairs,
- When her parents, unawares,
- In the kitchen were occupied with meals
- And she stood upon her head
- In her little trundle-bed,
- And then began hooraying with her heels.
-
- Her mother heard the noise,
- And she thought it was the boys
- A-playing at a combat in the attic;
- But when she climbed the stair,
- And found Jemima there,
- She took and she did spank her most emphatic.
-
-
- _MR. FINNEY’S TURNIP_
-
- Mr. Finney had a turnip
- And it grew and it grew;
- And it grew behind the barn,
- And that turnip did no harm.
-
- There it grew and it grew
- Till it could grow no taller;
- Then his daughter Lizzie picked it
- And put it in the cellar.
-
- There it lay and it lay
- Till it began to rot;
- And his daughter Susie took it
- And put it in the pot.
-
- And they boiled it and boiled it
- As long as they were able,
- And then his daughters took it
- And put it on the table.
-
- Mr. Finney and his wife
- They sat down to sup;
- And they ate and they ate
- And they ate that turnip up.
-
-James Thomas Fields, an acknowledged humorist, wrote mostly homely
-narrative wit.
-
-
- _THE ALARMED SKIPPER_
-
- Many a long, long year ago,
- Nantucket skippers had a plan
- Of finding out, though “lying low,”
- How near New York their schooners ran.
-
- They greased the lead before it fell,
- And then, by sounding through the night,
- Knowing the soil that stuck, so well,
- They always guessed their reckoning right.
-
- A skipper gray, whose eyes were dim,
- Could tell, by _tasting_, just the spot;
- And so below he’d “dowse the glim,”--
- After, of course, his “something hot.”
-
- Snug in his berth at eight o’clock
- This ancient skipper might be found;
- No matter how his craft would rock,
- He slept,--for skippers’ naps are sound!
-
- The watch on deck would now and then
- Run down and wake him, with the lead;
- He’d up, and taste, and tell the men
- How many miles they went ahead.
-
- One night ’twas Jotham Marden’s watch,
- A curious wag,--the peddler’s son,--
- And so he mused (the wanton wretch),
- “To-night I’ll have a grain of fun.
-
- “We’re all a set of stupid fools
- To think the skipper knows by _tasting_
- What ground he’s on: Nantucket schools
- Don’t teach such stuff, with all their basting!”
-
- And so he took the well-greased lead
- And rubbed it o’er a box of earth
- That stood on deck,--a parsnip-bed,--
- And then he sought the skipper’s berth.
-
- “Where are we now, sir? Please to taste.”
- The skipper yawned, put out his tongue,
- Then oped his eyes in wondrous haste,
- And then upon the floor he sprung!
-
- The skipper stormed, and tore his hair,
- Thrust on his boots, and roared to Marden,
- “_Nantucket’s sunk, and here we are
- Right over old Marm Hackett’s garden!_”
-
-John Godfrey Saxe has been called the American Tom Hood. His verses are
-among our very best humorous poems.
-
-
- _MY FAMILIAR_
-
- Again I hear that creaking step!--
- He’s rapping at the door!--
- Too well I know the boding sound
- That ushers in a bore.
- I do not tremble when I meet
- The stoutest of my foes,
- But heaven defend me from the friend
- Who comes,--but never goes!
-
- He drops into my easy-chair
- And asks about the news;
- He peers into my manuscript,
- And gives his candid views;
- He tells me where he likes the line,
- And where he’s forced to grieve;
- He takes the strangest liberties,--
- But never takes his leave!
-
- He reads my daily paper through
- Before I’ve seen a word;
- He scans the lyric (that I wrote)
- And thinks it quite absurd;
- He calmly smokes my last cigar,
- And coolly asks for more;
- He opens everything he sees--
- Except the entry door!
-
- He talks about his fragile health,
- And tells me of his pains;
- He suffers from a score of ills
- Of which he ne’er complains;
- And how he struggled once with death
- To keep the fiend at bay;
- On themes like those away he goes--
- But never goes away!
-
- He tells me of the carping words
- Some shallow critic wrote;
- And every precious paragraph
- Familiarly can quote;
- He thinks the writer did me wrong;
- He’d like to run him through!
- He says a thousand pleasant things--
- But never says “Adieu!”
-
- Whene’er he comes--that dreadful man--
- Disguise it as I may,
- I know that, like an autumn rain,
- He’ll last throughout the day.
- In vain I speak of urgent tasks;
- In vain I scowl and pout;
- A frown is no extinguisher--
- It does not put him out!
-
- I mean to take the knocker off,
- Put crape upon the door,
- Or hint to John that I am gone
- To stay a month or more.
- I do not tremble when I meet
- The stoutest of my foes,
- But Heaven defend me from the friend
- Who never, never goes!
-
-Henry Wheeler Shaw, creator of the character of Josh Billings, was a
-philosopher and essayist as well as a funny man.
-
-Doubtless his work has lived largely because of its amusing
-misspelling, but there is much wisdom to be found in his wit.
-
-The following essays are given only in part.
-
-
- _TIGHT BOOTS_
-
-I would jist like to kno who the man waz who fust invented _tite
-boots_.
-
-He must hav bin a narrow and kontrakted kuss.
-
-If he still lives, i hope he haz repented ov hiz sin, or iz enjoying
-grate agony ov sum kind.
-
-I hay bin in a grate menny tite spots in mi life, but generally could
-manage to make them average; but thare iz no sich thing az making a
-pair of tite boots average.
-
-Enny man who kan wear a pair ov tite boots, and be humble, and
-penitent, and not indulge profane literature, will make a good husband.
-
-Oh! for the pen ov departed Wm. Shakspear, to write an anethema aginst
-tite boots, that would make anshunt Rome wake up, and howl agin az she
-did once before on a previous ockashun.
-
-Oh! for the strength ov Herkules, to tare into shu strings all the tite
-boots ov creashun, and skatter them tew the 8 winds ov heaven.
-
-Oh! for the buty ov Venus, tew make a bigg foot look hansum without a
-tite boot on it.
-
-Oh! for the payshunce ov Job, the Apostle, to nuss a tite boot and bles
-it, and even pra for one a size smaller and more pinchfull.
-
-Oh! for a pair of boots bigg enuff for the foot ov a mountain.
-
-I have been led into the above assortment ov _Oh’s!_ from having
-in my posseshun, at this moment, a pair ov number nine boots, with a
-pair ov number eleven feet in them.
-
-Mi feet are az uneasy az a dog’s noze the fust time he wears a muzzle.
-
-I think mi feet will eventually choke the boots to deth.
-
-I liv in hopes they will.
-
-I suppozed i had lived long enuff not to be phooled agin in this way,
-but i hav found out that an ounce ov vanity weighs more than a pound ov
-reazon, espeshily when a man mistakes a bigg foot for a small one.
-
-Avoid tite boots, mi friend, az you would the grip of the devil; for
-menny a man haz cought for life a fust rate habit for swareing bi
-encouraging hiz feet to hurt hiz boots.
-
-I hav promised mi two feet, at least a dozen ov times during mi
-checkured life, that they never should be strangled agin, but i find
-them to-day az phull ov pain az the stummuk ake from a suddin attak ov
-tite boots.
-
-But this iz solemly the last pair ov tite boots i will ever wear; i
-will hereafter wear boots az bigg az mi feet, if i have to go barefoot
-to do it.
-
-I am too old and too respektable to be a phool enny more.
-
-Eazy boots iz _one_ of the luxurys ov life, but i forgit what the
-other luxury iz, but i don’t kno az i care, provided i kan git rid ov
-this pair ov tite boots.
-
-Enny man kan hav them for seven dollars, just half what they kost, and
-if they don’t make his feet ake wuss than an angle worm in hot ashes,
-he needn’t pay for them.
-
-Methuseles iz the only man, that i kan kall to mind now who could hav
-afforded to hav wore tite boots, and enjoyed them, he had a grate deal
-ov waste time tew be miserable in but life now days, iz too short, and
-too full ov aktual bizzness to phool away enny ov it on tite boots.
-
-Tite boots are an insult to enny man’s understanding.
-
-He who wears tite boots will hav too acknowledge the corn.
-
-Tite boots hav no bowells or mersy, their insides are wrath and
-promiskious cussing.
-
-Beware ov tite boots.--
-
-
- _A HEN_
-
-A hen is a darn phool, they was born so bi natur.
-
-When natur undertakes tew make a phool, she hits the mark the fust time.
-
-Most all the animile kritters hav instinkt, which is wuth more to them
-than reason would be, for instinkt don’t make enny blunders.
-
-If the animiles had reason, they would akt just as ridikilus as we men
-folks do.
-
-But a hen don’t seem tew hav even instinkt, and was made expressly for
-a phool.
-
-I hav seen a hen fly out ov a good warm shelter, on the 15th ov
-January, when the snow was 3 foot high, and lite on the top ov a stun
-wall, and coolly set thare, and freeze tew deth.
-
-Noboddy but a darn phool would do this, unless it was tew save a bet.
-
-I hav saw a human being do similar things, but they did it tew win a
-bet.
-
-To save a bet, is self-preservashun, and self-preservashun, is the fust
-law ov natur, so sez Blakstone, and he is the best judge ov law now
-living.
-
-If i couldn’t be Josh Billings, i would like, next in suit tew be
-Blakstone, and compoze sum law.
-
-Not so far removed from the Josh Billings type of humor is the work
-of James Russell Lowell. His well known _Biglow Papers_ exploit
-in perfection the back country New England politics as well as native
-character.
-
-
- _WHAT MR. ROBINSON THINKS_
-
- Guvener B. is a sensible man;
- He stays to his home an’ looks arter his folks;
- He draws his furrer ez straight ez he can,
- An’ into nobody’s tater-patch pokes;
- But John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez he wunt vote fer Guvener B.
-
- My ain’t it terrible? Wut shall we du?
- We can’t never choose him, o’ course,--thet’s flat;
- Guess we shall hev to come round (don’t you?)
- An’ go in fer thunder an’ guns, an’ all that;
- Fer John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez he wunt vote fer Guvener B.
-
- Gineral C. is a dreffle smart man:
- He’s ben on all sides thet give places or pelf;
- But consistency still was a part of his plan,--
- He’s ben true to _one_ party,--an’ thet is himself;--
- So John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez he shall vote fer Gineral C.
-
- Gineral C. he goes in fer the war;
- He don’t vally principle more’n an old cud;
- Wut did God make us raytional creeturs fer,
- But glory an’ gunpowder, plunder an’ blood?
- So John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez he shall vote fer Gineral C.
-
- We were gettin’ on nicely up here to our village,
- With good old idees o’ wut’s right an’ wut ain’t,
- We kind o’ thought Christ went agin’ war an’ pillage,
- An’ thet eppyletts worn’t the best mark of a saint;
- But John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez this kind o’ thing’s an exploded idee.
-
- The side of our country must ollers be took,
- An’ Presidunt Polk, you know, _he_ is our country,
- An’ the angel thet writes all our sins in a book
- Puts the _debit_ to him, an’ to us the _per contry_!
- An’ John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez this is his view o’ the thing to a T.
-
- Parson Wilbur he calls all these argimunts lies;
- Sez they’re nothin’ on airth but jest _fee_, _faw_, _fum_;
- An’ thet all this big talk of our destinies
- Is half on it ign’ance, an’ t’other half rum;
- But John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez it ain’t no sech thing; an’, of course, so must we.
-
- Parson Wilbur sez _he_ never heerd in his life
- Thet th’ Apostles rigged out in their swaller-tail coats,
- An’ marched round in front of a drum an’ a fife,
- To git some on ’em office, an’ some on ’em votes;
- But John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez they didn’t know everythin’ down in Judee.
-
- Wall, it’s a marcy we’ve gut folks to tell us
- The rights an’ the wrongs o’ these matters, I vow,--
- God sends country lawyers, an’ other wise fellers,
- To start the world’s team wen it gits in a slough;
- Fer John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez the world’ll go right, ef he hollers out Gee!
-
-Phoebe Cary, though a hymn writer of repute, did some extremely clever
-parodies. This work of hers is little known.
-
-
- _I REMEMBER_
-
- I remember, I remember,
- The house where I was wed,
- And the little room from which that night
- My smiling bride was led.
- She didn’t come a wink too soon,
- Nor make too long a stay;
- But now I often wish her folks
- Had kept the girl away!
-
- I remember, I remember,
- Her dresses, red and white,
- Her bonnets and her caps and cloaks,--
- They cost an awful sight!
- The “corner lot” on which I built,
- And where my brother met
- At first my wife, one washing-day,--
- That man is single yet!
-
- I remember, I remember,
- Where I was used to court,
- And thought that all of married life
- Was just such pleasant sport:--
- My spirit flew in feathers then,
- No care was on my brow;
- I scarce could wait to shut the gate,--
- I’m not so anxious now!
-
- I remember, I remember,
- My dear one’s smile and sigh;
- I used to think her tender heart
- Was close against the sky.
- It was a childish ignorance,
- But now it soothes me not
- To know I’m farther off from Heaven
- Than when she wasn’t got!
-
-
- _“THERE’S A BOWER OF BEAN-VINES”_
-
- There’s a bower of bean-vines in Benjamin’s yard,
- And the cabbages grow round it, planted for greens;
- In the time of my childhood ’twas terribly hard
- To bend down the bean-poles, and pick off the beans.
-
- That bower and its products I never forget,
- But oft, when my landlady presses me hard,
- I think, are the cabbages growing there yet,
- Are the bean-vines still bearing in Benjamin’s yard?
-
- No, the bean-vines soon withered that once used to wave,
- But some beans had been gathered, the last that hung on;
- And a soup was distilled in a kettle, that gave
- All the fragrance of summer when summer was gone.
-
- Thus memory draws from delight, ere it dies,
- An essence that breathes of it awfully hard;
- As thus good to my taste as ’twas then to my eyes,
- Is that bower of bean-vines in Benjamin’s yard.
-
-
- _JACOB_
-
- He dwelt among “Apartments let,”
- About five stories high;
- A man, I thought, that none would get,
- And very few would try.
-
- A boulder, by a larger stone
- Half hidden in the mud,
- Fair as a man when only one
- Is in the neighborhood.
-
- He lived unknown, and few could tell
- When Jacob was not free;
- But he has got a wife--and O!
- The difference to me!
-
-
- _REUBEN_
-
- That very time I saw, (but thou couldst not),
- Walking between the garden and the barn,
- Reuben, all armed; a certain aim he took
- At a young chicken, standing by a post,
- And loosed his bullet smartly from his gun,
- As he would kill a hundred thousand hens.
- But I might see young Reuben’s fiery shot
- Lodged in the chaste board of the garden fence,
- And the domesticated fowl passed on,
- In henly meditation, bullet free.
-
-Edward Everett Hale, George William Curtis, Richard Grant White and
-Donald G. Mitchell (Ik Marvel) wrote about this time, but their prose
-articles are too long to quote in full and not adapted to condensation.
-
-Again the newspaper writers forge to the front and in George Horatio
-Derby we find “the Father of” the new school of American humor. His
-sketches, over the name of John Phoenix, began to appear about the
-middle of the Nineteenth century and were later collected under the
-titles of Phoenixiana and Squibob Papers.
-
-A fragment of one is given.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The dentist went to work, and in three days he invented an instrument
-which he was confident would pull anything. It was a combination of the
-lever, pulley, wheel and axle, inclined plane, wedge, and screw. The
-castings were made, and the machine put up in the office, over an iron
-chair rendered perfectly stationary by iron rods going down into the
-foundations of the granite building. In a week old Byles returned; he
-was clamped into the iron chair, the forceps connected with the machine
-attached firmly to the tooth, and Tushmaker, stationing himself in the
-rear, took hold of a lever four feet in length. He turned it slightly.
-Old Byles gave a groan and lifted his right leg. Another turn, another
-groan, and up went the leg again.
-
-“What do you raise your leg for?” asked the Doctor.
-
-“I can’t help it,” said the patient.
-
-“Well,” rejoined Tushmaker, “that tooth is bound to come out now.”
-
-He turned the lever clear round with a sudden jerk, and snapped old
-Byles’ head clean and clear from his shoulders, leaving a space of four
-inches between the severed parts!
-
-They had a _post-mortem_ examination--the roots of the tooth were
-found extending down the right side, through the right leg, and turning
-up in two prongs under the sole of the right foot!
-
-“No wonder,” said Tushmaker, “he raised his right leg.”
-
-The jury thought so, too, but they found the roots much decayed; and
-five surgeons swearing that mortification would have ensued in a few
-months, Tushmaker was clear on a verdict of “justifiable homicide.”
-
-He was a little shy of that instrument for some time afterward; but one
-day an old lady, feeble and flaccid, came in to have a tooth drawn, and
-thinking it would come out very easy Tushmaker concluded, just by way
-of variety, to try the machine. He did so, and at the first turn drew
-the old lady’s skeleton completely and entirely from her body, leaving
-her a mass of quivering jelly in her chair! Tushmaker took her home in
-a pillow-case.
-
-The woman lived-seven years after that, and they called her the
-“India-Rubber Woman.” She had suffered terribly with the rheumatism,
-but after this occurrence never had a pain in her bones. The dentist
-kept them in a glass case. After this, the machine was sold to the
-contract or of the Boston Custom-House, and it was found that a child
-of three years of age could, by a single turn of the screw, raise a
-stone weighing twenty-three tons. Smaller ones were made on the same
-principle and sold to the keepers of hotels and restaurants. They were
-used for boning turkeys. There is no moral to this story whatever,
-and it is possible that the circumstances may have become slightly
-exaggerated. Of course, there can be no doubt of the truth of the main
-incidents.
-
-Charles Godfrey Leland, a humorist of Philadelphia, wrote almost
-entirely in a broken German dialect. His Hans Breitmann ballads are
-still among the famous examples of American humor.
-
-
- _BALLAD_
-
- Der noble Ritter Hugo
- Von Schwillensaufenstein
- Rode out mit shpeer and helmet,
- Und he coom to de panks of de Rhine.
-
- Und oop dere rose a meer maid,
- Vod hadn’t got nodings on,
- Und she say, “Oh, Ritter Hugo,
- Vhere you goes mit yourself alone?”
-
- Und he says, “I rides in de creenwood
- Mit helmet und mit shpeer,
- Till I cooms into em Gasthaus,
- Und dere I trinks some beer.”
-
- Und den outshpoke de maiden
- Vot hadn’t got nodings on:
- “I ton’t dink mooch of beoplesh
- Dat goes mit demselfs alone.
-
- “You’d petter coom down in de wasser,
- Vere dere’s heaps of dings to see,
- Und have a shplendid tinner
- Und drafel along mit me.
-
- “Dere you sees de fisch a-schwimmin,
- Und you catches dem efery one”--
- So sang dis wasser maiden
- Vot hadn’t got nodings on.
-
- “Dere ish drunks all full mit money
- In ships dat vent down of old;
- Und you helpsh yourself, by dunder!
- To shimmerin crowns of gold.
-
- “Shoost look at dese shpoons und vatches!
- Shoost see dese diamant rings!
- Coom down und full your bockets,
- Und I’ll giss you like averydings.
-
- “Vot you vantsh mit your schnapps und lager?
- Coom down into der Rhine!
- Der ish pottles der Kaiser Charlemagne
- Vonce filled mit gold-red wine!”
-
- _Dat_ fetched him--he shtood all shpellpound;
- She pooled his coat-tails down,
- She drawed him oonder der wasser,
- De maiden mit nodings on.
-
-William Allen Butler is remembered chiefly by his long humorous poem of
-Miss Flora M’Flimsey, or, as it is entitled, _Nothing To Wear_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Charles Graham Halpine wrote in an Irish brogue the adventures of
-Private Miles O’Reilly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-John T. Trowbridge and Charles Dudley Warner are among the famous
-Nineteenth Century writers but their works are not adapted to quotation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Which brings us to Mark Twain.
-
-Samuel Langhorne Clemens is too well known both by his works and by his
-life to need any word of comment. His whole career, as printer, pilot,
-lecturer and writer is an open and conned book to all.
-
-Difficult indeed it is to quote from his volumes of fun, but we append
-a short extract from _The Jumping Frog of Calaveras County_.
-
-... Smiley was monstrous proud of his frog, and well he might be, for
-fellers that had traveled and been everywheres all said he laid over
-any frog that ever _they_ see.
-
-Well, Smiley kep’ the beast in a little lattice box, and he used to
-fetch him down-town sometimes and lay for a bet. One day a feller--a
-stranger in the camp, he was--come acrost him with his box, and says:
-
-“What might it be that you’ve got in the box?”
-
-And Smiley says, sorter indifferent-like, “It might be a parrot, or it
-might be a canary, maybe, but it ain’t--it’s only just a frog.”
-
-And the feller took it, and looked at it careful, and turned it round
-this way and that, and says, “H’m--so ’tis. Well what’s _he_ good
-for?”
-
-“Well,” Smiley says, easy and careless, “he’s good enough for
-_one_ thing, I should judge--he can outjump any frog in Calaveras
-County.”
-
-The feller took the box again, and took another long, particular look,
-and give it back to Smiley, and says, very deliberate, “Well,” he says,
-“I don’t see no p’ints about that frog that’s any better’n any other
-frog.”
-
-“Maybe you don’t,” Smiley says. “Maybe you understand frogs and maybe
-you don’t understand ’em; maybe you’ve had experience, and maybe you
-ain’t only a amature, as it were. Anyways, I’ve got _my_ opinion
-and I’ll resk forty dollars that he can outjump any frog in Calaveras
-County.”
-
-And the feller studied a minute, and then says, kinder sad like, “Well,
-I’m only a stranger here, and I ain’t got no frog; but if I had a frog
-I’d bet you.”
-
-And then Smiley says, “That’s all right--that’s all right--if you’ll
-hold my box a minute I’ll go and get you a frog.” And so the feller
-took the box, and put up his forty dollars along with Smiley’s, and set
-down to wait.
-
-So he set there a good while thinking and thinking to himself, and
-then he got the frog out and prized his mouth open and took a teaspoon
-and filled him full of quail shot--filled him pretty near up to his
-chin--and set him on the floor. Smiley he went to the swamp and slopped
-around in the mud for a long time, and finally he ketched a frog, and
-fetched him in, and give him to this feller, and says:
-
-“Now, if you’re ready, set him alongside of Dan’l, with his forepaws
-just even with Dan’l’s, and I’ll give the word.” Then he says,
-“One--two--three--_git_.” and him and the feller touched up the
-frogs from behind, and the new frog hopped off lively, but Dan’l give a
-heave, and hysted up his shoulders--so--like a Frenchman, but it warn’t
-no use--he couldn’t budge; he was planted as solid as a church, and he
-couldn’t no more stir than if he was anchored out. Smiley was a good
-deal surprised, and he was disgusted, too, but he didn’t have no idea
-what the matter was, of course.
-
-The feller took the money and started away; and when he was going out
-at the door, he sorter jerked his thumb over his shoulder--so--at
-Dan’l, and says again, very deliberate, “Well,” he says, “_I_
-don’t see no p’ints about that frog that’s any better’n any other frog.”
-
-Smiley he stood scratching his head and looking down at Dan’l a long
-time, and at last he says, “I do wonder what in the nation that frog
-throw’d off for--I wonder if there ain’t something the matter with
-him--e ’pears to look mighty baggy, somehow.” And he ketched Dan’l by
-the nap of the neck, and hefted him, and says, “Why blame my cats if he
-don’t weight five pound!” and turned him upside down and he belched out
-a double handful of shot. And then he see how it was, and he was the
-maddest man--he set the frog down and took out after that feller, but
-he never ketched him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-James Bayard Taylor and Thomas Bailey Aldrich, friends and congenial
-spirits, both despised American Dialect poetry.
-
-Their own work shows a facile wit and graceful fancy, but, with Edmund
-Clarence Stedman, they must be classed as writers of light verse rather
-than as humorists.
-
-Taylor was good at parody, and in his _Echo Club_, thus burlesques
-the style of Aldrich.
-
-
- _PALABRAS GRANDIOSAS_
-
- _After T---- B---- A----_
-
- I lay i’ the bosom of the sun,
- Under the roses dappled and dun.
- I thought of the Sultan Gingerbeer,
- In his palace beside the Bendemeer,
- With his Afghan guards and his eunuchs blind,
- And the harem that stretched for a league behind.
- The tulips bent i’ the summer breeze,
- Under the broad chrysanthemum trees,
- And the minstrel, playing his culverin,
- Made for mine ears a merry din.
-
- If I were the Sultan, and he were I,
- Here i’ the grass he should loafing lie,
- And I should bestride my zebra steed,
- And the ride of the hunt of the centipede;
- While the pet of the harem, Dandeline,
- Should fill me a crystal bucket of wine,
- And the kislar aga, Up-to-Snuff,
- Should wipe my mouth when I sighed “Enough!”
- And the gay court-poet, Fearfulbore,
- Should sit in the hall when the hunt was o’er,
- And chant me songs of silvery tone,
- Not from Hafiz, but--mine own!
-
- Ah, wee sweet love, beside me here,
- I am not the Sultan Gingerbeer,
- Nor you the odalisque Dandeline,
- Yet I am yourn, and you are mine!
-
-David Ross Locke, who wrote over the name of Petroleum V. Nasby, was a
-humorist of the newspapers. He achieved no success until he began to
-misspell his words, when he at once leaped into popularity.
-
-But the Prince of Misspellers, excepting always Josh Billings, was
-Artemus Ward, the pseudonym of Charles Farrar Browne.
-
-The trick of misspelling and the use of excessive exaggeration were his
-stock in trade, added to a certain plaintiveness and abounding good
-humor.
-
-Browne was the only one of this group of American humorists, whose
-work was read in England, and he lectured over there with pronounced
-success.
-
-
- _ON “FORTS”_
-
-Every man has got a Fort. It’s sum men’s fort to do one thing, and
-some other men’s fort to do another, while there is numeris shiftliss
-critters goin’ round loose whose fort is not to do nothin’.
-
-Shakspeer rote good plase, but he wouldn’t hav succeeded as a
-Washington coorespondent of a New York daily paper. He lacked the
-rekesit fancy and imagginashun.
-
-That’s so!
-
-Old George Washington’s Fort was not to hev eny public man of the
-present day resemble him to eny alarmin extent. Whare bowts can
-George’s ekal be found? I ask, & boldly answer no whares, or any whare
-else.
-
-Old man Townsin’s Fort was to maik Sassyperiller. “Goy to the world!
-anuther life saived!” (Cotashun from Townsin’s advertisement.)
-
-Cyrus Field’s Fort is to lay a sub-machine telegraf under the boundin
-billers of the Oshun, and then have it Bust.
-
-Spaldin’s Fort is to maik Prepared Gloo, which mends every thing.
-Wonder ef it will mend a sinner’s wickid waze. (Impromptoo goak.)
-
-Zoary’s Fort is to be a femaile circus feller.
-
-My Fort is the grate moral show bizniss & ritin choice famerly
-literatoor for the noospapers. That’s what’s the matter with _me_.
-
-&., &., &. So I mite go on to a indefinit extent.
-
-Twict I’ve endevered to do things which thay wasn’t my Fort. The fust
-time was when I undertuk to lick a owdashus cuss who cut a hole in my
-tent & krawld threw. Sez I, “My jentle Sir, go out or I shall fall on
-to you putty hevy.” Sez he, “Wade in, Old wax figgers,” whereupon I
-went for him, but he cawt me powerful on the bed & knockt me threw the
-tent into a cow pastur. He pursood the attach & flung me into a mud
-puddle. As I arose & rung out my drencht garmints I koncluded fitin
-wasn’t my Fort. Ile now rize the kurtin upon Seen 2nd: It is rarely
-seldum that I seek consolation in the Flowin Bole. But in a certain
-town in Injianny in the Faul of 18--, my orgin grinder got sick with
-the fever & died. I never felt so ashamed in my life, & I thowt I’d
-hist in a few swallers of suthin strengthnin. Konsequents was I histid
-in so much I dident zackly know whare bowts I was. I turned my livin
-wild beasts of Pray loose into the streets and spilt all my wax wurks.
-I then bet I cood play hoss. So I hitched myself to a Kanawl bote,
-there bein two other hosses hicht on also, one behind and anuther ahead
-of me. The driver hollerd for us to git up, and we did. But the hosses
-bein onused to sich a arrangemunt begun to kick & squeal and rair up.
-Konsequents was I fownd myself in the Kanawl with the other hosses,
-kickin & yellin like a tribe of Cusscaroorus savvijis. I was rescood, &
-as I was bein carrid to the tavern on a hemlock Bored I sed in a feeble
-voise, “Boys, playin hoss isn’t my Fort.”
-
-_Morul._--Never don’t do nothin which isn’t your Fort, for ef you
-do you’ll find yourself splashin round in the Kanawl, figgeratively
-speakin.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Frank R. Stockton was a nobleman among the humorists.
-
-His quiet and often subtle humor, his delightful style and his
-unique originality made all his stories a joy and some masterpieces.
-No quotations can be given, for any Stockton story must be read in
-its entirety. _The Lady and the Tiger_ is doubtless the most
-celebrated one, but many others are even more clever and unusual.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Francis Bret Harte, famed for his short stories, also wrote humorous
-verse. _The Heathen Chinee_ is a byword in all households, and
-_Truthful James_ is nearly as well known.
-
-
- _THE SOCIETY UPON THE STANISLAUS_
-
- I reside at Table Mountain, and my name is Truthful James;
- I am not up to small deceit, or any sinful games;
- And I’ll tell in simple language what I know about the row
- That broke up our Society upon the Stanislow.
-
- But first I would remark, that it is not a proper plan
- For any scientific gent to whale his fellow man,
- And, if a member don’t agree with his peculiar whim,
- To lay for that same member for to “put a head” on him.
-
- Now, nothing could be finer or more beautiful to see
- Than the first six months’ proceedings of that same society,
- Till Brown of Calaveras brought a lot of fossil bones
- That he found within a tunnel near the tenement of Jones.
-
- Then Brown he read a paper, and he reconstructed there,
- From those same bones an animal that was extremely rare,
- And Jones then asked the chair for a suspension of the rules
- Till he could prove that those same bones was one of his lost mules.
-
- Then Brown he smiled a bitter smile, and said he was at fault;
- It seemed he had been trespassing on Jones’s family vault
- He was a most sarcastic man, this quiet Mr. Brown,
- And on several occasions he had cleaned out the town.
-
- Now, I hold it is not decent for a scientific gent
- To say another is an ass--at least, to all intent;
- Nor should the individual who happens to be meant
- Reply by heaving rocks at him to any great extent.
-
- Then Abner Dean of Angel’s raised a point of order--when
- A chunk of old red sandstone took him in the abdomen,
- And he smiled a kind of sickly smile, and curled up on the floor,
- And the subsequent proceedings interested him no more.
-
- For, in less time than I write it, every member did engage
- In a warfare with the remnants of a paleozoic age;
- And the way they heaved those fossils in their anger was a sin,
- Till the skull of an old mammoth caved the head of Thompson in.
-
- And this is all I have to say of these improper games,
- For I live at Table Mountain, and my name is Truthful James;
- And I’ve told in simple language what I know about the row
- That broke up our Society upon the Stanislow.
-
-
- _TO THE PLIOCENE SKULL_
-
- “Speak, O man less recent!
- Fragmentary fossil!
- Primal pioneer of pliocene formation,
- Hid in lowest drifts below the earliest stratum
- Of volcanic tufa!
-
- “Older than the beasts, the oldest Palæotherium;
- Older than the trees, the oldest Cryptogami;
- Older than the hills, those infantile eruptions
- Of earth’s epidermis!
-
- “Eo--Mio--Plio--Whatsoe’er the ’cene’ was
- That those vacant sockets filled with awe and wonder--
- Whether shores Devonian or Silurian beaches--
- Tell us thy strange story!
-
- “Or has the professor slightly antedated
- By some thousand years thy advent on this planet,
- Giving thee an air that’s somewhat better fitted
- For cold-blooded creatures?
-
- “Wert thou true spectator of that mighty forest
- When above thy head the stately Sigillaria
- Reared its columned trunks in that remote and distant
- Carboniferous epoch?
-
- “Tell us of that scene--the dim and watery woodland
- Songless, silent, hushed, with never bird or insect;
- Veiled with spreading fronds and screened with tall clubmosses,
- Lycopodiacea,
-
- When beside thee walked the solemn Plesiosaurus,
- And around thee crept the festive Ichthyosaurus,
- While from time to time above thee flew and circled
- Cheerful Pterodactyls.
-
- “Tell us of thy food--those half-marine refections,
- Crinoids on the shell and brachipods _au naturel_--
- Cuttle-fish to which the _pieuvre_ of Victor Hugo
- Seems a periwinkle.
-
- “Speak, thou awful vestige of the earth’s creation,
- Solitary fragment of remains organic!
- Tell the wondrous secret of thy past existence--
- Speak! thou oldest primate!”
-
- Even as I gazed, a thrill of the maxilla,
- And a lateral movement of the condyloid process,
- With post-pliocene sounds of healthy mastication,
- Ground the teeth together.
-
- And, from that imperfect dental exhibition,
- Stained with expressed juices of the weed Nicotian,
- Came these hollow accents, blent with softer murmurs
- Of expectoration:
-
- “Which my name is Bowers, and my crust was busted
- Falling down a shaft in Calaveras county,
- But I’d take it kindly if you’d send the pieces
- Home to old Missouri!”
-
-Pioneering in the West marked a distinct epoch in American humor. Bret
-Harte owed his meteoric success largely to the fact of his utilizing
-the background of the Golden West. And so did Joaquin Miller, John Hay
-and Edward Rowland Sill.
-
-The Pike County Ballads of John Hay were national favorites.
-
-
- _LITTLE BREECHES_
-
- I don’t go much on religion,
- I never ain’t had no show;
- But I’ve got a middlin’ tight grip, sir,
- On the handful o’ things I know.
- I don’t pan out on the prophets
- And free-will and that sort of thing--
- But I b’lieve in God and the angels,
- Ever sence one night last spring.
-
- I come into town with some turnips,
- And my little Gabe come along--
- No four-year-old in the county
- Could beat him for pretty and strong,
- Peart and chipper and sassy,
- Always ready to swear and fight--
- And I’d larnt him to chaw terbacker
- Jest to keep his milk-teeth white.
-
- The snow come down like a blanket
- As I passed by Taggart’s store;
- I went in for a jug of molasses
- And left the team at the door.
- They scared at something and started--
- I heard one little squall,
- And hell-to-split over the prairie
- Went team, Little Breeches and all.
-
- Hell-to-split over the prairie!
- I was almost froze with skeer;
- But we rousted up some torches,
- And sarched for ’em far and near.
- At last we struck horses and wagon,
- Snowed under a soft white mound,
- Upsot, dead beat--but of little Gabe
- Nor hide nor hair was found.
-
- And here all hope soured on me,
- Of my fellow-critter’s aid--
- I jest flopped down on my marrow-bones,
- Crotch-deep in the snow, and prayed.
-
- * * * * *
-
- By this, the torches was played out,
- And me and Isrul Parr
- Went off for some wood to a sheepfold
- That he said was somewhar thar.
-
- We found it at last, and a little shed
- Where they shut up the lambs at night.
- We looked in and seen them huddled thar,
- So warm and sleepy and white;
- And THAR sot Little Breeches, and chirped,
- As peart as ever you see:
- “I want a chaw of terbacker,
- And that’s what’s the matter of me.”
-
- How did he git thar? Angels.
- He could never have walked in that storm;
- They jest scooped down and toted him
- To whar it was safe and warm.
- And I think that saving a little child,
- And bringing him to his own,
- Is a derned sight better business
- Then loafing around The Throne.
-
-Joaquin Miller, whose true name was Cincinnatus Hiner Miller, was
-called the Poet of the Sierras.
-
-He seldom wrote in humorous vein, but some of his verse must fall into
-that category.
-
-
- _THAT GENTLE MAN FROM BOSTON TOWN_
-
- AN IDYL OF OREGON
-
- Two webfoot brothers loved a fair
- Young lady, rich and good to see;
- And oh, her black abundant hair!
- And oh, her wondrous witchery!
- Her father kept a cattle farm,
- These brothers kept her safe from harm:
-
- From harm of cattle on the hill;
- From thick-necked bulls loud bellowing
- The livelong morning, loud and shrill,
- And lashing sides like anything;
- From roaring bulls that tossed the sand
- And pawed the lilies from the land.
-
- There came a third young man. He came
- From far and famous Boston town.
- He was not handsome, was not “game,”
- But he could “cook a goose” as brown
- As any man that set foot on
- The sunlit shores of Oregon.
-
- This Boston man he taught the school,
- Taught gentleness and love alway,
- Said love and kindness, as a rule,
- Would ultimately “make it pay.”
- He was so gentle, kind, that he
- Could make a noun and verb agree.
-
- So when one day the brothers grew
- All jealous and did strip to fight,
- He gently stood between the two,
- And meekly told them ’twas not right.
- “I have a higher, better plan,”
- Outspake this gentle Boston man.
-
- “My plan is this: Forget this fray
- About that lily hand of hers;
- Go take your guns and hunt all day
- High up yon lofty hill of firs,
- And while you hunt, my loving doves,
- Why, I will learn which one she loves.”
-
- The brothers sat the windy hill,
- Their hair shone yellow, like spun gold,
- Their rifles crossed their laps, but still
- They sat and sighed and shook with cold.
- Their hearts lay bleeding far below;
- Above them gleamed white peaks of snow.
-
- Their hounds lay couching, slim and neat;
- A spotted circle in the grass.
- The valley lay beneath their feet;
- They heard the wide-winged eagles pass.
- The eagles cleft the clouds above;
- Yet what could they but sigh and love?
-
- “If I could die,” the elder sighed,
- “My dear young brother here might wed.”
- “Oh, would to Heaven I had died!”
- The younger sighed, with bended head.
- Then each looked each full in the face
- And each sprang up and stood in place.
-
- “If I could die,”--the elder spake,--
- “Die by your hand, the world would say
- ’Twas accident;--and for her sake,
- Dear brother, be it so, I pray.”
- “Not that!” the younger nobly said;
- Then tossed his gun and turned his head.
-
- And fifty paces back he paced!
- And as he paced he drew the ball;
- Then sudden stopped and wheeled and faced
- His brother to the death and fall!
- Two shots rang wild upon the air!
- But lo! the two stood harmless there!
-
- An eagle poised high in the air;
- Far, far below the bellowing
- Of bullocks ceased, and everywhere
- Vast silence sat all questioning.
- The spotted hounds ran circling round
- Their red, wet noses to the ground.
-
- And now each brother came to know
- That each had drawn the deadly ball;
- And for that fair girl far below
- Had sought in vain to silent fall.
- And then the two did gladly “shake,”
- And thus the elder bravely spake:
-
- “Now let us run right hastily
- And tell the kind schoolmaster all!
- Yea! yea! and if she choose not me,
- But all on you her favors fall,
- This valiant scene, till all life ends,
- Dear brother, binds us best of friends.”
-
- The hounds sped down, a spotted line,
- The bulls in tall, abundant grass,
- Shook back their horns from bloom and vine,
- And trumpeted to see them pass--
- They loved so good, they loved so true,
- These brothers scarce knew what to do.
-
- They sought the kind schoolmaster out
- As swift as sweeps the light of morn;
- They could but love, they could not doubt
- This man so gentle, “in a horn,”
- They cried, “Now whose the lily hand--
- That lady’s of this webfoot land?”
-
- They bowed before that big-nosed man,
- That long-nosed man from Boston town;
- They talked as only lovers can,
- They talked, but he could only frown;
- And still they talked, and still they plead;
- It was as pleading with the dead.
-
- At last this Boston man did speak--
- “Her father has a thousand ceows,
- An hundred bulls, all fat and sleek;
- He also had this ample heouse.”
- The brothers’ eyes stuck out thereat,
- So far you might have hung your hat.
-
- “I liked the looks of this big heouse--
- My lovely boys, won’t you come in?
- Her father has a thousand ceows,
- He also had a heap of tin.
- The guirl? Of yes, the guirl, you see--
- The guirl, just neow she married me.”
-
-Robert Henry Newell, a popular journalist and humorist, wrote over the
-name of Orpheus C. Kerr. His best known work is the Orpheus C. Kerr
-Papers, but as a parodist he gives us these burlesque National Hymns.
-
-
- I
-
- BY H--Y W. L-NGF---- W
-
- Back in the years when Phlagstaff, the Dane, was monarch
- Over the sea-ribb’d land of the fleet-footed Norsemen,
- Once there went forth young Ursa to gaze at the heavens--
- Ursa--the noblest of all the Vikings and horsemen.
-
- Musing, he sat in his stirrups and viewed the horizon,
- Where the Aurora lapt stars in a North-polar manner,
- Wildly he started,--for there in the heavens before him
- Flutter’d and flam’d the original Star Spangled Banner.
-
-
- II
-
- BY J-HN GR--NL--F WH--T--R
-
- My Native Land, thy Puritanic stock
- Still finds its roots firm-bound in Plymouth Rock,
- And all thy sons unite in one grand wish--
- To keep the virtues of Preservèd Fish.
-
- Preservèd Fish, the Deacon stern and true,
- Told our New England what her sons should do,
- And if they swerve from loyalty and right,
- Then the whole land is lost indeed in night.
-
-
- III
-
- BY DR. OL-V-R W-ND-L H-LMES
-
- A diagnosis of our hist’ry proves
- Our native land a land its native loves;
- Its birth a deed obstetric without peer,
- Its growth a source of wonder far and near.
-
- To love it more behold how foreign shores
- Sink into nothingness beside its stores;
- Hyde Park at best--though counted ultra-grand--
- The “Boston Common” of Victoria’s land.
-
-
- IV
-
- BY R-LPH W-LDO EM-R--N
-
- Source immaterial of material naught,
- Focus of light infinitesimal,
- Sum of all things by sleepless Nature wrought,
- Of which the normal man is decimal.
-
- Refract, in prism immortal, from thy stars
- To the stars bent incipient on our flag,
- The beam translucent, neutrifying death,
- And raise to immortality the rag.
-
-
- V
-
- By W-LL--M C-LL-N B-Y-NT
-
- The sun sinks softly to his Ev’ning Post,
- The sun swells grandly to his morning crown;
- Yet not a star our Flag of Heav’n has lost,
- And not a sunset stripe with him goes down.
-
- So thrones may fall, and from the dust of those
- New thrones may rise, to totter like the last;
- But still our Country’s nobler planet glows
- While the eternal stars of Heaven are fast.
-
-
- VI
-
- By N. P. W-LL-S
-
- One hue of our Flag is taken
- From the cheeks of my blushing Pet,
- And its stars beat time and sparkle
- Like the studs on her chemisette.
-
- Its blue is the ocean shadow
- That hides in her dreamy eyes,
- It conquers all men, like her,
- And still for a Union flies.
-
-
- VII
-
- BY TH-M-S B-IL-Y ALD--CH
-
- The little brown squirrel hops in the corn,
- The cricket quaintly sings,
- The emerald pigeon nods his head,
- And the shad in the river springs,
- The dainty sunflow’r hangs its head
- On the shore of the summer sea;
- And better far that I were dead,
- If Maud did not love me.
-
- I love the squirrel that hops in the corn,
- And the cricket that quaintly sings;
- And the emerald pigeon that nods his head,
- And the shad that gaily springs.
- I love the dainty sunflow ’r, too.
- And Maud with her snowy breast;
- I love them all;--but I love--I love--
- I love my country best.
-
-Edward Rowland Sill, writing of the West for many years, wrote
-delightful humor on other subjects as well.
-
-
- _EVE’s DAUGHTER_
-
- I waited in the little sunny room:
- The cool breeze waved the window-lace at play,
- The white rose on the porch was all in bloom,
- And out upon the bay
- I watched the wheeling sea-birds go and come.
- “Such an old friend--she would not make me stay
- While she bound up her hair.” I turned, and lo,
- Danæ in her shower! and fit to slay
- All a man’s hoarded prudence at a blow:
- Gold hair, that streamed away
- As round some nymph a sunlit fountain’s flow.
- “She would not make me wait!”--but well I know
- She took a good half-hour to loose and lay
- Those locks in dazzling disarrangement so!
-
-Newspaper humor of this period included the _Danbury News Man_, _Peck’s
-Bad Boy_ and _Eli Perkins_ (Melville D. Landon).
-
-Charles E. Carryl, though his books are called Juveniles, wrote
-delicious nonsense, approaching nearer to Lewis Carroll than any other
-American writer.
-
-
- _THE WALLOPING WINDOW-BLIND_
-
- A capital ship for an ocean trip
- Was the “Walloping Window-blind”--
- No gale that blew dismayed her crew
- Or troubled the captain’s mind.
- The man at the wheel was taught to feel
- Contempt for the wildest blow,
- And it often appeared, when the weather had cleared,
- That he’d been in his bunk below.
-
- The boatswain’s mate was very sedate,
- Yet fond of amusement, too;
- And he played hop-scotch with the starboard watch,
- While the captain tickled the crew.
- And the gunner we had was apparently mad,
- For he sat on the after rail,
- And fired salutes with the captain’s boots,
- In the teeth of the booming gale.
-
- The captain sat in a commodore’s hat
- And dined in a royal way
- On toasted pigs and pickles and figs
- And gummery bread each day.
- But the cook was Dutch and behaved as such:
- For the food he gave the crew
- Was a number of tons of hot-cross buns
- Chopped up with sugar and glue.
-
- And we all felt ill as mariners will,
- On a diet that’s cheap and rude;
- And we shivered and shook as we dipped the cook
- In a tub of his gluesome food.
- Then nautical pride we laid aside,
- And we cast the vessel ashore
- On the Gulliby Isles, where the Poohpooh smiles,
- And the Anagazanders roar.
-
- Composed of sand was that favored land,
- And trimmed with cinnamon straws;
- And pink and blue was the pleasing hue
- Of the Tickletoeteaser’s claws.
- And we sat on the edge of a sandy ledge
- And shot at the whistling bee;
- And the Binnacle-bats wore water-proof hats
- As they danced in the sounding sea.
-
- On rubagub bark, from dawn to dark,
- We fed, till we all had grown
- Uncommonly shrunk,--when a Chinese junk
- Came by from the torriby zone.
- She was stubby and square, but we didn’t much care,
- And we cheerily put to sea;
- And we left the crew of the junk to chew
- The bark of the rubagub tree.
-
-Robert Jones Burdette, known as the Burlington Hawkeye Man, was one of
-the prototypes of our present day newspaper columnists.
-
-His witty verse and prose has lived, and he ranks with the humorists of
-our land.
-
-
- _WHAT WILL WE DO?_
-
- What will we do when the good days come--
- When the prima donna’s lips are dumb.
- And the man who reads us his “little things”
- Has lost his voice like the girl who sings;
- When stilled is the breath of the cornet-man,
- And the shrilling chords of the quartette clan;
- When our neighbours’ children have lost their drums--
- Oh, what will we do when the good time comes?
- Oh, what will we do in that good, blithe time,
- When the tramp will work--oh, thing sublime!
- And the scornful dame who stands on your feet
- Will “Thank you, sir,” for the proffered seat;
- And the man you hire to work by the day,
- Will allow you to do his work your way;
- And the cook who trieth your appetite
- Will steal no more than she thinks is right;
- When the boy you hire will call you “Sir,”
- Instead of “Say” and “Guverner”;
- When the funny man is humorsome--
- How can we stand the millennium?
-
-
- “_SOLDIER, REST!_”
-
- A Russian sailed over the blue Black Sea
- Just when the war was growing hot,
- And he shouted, “I’m Tjalikavakeree--
- Karindabrolikanavandorot--
- Schipkadirova--
- Ivandiszstova--
- Sanilik--
- Danilik--
- Varagobhot!”
-
- A Turk was standing upon the shore
- Right where the terrible Russian crossed;
- And he cried, “Bismillah! I’m Abd el Kor--
- Bazaroukilgonautoskobrosk--
- Getzinpravadi--
- Kilgekosladji--
- Grivido--
- Blivido--
- Jenikodosk!”
-
- So they stood like brave men, long and well,
- And they called each other their proper names,
- Till the lockjaw seized them, and where they fell
- They buried them both by the Irdosholames--
- Kalatalustchuk--
- Mischaribustchup--
- Bulgari--
- Dulgari--
- Sagharimainz.
-
-Marietta Holley wrote with shrewd observation and much homely common
-sense. Her books about Betsey Bobbet and Josiah Allen’s Wife were best
-sellers in the seventies or thereabouts.
-
-Like many of her contemporaries for her fun she depended largely on
-misspelling.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here Betsey interrupted me. “The deah editah of the _Augah_ has
-no need to advise me to read Tuppah, for he is indeed my most favorite
-authar. You have devorhed him haven’t you, Josiah Allen’s wife?”
-
-“Devoured who?” says I, in a tone pretty near as cold as a cold icicle.
-
-“Mahtan Fahqueah Tuppah, that sweet authar,” says she.
-
-“No, mam,” says I shortly; “I hain’t devoured Martin Farquhar Tupper,
-nor no other man. I hain’t a cannibal.”
-
-“Oh, you understand me not; I meant, devorhed his sweet tender lines.”
-
-“I hain’t devoured his tenderlines, nor nothin’ relatin’ to him,” and I
-made a motion to lay the paper down, but Betsey urged me to go on, and
-so I read:
-
-
- _GUSHINGS OF A TENDAH SOUL_
-
- “‘Oh, let who will,
- Oh, let who can,
- Be tied onto
- A horrid male man.’
-
- “Thus said I ere
- My tendah heart was touched;
- Thus said I ere
- My tendah feelings gushed.
-
- “But oh, a change
- Hath swept ore me,
- As billows sweep
- The ‘deep blue sea.’
-
- “A voice, a noble form
- One day I saw;
- An arrow flew,
- My heart is nearly raw.
-
- “His first pardner lies
- Beneath the turf;
- He is wondering now
- In sorrow’s briny surf.
-
- “Two twins, the little
- Death cherub creechahs,
- Now wipe the teahs
- From off his classic feachahs.
-
- “Oh, sweet lot, worthy
- Angel arisen,
- To wipe teahs
- From eyes like hisen.”
-
-“What think you of it?” says she, as I finished readin’.
-
-I looked right at her ’most a minute with a majestic look. In spite
-of her false curls and her new white ivory teeth, she is a humbly
-critter. I looked at her silently while she sot and twisted her long
-yellow bunnet-strings, and then I spoke out. “Hain’t the editor of the
-_Augur_ a widower with a pair of twins?”
-
-“Yes,” says she, with a happy look.
-
-Then says I, “If the man hain’t a fool, he’ll think you are one....
-There is a time for everything, and the time to hunt affinity is before
-you are married; married folks hain’t no right to hunt it,” says I
-sternly.
-
-“We kindred soles soah above such petty feelin’s--we soah far above
-them.”
-
-“I hain’t much of a soarer,” says I, “and I don’t pretend to be; and
-to tell you the truth,” says I, “I am glad I hain’t.” “The editah of
-the _Augah_,” says she, and she grasped the paper offen the stand
-and folded it up, and presented it at me like a spear, “the editah of
-this paper is a kindred sole; he appreciates me, he undahstands me, and
-will not our names in the pages of this very papah go down to posterety
-togathah?”
-
-“Then,” says I, drove out of all patience with her, “I wish you was
-there now, both of you. I wish,” says I, lookin’ fixedly on her, “I
-wish you was both of you in posterity now.”
-
- --_My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s._
-
-George Thomas Lanigan wrote clever verse, of which _The Akhoond of
-Swat_ is among the best.
-
-
- _A THRENODY_
-
-“The Akhoond of Swat is dead,”--_London Papers of January 22,
-1878_.
-
- What, what, what,
- What’s the news from Swat?
- Sad news,
- Bad news,
- Cometh by cable led
- Through the Indian Ocean’s bed,
- Through the Persian Gulf, the Red
- Sea and the Med-
- Iterranean: he’s dead,--
- The Akhoond is dead!
-
- For the Akhoond I mourn.
- Who wouldn’t?
- He strove to disregard the message stern,
- But he Akhoondn’t.
-
- Dead, dead, dead;
- (Sorrow, Swats!)
- Swats wha hae wi’ Akhoond bled,
- Swats wham he hath often led
- Onward to a gory bed,
- Or to victory,
- As the case might be,--
- Sorrow, Swats!
- Tears shed,
- Shed tears like water,
- Your great Akhoond is dead!
- That’s Swat’s the matter!
-
- Mourn, city of Swat,
- Your great Akhoond is not,
- But laid ’mid worms to rot,--
- His mortal part alone: his soul was caught
- (Because he was a good Akhoond)
- Up to the bosom of Mahound.
- Though earthly walls his frame surround
- (Forever hallowed be the ground),
- And sceptics mock the lowly mound
- And say, “He’s now of no Akhoond!”
- His soul is in the skies,--
- The azure skies that bend above his loved metropolis of Swat;
- He sees, with larger, other eyes,
- Athwart all earthly mysteries;
- He knows what’s Swat.
-
- Let Swat bury the great Akhoond
- With a noise of mourning and of lamentation!
- Let Swat bury the great Akhoond
- With the noise of the mourning of the Swattish nation!
- Fallen is at length
- Its tower of strength.
- Its sun is dimmed ere it had nooned,
- Dead lies the great Akhoond,
- The great Akhoond of Swat,
- Is not!
-
-Lanigan also wrote Fables, which he signed G. Washington Æsop.
-
-
- _THE OSTRICH AND THE HEN_
-
-An Ostrich and a Hen chanced to occupy adjacent apartments, and the
-former complained loudly that her rest was disturbed by the cackling
-of her humble neighbor. “Why is it,” she finally asked the Hen, “that
-you make such an intolerable noise?” The Hen replied, “Because I have
-laid an egg.” “Oh, no,” said the Ostrich, with a superior smile, “it is
-because you are a Hen and don’t know any better.”
-
-_Moral._--The moral of the foregoing is not very clear, but it
-contains some reference to the Agitation for Female Suffrage.
-
-
- _THE KIND-HEARTED SHE-ELEPHANT_
-
-A kind-hearted She-Elephant, while walking through the Jungle where the
-Spicy Breezes blow soft o’er Ceylon’s Isle, heedlessly set foot upon a
-Partridge, which she crushed to death within a few inches of the Nest
-containing its Callow Brood. “Poor little things!” said the generous
-Mammoth. “I have been a Mother myself, and my affection shall atone for
-the Fatal Consequences of my neglect.” So saying, she sat down upon the
-Orphaned Birds.
-
-_Moral._--The above Teaches us What Home is Without a Mother;
-also, that it is not every Person who should be entrusted with the Care
-of an Orphan Asylum.
-
- * * * * *
-
-James Jeffrey Roche wrote delightful verse, which is properly classed
-as _Vers de Société_, but which shows more wit than much of that
-type.
-
-
- _THE V-A-S-E_
-
- From the madding crowd they stand apart,
- The maidens four and the Work of Art;
-
- And none might tell, from sight alone,
- In which had Culture ripest grown--
-
- The Gotham Million, fair to see,
- The Philadelphia Pedigree,
-
- The Boston Mind of azure hue,
- Or the soulful Soul from Kalamazoo--
-
- For all loved Art in a seemly way,
- With an earnest soul and a capital A.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Long they worshiped; but no one broke
- The sacred stillness, until up spoke
-
- The Western one from the nameless place,
- Who blushing said, “What a lovely vace!”
-
- Over three faces a sad smile flew,
- And they edged away from Kalamazoo.
-
- But Gotham’s haughty soul was stirred
- To crush the stranger with one small word.
-
- Deftly hiding reproof in praise,
- She cries, “’Tis, indeed, a lovely vaze!”
-
- But brief her unworthy triumph when
- The lofty one from the house of Penn,
-
- With the consciousness of two grandpapas,
- Exclaims, “It is quite a lovely vahs!”
-
- And glances round with an anxious thrill,
- Awaiting the word of Beacon Hill.
-
- But the Boston maid smiles courteouslee,
- And gently murmurs, “Oh, pardon me!
-
- “I did not catch your remark, because
- I was so entranced with that lovely vaws!”
-
- _Dies erit praegelida
- Sinistra quum Bostonia._
-
-
- _A BOSTON LULLABY_
-
- Baby’s brain is tired of thinking
- On the Wherefore and the Whence;
- Baby’s precious eyes are blinking
- With incipient somnolence.
-
- Little hands are weary turning
- Heavy leaves of lexicon;
- Little nose is fretted learning
- How to keep its glasses on.
-
- Baby knows the laws of nature
- Are beneficent and wise;
- His medulla oblongata
- Bids my darling close his eyes,
-
- And his pneumogastrics tell him
- Quietude is always best
- When his little cerebellum
- Needs recuperative rest.
-
- Baby must have relaxation,
- Let the world go wrong or right.
- Sleep, my darling, leave Creation
- To its chances for the night.
-
-Joel Chandler Harris is in a class by himself. Although he wrote other
-things, he will always be remembered for the immortal Uncle Remus
-stories. _The Tar Baby_ and _Brer Rabbit_ are known and loved
-of all American families. A short bit is given from:
-
-
- _THE SAD END OF BRER WOLF_
-
-“Bimeby, one day w’en Brer Rabbit wuz fixin’ fer ter call on Miss Coon,
-he heered a monst’us fussen clatter up de big road, en ’mos’ ’fo’ he
-could fix his years fer ter lissen, Brer Wolf run in de do’. De little
-Rabbits dey went inter dere hole in de cellar, dey did, like blowin’
-out a cannle. Brer Wolf wuz far’ly kiver’d wid mud, en mighty nigh
-outer win’.
-
-“‘Oh, do pray save me, Brer Rabbit!’ sez Brer Wolf, sezee. ‘Do, please,
-Brer Rabbit! de dogs is atter me, en dey’ll t’ar me up. Don’t you year
-um comin’? Oh, do please save me Brer Rabbit! Hide me some’rs whar de
-dogs won’t git me.’
-
-“No quicker sed dan done.
-
-“‘Jump in dat big chist dar, Brer Wolf,’ sez Brer Rabbit sezee; ‘jump
-in dar en make yo’se’f at home.’
-
-“In jump Brer Wolf, down come de lid, en inter de hasp went de hook, en
-dar Mr. Wolf wuz. Den Brer Rabbit went ter de lookin’-glass, he did, en
-wink at hisse’f, en den he draw’d de rockin’-cheer in front er de fier,
-he did, en tuck a big chaw terbarker.”
-
-“Tobacco, Uncle Remus?” asked the little boy incredulously.
-
-“Rabbit terbarker, honey. You know dis yer life ev’lastin’ w’at Miss
-Sally puts ’mong de cloze in de trunk; well, dat’s rabbit terbarker.
-Den Brer Rabbit sot dar long time, he did, turnin’ his mine over en
-wukken’ his thinkin’ masheen. Bimeby he got up, en sorter stir ’roun’.
-Den Brer Wolf open up:
-
-“‘Is de dogs all gone, Brer Rabbit?’
-
-“‘Seem like I hear one un um smellin’ roun’ de chimbly cornder des now.’
-
-“Den Brer Rabbit git de kittle en fill it full er water, en put it on
-de fier.
-
-“‘W’at you doin’ now, Brer Rabbit?’
-
-“‘I’m fixin’ fer ter make you a nice cup er tea, Brer Wolf.’
-
-“Den Brer Rabbit went ter de cubberd, en git de gimlet, en commence for
-ter bo’ little holes in de chist-lid.
-
-“‘W’at you doin’ now, Brer Rabbit?’
-
-“‘I’m a-bo’in’ little holes so you kin get bref, Brer Wolf.’
-
-“Den Brer Rabbit went out en git some mo’ wood, en fling it on de fier.
-
-“‘W’at you doin’ now, Brer Rabbit?’
-
-“‘I’m a-chunkin’ up de fier so you won’t git cole, Brer Wolf.’
-
-“Den Brer Rabbit went down inter de cellar en fotch out all his
-chilluns.
-
-“‘W’at you doin’ now, Brer Rabbit?’
-
-“‘I’m a-tellin’ my chilluns w’at a nice man you is, Brer Wolf.’
-
-“En de chilluns, dey had ter put der han’s on her moufs fer ter keep
-fum laffin’. Den Brer Rabbit he got de kittle en commenced fer to po’
-de hot water on de chist-lid.
-
-“‘W’at dat I hear, Brer Rabbit?’
-
-“‘You hear de win’ a-blowin’, Brer Wolf.’
-
-“Den de water begin fer ter sif’ thoo.
-
-“‘W’at dat I feel, Brer Rabbit?’
-
-“‘You feels de fleas a-bitin’, Brer Wolf.’
-
-“‘Dey er bitin’ mighty hard, Brer Rabbit.’
-
-“‘Tu’n over on de udder side, Brer Wolf.’
-
-“‘W’at dat I feel now, Brer Rabbit?’
-
-“‘Still you feels de fleas, Brer Wolf.’
-
-“‘Dey er eatin’ me up, Brer Rabbit,’ en dem wuz de las’ words er Brer
-Wolf, kase de scaldin’ water done de bizness.
-
-“Den Brer Rabbit call in his nabers, he did, en dey hilt a reg’lar
-juberlee; en ef you go ter Brer Rabbit’s house right now, I dunno but
-w’at you’ll fine Brer Wolf’s hide hangin’ in de back-po’ch, en all
-bekaze he wuz so bizzy wid udder fo’kses doin’s.”
-
- --_From Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings._
-
-Eugene Field, beside being the greatest of newspaper paragraphers was
-a versatile writer of all sorts, from Christmas Hymns to the most
-flippant themes.
-
-His own personal charm imbued his work, and whether writing _Echoes
-of Horace_ or appalling tales of _Little Willie_, he was always
-original and truly funny.
-
-
- _THE DINKEY-BIRD_
-
- In an ocean, ’way out yonder
- (As all sapient people know),
- Is the land of Wonder-Wander,
- Whither children love to go;
- It’s their playing, romping, swinging,
- That give great joy to me
- While the Dinkey-Bird goes singing
- In the Amfalula-tree!
-
- There the gum-drops grow like cherries,
- And taffy’s thick as peas,--
- Caramels you pick like berries
- When, and where, and how you please:
- Big red sugar-plums are clinging
- To the cliffs beside that sea
- Where the Dinkey-Bird is singing
- In the Amfalula-tree.
-
- So when children shout and scamper
- And make merry all the day,
- When there’s naught to put a damper
- To the ardor of their play;
- When I hear their laughter ringing,
- Then I’m sure as sure can be
- That the Dinkey-Bird is singing
- In the Amfalula-tree.
-
- For the Dinkey-Bird’s bravuras
- And staccatos are so sweet--
- His roulades, appogiaturas,
- And robustos so complete,
- That the youth of every nation--
- Be they near or far away--
- Have especial delectation
- In that gladsome roundelay.
-
- Their eyes grow bright and brighter,
- Their lungs begin to crow,
- Their hearts get light and lighter,
- And their cheeks are all aglow;
- For an echo cometh bringing
- The news to all and me.
- That the Dinkey-Bird is singing
- In the Amfalula-tree.
-
- I’m sure you’d like to go there
- To see your feathered friend--
- And so many goodies grow there
- You would like to comprehend!
- _Speed, little dreams, your winging
- To that land across the sea
- Where the Dinkey-Bird is singing
- In the Amfalula-Tree!_
-
-
- _THE LITTLE PEACH_
-
- A little peach in the orchard grew,
- A little peach of emerald hue:
- Warmed by the sun, and wet by the dew,
- It grew.
-
- One day, walking the orchard through,
- That little peach dawned on the view
- Of Johnny Jones and his sister Sue--
- Those two.
-
- Up at the peach a club they threw:
- Down from the limb on which it grew,
- Fell the little peach of emerald hue--
- Too true!
-
- John took a bite, and Sue took a chew,
- And then the trouble began to brew,--
- Trouble the doctor couldn’t subdue,--
- Paregoric too.
-
- Under the turf where the daisies grew,
- They planted John and his sister Sue;
- And their little souls to the angels flew--
- Boo-hoo!
-
- But what of the peach of emerald hue,
- Warmed by the sun, and wet by the dew?
- Ah, well! its mission on earth is through--
- Adieu!
-
-
- _GOOD JAMES AND NAUGHTY REGINALD_
-
-Once upon a Time there was a Bad boy whose Name was Reginald and there
-was a Good boy whose Name was James. Reginald would go Fishing when his
-Mamma told him Not to, and he Cut off the Cat’s Tail with the Bread
-Knife one Day, and then told Mamma the Baby had Driven it in with the
-Rolling Pin, which was a Lie. James was always Obedient, and when his
-Mamma told him not to Help an old Blind Man across the street or Go
-into a Dark Room where the Boogies were, he always Did What She said.
-That is why they Called him Good James. Well, by and by, along Came
-Christmas. Mamma said, You have been so Bad, my son Reginald, you will
-not Get any Presents from Santa Claus this Year; but you, my Son James,
-will get Oodles of Presents, because you have Been Good. Will you
-Believe it, Children, that Bad boy Reginald said he didn’t Care a Darn
-and he Kicked three Feet of Veneering off the Piano just for Meanness.
-Poor James was so sorry for Reginald that he cried for Half an Hour
-after he Went to Bed that Night. Reginald lay wide Awake until he saw
-James was Asleep and then he Said if these people think they can Fool
-me, they are Mistaken. Just then Santa Claus came down the Chimney. He
-had lots of Pretty Toys in a Sack on his Back. Reginald shut his Eyes
-and Pretended to be Asleep. Then Santa Claus Said, Reginald is Bad and
-I will not Put any nice Things in his Stocking. But as for you, James,
-I will Fill your Stocking Plumb full of Toys, because You are Good.
-So Santa Claus went to Work and Put, Oh! heaps and Heaps of Goodies
-in James’ stocking but not a Sign of a Thing in Reginald’s stocking.
-And then he Laughed to himself and Said, I guess Reginald will be
-sorry to-morrow because he Was so Bad. As he said this he Crawled up
-the chimney and rode off in his Sleigh. Now you can Bet your Boots
-Reginald was no Spring Chicken. He just Got right Straight out of Bed
-and changed all those Toys and Truck from James’ stocking into his own.
-Santa Claus will Have to Sit up all Night, said He, when he Expects to
-get away with my Baggage. The next morning James got out of Bed and
-when He had Said his Prayers he Limped over to his Stocking, licking
-his chops and Carrying his Head as High as a Bull going through a Brush
-Fence. But when he found there was Nothing in his stocking and that
-Reginald’s Stocking was as Full as Papa Is when he comes home Late from
-the Office, he Sat down on the Floor and began to Wonder why on Earth
-he had Been such a Good boy. Reginald spent a Happy Christmas and James
-was very Miserable. After all, Children, it Pays to be Bad, so Long as
-you Combine Intellect with Crime.
-
- --_From the Tribune Primer._
-
-Edgar Wilson Nye, known commonly as Bill Nye, wrote in prose and also
-made a success on the lecture platform, as well as in his newspaper
-work.
-
-
- _THE GARDEN HOSE_
-
-It is now the proper time for the cross-eyed woman to fool with the
-garden hose. I have faced death in almost every form, and I do not know
-what fear is, but when a woman with one eye gazing into the zodiac
-and the other peering into the middle of next week, and wearing one
-of those floppy sun-bonnets, picks up the nozzle of the garden hose
-and turns on the full force of the institution, I fly wildly to the
-Mountains of Hepsidam.
-
-Water won’t hurt any one, of course, if care is used not to forget and
-drink any of it, but it is this horrible suspense and uncertainty about
-facing the nozzle of a garden hose in the hands of a cross-eyed woman
-that unnerves and paralyzes me.
-
-Instantaneous death is nothing to me. I am as cool and collected where
-leaden rain and iron hail are thickest as I would be in my own office
-writing the obituary of the man who steals my jokes. But I hate to be
-drowned slowly in my good clothes and on dry land, and have my dying
-gaze rest on a woman whose ravishing beauty would drive a narrow-gage
-mule into convulsions and make him hate himself t’death.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Richard Kendall Munkittrick wielded a graceful pen and his verses show
-an original wit.
-
-
- _WHAT’S IN A NAME?_
-
- In letters large upon a frame,
- That visitors might see,
- The painter placed his humble name,
- O’Callaghan McGee.
-
- And from Beersheba unto Dan,
- The critics with a nod
- Exclaimed: “This painting Irishman
- Adores his native sod.
-
- “His stout heart’s patriotic flame
- There’s naught on earth can quell
- He takes no wild romantic name
- To make his pictures sell!”
-
- Then poets praised in sonnets neat
- His stroke so bold and free;
- No parlor wall was thought complete
- That hadn’t a McGee.
-
- All patriots before McGee
- Threw lavishly their gold;
- His works in the Academy
- Were very quickly sold.
-
- His “Digging Clams at Barnegat,”
- His “When the Morning Smiled,”
- His “Seven Miles from Ararat,”
- His “Portrait of a Child,”
- Were purchased in a single day
- And lauded as divine.
-
- * * * * *
-
- That night as in his _atelier_
- The artist sipped his wine,
-
- And looked upon his gilded frames,
- He grinned from ear to ear:
- “They little think my _real_ name’s
- V. Stuyvesant De Vere!”
-
-Edward Waterman Townsend, varied the time-honored tradition of
-misspelling by introducing an example of Bowery slang. His _Chimmie
-Fadden_ took a firm hold on the public notice and the vogue lasted
-for many years.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Naw, I ain’t stringin’ ye. ‘Is Whiskers is de loidy’s fadder. Sure!
-
-“’E comes ter me room wid der loidy, ’is Whiskers does, an’ he says,
-says ’e, ‘Is dis Chimmie Fadden?’ says ’e.
-
-“‘Yer dead on,’ says I.
-
-“‘Wot t’ell?’ ’e says, turning to ’is daughter. ‘Wot does de young man
-say?’ ’e says.
-
-“Den de loidy she kinder smiled--say, ye otter seed ’er smile. Say,
-it’s outter sight. Dat’s right. Well, she says: ‘I t’ink I understan’
-Chimmie’s langwudge,’ she says. ‘‘E means ’e’s de kid youse lookin’
-fer. ’E’s de very mug.’
-
-“Dat’s wot she says; somet’n like dat, only a felly can’t just remember
-’er langwudge.
-
-“Den ’is Whiskers gives me a song an’ dance ’bout me bein’ a brave
-young man fer t’umpin’ der mug wot insulted ’is daughter, an’ ’bout ’is
-heart bein’ all broke dat ’is daughter should be doin’ missioner work
-in de slums.
-
-“I says, ‘Wot tell’; but der loidy, she says, ‘Chimmie,’ says she, ‘me
-fadder needs a footman,’ she says, ‘an’ I taut you’d be de very mug fer
-de job,’ says she. See?
-
-“Say, I was all broke up, an’ couldn’t say nottin’, fer ’is Whiskers
-was so solemn. See?
-
-“‘Wot’s yer lay now?’ says ’is Whiskers, or somet’n’ like dat.
-
-“Say, I could ’ave give ’im a string ’bout me bein’ a hard-workin’ boy,
-but I knowed der loidy was dead on ter me, so I only says, says I, ‘Wot
-t’ell?’ says I, like dat, ‘Wot t’ell?’ See?
-
-“Den ’is Whiskers was kinder paralized like, an’ ’e turns to ’is
-daughter an’ ’e says--dese is ’is very words--’e says:
-
-“Really, Fannie,’ ’e says, ‘really, Fannie, you must enterpret dis
-young man’s langwudge.’
-
-“Den she laffs an’ says, says she:
-
-“Chimmie is a good boy if ’e only had a chance,’ she says.
-
-“Den ’is Whiskers ’e says, ‘I dare say,’ like dat. See? ‘I dare say.’
-See? Say, did ye ever ’ear words like dem? Say, I was fer tellin’ ’is
-Whiskers ter git t’ell outter dat, only fer der loidy. See?
-
-“Well, den we all give each odder a song an’ dance, an’ de end was I
-was took fer a footman. See? Tiger, ye say? Naw, dey don’t call me no
-tiger.
-
-“Say, wouldn’t de gang on de Bow’ry be paralized if dey seed me in dis
-harness? Ain’t it great? Sure! Wot am I doin’? Well, I’m doin’ pretty
-well. I had ter t’ump a felly dey calls de butler de first night I was
-dere for callin’ me a heathen. See? Say, dere’s a kid in de house wot
-opens de front door when youse ring de bell, an’ I win all ’is boodle
-de second night I was dere showin’ ’im how ter play Crusoe. Say, it’s a
-dead easy game, but de loidy she axed me not to bunco de farmers--dey’s
-all farmers up in dat house, dead farmers--so I leaves ’em alone.
-’Scuse me now, dat’s me loidy comin’ outter der shop. I opens de door
-of de carriage an’ she says, ‘Home, Chames.’ Den I jumps on de box an’
-strings de driver. Say, ’e’s a farmer, too. I’ll tell you some more
-’bout de game next time. So long.”
-
- --_Chimmie Fadden._
-
-Sam Walter Foss added to his misspelling a certain understanding of
-human nature and produced many mildly satirical verses.
-
-
- _A PHILOSOPHER_
-
- Zack Bumstead useter flosserfize
- About the ocean and the skies,
- An’ gab an’ gas f’um morn till noon
- About the other side the moon;
- An’ ’bout the natur of the place
- Ten miles beyend the end of space.
- An’ if his wife she’d ask the crank
- If he wouldn’t kinder try to yank
- Hisself outdoors an’ git some wood
- To make her kitchen fire good,
- So she c’d bake her beans an’ pies,
- He’d say, “I’ve gotter flosserfize.”
-
- An’ then he’d set an’ flosserfize
- About the natur an’ the size
- Of angels’ wings, an’ think, and gawp,
- An’ wonder how they made ’em flop.
- He’d calkerlate how long a skid
- ’Twould take to move the sun, he did;
- An’ if the skid wuz strong an’ prime,
- It couldn’t be moved to supper-time.
- An’ w’en his wife ’d ask the lout
- If he wouldn’t kinder waltz about
- An’ take a rag an’ shoo the flies,
- He’d say, “I’ve gotter flosserfize.”
-
- An’ then he’d set an’ flosserfize
- ’Bout schemes for fencing in the skies,
- Then lettin’ out the lots to rent
- So’s he could make an honest cent.
- An’ if he’d find it pooty tough
- To borry cash fer fencin’ stuff.
- An’ if ’twere best to take his wealth
- An’ go to Europe for his health,
- Or save his cash till he’d enough
- To buy some more of fencin’ stuff.
- Then, if his wife she’d ask the gump
- If he wouldn’t kinder try to hump
- Hisself to t’other side the door
- So she c’d come an’ sweep the floor,
- He’d look at her with mournful eyes,
- An’ say, “I’ve gotter flosserfize.”
-
- An’ so he’d set an’ flosserfize
- ’Bout w’at it wuz held up the skies,
- An’ how God made this earthly ball
- Jest simply out er nawthin’ ’tall,
- An’ ’bout the natur, shape, an’ form
- Of nawthin’ that He made it from.
- Then, if his wife sh’d ask the freak
- If he wouldn’t kinder try to sneak
- Out to the barn an’ find some aigs,
- He’d never move, nor lift his laigs,
- He’d never stir, nor try to rise,
- But say, “I’ve gotter flosserfize.”
-
- An’ so he’d set an’ flosserfize
- About the earth an’ sea an’ skies,
- An’ scratch his head an’ ask the cause
- Of w’at there wuz before time wuz,
- An’ w’at the universe’d do
- Bimeby w’en time had all got through;
- An’ jest how fur we’d have to climb
- If we sh’d travel out er time,
- An’ if we’d need, w’en we got there
- To keep our watches in repair.
- Then, if his wife she’d ask the gawk
- If he wouldn’t kinder try to walk
- To where she had the table spread
- An’ kinder git his stomach fed,
- He’d leap for that ’ar kitchen door,
- An’ say, “W’y didn’t you speak afore?”
- An’ w’en he’d got his supper et,
- He’d set, an’ set, an’ set, an’ set,
- An’ fold his arms an’ shet his eyes,
- An’ set, an’ set, an’ flosserfize.
-
-Finley Peter Dunne created the immortal Mr. Dooley about the time of
-the Spanish War.
-
-The Irish dialect is perfect, the humor most droll and the wit quiet
-and clean-cut.
-
-Among the best of the chapters is the one that burlesques the
-proceedings that took place at a celebrated murder trial of the day.
-
-
- _ON EXPERT TESTIMONY_
-
-“Annything new?” said Mr. Hennessy, who had been waiting patiently for
-Mr. Dooley to put down his newspaper.
-
-“I’ve been r-readin’ th’ tistimony iv th’ Lootgert case,” said Mr.
-Dooley.
-
-“What d’ye think iv it?”
-
-“I think so,” said Mr. Dooley.
-
-“Think what?”
-
-“How do I know?” said Mr. Dooley. “How do I know what I think?
-I’m no combination iv chemist, doctor, osteologist, polisman, an’
-sausage-maker, that I can give ye an opinion right off th’ bat. A man
-needs to be all iv thim things to detarmine annything about a murdher
-trile in these days. This shows how intilligent our methods is, as
-Hogan says. A large German man is charged with puttin’ his wife away
-into a breakfas’-dish, an’ he says he didn’t do it. Th’ question thin
-is, Did or did not Alphonse Lootgert stick Mrs. L. into a vat, an’
-rayjooce her to a quick lunch? Am I right?”
-
-“Ye ar-re,” said Mr. Hennessy.
-
-“That’s simple enough. What th’ Coort ought to’ve done was to call him
-up, an’ say: ‘Lootgert, where’s ye’er good woman?’ If Lootgert cudden’t
-tell, he ought to be hanged on gin’ral principles; f’r a man must keep
-his wife around th’ house, an’ whin she isn’t there it shows he’s a
-poor provider. But, if Lootgert says, ‘I don’t know where me wife is,’
-the Coort shud say:’ Go out an’ find her. If ye can’t projooce her in
-a week, I’ll fix ye.’ An’ let that be th’ end iv it.
-
-“But what do they do? They get Lootgert into coort an’ stand him up
-befure a gang iv young rayporthers an’ th’ likes iv thim to make
-pitchers iv him. Thin they summon a jury composed iv poor tired, sleepy
-expressmen an’ tailors an’ clerks. Thin they call in a profissor from
-a college. ‘Professor,’ says th’ lawyer f’r the State, ‘I put it to
-ye if a wooden vat three hundherd an’ sixty feet long, twenty-eight
-feet deep, an’ sivinty-five feet wide, an’ if three hundherd pounds
-iv caustic soda boiled, an’ if the leg iv a guinea-pig, an’ ye said
-yestherdah about bi-carbonate iv soda, an’ if it washes up an’ washes
-over, an’ th’ slimy, slippery stuff, an’ if a false tooth or a lock iv
-hair or a jawbone or a goluf ball across th’ cellar eleven feet nine
-inches--that is, two inches this way an’ five gallons that?’ ‘I agree
-with ye intirely,’ says th’ profissor. I made lab’ratory experiments in
-an’ ir’n basin, with bichloride iv gool, which I will call soup-stock,
-an’ coal-tar, which I will call ir’n filings. I mixed th’ two over a
-hot fire, an’ left in a cool place to harden. I thin packed it in ice,
-which I will call glue, an’ rock-salt, which I will call fried eggs,
-an’ obtained a dark queer solution that is a cure f’r freckles, which I
-will call antimony or doughnuts or annything I blamed please.’
-
-“‘But,’ says th’ lawyer f’r th’ State, ‘measurin’ th’ vat with gas--an’
-I lave it to ye whether this is not th’ on’y fair test--an’ supposin’
-that two feet acrost is akel to tin feet sideways, an’ supposin’ that
-a thick green an’ hard substance, an’ I daresay it wud; an’ supposin’
-you may, takin’ into account th’ measuremints--twelve be eight--th’
-vat bein’ wound with twine six inches fr’m th’ handle an’ a rub iv th’
-green, thin ar-re not human teeth often found in counthry sausage?’ ‘In
-th’ winter,’ says th’ profissor. ‘But th’ sisymoid bone is sometimes
-seen in th’ fut, sometimes worn as a watch-charm. I took two sisymoid
-bones, which I will call poker dice, an’ shook thim together in a
-cylinder, which I will call Fido, poored in a can iv milk, which I will
-call gum arabic, took two pounds iv rough-on-rats, which I rayfuse to
-call; but th’ raysult is th’ same.’ Question be th’ Coort: ‘Different?’
-Answer: ‘Yis.’ Th’ Coort: ‘Th’ same.’ Be Misther McEwen: ‘Whose
-bones?’ Answer: ‘Yis.’ Be Misther Vincent: ‘Will ye go to th’ divvle?’
-Answer: ‘It dissolves th’ hair.’
-
-“Now what I want to know is where th’ jury gets off. What has that
-collection iv pure-minded pathrites to larn fr’m this here polite
-discussion, where no wan is so crool as to ask what anny wan else
-means? Thank th’ Lord, whin th’ case is all over, the jury’ll pitch
-th’ tistimony out iv th’ window, an’ consider three questions: ‘Did
-Lootgert look as though he’d kill his wife? Did his wife look as though
-she ought so be kilt? Isn’t it time we wint to supper?’ An’, howiver
-they answer, they’ll be right, an’ it’ll make little diff’rence wan way
-or th’ other. Th’ German vote is too large an’ ignorant annyhow.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-George Ade, in the Biographical Dictionaries, is classed almost
-exclusively as a playwright, but to those who know and love his
-_Fables in Slang_,--and who does not?--he will always be a
-humorist.
-
-His slang is all that slang should be, witty, trenchant, picturesque
-and used but once. His own rule for slang stipulates that it shall be
-impromptu, spontaneous and never repeated.
-
-From his opera _The Sultan of Sulu_, we quote one song.
-
-
- _THE COCKTAIL_
-
- The cocktail is a pleasant drink,
- It’s mild and harmless--I don’t think!
- When you have one, you call for two--
- And then you don’t care what you do.
-
- Last night I hoisted twenty-three
- Of those arrangements into me;
- My bosom heaved, I swelled with pride,
- I was pickled, primed and ossified!
-
- But R-E-M-O-R-S-E--
- The water wagon is the place for me!
- It is no time for mirth and laughter,
- The cold, dark dawn of the Morning After!
-
-
- _THE FABLE OF THE CADDY WHO HURT HIS HEAD WHILE THINKING_
-
-One day a Caddy sat in the Long Grass near the Ninth Hole and wondered
-if he had a Soul. His number was 27, and he almost had forgotten his
-Real Name.
-
-As he sat and Meditated, two Players passed him. They were going the
-Long Round, and the Frenzy was upon them.
-
-They followed the Gutta-Percha Balls with the intent swiftness of
-trained Bird-Dogs, and each talked feverishly of Brassy Lies, and
-getting past the Bunker, and Lofting to the Green, and Slicing into the
-Bramble--each telling his own Game to the Ambient Air, and ignoring
-what the other Fellow had to say.
-
-As they did the St. Andrews Full Swing for eighty Yards apiece and then
-Followed Through with the usual Explanations of how it Happened, the
-Caddy looked at them and Reflected that they were much inferior to his
-Father.
-
-His Father was too Serious a Man to get out in Mardi Gras Clothes and
-hammer a Ball from one Red flag to another.
-
-His Father worked in a Lumber-Yard.
-
-He was an Earnest Citizen, who seldom Smiled, and he knew all about the
-Silver Question and how J. Pierpont Morgan done up a Free People on the
-Bond Issue.
-
-The Caddy wondered why it was that his Father, a really Great Man, had
-to shove Lumber all day and could seldom get one Dollar to rub against
-another, while these superficial Johnnies who played Golf all the Time
-had Money to Throw at the Birds. The more he Thought the more his Head
-ached.
-
-MORAL.--_Don’t try to Account for Anything._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Will Carleton wrote many long narrative ballads, of a homely type. His
-_Betsey and I Are Out_, and _Over the Hills to the Poorhouse_, in their
-day were known to every household.
-
-A shorter work is:
-
-
- _ELIPHALET CHAPIN’S WEDDING_
-
- ’Twas when the leaves of Autumn were by tempest-fingers picked,
- Eliphalet Chapin started to become a benedict;
- With an ancient two-ox waggon to bring back his new-found goods,
- He hawed and gee’d and floundered through some twenty miles o’
- woods;
- With prematrimonial ardour he his hornèd steeds did press,
- But Eliphalet’s wedding journey didn’t bristle with success.
- Oh no,
- Woe, woe!
- With candour to digress,
- Eliphalet’s wedding journey didn’t tremble with success.
-
- He had not carried five miles his mouth-disputed face,
- When his wedding garments parted in some inconvenient place;
- He’d have given both his oxen to a wife that now was dead,
- For her company two minutes with a needle and a thread.
- But he pinned them up, with twinges of occasional distress,
- Feeling that his wedding wouldn’t be a carnival of dress:
- “Haw, Buck!
- Gee, Bright!
- Derned pretty mess!”
- No; Eliphalet was not strictly a spectacular success.
-
- He had not gone a ten-mile when a wheel demurely broke,
- A disunited family of felloe, hub, and spoke;
- It joined, with flattering prospects, the Society of Wrecks;
- And he had to cut a sapling, and insert it ’neath the “ex.”
- So he ploughed the hills and valleys with that Doric wheel and tire,
- Feeling that his wedding journey was not all he could desire.
- “Gee, Bright!
- G’long, Buck!”
- He shouted, hoarse with ire!
- No; Eliphalet’s wedding journey none in candour could admire!
-
- He had not gone fifteen miles with extended face forlorn,
- When Night lay down upon him hard, and kept him there till morn;
- And when the daylight chuckled at the gloom within his mind,
- One ox was “Strayed or Stolen,” and the other hard to find.
- So yoking Buck as usual, he assumed the part of Bright
- (Constituting a menagerie diverting to the sight);
- With “Haw, Buck!
- Gee, Buck!
- Sh’n’t get there till night!”
- No; Eliphalet’s wedding journey was not one intense delight.
-
- Now, when he drove his equipage up to his sweetheart’s door,
- The wedding guests had tired and gone, just half-an-hour before;
- The preacher had from sickness an unprofitable call,
- And had sent a voice proclaiming that he couldn’t come at all;
- The parents had been prejudiced by some one, more or less,
- And the sire the bridegroom greeted with a different word from
- “bless.”
- “Blank your head,
- You blank!” he said;
- “We’ll break this off, I guess!”
- No; Eliphalet’s wedding was not an unqualified success.
-
- Now, when the bride saw him arrive, she shook her crimson locks,
- And vowed to goodness gracious she would never wed an ox;
- And with a vim deserving rather better social luck,
- She eloped that day by daylight with a swarthy Indian “buck,”
- With the presents in the pockets of her woollen wedding-dress;
- And “Things ain’t mostly with me,” quoth Eliphalet, “I confess,”
- No--no;
- As things go,
- No fair mind ’twould impress,
- That Eliphalet Chapin’s wedding was an unalloyed success.
-
-Dr. William H. Drummond is best known humorously by his apt rendition
-of the French-Canadian dialect.
-
-
- _THE WRECK OF THE “JULIE PLANTE.”_
-
- A Legend of Lake St. Peter.
-
- On wan dark night on Lac Saint Pierre,
- De win’ she blow, blow, blow,
- An’ de crew of de wood scow “Julie Plante”
- Got scar’t, an’ run below--
- For de win’ she blow lak hurricain,
- Bimeby she blow some more,
- An’ de scow buss h’up on Lac Saint Pierre
- Wan h’arpent from de shore.
-
- De captinne walk h’on de fronte deck,
- An’ walk de hin’ deck too--
- He call de crew from h’up de ’ole
- He call de cook h’also.
- De crew she’s name was Rosie,
- She’s come from Montreal,
- Was chambre maid h’on lombaire barge,
- H’on de Grande La Chine Canal.
-
- De win’ she’s blow from nor’-eass-wess--
- De sout’ win’ she’s blow too,
- W’en Rosie cry, “Mon cher captinne,
- Mon cher, w’at I shall do?”
- Den de captinne trow de big h’ankerre,
- But steel de scow she dreef,
- De crew he can’t pass on de shore,
- Becos he loss hees skeef.
-
- De night was dark lak’ wan black cat,
- De wave run ’igh an’ fas’,
- W’en de captinne tak’ de poor Rosie
- An’ tie her to de mas’.
- Den he h’also tak’ de life preserve,
- An’ jomp h’off on de lak’,
- An’ say, “Good-bye, ma Rosie dear,
- I go drown for your sak’.”
-
- Nex’ morning very h’early
- Bout haf-pas’ two--t’ree--four--
- De captinne--scow--an’ de poor Rosie
- Was corpses on de shore.
- For de win’ she blow lak’ hurricain,
- Bimeby she blow some more,
- An’ de scow bus’ h’up on Lac Saint Pierre,
- Wan h’arpent from de shore.
-
-
- MORAL
-
- Now h’all good wood scow sailor man
- Tak’ warning by dat storm,
- An’ go an’ marry some nice French girl
- An’ leev on one beeg farm.
-
- De win’ can blow lak hurricain
- An’ s’pose she blow some more,
- You can’t get drown on Lac St. Pierre
- So long you stay on shore.
-
-Ben King is responsible for at least two humorous jingles of wide
-popularity.
-
-
- _THE PESSIMIST_
-
- Nothing to do but work;
- Nothing to eat but food;
- Nothing to wear but clothes,
- To keep one from going nude.
-
- Nothing to breathe but air;
- Quick as a flash ’tis gone;
- Nowhere to fall but off;
- Nowhere to stand but on.
-
- Nothing to comb but hair;
- Nowhere to sleep but in bed;
- Nothing to weep but tears;
- Nothing to bury but dead.
-
- Nothing to sing but songs,
- Ah, well, alas! alack!
- Nowhere to go but out;
- Nowhere to come but back.
-
- Nothing to see but sights;
- Nothing to quench but thirst;
- Nothing to have but what we’ve got;
- Thus thro’ life we are cursed.
-
- Nothing to strike but a gait;
- Everything moves that goes.
- Nothing at all but common sense
- Can ever withstand these woes.
-
-
- _IF I SHOULD DIE TO-NIGHT_
-
- If I should die to-night,
- And you should come to my cold corpse and say,
- Weeping and heartsick o’er my lifeless clay--
- If I should die to-night,
- And you should come in deepest grief and wo--
- And say, “Here’s that ten dollars that I owe,”
- I might arise in my large white cravat,
- And say, “What’s that?”
-
- If I should die to-night,
- And you should come to my cold corpse and kneel,
- Clasping my bier to show the grief you feel,
- I say, if I should die to-night,
- And you should come to me, and there and then
- Just even hint ’bout payin’ me that ten,
- I might arise the while,
- But I’d drop dead again.
-
-A humorous jingle that achieved immediate vogue is _Casey at the
-Bat_. The authorship has been questioned but consensus of research
-seems to ascribe it to Ernest Lawrence Thayer.
-
-
- _CASEY AT THE BAT_
-
- It looked extremely rocky for the Mudville nine that day;
- The score stood four to six, with just an inning left to play;
- And so, when Cooney died at first, and Burrows did the same,
- A pallor wreathed the features of the patrons of the game.
-
- A straggling few got up to go, leaving there the rest,
- With that hope which springs eternal within the human breast;
- For they thought if only Casey could get one whack, at that
- They’d put up even money, with Casey at the bat.
-
- But Flynn preceded Casey, and so likewise did Blake,
- And the former was a pudding and the latter was a fake;
- So on that stricken multitude a death-like silence sat,
- For there seemed but little chance of Casey’s getting to the bat.
-
- But Flynn let drive a single to the wonderment of all,
- And the much-despised Blakie tore the cover off the ball;
- And when the dust had lifted, and they saw what had occurred,
- There was Blakie safe on second, and Flynn a-hugging third.
-
- Then from the gladdened multitude went up a joyous yell,
- It bounded from the mountain-top, and rattled in the dell;
- It struck upon the hillside, and rebounded on the flat;
- For Casey, mighty Casey, was advancing to the bat.
-
- There was ease in Casey’s manner as he stepped into his place,
- There was pride in Casey’s bearing, and a smile on Casey’s face;
- And when responding to the cheers he lightly doffed his hat,
- No stranger in the crowd could doubt ’twas Casey at the bat.
-
- Ten thousand eyes were on him as he rubbed his hands with dirt,
- Five thousand tongues applauded when he wiped them on his shirt;
- Then while the writhing pitcher ground the ball into his hip,
- Defiance glanced in Casey’s eye, a sneer curled Casey’s lip.
-
- And now the leather-covered sphere came hurtling through the air,
- And Casey stood a-watching it in haughty grandeur there;
- Close by the sturdy batsman the ball unheeded sped.
- “That ain’t my style,” said Casey. “Strike one,” the umpire said.
-
- From the benches, black with people, there went up a muffled roar,
- Like the beating of the storm-waves on a stern and distant shore;
- “Kill him! kill the umpire!” shouted some one on the stand.
- And it’s likely they’d have killed him had not Casey raised his
- hand.
-
- With a smile of Christian charity great Casey’s visage shone,
- He stilled the rising tumult; he bade the game go on;
- He signaled to the pitcher, and once more the spheroid flew,
- But Casey still ignored it, and the umpire said, “Strike two.”
-
- “Fraud!” cried the maddened thousands, and the echo answered,
- “Fraud!”
- But the scornful look from Casey, and the audience was awed;
- They saw his face grow stern and cold, they saw his muscles strain,
- And they knew that Casey wouldn’t let that ball go by again.
-
- The sneer is gone from Casey’s lips, his teeth are clenched in hate,
- He pounds with cruel violence his bat upon the plate;
- And now the pitcher holds the ball, and now he lets it go,
- And now the air is shattered by the force of Casey’s blow.
-
- Oh! somewhere in this favored land the sun is shining bright,
- The band is playing somewhere, and somewhere hearts are light;
- And somewhere men are laughing, and somewhere children shout,
- But there is no joy in Mudville--mighty Casey has struck out.
-
-John Kendrick Bangs, one time Editor of _Puck_, of lamented
-memory, wrote tomes of humorous verse. As a pastime in tricky rhyming
-we quote:
-
-
- _MONA LISA_
-
- Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa,
- Have you gone? Great Julius Cæsar!
- Who’s the Chap so bold and pinchey
- Thus to swipe the great da Vinci,
- Taking France’s first Chef d’œuvre
- Squarely from old Mr. Louvre,
- Easy as some pocket-picker
- Would remove our handkerchicker
- As we ride in careless folly
- On some gaily bounding trolley?
-
- Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa,
- Who’s your Captor? Doubtless he’s a
- Crafty sort of treasure-seeker--
- Ne’er a Turpin e’er was sleeker--
- But, alas, if he can win you
- Easily as I could chin you,
- What is safe in all the nations
- From his dreadful depredations?
- He’s the style of Chap, I’m thinkin’
- Who will drive us all to drinkin’!
-
- Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa,
- Next he’ll swipe the Tower of Pisa,
- Pulling it from out its socket
- For to hide it in his pocket;
- Or perhaps he’ll up and steal, O,
- Madame Venus, late of Milo;
- Or maybe while on the grab he
- Will annex Westminster Abbey,
- And elope with that distinguished
- Heap of Ashes long extinguished.
-
- Maybe too, O Mona Lisa,
- He will come across the seas a--
- Searching for the style of treasure
- That we have in richest measure.
- Sunset Cox’s brazen statue,
- Have a care lest he shall catch you
- Or maybe he’ll set his eye on
- Hammerstein’s, or the Flatiron,
- Or some bit of White Wash done
- By those lads at Washington--
- Truly he’s a crafty geezer,
- Is your Captor, Mona Lisa!
-
-Thomas L. Masson, humorous writer, and for many years editor of
-_Life_, has doubtless written more humor and books of humor than
-any one in the country.
-
-
- _THE KISS_
-
- “What other men have dared, I dare,”
- He said. “I’m daring, too:
- And tho’ they told me to beware,
- One kiss I’ll take from you.
-
- “Did I say one? Forgive me, dear;
- That was a grave mistake,
- For when I’ve taken one, I fear,
- One hundred more I’ll take.
-
- “’Tis sweet one kiss from you to win,
- But to stop there? Oh, no!
- One kiss is only to begin;
- There is no end, you know.”
-
- The maiden rose from where she sat
- And gently raised her head:
- “No man has ever talked like that--
- You may begin,” she said.
-
-
- _DESOLATION_
-
- Somewhat back from the village street
- Stands the old fashioned country seat.
- Across its antique portico
- Tall poplar trees their shadows throw.
- And there throughout the livelong day,
- Jemima plays the pi-a-na.
- Do, re, mi,
- Mi, re, do.
-
- In the front parlor there it stands,
- And there Jemima plies her hands,
- While her papa, beneath his cloak,
- Mutters and groans: “This is no joke!”
- And swears to himself and sighs, alas!
- With sorrowful voice to all who pass.
- Do, re, mi,
- Mi, re, do.
-
- Through days of death and days of birth
- She plays as if she owned the earth
- Through every swift vicissitude
- She drums as if it did her good,
- And still she sits from morn till night
- And plunks away with main and might
- Do, re, mi,
- Mi, re, do.
-
- In that mansion used to be
- Free-hearted hospitality;
- But that was many years before
- Jemima dallied with the score.
- When she began her daily plunk,
- Into their graves the neighbors sunk.
- Do, re, mi,
- Mi, re, do.
-
- To other worlds they’ve long since fled,
- All thankful that they’re safely dead.
- They stood the racket while alive
- Until Jemima rose at five.
- And then they laid their burdens down,
- And one and all they skipped the town.
- Do, re, mi,
- Mi, re, do.
-
-Stephen Crane, a strange and often misunderstood genius, never waxed
-humorous in a broad sense. But the incisive, satirical wit of his lines
-can seldom be found bettered.
-
- A man said to the universe,
- “Sir, I exist!”
- “However,” replied the universe,
- “The fact has not created in me
- A sense of obligation.”
-
- Upon the road of my life,
- Passed me many fair creatures,
- Clothed all in white, and radiant;
- To one, finally, I made speech:
- “Who art thou?”
- But she, like the others,
- Kept cowled her face,
- And answered in haste, anxiously,
- “I am Good Deed, forsooth;
- You have often seen me.”
-
- “Not uncowled,” I made reply.
- And with rash and strong hand,
- Though she resisted,
- I drew away the veil,
- And gazed at the features of Vanity.
- She, shamefaced, went on;
- And after I had mused a time,
- I said of myself, “Fool!”
-
- “Think as I think,” said a man,
- “Or you are abominably wicked;
- You are a toad.”
- And after I had thought of it,
- I said, “I will, then, be a toad.”
-
-Charles Battell Loomis was a favorably known writer of humorous
-jingles, and he wielded a facile pen in parody.
-
-
- _JACK AND JILL_
-
- (_As Austin Dobson might have written it_)
-
- Their pail they must fill
- In a crystalline springlet,
- Brave Jack and fair Jill.
- Their pail they must fill
- At the top of the hill,
- Then she gives him a ringlet.
- Their pail they must fill
- In a crystalline springlet.
-
- They stumbled and fell,
- And poor Jack broke his forehead,
- Oh, how he did yell!
- They stumbled and fell,
- And went down pell-mell--
- By Jove! it was horrid.
- They stumbled and fell,
- And poor Jack broke his forehead.
-
-
- (_As Swinburne might have written it_)
-
- The shudd’ring sheet of rain athwart the trees!
- The crashing kiss of lightning on the seas!
- The moaning of the night wind on the wold,
- That erstwhile was a gentle, murm’ring breeze!
-
- On such a night as this went Jill and Jack
- With strong and sturdy strides through dampness black
- To find the hill’s high top and water cold,
- Then toiling through the town to bear it back.
-
- The water drawn, they rest awhile. Sweet sips
- Of nectar then for Jack from Jill’s red lips,
- And then with arms entwined they homeward go;
- Till mid the mad mud’s moistened mush Jack slips.
-
- Sweet Heaven, draw a veil on this sad plight,
- His crazèd cries and cranium cracked; the fright
- Of gentle Jill, her wretchedness and wo!
- Kind Phœbus, drive thy steeds and end this night!
-
-
- (_As Walt Whitman might have written it_)
-
- I celebrate the personality of Jack!
- I love his dirty hands, his tangled hair, his locomotion blundering.
- Each wart upon his hands I sing,
- Pæans I chant to his hulking shoulder blades.
- Also Jill!
- Her I celebrate.
- I, Walt, of unbridled thought and tongue,
- Whoop her up!
- What’s the matter with Jill?
- Oh, she’s all right!
- Who’s all right?
- Jill.
-
- Her golden hair, her sun-struck face, her hard and reddened hands;
- So, too, her feet, hefty, shambling.
- I see them in the evening, when the sun empurples the horizon, and
- through the darkening forest aisles are heard the sounds of
- myriad creatures of the night.
- I see them climb the steep ascent in quest of water for their
- mother.
- Oh, speaking of her, I could celebrate the old lady if I had time.
- She is simply immense!
-
- But Jack and Jill are walking up the hill.
- (I didn’t mean that rhyme.)
- I must watch them.
- I love to watch their walk,
- And wonder as I watch;
- He, stoop-shouldered, clumsy, hide-bound,
- Yet lusty,
- Bearing his share of the 1-lb bucket as though it were a
- paperweight.
- She, erect, standing, her head uplifting,
- Holding, but bearing not the bucket.
- They have reached the spring.
- They have filled the bucket.
- Have you heard the “Old Oaken Bucket”?
- I will sing it:--
-
- Of what countless patches is the bed-quilt of life composed!
- Here is a piece of lace. A babe is born.
- The father is happy, the mother is happy.
- Next black crêpe. A beldame “shuffles off this mortal coil.”
- Now brocaded satin with orange blossoms,
- Mendelssohn’s “Wedding March,” an old shoe missile,
- A broken carriage window, the bride in the Bellevue sleeping.
- Here’s a large piece of black cloth!
- “Have you any last words to say?”
- “No.”
- “Sheriff, do your work!”
- Thus it is: from “grave to gay, from lively to severe.”
-
- I mourn the downfall of my Jack and Jill.
- I see them descending, obstacles not heeding.
- I see them pitching headlong, the water from the pail outpouring, a
- noise from leathern lungs out-belching.
- The shadows of the night descend on Jack, recumbent, bellowing, his
- pate with gore besmeared.
- I love his cowardice, because it is an attribute, just like
- Job’s patience or Solomon’s wisdom, and I love attributes.
- Whoop!!!
-
-Guy Wetmore Carryl, son of Charles E. Carryl, possessed a lovable and
-whimsical nature and wielded an exceedingly clever pen, both in verse
-and prose. His untimely death robbed us of one of our most delightful
-young humorists.
-
-
- _HOW A GIRL WAS TOO RECKLESS OF GRAMMAR_
-
- Matilda Maud Mackenzie frankly hadn’t any chin,
- Her hands were rough, her feet she turned invariably in;
- Her general form was German,
- By which I mean that you
- Her waist could not determine
- Within a foot or two.
- And not only did she stammer,
- But she used the kind of grammar
- That is called, for sake of euphony, askew.
-
- From what I say about her, don’t imagine I desire
- A prejudice against this worthy creature to inspire.
- She was willing, she was active,
- She was sober, she was kind,
- But she _never_ looked attractive
- And she _hadn’t_ any mind.
- I knew her more than slightly,
- And I treated her politely
- When I met her, but of course I wasn’t blind!
-
- Matilda Maud Mackenzie had a habit that was droll,
- She spent her morning seated on a rock or on a knoll,
- And threw with much composure
- A smallish rubber ball
- At an inoffensive osier
- By a little waterfall;
- But Matilda’s way of throwing
- Was like other people’s mowing,
- And she never hit the willow-tree at all!
-
- One day as Miss Mackenzie with uncommon ardour tried
- To hit the mark, the missile flew exceptionally wide.
- And, before her eyes astounded,
- On a fallen maple’s trunk
- Ricochetted and rebounded
- In the rivulet, and sunk!
- Matilda, greatly frightened,
- In her grammar unenlightened,
- Remarked, “Well now I ast yer, who’d ’er thunk?”
-
- But what a marvel followed! From the pool at once there rose
- A frog, the sphere of rubber balanced deftly on his nose.
- He beheld her fright and frenzy
- And, her panic to dispel,
- On his knee by Miss Mackenzie
- He obsequiously fell.
- With quite as much decorum
- As a speaker in a forum
- He started in his history to tell.
-
- “Fair maid,” he said, “I beg you do not hesitate or wince,
- If you’ll promise that you’ll wed me, I’ll at once become a prince;
- For a fairy, old and vicious,
- An enchantment round me spun!”
- Then he looked up, unsuspicious,
- And he saw what he had won,
- And in terms of sad reproach, he
- Made some comments, _sotto voce_,
- (Which the publishers have bidden me to shun!)
-
- Matilda Maud Mackenzie said, as if she meant to scold;
- “I _never_! Why, you forward thing! Now, ain’t you awful bold!”
- Just a glance he paused to give her,
- And his head was seen to clutch,
- Then he darted to the river,
- And he dived to beat the Dutch!
- While the wrathful maiden panted
- “I don’t think he was enchanted!”
- (And he really didn’t look it overmuch!)
-
- THE MORAL
-
- In one’s language one conservative should be;
- Speech is silver and it never should be free!
-
-Edwin Arlington Robinson, among the greatest of our later poets, has a
-fine wit, nowhere better shown than in:
-
-
- _MINIVER CHEEVY_
-
- Miniver Cheevy, child of scorn,
- Grew lean while he assailed the seasons;
- He wept that he was ever born,
- And he had reasons.
-
- Miniver loved the days of old
- When swords were bright and steeds were prancing;
- The vision of a warrior bold
- Would set him dancing.
-
- Miniver sighed for what was not,
- And dreamed and rested from his labors;
- He dreamed of Thebes and Camelot
- And Priam’s neighbors.
-
- Miniver mourned the ripe renown
- That made so many a name so fragrant;
- He mourned Romance, now on the town,
- And Art, a vagrant.
-
- Miniver loved the Medici,
- Albeit he had never seen one;
- He would have sinned incessantly
- Could he have been one.
-
- Miniver cursed the commonplace,
- And eyed a khaki suit with loathing;
- He missed the mediæval grace
- Of iron clothing.
-
- Miniver scorned the gold he sought,
- But sore annoyed he was without it;
- Miniver thought and thought and thought
- And thought about it.
-
- Miniver Cheevy, born too late,
- Scratched his head and kept on thinking;
- Miniver coughed, and called it fate,
- And kept on drinking.
-
-
- _TWO MEN_
-
- There be two men of all mankind
- That I should like to know about;
- But search and question where I will,
- I cannot ever find them out.
-
- Melchizedek he praised the Lord,
- And gave some wine to Abraham;
- But who can tell what else he did
- Must be more learned than I am.
-
- Ucalegon he lost his house
- When Agamemnon came to Troy;
- But who can tell me who he was--
- I’ll pray the gods to give him joy.
-
- There be two men of all mankind
- That I’m forever thinking on;
- They chase me everywhere I go,--
- Melchizedek, Ucalegon.
-
-Arthur Guiterman, among the best of our present day humorous writers,
-never did anything better than this intensified bit of burlesque.
-
-
- _MAVRONE_
-
- ONE OF THOSE SAD IRISH POEMS, WITH NOTES
-
- From Arranmore the weary miles I’ve come;
- An’ all the way I’ve heard
- A Shrawn[2] that’s kep’ me silent, speechless, dumb,
- Not sayin’ any word.
- An’ was it then the Shrawn of Eire,[3] you’ll say,
- For him that died the death on Carrisbool?
- It was not that; nor was it, by the way,
- The Sons of Garnim[4] blitherin’ their drool;
- Nor was it any Crowdie of the Shee,[5]
- Or Itt, or Himm, nor wail of Barryhoo[6]
- For Barrywhich that stilled the tongue of me.
- ’Twas but my own heart cryin’ out for you
- Magraw![7] Bulleen, shinnanigan, Boru,
- Aroon, Machree, Aboo![8]
-
-
- _ELEGY_
-
- The jackals prowl, the serpents hiss
- In what was once Persepolis.
- Proud Babylon is but a trace
- Upon the desert’s dusty face.
- The topless towers of Ilium
- Are ashes. Judah’s harp is dumb.
- The fleets of Nineveh and Tyre
- Are down with Davy Jones, Esquire
- And all the oligarchies, kings,
- And potentates that ruled these things
- Are gone! But cheer up; don’t be sad;
- Think what a lovely time they had!
-
-Oliver Herford, born in England but living most of his life in America,
-has without doubt the most humorous soul in the world.
-
-His art, which is pictorial as well as literary, is unique and of an
-intangible, indescribable nature.
-
-As graceful of fancy as Spenser, as truly funny as Sir William Gilbert,
-he also possesses a deep philosophy and a perfect technique.
-
-
- _PHYLLIS LEE_
-
- Beside a Primrose ’broider’d Rill
- Sat Phyllis Lee in Silken Dress
- Whilst Lucius limn’d with loving skill
- Her likeness, as a Shepherdess.
- Yet tho’ he strove with loving skill
- His Brush refused to work his Will.
-
- “Dear Maid, unless you close your Eyes
- I cannot paint to-day,” he said;
- “Their Brightness shames the very Skies
- And turns their Turquoise into Lead.”
- Quoth Phyllis, then, “To save the Skies
- And speed your Brush, I’ll shut my Eyes.”
-
- Now when her Eyes were closed, the Dear,
- Not dreaming of such Treachery,
- Felt a Soft Whisper in her Ear,
- “Without the Light, how can one See?”
- “If you are _sure_ that none can see
- I’ll keep them shut,” said Phyllis Lee.
-
-
- _SOME GEESE_
-
- Ev-er-y child who has the use
- Of his sen-ses knows a goose.
- See them un-der-neath the tree
- Gath-er round the goose-girl’s knee,
- While she reads them by the hour
- From the works of Scho-pen-hau-er.
-
- How pa-tient-ly the geese at-tend!
- But do they re-al-ly com-pre-hend
- What Scho-pen-hau-er’s driv-ing at?
- Oh, not at all; but what of that?
- Nei-ther do I; nei-ther does she;
- And, for that mat-ter, nor does he.
-
-
- _THE CHIMPANZEE_
-
- Children, behold the Chimpanzee:
- He sits on the ancestral tree
- From which we sprang in ages gone.
- I’m glad we sprang: had we held on,
- We might, for aught that I can say,
- Be horrid Chimpanzees to-day.
-
-
- _THE HEN_
-
- Alas! my Child, where is the Pen
- That can do Justice to the Hen?
- Like Royalty, She goes her way,
- Laying foundations every day,
- Though not for Public Buildings, yet
- For Custard, Cake and Omelette.
-
- Or if too Old for such a use
- They have their Fling at some Abuse,
- As when to Censure Plays Unfit
- Upon the Stage they make a Hit,
- Or at elections Seal the Fate
- Of an Obnoxious Candidate.
- No wonder, Child, we prize the Hen,
- Whose Egg is Mightier than the Pen.
-
-
- _MARK TWAIN: A PIPE DREAM_
-
- Well I recall how first I met
- Mark Twain--an infant barely three
- Rolling a tiny cigarette
- While cooing on his nurse’s knee.
-
- Since then in every sort of place
- I’ve met with Mark and heard him joke,
- Yet how can I describe his face?
- I never saw it for the smoke.
-
- At school he won a _smokership_,
- At Harvard College (Cambridge, Mass.)
- His name was soon on every lip,
- They made him “_smoker_” of his class.
-
- Who will forget his smoking bout
- With Mount Vesuvius--our cheers--
- When Mount Vesuvius went out
- And didn’t smoke again for years?
-
- The news was flashed to England’s King,
- Who begged Mark Twain to come and stay,
- Offered him dukedoms--anything
- To smoke the London fog away.
-
- But Mark was firm. “I bow,” said he,
- “To no imperial command,
- No ducal coronet for me,
- My smoke is for my native land!”
-
- For Mark there waits a brighter crown!
- When Peter comes his card to read--
- He’ll take the sign “No Smoking” down,
- --Then Heaven will be Heaven indeed.
-
-
- _GOLD_
-
- Some take their gold
- In minted mold,
- And some in harps hereafter,
- But give me mine
- In tresses fine,
- And keep the change in laughter!
-
-
- _AFTER HERRICK_
-
- _SONG_
-
- Gather Kittens while you may,
- Time brings only Sorrow;
- And the Kittens of To-day
- Will be Old Cats To-morrow.
-
-
- _THE PRODIGAL EGG_
-
- An egg of humble sphere
- By vain ambition stung,
- Once left his mother dear
- When he was very young.
-
- ’Tis needless to dilate
- Upon a tale so sad;
- The egg, I grieve to state,
- Grew very, very bad.
-
- At last when old and blue,
- He wandered home, and then
- They gently broke it to
- The loving mother hen.
-
- She only said, in fun,
- “I fear you’re spoiled, my son!”
-
-Frank Gelett Burgess, one time editor of _The Lark_, a short-lived
-humorous periodical, is at his best in the realms of sheer nonsense.
-His _Purple Cow_ has a nation-wide reputation and his humorous
-excursions into the French Forms are always marked by exact precision
-as to rule and law.
-
-
- _THE PURPLE COW_
-
- I never saw a Purple Cow,
- I never hope to see one;
- But I can tell you, anyhow,
- I’d rather see than be one.
-
-
- _THE INVISIBLE BRIDGE_
-
- I’d Never Dare to Walk across
- A Bridge I Could Not See;
- For Quite afraid of Falling off,
- I fear that I Should Be!
-
-
- _VILLANELLE OF THINGS AMUSING_
-
- These are the things that make me laugh--
- Life’s a preposterous farce, say I!
- And I’ve missed of too many jokes by half.
-
- The high-heeled antics of colt and calf,
- The men who think they can act, and try--
- These are the things that make me laugh.
-
- The hard-boiled poses in photograph,
- The groom still wearing his wedding tie--
- And I’ve missed of too many jokes by half!
-
- These are the bubbles I gayly quaff
- With the rank conceit of the new-born fly--
- These are the things that make me laugh!
-
- For, Heaven help me! I needs must chaff,
- And people will tickle me till I die--
- And I’ve missed of too many jokes by half!
-
- So write me down in my epitaph
- As one too fond of his health to cry--
- These are the things that make me laugh,
- And I’ve missed of too many jokes by half!
-
-
- _PSYCHOLOPHON_
-
- _Supposed to be Translated from the Old Parsee_
-
- Twine then the rays
- Round her soft Theban tissues!
- All will be as She says,
- When that dead past reissues.
- Matters not what nor where,
- Hark, to the moon’s dim cluster!
- How was her heavy hair
- Lithe as a feather duster!
- Matters not when nor whence;
- Flittertigibbet!
- Sounds make the song, not sense,
- Thus I inhibit!
-
-Carolyn Wells has written much humorous verse and prose. Her work has
-appeared in many of the periodicals and in book form.
-
-
- _THE IDIOT’S DELIGHT_
-
- A curious man of the human clan
- Is a man who fools himself;
- Who thinks he can swing the Pierian spring
- Through a conduit of books on a shelf!
- Who thinks if he pores in the old bookstores
- And browses among the rares,
- He is fit to belong to the scholarly throng
- And gives himself scholarly airs.
-
- He gasps as he speaks of his worn antiques--
- With emotion almost dumb!
- Or he solemnly turns his Kilmarnock Burns
- With an awed and reverent thumb;
- He’ll scrimp to possess a Kelmscott Press,
- And hoard up his hard-earned wage
- Till he saves the cost of a Paradise Lost
- With the right sort of title page.
-
- If he has on his shelves some dumpy twelves,
- Of which he’s a connoisseur,
- The bibliophile, with a fatuous smile,
- Believes he’s a littérateur!
- Because he achieves incunabula leaves,
- On himself as a scholar he’ll look;
- Though I’m ready to bet no scholar _I’ve_ met
- Has ever collected a book!
-
- The difference, you see, in the viewpoint must be,
- And it _is_ a distinction nice;
- A scholar will look at the worth of a book,
- A collector will think of its price.
- He nearly bursts with pride in his firsts;
- And you can’t get it into his dome
- That he cannot affect his intellect
- By buying a tattered tome!
-
- A collector _may_ have matter gray,
- He _may_ have wisdom, too;
- As he may have a head of a carroty red
- Or eyes of a chicory blue.
- But he has these things by the grace of God;
- Especially his good looks;
- By Nature’s laws, and _not_ because
- The things he collects are _books_!
-
- And so I maintain there is no brain,
- No genius or talent or mind,
- Required to look for a certain book,
- Or to struggle that book to find.
- No collector reads his precious screeds,
- He appraises his books by sight;
- And I make claim that the blooming game
- Is the idiot’s delight!
-
-
- _THE MYSTERY_
-
- I can understand politics, civics and law,
- Of national issues I have no great awe;
- The theories of Einstein are simple to me,
- And psychoanalysis mere A. B. C.
- But there is one thing I can’t get in my head--
- Why _do_ people marry the people they wed?
-
- I can do mathematics, no matter how high;
- And to me fourth dimension is easy as pie;
- Most intricate problems I readily solve,
- And I know why the nebular spirals revolve.
- But on this baffling question no light has been shed;
- Why _do_ people marry the people they wed?
-
- Long hours over Nietzsche I frequently spend,
- I’ve all his philosophy at my tongue’s end.
- Of Freudian conclusions I haven’t a doubt.
- I’ve got human complexes all straightened out.
- But on this deep problem I muse in my bed--
- Why _do_ people marry the people they wed?
-
- I’ve studied up ancient religions and cults,
- I’ve tried spiritism with curious results;
- I know the Piltdown and Neanderthal man,
- How big is Betelgeuse and how old is Ann;
- But this I shall wonder about till I’m dead--
- Why _do_ people marry the people they wed?
-
-
- _WOMAN_
-
- Women are dear and women are queer
- Men call them, with a laugh,
- The female of the species,
- Or a husband’s better half.
- They sing their praise in many ways,
- They flatter them--but, oh,
- How little they know of Woman
- Who only women know!
-
- Now women are pert and women will flirt,
- And they’re catty and rude and vain;
- And sometimes they’re witty and sometimes they’re pretty--
- And sometimes they’re awfully plain.
- But Woman is rare beyond compare,
- The poets tell us so;
- How little they know of Woman
- Who only women know!
-
- Women are petty and women are fretty,
- They try to hide their years;
- They steadily nag and nervously rag,
- And frequently burst into tears.
- But Woman is gracious, serene and calm,
- Above all tricks or arts,
- Her sympathy’s like a soothing balm
- To sad and sorrowing hearts.
-
- Women are very perverse and contrary,
- They will contradict you flat;
- Oh, women I’ll call the devil and all,
- There’s no denying that!
- But Woman, oh, men, is beyond our ken,
- Too angelic for mortals below;
- How little they know of Woman
- Who only women know!
-
-
- _A SYMPOSIUM OF POETS_
-
-Once upon a time a few of the greatest Poets of all ages gathered
-together for the purpose of discussing the merits of the Classic Poem:
-
- Peter, Peter, Pumpkin Eater,
- Had a wife and couldn’t keep her,
- Put her in a Pumpkin shell,
- And there he kept her very well.
-
-In many ways this historic narrative called forth admiration. One must
-admit Peter’s great strength of character, his power of quick decision,
-and immediate achievement. Some hold that his inability to retain the
-lady’s affection in the first place, argues a defect in his nature;
-but remembering the lady’s youth and beauty (implied by the spirit of
-the whole poem), we can only reiterate our appreciation of the way
-he conquered circumstances, and proved himself master of his fate,
-and captain of his soul! Truly, the Pumpkin-Eaters must have been a
-forceful race, able to defend their rights and rule their people.
-
-The Poets at their symposium unanimously felt that the style of the
-poem, though hardly to be called crude, was a little bare, and they
-took up with pleasure the somewhat arduous task of rewriting it.
-
-Mr. Ed. Poe opined that there was lack of atmosphere, and that the
-facts of the narrative called for a more impressive setting. He
-therefore offered:
-
- The skies, they were ashen and sober,
- The lady was shivering with fear;
- Her shoulders were shud’ring with fear.
- On a dark night in dismal October,
- Of his most Matrimonial Year.
- It was hard by the cornfield of Auber,
- In the musty Mud Meadows of Weir,
- Down by the dank frog-pond of Auber,
- In the ghoul-haunted cornfield of Weir.
-
- Now, his wife had a temper Satanic,
- And when Peter roamed here with his Soul,
- Through the corn with his conjugal Soul,
- He spied a huge pumpkin Titanic,
- And he popped her right in through a hole.
- Then solemnly sealed up the hole.
-
- And thus Peter Peter has kept her
- Immured in Mausoleum gloom,
- A moist, humid, damp sort of gloom.
- And though there’s no doubt he bewept her,
- She is still in her yellow hued tomb,
- Her unhallowed, Hallowe’en tomb
- And ever since Peter side-stepped her,
- He calls her his lost Lulalume,
- His Pumpkin-entombed Lulalume.
-
-This was received with acclaim, but many objected to the mortuary
-theory.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mrs. Robert Browning was sure that Peter’s love for his wife, though
-perhaps that of a primitive man, was of the true Portuguese stamp, and
-with this view composed the following pleasing Sonnet:
-
- How do I keep thee? Let me count the ways.
- I bar up every breadth and depth and height
- My hands can reach, while feeling out of sight
- For bolts that stick and hasps that will not raise.
- I keep thee from the public’s idle gaze,
- I keep thee in, by sun or candle light.
- I keep thee, rude, as women strive for Right.
- I keep thee boldly, as they seek for praise,
- I keep thee with more effort than I’d use
- To keep a dry-goods shop or big hotel.
- I keep thee with a power I seemed to lose
- With that last cook. I’ll keep thee down the well,
- Or up the chimney-place! Or if I choose,
- I shall but keep thee in a Pumpkin shell.
-
-This was of course meritorious, though somewhat suggestive of the
-cave-men, who, we have never been told, were Pumpkin Eaters.
-
-Austin Dobson’s version was really more ladylike:
-
-
- _BALLADE OF A PUMPKIN_
-
- Golden-skinned, delicate, bright,
- Wondrous of texture and hue,
- Bathed in a soft, sunny light,
- Pearled with a silvery dew.
- Fair as a flower to the view,
- Ripened by summer’s soft heat,
- Basking beneath Heaven’s blue,--
- This is the Pumpkin of Pete.
-
- Peter consumed day and night,
- Pumpkin in pie or in stew;
- Hinted to Cook that she might
- Can it for winter use, too.
- Pumpkin croquettes, not a few,
- Peter would happily eat;
- Knowing content would ensue,--
- This is the Pumpkin of Pete.
-
- Everything went along right,
- Just as all things ought to do;
- Till Peter,--unfortunate wight,--
- Married a girl that he knew,
- Each day he had to pursue,
- His runaway Bride down the street,--
- So her into prison he threw,--
- This is the Pumpkin of Pete.
-
-
- _L’envoi_
-
- Lady, a sad lot, ’tis true,
- Staying your wandering feet;
- But ’tis the best place for you,--
- This is the Pumpkin of Pete.
-
-Like the other women present Dinah Craik felt the pathos of the
-situation, and gave vent to her feelings in this tender burst of song:
-
- Could I come back to you Peter, Peter,
- From this old pumpkin that I hate;
- I would be so tender, so loving, Peter,--
- Peter, Peter, gracious and great.
-
- You were not half worthy of me, Peter,
- Not half worthy the like of I;
- Now all men beside are not in it, Peter,--
- Peter, Peter, I feel like a pie.
-
- Stretch out your hand to me, Peter, Peter,
- Let me out of this Pumpkin, do;
- Peter, my beautiful Pumpkin Eater,
- Peter, Peter, tender and true.
-
-Mr. Hogg took his own graceful view of the matter, thus:
-
- Lady of wandering,
- Blithesome, meandering,
- Sweet was thy flitting o’er moorland and lea;
- Emblem of restlessness,
- Blest be thy dwelling place,
- Oh, to abide in the Pumpkin with thee.
-
- Peter, though bland and good,
- Never thee understood,
- Or he had known how thy nature was free;
- Goddess of fickleness,
- Blest be thy dwelling place,
- Oh, to abide in the Pumpkin with thee.
-
-Mr. Kipling grasped at the occasion for a ballad in his best vein. The
-plot of the story aroused his old time enthusiasm, and he transplanted
-the pumpkin eater and his wife to the scenes of his earlier powers:
-
- In a great big Mammoth pumpkin
- Lookin’ eastward to the sea,
- There’s a wife of mine a-settin’
- And I know she’s mad at me.
- For I hear her calling, “Peter!”
- With a wild hysteric shout;
- “Come you back, you Punkin Eater,--
- Come you back and let me out!”
- For she’s in a punkin shell,
- I have locked her in her cell;
- But it really is a comfy, well-constructed punkin shell;
- And there she’ll have to dwell,
- For she didn’t treat me well,
- So I put her in the punkin and I’ve kept her very well.
-
-Algernon Swinburne was also in one of his early moods, and as a result
-he wove the story into this exquisite fabric of words:
-
-
- _IN THE PUMPKIN_
-
- Leave go my hands. Let me catch breath and see,
- What is this confine either side of me?
- Green pumpkin vines about me coil and crawl,
- Seen sidelong, like a ’possum in a tree,--
- Ah me, ah me, that pumpkins are so small!
-
- Oh, my fair love, I charge thee, let me out;
- From this gold lush encircling me about;
- I turn and only meet a pumpkin wall.
- The crescent moon shines slim,--but I am stout,--
- Ah me, ah me, that pumpkins are so small!
-
- Pumpkin seeds like cold sea blooms bring me dreams;
- Ah, Pete,--too sweet to me,--my Pete, it seems
- Love like a Pumpkin holds me in its thrall;
- And overhead a writhen shadow gleams,--
- Ah me, ah me, that pumpkins are so small!
-
-This intense poesy thrilled the heavens, and it was with a sense of
-relief to their throbbing souls that they listened to Mr. Bret Harte’s
-contribution:
-
- Which I wish to remark,
- That the lady was plain;
- And for ways that are dark
- And for tricks that are vain,
- She had predilections peculiar,
- And drove Peter nearly insane.
-
- Far off, anywhere,
- She wandered each day;
- And though Peter would swear,
- The lady would stray;
- And whenever he thought he had got her,
- She was sure to be rambling away.
-
- Said Peter, “My Wife,
- Hereafter you dwell
- For the rest of your life
- In a big Pumpkin Shell.”
- He popped her in one that was handy,
- And since then he’s kept her quite well.
-
- Which is why I remark,
- Though the lady was plain,
- For ways that are dark
- And tricks that are vain,
- A husband is very peculiar,
- And the same I am free to maintain.
-
-Oscar Wilde in a poetic fervour and a lily-like kimono, recited with
-tremulous intensity this masterpiece of his own:
-
- Oh, Peter! Pumpkin-fed and proud,
- Ah me! ah me!
- (Sweet squashes, mother!)
- Thy woe knells like a stricken cloud;
- (Ah me; ah me!
- Hurroo, Hurree!)
-
- Lo! vanisht like an anguisht wraith;
- Ah me! ah me!
- (Sweet squashes, mother!)
- Wan hope a dolorous Musing saith;
- (Ah me; ah me!
- Dum diddle dee!)
-
- Hist! dare we soar? The Pumpkin shell
- Ah me! ah me!
- (Sweet squashes, mother!)
- (Fast and forever! Sooth, ’tis well.
- (Ah me; ah me!
- Faloodle dee!)
-
-There was little to be said after this, so the meeting was closed with
-a solo by Lady Arthur Hill, using with a truly touching touch:
-
- In the pumpkin, oh, my darling,
- Think not bitterly of me;
- Though I went away in silence,
- Though I couldn’t set you free.
- For my heart was filled with longing,
- For another piece of pie;
- It was best to leave you there, dear,
- Best for you and best for I.
-
-Two of our most gentle and kindly humorists may not be quoted, because
-it would be a crime to separate their text and pictures.
-
-Peter Newell and J. G. Francis have drawn some of the most delicately
-witty pictures and have written quatrains or Limericks to accompany
-them, but picture and text must be shown together, if at all.
-
-For the same reason our cartoonists may not be touched upon.
-
-Nor can we include any writers whose work did not appear before 1900.
-
-The scope of this book is bounded by the twentieth century, and much
-as we should like to present the Columnists and the more recent
-versifiers, they must be left for a later chronicler.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
- _About a Woman’s Promise_, Unknown, 172
-
- ABRAHAM Á SANCTA CLARA,
- _Burdensome Wife, A_ (from _Hie! Fie!_), 413
- _Donkey’s Voice, The_ (from _Judas, the Arch-Rogue_), 412
- _St. Anthony’s Sermon to the Fishes_, 413
-
- ABU ISHAK,
- _Parody on Hafiz_, 154
-
- _Academy of Syllographs, The_, Count Giacomo Leopardi, 616
-
- _Acrostics_, Sir John Davies, 309
-
- ADAMS, JOHN QUINCY,
- _To Sally_, 650
-
- ADDISON, JOSEPH, 421
- _Will of a Virtuoso, The_ (from _The Tatler_), 422
-
- _Address to Bacchus, An_, Marc-Antoine Gerard, 392
-
- _Address to the Toothache_, Robert Burns, 444
-
- ADE, GEORGE,
- _Cocktail, The_ (from _The Sultan of Sulu_), 722
- _Fable of the Caddy Who Hurt His Head While Thinking, The_, 723
-
- _Adventures of Baron Münchausen_, (selections), Rudolph Erich
- Raspe, 589
-
- _Advice to a Friend on Marriage_, Eustache Deschampes, 315
-
- _Advice to an Innkeeper_, José Morell, 412
-
- _Advice to Ponticus_, Johannes Audœmus, 194
-
- ÆSOP’S _Fables_, 44
- _Lion, the Bear, the Monkey and the Fox, The_, 44
- _Partial Judge, The_, 45
-
- ÆSOP, G. WASHINGTON. _See_ Lanigan, George Thomas
-
- _Æstivation_, Oliver Wendell Holmes, 666
-
- _After a Wedding_ (from _Mrs. Partington_), Benjamin Penhallow
- Shillaber, 664
-
- _After Herrick: Song_, Oliver Herford, 747
-
- _After Swimming the Hellespont_, Lord Byron, 462
-
- _Against Abolishing Christianity_, Jonathan Swift, 415
-
- AGATHIAS,
- _Grammar and Medicine_, 76
-
- _Alarmed Skipper, The_, James Thomas Fields, 668
-
- ALCAZAR, BALTAZAR DEL, _Sleep_, 359
-
- ALDRICH, THOMAS BAILEY, 683
-
- ALEXIS,
- Epigrams, 69
-
- ALY BEN AHMED BEN MANSOUR,
- _To the Vizier Cassim Obid Allah, on the Death of One of His
- Sons_, 191
-
- American humor, 643–760
-
- AMICIS, EDMONDO DE,
- _Tooth for Tooth_, 623
-
- AMMIANUS,
- _Epitaph, An_, 77
-
- _Analects of Confucius, The_ (extracts), 156
-
- ANAXANDRIADES,
- Epigrams, 68
-
- ANSTEY, F. _See_ Guthrie, T. A.
-
- Anthologies, 311
-
- ANTIPHANES, 66
- Epigrams, 67
-
- APOLLODORUS,
- Epigrams, 85
-
- _Apology for Cider_, Olivier Basselin, 317
-
- _Apology for Herodotus_ (Noodle Stories from), Henry Stephens
- (Henri Estienn), 215
-
- APULEIUS,
- _Metamorphose, or The Golden Ass_ (extracts), 112
-
- Arabian humor, 33, 126–138, 208
-
- _Arabian Nights’ Entertainment, The_, 33, 126
- _Bakbarah’s Visit to the Harem_, 132
- _Husband and the Parrot, The_, 131
- _Ignorant Man Who Set Up for a Schoolmaster, The_, 129
- _Simpleton and the Sharper, The_, 127
- _Thief Turned Merchant and the Other Thief, The_, 128
-
- Arabian Riddle, 35
-
- Arabian tale, the universal, 208
-
- ARBUTHNOT, JOHN,
- _Dissertation on Dumplings, A_, (from _Bull and Mouth_), 427
-
- ARISTOPHANES,
- _Birds, The_ (plot), 64
- _Frogs, The_ (extracts), 55
-
- ARISTOPHON, Epigram, 69
-
- ARISTOTLE,
- definition of the Ridiculous, 3, 70
- Disappointment Theory, 4 ff.
-
- AROUET. _See_ Voltaire
-
- _Artist and Public_, Friedrich Rückert, 609
-
- “As with my hat upon my head,” Samuel Johnson, 431
-
- _As You Like It_ (extract), Shakespeare, 288
-
- _Ass and the Flute, The_, Thomas Yriarte, 626
-
- _Ass’s Testament, The_, Rutebœuf, 312
-
- _At the Sign of the Cock_, Sir Owen Seaman, 541
-
- AUDŒMUS, JOHANNES,
- _Advice to Ponticus_, 194
- _To a Friend in Distress_, 194
-
- AUTHORS UNKNOWN,
- _Convenient Partnership_, 78
- _Creation of Woman_, The (_from The Churning of the Ocean of
- Time_), 122
- _Good Wife and the Bad Husband, The_, 37
- _Lerneans, The_, 79
- _Long and Short_, 78
- _On Late Acquired Wealth_, 190
- _On the Inconstancy of Woman’s Love_, 191
- _Perplexity_, 79
- _Voice from the Grave, A_, 190
- _Wife’s Ruse, A_: A Rabbinical Tale, 32
-
- AYTOUN, WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE, 493
- _Husband’s Petition, The_, 494
- _Lay of the Lovelorn, The_, 495
-
-
- _Baby’s Début, The_, James Smith, 466
-
- BACON, FRANCIS,
- Epigrams, 291
-
- _Baharistan, The_ (extracts), Jami, 196
-
- _Bakbarah’s Visit to the Harem_ (from _The Arabian Nights’
- Entertainment_), 132
-
- BAKIN, KIOKUTEI,
- _On Clothes and Comforts_ (from _The Land of Dreams_), 161
-
- Balaam and his Ass, story of, 30
-
- _Ballad_, after Rosetti, Charles Stuart Calverly, 506
-
- _Ballad_ (from _Hans Breitmann Ballads_), Charles Godfrey Leland,
- 680
-
- Ballad literature, 365
-
- _Ballad of the Primitive Jest_, Andrew Lang, 526
-
- _Ballad of the Women of Paris_, François Villon, 320
-
- _Ballad of Women’s Doubleness_, Chaucer, 258
-
- _Ballade of an Anti-Puritan, A_, Gilbert K. Chesterton, 558
-
- _Ballade of Dead Ladies, The_, François Villon, 318
-
- _Ballade of Literary Fame_, Andrew Lang, 527
-
- _Ballade of Old Time Ladies, A_, François Villon, 319
-
- _Ballade of Suicide, A_, Gilbert K. Chesterton, 557
-
- BALZAC, HONORÉ DE,
- _Innocence_ (from _Contés Drolatiques_), 568
- _Slight Misunderstanding, A_ (from _Contés Drolatiques_), 567
-
- BANGS, JOHN KENDRICK,
- Mona Lisa, 731
-
- Bards or rhapsodists, 26
-
- BAR HEBRÆUS, GREGORY,
- _The Book of Laughable Stories_ (extracts), 204
-
- BARHAM, RICHARD HARRIS,
- _Ingoldsby Legends_, 455
- _Raising the Devil_, 456
- _“True and Original” Version, A_, 455
-
- BARRIE, JAMES MATTHEW,
- _Humourist on his Calling, A_ (from _A Window in Thrums_), 535
-
- BARROW, DR. ISAAC,
- on facetiousness, 9
-
- BASSELIN, OLIVIER,
- _Apology for Cider_, 317
- _To My Nose_, 316
-
- _Battle of the Frogs and Mice, The_,
- Homer, 51
- Version by “Singing Mouse,” 53
- Version by Samuel Wesley, 54
-
- _Battle of the Kegs, The_, Francis Hopkinson, 647
-
- BAYLY, THOMAS HAYNES,
- _Why Don’t the Men Propose?_ 472
-
- _Beating of Thersites, The_ (from _The Iliad_), Homer, 49
-
- _Beer_, Julian, 76
-
- BELLOC, HILAIRE,
- _Bison, The_, 556
- _Frog, The_, 557
- _Microbe, The_, 556
- _Python, The_, 555
-
- _Beneficence and Gratitude_, Ivan Turgenieff, 638
-
- BERANGER, PIERRE JEAN DE, 563
- _Dead Alive, The_, 565
- _Education of Young Ladies, The_, 564
-
- BERCHEURE, PIERRE, 243
-
- BERGERAC, CYRANO DE,
- _Soul of the Cabbage, The_, 390
-
- BERGSON, on playfulness of animals and man, 18
-
- BERNI, FRANCESCO,
- _Living in Bed_ (from _Roland Enamored_), 352
-
- _Between the Lines_, Martial, 107
-
- BEZA, THEODORUS, Epigram, 193
-
- BHARTRIHARI, cynical paragraphs, 195, 196
-
- BIDPAI. _See_ Pilpay
-
- _Biglow Papers_ (extract), James Russell Lowell, 674
-
- BILLINGS, JOSH. _See_ Shaw, Henry Wheeler
-
- _Bison, The_, Hilaire Belloc, 556
-
- _Bizarrures_ of Sieur Gaulard, 211
-
- _Board or Lodging_, Lucilius, 78
-
- BOCCACCIO, GIOVANNI,
- _Decameron_, 164, 343
- _Of Three Girls and Their Talk_ (a sonnet), 343
- _Stolen Pig, The_ (from _The Decameron_), 345
-
- _Bohemian Life Sketches_ (extracts), Henri Murger, 579
-
- BOILEAU-DESPREAUX, NICOLAS,
- _On Cotin_, 405
- _To Perrault_, 405
-
- BONIFACIUS, BALTHASAR,
- _Dangerous Love_, 194
-
- _Book of Laughable Stories, The_ (extracts), 204
-
- _Boston Lullaby, A_, James Jeffrey Roche, 708
-
- BRANDT, 337
-
- BROWNE, CHARLES FARRAR (Artemus Ward), 684
- _On Forts_, 685
-
- BROWNING, ROBERT,
- _Pope and the Net, The_, 502
-
- BRUYERE, JEAN DE LA,
- _Iphis_, 406
- _Thoughts_, 406
-
- BRYANT, WILLIAM CULLEN,
- _To a Mosquito_, 655
-
- BUCHANANUS, GEORGIUS,
- _On Leonora_, 193
- _To Zoilus_, 193
-
- Buddha’s _Jatakas_, 34, 214
-
- Buffoons, 26, 87
-
- _Burdensome Wife, A_ (from _Hie! Fie!_), Abraham á Sancta Clara,
- 413
-
- BURDETTE, ROBERT JONES,
- “_Soldier, Rest!_” 701
- _What Will We Do?_ 700
-
- BURGESS, FRANK GELETT,
- _Invisible Bridge, The_, 748
- _Psycholophon_, 749
- _Purple Cow, The_, 748
- _Villanelle of Things Amusing_, 748
-
- Burlesque, 25, 47
-
- BURNAND, FRANCIS C.,
- _True To Poll_, 532
-
- BURNS, ROBERT,
- _Address to the Toothache_, 444
- _Holy Willie’s Prayer_, 440
-
- BUSCH, WILHELM, 613
-
- BUTLER, SAMUEL,
- _Description of Holland_, 377
- _Poets_, 377
- _Puffing_, 377
- _Religion of Hudibras, The_ (from _Hudibras_), 374
- _Saintship versus Conscience_, (from _Hudibras_), 375
-
- BUTLER, WILLIAM ALLEN, 681
-
- BYRON, LORD,
- _After Swimming the Hellespont_, 462
- _Don Juan_ (extracts), 460
-
-
- _C. Mery Talys_ (_Hundred Merry Tales_) (extracts), 263, 265, 270
- _ff_
-
- CALVERLY, CHARLES STUART, 537
- _Ballad_, after Rossetti, 506
- _Cock and the Bull, The_, 507
- _Lovers and a Reflection_, 511
- _Ode to Tobacco_, 513
-
- CAMDEN,
- _Britannia_ (extracts), 383
- _Witticisms_, 274 _ff_
-
- _Candide_ (extract), Voltaire, 560
-
- CANNING, GEORGE, 438
- _Friend of Humanity and the Knife-Grinder, The_, 439
-
- CAREW, THOMAS, 368
-
- Caricature, 25, 27, 47, 226
-
- CARLETON, WILL,
- _Eliphalet Chapin’s Wedding_, 723
-
- CARROLL, LEWIS (Dodgson, Charles Lutwidge), 514
- _Jabberwocky_ (from _Through the Looking-Glass_), 515
- _Some Hallucinations_, 518
- _Ways and Means_ (from _Through the Looking-Glass_), 516
-
- CARRYL, CHARLES E.,
- _Walloping Window-Blind, The_, 699
-
- CARRYL, GUY WETMORE,
- _How a Girl Was Too Reckless of Grammar_, 738
-
- CARY, PHOEBE,
- _I Remember_, 676
- _Jacob_, 677
- _Reuben_, 678
- “_There’s a Bower of Bean-Vines_,” 677
-
- _Casey at the Bat_, Ernest Lawrence Thayer, 729
-
- CASTIGLIONE, BALDASSARE,
- _Il Cortegiano_ (extracts), 183
-
- CATULLUS,
- _Fixed Smile, A_, 98
- _On His Own Love_, 191
- _Roman Cockney, The_, 97
-
- CELLINI, BENVENUTO,
- _Compulsory Marriage at Sword’s Point, A_ (from his Biography),
- 356
- _Criticism of a Statue of Hercules_ (from his Biography), 358
-
- _Certain Young Lady_, A, Washington Irving, 654
-
- _Certaine Conceyts and Jeasts_ (extracts), 268
-
- CERVANTES, MIGUEL DE, 277
- _He Secures Sancho Panza as his Squire_ (from _Don Quixote_), 360
- _Of the Valorous Don Quixote’s Adventure of the Windmills_ (from
- _Don Quixote_), 363
-
- CHAMMISSO, ADELBERT VON,
- _The Pigtail_, 605
-
- CHARIVARI, 229, 230
-
- CHAUCER, 253
- _Ballad of Women’s Doubleness_, 258
- _Cock and the Fox, The_ (from _The Nun’s Priest’s Tale_), 254
- _To My Empty Purse_, 257
-
- CHEKOW, ANTON,
- Proverbs, 639
-
- CHEMNITZER, IVAN,
- _Lion’s Council of State, The_, 632
- _Philosopher, The_ (from _The Fables_), 631
-
- CHESTERFIELD, LORD, 428
- _Letters to His Son_ (extracts), 429
-
- CHESTERTON, GILBERT K.,
- _Ballade of an Anti-Puritan, A_, 558
- _Ballade of Suicide, A_, 557
-
- _Child’s Verses_ (extracts), Robert Louis Stevenson, 534
-
- _Chimmie Fadden_ (extract), Edward Waterman Townsend, 716
-
- _Chimpanzee, The_, Oliver Herford, 745
-
- Chinese humor, 156–161, 164, 214
-
- Chinese Proverbs of Confucius, 160
-
- Chinese story, 214
-
- CHOTZNER, PROFESSOR, on Hebrew satire, 30
-
- _Churning of the Ocean of Time_ (extract), Unknown, 122
-
- CHWANG TZE,
- _Pleasure of Fishes, The_ (from _Autumn Floods_), 157
-
- CLAUDIUS, MATTHIAS,
- _The Hen and the Egg_, 592
-
- CLEMENS, SAMUEL LANGHORNE (Mark Twain), 8
- _Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, The_ (extract), 681
-
- _Clever Grethel_ (from _Grimm’s Fairy Tales_), 607
-
- _Cock and the Bull, The_, Charles Stuart Calverly, 507
-
- _Cock and the Fox, The_ (from _The Nun’s Priest’s Tale_), Chaucer,
- 254
-
- _Cock and the Fox, The_, Jean de la Fontaine, 403
-
- _Cocktail, The_ (from _The Sultan of Sulu_), George Ade, 722
-
- _Code of Love, The_, 240
-
- COGIA, NASR EDDIN EFFENDI, 199
- _Pleasantries of, The_ (extracts), 213
-
- _Cold Mutton, Pudding, Pancakes_ (from _Mrs. Caudle’s Curtain
- Lectures_), Douglas Jerrold, 476
-
- COLERIDGE, on humor, 3, 249
-
- Collections, 162 _ff._, 263, 311
-
- COLMAN, GEORGE, the Younger, 438
-
- _Colubriad, The_, William Cowper, 436
-
- Comedy, 46, 48
-
- Comic, the, 9, 48
-
- Comic literature, 87
-
- _Compulsory Marriage at Sword’s Point A_, (from Biography),
- Benvenuto Cellini, 356
-
- CONFUCIUS,
- _Analects, The_ (extracts), 156
- Proverbs, 160
-
- _Constant Lover, The_, Sir John Suckling, 369
-
- _Convenient Partnership_, Unknown, 78
-
- CORBET, BISHOP, 301
- _Epigram on Beaumont’s Early Death_, 305
- _Farewell to the Fairies_, 303
- _Like to the Thundering Tone_, 302
- _Nonsense_, 302
-
- CORDUS, EURICIUS,
- _Doctor’s Appearance, The_, 192
- _To Philomusus_, 192
-
- _Cosmetic Disguise_ (from _Satires_), Juvenal, 110
-
- COUCH, ARTHUR THOMAS QUILLER-,
- _De Tea Fabula_, 546
-
- _Council Held by the Rats, The_, Jean de la Fontaine, 402
-
- _Country Parson, The_, Elizabeth Graeme Ferguson, 650
-
- _Country Squire, The_, Thomas Yriarte, 628
-
- _Court Fool and King’s Jester_, 87, 262
-
- _Court of Love, The_, 240
-
- COWPER, WILLIAM,
- _Colubriad, The_, 436
- _Faithful Picture of Ordinary Society, A_, 435
-
- COZZENS, FREDERICK SWARTOUT, 664
-
- CRANE, STEPHEN,
- Extracts, 734
-
- _Crane and the Cray-Fish, The_, Pilpay, 167
-
- CRATES,
- _Cures for Love_, 76
-
- CRATINUS Extracts, 65
-
- _Creation of Woman, The_ (from _The Churning of the Ocean of
- Time_), Unknown, 122
-
- _Crede Experto_, Martial, 109
-
- _Credo_ (German Student Song), 614
-
- _Criticism of a Statue of Hercules_ (from Biography), Benvenuto
- Cellini, 358
-
- _Crow and the Fox, The_, Jean de la Fontaine, 404
-
- _Cures for Love_, Crates, 76
-
- CURTIS, GEORGE WILLIAM, 678
-
- Cynical paragraphs, Bhartrihari, 195
-
-
- _Dangerous Love_, Balthasar Bonifacius, 194
-
- DANTE, 231
-
- _Darkness_, Lucian, 76
-
- DAUDET, ALPHONSE,
- _William Tell_ (from _Tartarin in the Alps_), 583
-
- DAVIES, SIR JOHN,
- _Acrostics_, 309
- _Married State, The_, 310
-
- DAVISON, FRANCIS, 311
-
- _De Tea Fabula_, Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch, 546
-
- _Dead Alive, The_, Pierre Jean de Beranger, 565
-
- DEANE, ANTHONY C.,
- _Here Is the Tale_, 543
-
- _Decameron, The_, 164; (extract), 343, 345, Giovanni Boccaccio
-
- _Decorated Bow, The_ (from _Fables_), Lessing, 588
-
- DEFOE, DANIEL,
- _Friday’s Conflict with the Bear_ (from _Robinson Crusoe_), 383
-
- DEKKER, THOMAS,
- _Horace Concocting an Ode_, 300
- _Obedient Husbands_ (from _The Bachelor’s Banquet_), 298
-
- DE QUINCEY, THOMAS,
- _Murder as One of the Fine Arts_, 458
-
- DERBY, GEORGE HORATIO (John Phoenix),
- _Tushmaker’s Tooth-Puller_, 678
-
- Derision theory of humor, 5, 6, 9, 12
-
- DESANGIERS, MARC ANTOINE,
- _Eternal Yawner, The_, 562
-
- DESCHAMPES, EUSTACHE,
- _Advice to a Friend on Marriage_, 315
-
- _Description of Holland_, Samuel Butler, 377
-
- _Desolation_, Thomas L. Masson, 733
-
- _Dialogue between Shallow and Silence_ (from _Henry IV, Part II_),
- Shakespeare, 279
-
- _Diary of Samuel Pepys_ (extracts), 378
-
- _Diatribe Against Water_, Francesca Redi, 410
-
- DICKENS, CHARLES, 14
- _Mrs. Gamp’s Apartment_ (from _Martin Chuzzlewit_), 491
-
- _Dinkey-Bird, The_, Eugene Field, 710
-
- Dionysiac festivals, 46, 55
-
- DIPHILUS, Epigrams, 84
-
- Disappointment Theory of humor, 4 _ff._
-
- _Discomfort Better Than Drowning_ (from _The Rose Garden_
- [_Gulistan_]), Sadi, 142
-
- _Dissertation on Dumplings, A_ (from _Bull and Mouth_), John
- Arbuthnot, 427
-
- _Dissertation on Puns_, Theodore Hook, 453
-
- _Diving for an Egg_, Do-Pyazah, 156
-
- DOBSON, HENRY AUSTIN, (Austin Dobson),
- _On a Fan_, 524
- _Rondeau, The_, 525
-
- _Doctor, The_ (extract), Robert Southey, 450
-
- _Doctor’s Appearance, The_, Euricius Cordus, 192
-
- DODGSON, CHARLES LUTWIDGE. _See_ Carroll, Lewis
-
- _Don Juan_ (extracts), Lord Byron, 460
-
- _Don Quixote_ (extracts), Miguel de Cervantes, 363
-
- _Donkey’s Voice, The_ (from _Judas, the Arch-Rogue_), Abraham á
- Sancta Clara, 412
-
- DONNE, JOHN,
- _Will, The_, 296
- _See_ Dunne, Finley Peter
-
- DOOLEY, MR., 720
-
- DO-PYAZAH, Definitions, 154
- _Diving for an Egg_, 156
-
- DOSTOEVSKY, FEDOR, 634
- _Karlchen, the Crocodile_ (extract), 635
-
- DOWNING, MAJOR JACK. _See_ Smith, Seba
-
- DRAKE, JOSEPH RODMAN, and HALLECK, FITZ-GREENE,
- _Ode to Fortune_, 657
-
- _Dream Wife, The_, Kajetan Wengierski, 639
-
- DRUMMOND, WILLIAM H., M. D.,
- _Wreck of the “Julie Plante,” The_, 726
-
- _Drunkard’s Fancy, The_, Wilhelm Müller, 606
-
- DRYDEN, JOHN,
- _Milton Compared with Homer and Virgil_, 382
- _On Shadwell_, 380
- _On the Duke of Buckingham_, 381
-
- DUMAS, ALEXANDER, the Elder,
- _Touching the Olfactory Organ_, 574
-
- DUNNE, FINLEY PETER (Mr. Dooley),
- _On Expert Testimony_, 720
-
-
- EASTMAN, MAX, definition of the Disappointment Theory, 7
- on sense of humor, 13
-
- _Education of Young Ladies, The_, Pierre Jean de Béranger, 563
-
- _Eggs, The_, Thomas Yriarte, 627
-
- Egyptian humor, 27–29
-
- _Elegy_, Arthur Guiterman, 743
-
- _Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog, An_, Oliver Goldsmith, 432
-
- _Elegy on the Glory of Her Sex, Mrs. Mary Blaize, An_, Oliver
- Goldsmith, 433
-
- _Eliphalet Chapin’s Wedding_, Will Carleton, 723
-
- EMERSON, RALPH WALDO,
- _Mountain and the Squirrel, The_, 660
-
- _Enforced Greatness_, San Shroe Bu, 219
-
- English humor, 253–311, 365–389, 415–559
-
- _Envy_, Lucilius, 77
-
- _Epigram on Mrs. Tofts_, Alexander Pope, 421
-
- Epigrams,
- English, 291, 295, 296, 377, 382, 421, 478, 479
- French, 335–337
- German, 588–589
- Greek, 67–70, 76–79, 83–85, 189, 190
- Haytian, 641, 642
- Hindu, 195, 196
- Mediæval, 189–207
- Persian, 142, 196–199
- Roman, 107–110, 333
- Turkish, 199–204
-
- _Epitaph, An_, Ammianus, 77
-
- _Epitaph, An_, Matthew Prior, 387
-
- _Epitaph for an Old University Carrier_, Milton, 373
-
- ERASMUS, DESIDERIUS, 178
- _Praise of Folly, The_ (extracts), 337
-
- _Eternal Yawner, The_, Marc Antoine Desangier, 562
-
- EUBULUS, Epigrams, 69
-
- EULENSPIEGEL, TYLL (Owleglas or Howleglas),
- _Golden Horsehoes, The_ (from _Eulenspiegel’s Pranks_), 339
- _Paying with the Sound of a Penny_ (from _Eulenspiegel’s
- Pranks_), 340
-
- _Evening Reception, An_ (from _Bohemian Life Sketches_), Henri
- Murger, 579
-
- _Every Man in His Humor_ (extract), Ben Jonson, 293
-
- _Eve’s Daughter_, Edward Rowland Sill, 698
-
-
- _Fable of the Caddy Who Hurt His Head While Thinking, The_, George
- Ade, 723
-
- Fables,
- origin of, 27–28
- use of term, 162, 235
-
- _Fables of Pilpay or Bidpai_ (selections), 164
-
- _Fabliaux_, 164, 235, 236
-
- _Faithful Picture of Ordinary Society, A_, William Cowper, 435
-
- _Faithless Nelly Gray_, Thomas Hood, 462
-
- _False Charms_, Lucilius, 78
-
- _Farewell to Chloris_, Paul Scarron, 398
-
- _Farewell to the Fairies_, Bishop Corbet, 303
-
- FAUVEL, 228
-
- FERGUSON, ELIZABETH GRAEME,
- _Country Parson, The_, 650
-
- FIELD, EUGENE,
- _Dinkey-Bird, The_, 710
- _Good James and Naughty Reginald_ (from _The Tribune Primer_),
- 713
- _Little Peach, The_, 712
-
- FIELDS, JAMES THOMAS,
- _Alarmed Skipper, The_, 668
-
- FILIPPO, RUSTICO DI, 349
- _Making of Master Messerin, The_, 350
-
- _Fine Lady, The_, Simonides, 65
-
- FIRDAUSI,
- _On Sultan Mahmoud_, 142
-
- _Fixed Smile, A_, Catullus, 98
-
- FLETCHER, JOHN,
- _Laughing Song_, 300
-
- FONTAINE, JEAN DE LA,
- _Cock and the Fox, The_, 403
- _Council Held by the Rats, The_, 402
- _Crow and the Fox, The_, 404
-
- FOSS, SAM WALTER, 717
- _Philosopher, A_, 718
-
- FRANCIS, J. G., 760
-
- FRANKLIN, BENJAMIN,
- “He Paid Too Much for His Whistle” (from Letter to a Friend), 643
- _Paper_, 645
-
- French humor, 211–213, 235–243, 312–337, 390–409, 560–585
-
- _Friday’s Conflict With the Bear_ (from _Robinson Crusoe_), Daniel
- Defoe, 383
-
- _Friend of Humanity and the Knife-Grinder, The_, George Canning,
- 439
-
- _Frog, The_, Hilaire Belloc, 557
-
- _Frogs, The_ (extracts), Aristophanes, 55
-
- _Furniture of a Woman’s Mind, The_, Jonathan Swift, 416
-
-
- _Gammer Gurton’s Needle_ (extract), John Still, 308
-
- _Garden Hose, The_, Edgar Wilson Nye, 714
-
- _Gargantua and Pantagruel_, 323
- (extracts), François Rabelais, 329
-
- Gargoyles, 48
-
- GAULARD, SIEUR,
- _Bizarrures_, 211
- _Contes Facetieux, Les_ (extract), 74
-
- GAUTIER, THÉOPHILE,
- _Lap Dog, The_ (_Fanfreluche_), 577
-
- GELLERT, CHRISTIAN F.,
- _Patient Cured, The_, 586
-
- _Gentle Alice Brown_, William Schwenck Gilbert, 529
-
- _Gentleman Cit, The_ (extract), Molière, 396
-
- GERARD, MARC-ANTOINE,
- _Address to Bacchus, An_, 392
-
- German humor, 337–344, 412–415, 586–615
-
- German Student Songs,
- _Credo_, 614
- _Pope and Sultan_, 613
-
- _Gesta Romanorum_,
- authorship and sources, 163, 243
- _Of Sloth_, 243
- _Of the Deceits of the Devil_, 246
- _Of the Good, Who Alone Will Enter the Kingdom of Heaven_, 244
- _Of the Incarnation of Our Lord_, 245
- _Of Vigilance in Our Calling_, 247
-
- GHISLANZONI, ANTONIO,
- _On Musical Instruments_, 619
-
- GILBERT, WILLIAM SCHWENK,
- _Gentle Alice Brown_, 529
- “Lady from the provinces, The,” 210
- _Mighty Must, The_, 528
- _To the Terrestrial Globe_, 529
-
- _Giles and Joan_, Ben Jonson, 296
-
- Gleemen, 232
-
- GOETHE, JOHANN WOLFGANG,
- _Reynard the Fox_ (extract), 596
-
- _Gold_, Oliver Herford, 747
-
- _Golden Ass, The_ (extracts), Apuleius, 112
-
- _Golden Horseshoes, The_ (from _Eulenspiegel’s Pranks_), Tyll
- Eulenspiegel, 339
-
- GOLDONI, CARLO, 616
-
- GOLDSMITH, OLIVER, 431
- _Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog, An_, 432
- _Elegy on the Glory of Her Sex, Mrs. Mary Blaize, An_, 433
- _Parson Gray_, 434
-
- _Good Flea and the Wicked King, The_ (from _Tales of a
- Grandfather_), Victor Marie Hugo, 580
-
- _Good James and Naughty Reginald_ (from _The Tribune Primer_),
- Eugene Field, 713
-
- _Good Wife and the Bad Husband, The_, 37
-
- _Goose, The_, Alfred Tennyson, 500
-
- Gothamites, 208, 214, 216, 341
-
- GOZZI, CARLO, 616
-
- _Grammar and Medicine_, Agathias, 76
-
- _Great Contention, The_, Nicarchus, 190
-
- _Greedy and Ambitious Cat, The_, Pilpay, 164
-
- _Greek Anthology_, 75
- Epigrams, 76 _ff._
-
- Greek Comedy, 46, 48, 55, 66
-
- Greek humor, 43–85, 178–181, 189–190
-
- GREENE, ALBERT GORTON,
- _Old Grimes_, 658
-
- GRIBOYEDOFF, ALEXANDER, 631
-
- GRIMM, JAKOB and WILHELM,
- _Clever Grethel_ (from _Fairy Tales_), 607
-
- GUITERMAN, ARTHUR,
- _Elegy_, 743
- _Mavrone_, 742
-
- GUTHRIE, T. A. (F. Anstey),
- _Select Passages from a Coming Poet_, 554
-
-
- HALE, EDWARD EVERETT, 678
-
- HALLECK, FITZ-GREENE, and DRAKE, JOSEPH RODMAN,
- _Ode to Fortune_, 657
-
- HALPINE, CHARLES GRAHAM, 681
-
- _Hamlet_ (extract), Shakespeare, 286
-
- _Hans Breitmann Ballads_ (selection), Charles Godfrey Leland, 680
-
- HARINGTON, SIR JOHN,
- _Of a Certain Man_, 293
- _Of a Precise Tailor_, 292
-
- HARRIS, JOEL CHANDLER,
- _Sad End of Brer Wolf_, _The_ (from _Uncle Remus, His Songs and
- His Sayings_), 708
-
- HARTE, FRANCIS BRET,
- _Society upon the Stanislaus, The_, 686
- _To the Pliocene Skull_, 688
-
- _Hatefulness of Old Husbands_ (from _The Rose Garden_
- [_Gulistan_]), Sadi, 144
-
- HAY, JOHN,
- _Little Breeches_ (from _Pike County Ballads_), 690
-
- Haytian Epigrams, 641
-
- HAZLITT, WILLIAM, 18, 277
- on the laughable, 7
- on distinction between wit and humor, 15, 16, 17
- on Falstaff, 278
-
- “He Paid Too Much for His Whistle” (from Letter to a Friend),
- Benjamin Franklin, 643
-
- _He Secures Sancho Panza as His Squire_ (from _Don Quixote_),
- Miguel de Cervantes, 360
-
- Hebrew humor, 30–33, 124–126
-
- _Height of the Ridiculous, The_, Oliver Wendell Holmes, 665
-
- HEINE, HEINRICH, 610
- Extracts, 612
- _Town of Göttingen, The_, 611
-
- _Hen, A_ (extract), Henry Wheeler Shaw, 673
-
- _Hen, The_, Oliver Herford, 745
-
- _Hen and the Egg, The_, Matthias Claudius, 592
-
- HENLEY, WILLIAM ERNEST,
- _Villanelle_, 533
-
- _Henry IV, Part I_ (extract), Shakespeare, 281
-
- _Henry IV, Part II_ (extract), Shakespeare, 279
-
- _Heptameron, The_, 164, 321
-
- HERBERT, GEORGE, 365
-
- _Here Is the Tale_, Anthony C. Deane, 543
-
- HERFORD, OLIVER,
- _Chimpanzee, The_, 745
- _Gold_, 747
- _Hen, The_, 745
- _Mark Twain: A Pipe Dream_, 746
- _Phyllis Lee_, 744
- _Prodigal Egg, The_, 747
- _Some Geese_, 744
- _Song--After Herrick_, 747
-
- HERRICK, ROBERT,
- _Kiss, The--A Dialogue_, 367
- _Ternary of Littles, upon a Pipkin of Jelly Sent to a Lady, A_,
- 368
-
- HIEROCLES,
- Jests, 72, 175
-
- _Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell, The_, Charles Algernon Swinburne,
- 522
-
- Hindu humor, 36–39, 121–124, 164–175, 195–196, 214–215, 219–225
-
- HOBBES, THOMAS, 365
- _Laughter_ (from _Treatise on Human Nature_), 11, 12, 366
-
- HOFFMAN, HEINRICH, 613
-
- HOLLEY, MARIETTA,
- _My Opinions and Betsy Bobbet’s_ (extract), 702
-
- HOLMES, OLIVER WENDELL, 18
- _Æstivation_, 666
- _Height of the Ridiculous, The_, 665
-
- _Holy Willie’s Prayer_, Robert Burns, 440
-
- HOMER,
- identity, 43, 48
- _Battle of the Frogs and Mice, The_, 51, 53
- _Beating of Thersites, The_ (from _The Iliad_), 49
-
- Homer’s Riddle, 35
-
- HOOD, THOMAS,
- _Faithless Nelly Gray_, 462
- _No!_, 465
-
- HOOK, THEODORE,
- _Dissertation on Puns_, 453
-
- HOPKINSON, FRANCIS,
- _Battle of the Kegs, The_, 647
-
- HORACE,
- _Obtrusive Company on the Sacred Way_ (from _Satires_), 98
-
- _Horace Concocting an Ode_, Thomas Dekker, 300
-
- _Horse Tied to a Steeple, A_ (from _Adventures of Baron
- Münchausen_), Rudolph Erich Raspe, 589
-
- _How a Girl Was Too Reckless of Grammar_, Guy Wetmore Carryl, 738
-
- _How Jacke by Sophistry Would Make of Two Eggs Three_ (from _The
- Jests of Scogin_), 265
-
- _How Madde Coomes, When His Wife Was Drowned, Sought Her against
- the Streame_ (from _Mother Bunches Merriments_), 267
-
- _How Maister Hobson Said He Was Not at Home_ (from _The Pleasant
- Conceits of Old Hobson_, Richard Johnson), 267
-
- _How Scogin Sold Powder to Kill Fleas_ (from _The Jests of
- Scogin_), 265
-
- _How Skelton Came Late Home to Oxford from Abington_ (from
- _Certayne Merye Tales_), John Skelton, 264
-
- _How the Welshman Dyd Desyre Skelton to Ayde Him in Hys Sute to the
- Kynge for a Patent to Sell Drynke_, John Skelton, 263
-
- _Hudibras_ (extracts), Samuel Butler, 375
-
- HUGO, VICTOR MARIE,
- _The Good Flea and the Wicked King_ (from _Tales of a
- Grandfather_), 580
-
- _Human Nature, Treatise on_ (extracts), Thomas Hobbes, 11, 12, 366
-
- Humor,
- use of term, 3
- theories and definitions, 4 _ff._, 23
- Hazlitt on, 7, 15 _ff._
- Max Eastman on, 7, 13
- Dr. Isaac Barrows on, 9–11
- Thomas Hobbes on, 11
- George Meredith on, 12
- sense of humor, 13–15
- Brander Matthews on, 13
- distinction between wit and, 15–17
- playfulness of animals, 18 _ff._
- chronological periods, 20, 43
- origin of, 23, 45, 46
- educational use, 249
- influx into literature, 277
-
- _Humorist on His Calling, A_ (from _A Window in Thrums_), James
- Matthew Barrie, 535
-
- _Hunting with a King_ (from _Sakuntala_), Kalidasa, 121
-
- _Husband and the Parrot, The_ (from _The Arabian Nights’
- Entertainment_), 131
-
- _Husband’s Petition, The_, William Edmonstoune Aytoun, 494
-
- _Hymn of the Frogs, The_ (from the Rig Vedas), 34
-
-
- “I am a saint of good repute,” Monk of Montaudon, 238
-
- _Idiot’s Delight, The_, Carolyn Wells, 749
-
- _Idler, The_ (extract), Samuel Johnson, 430
-
- _If I Should Die To-Night_, Ben King, 728
-
- _Ignorant Man Who Set Up for a Schoolmaster, The_ (from _The
- Arabian Nights’ Entertainment_), 129
-
- _Il Cortegiano_ (extracts), Castiglione, 183
-
- _Iliad_ (extract), Homer, 49
-
- _Iliad in a Nutshell, The_, 51
-
- _Ingenious Cook, An_ (from _Trimalchio’s Banquet_), Petronius, 102
-
- _Ingoldsby Legends_, Richard Harris Barham, 455
-
- _Inheritance of a Library, The_ (from _Novellino_), Massuchio di
- Salerno, 350
-
- _I Remember_, Phœbe Cary, 676
-
- _Innocence_ (from _Contes Drolatiques_), Honoré de Balzac, 568
-
- Irish Bulls, prototypes of, 211
-
- _Invalid and His Deaf Visitor, The_ (from _Stories in Rime_
- [_Masnavi_]), Jalal uddin Rumi, 152
-
- _Invisible Bridge, The_, Frank Gelett Burgess, 748
-
- _Iphis_, Jean de la Bruyère, 406
-
- _Irishman, The_, William Maginn, 471
-
- IRVING, WASHINGTON,
- _Certain Young Lady, A_, 654
-
- Italian humor, 182–184, 218, 344–359, 409–411, 616–625
-
-
- _Jabberwocky_ (from _Through the Looking-Glass_), Lewis Carroll,
- 515
-
- _Jack and Jill_ (a symposium), Charles Battell Loomis, 735
-
- _Jacob_, Phœbe Cary, 677
-
- JALAL UDDIN RUMI,
- _Invalid and His Deaf Visitor, The_ (from _Stories in Rime_
- [_Masnavi_]), 152
- _Old Age--Dialogue_, 153
- _Sick Schoolmaster, The_ (from _Stories in Rime_), 149
-
- JAMI,
- _The Baharistan_ (extracts), 196
-
- Japanese humor, 161
-
- _Játakas_, or Buddhist stories, 34, 214
-
- JERROLD, DOUGLAS, 475
- _Cold Mutton, Pudding, Pancakes_ (from _Mrs. Caudle’s Curtain
- Lectures_), 476
- Witticisms, 478
-
- Jestbooks (extracts),
- English, 262 _ff._, 274 _ff._
- French, 335–337
-
- _Jester Condemned to Death, The_, Horace Smith, 469
-
- Jests
- Greek, 178–181
- Mediæval German, 188–189
- Old jokes, 72–75
- Roman, 181–182
-
- _Jests of Hierocles_, 72, 175, 176–178
-
- _Jests of Scogin, The_, 263, (extracts), 265
-
- _Jobsiad, The_ (extract), Carl Arnold Kortum, 599
-
- JOHANNES SECUNDUS,
- _On Charinus, the Husband of an Ugly Wife_, 193
-
- JOHNSON, RICHARD,
- _The Pleasant Conceits of Old Hobson_ (extract), 267
-
- JOHNSON, SAMUEL,
- “As with my hat upon my head,” 431
- _On Lying News-Writers_ (from _The Idler_), 430
-
- Jokes,
- popular idea of, 4
- what makes, 5
- practical, 6
- and bards, 26
-
- _Jolly Good Ale and Old_ (from _Gammer Gurton’s Needle_), John
- Still, 308
-
- _Jongleurs_ of Middle Ages, 233
-
- JONSON, BEN,
- Epigrams, 295
- _Every Man in His Humor_ (extract), 293
- _Giles and Joan_, 296
- _To the Ghost of Martial_, 295
- _Vintner, A_, 295
- _Volpone_ (extract), 294
-
- Jotham, story of, 31
-
- _Judas, the Arch-Rogue_ (extract), Abraham á Sancta Clara, 412
-
- Jugglers, 233
-
- JULIAN,
- _Beer_, 76
-
- _Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, The_ (extract), Samuel Langhorne
- Clemens, 681
-
- JUVENAL,
- _Cosmetic Disguise_ (from _Satires_), 110
- _On Domineering Wives_ (from _Satires_), 111
-
-
- KALIDASA,
- _Hunting with a King_ (from _Sakuntala_), 121
-
- KANT,
- definition of laughter, 13
-
- _Karlchen, the Crocodile_ (extract), Fedor Dostoevsky, 635
-
- _Kathá Manjari_ (extract), 75
-
- _Kathá Sarit Ságara_, Somadeva, 214
-
- KERR, ORPHEUS C. _See_ Newell, Robert Henry
-
- KHOJA NASRU’D DÍN. _See_ Cogia Nasr Eddin Effendi
-
- _Kind-Hearted She-Elephant, The_, George Thomas Lanigan, 706
-
- KING, BEN,
- _If I Should Die To-Night_, 728
- _Pessimist, The_, 727
-
- KINGSLEY, CHARLES,
- _Professor’s Malady, The_ (from _Water Babies_), 498
-
- _Kiss, The_, Thomas L. Masson, 732
-
- _Kiss, The--A Dialogue_, Robert Herrick, 367
-
- KOCK, CHARLES PAUL DE,
- _Theophile’s Mother-in-Law_ (from _A Much Worried Gentleman_),
- 572
-
- KORTUM, CARL ARNOLD,
- _The Jobsiad_ (extract), 599
-
- Krishna,
- caricatures of, 36
-
- KRYLOFF (V), IVAN, 631
- _Musicians, The_, 634
- _Swan, the Pike and the Crab, The_, 633
-
-
- _Lady from the Provinces, The_, W. S. Gilbert, 210
-
- “La Gallisse, now I wish to touch,” Gilles Ménage, 407
-
- _L’Allegro_, Milton, 371
-
- LAMB, CHARLES (extracts), 449
-
- LANDON, MELVILLE D., 698
-
- LANG, ANDREW,
- _Ballad of the Primitive Jest_, 526
- _Ballade of Literary Fame_, 527
-
- LANIGAN, GEORGE THOMAS (G. Washington Æsop), 705
- _Kind-Hearted She-Elephant, The_, 706
- _Ostrich and the Hen, The_, 706
- _Threnody, A_, 704
-
- _Lanty Leary_, Samuel Lover, 482
-
- _Lap Dog, The_, Théophile Gautier, 577
-
- LA ROCHEFOUCAULD, FRANÇOIS DE,
- _Maxims_, 399
-
- Laughable, the, ideas on, 4, 7
-
- _Laughing Song_, John Fletcher, 300
-
- Laughter,
- what makes us laugh, 5
- Hobbes’s definition, 11, 12, 366
- Kant’s definition, 13
-
- _Lay of the Lovelorn, The_, William Edmonstoune Aytoun, 495
-
- LEAR, EDWARD,
- Limericks, 519
- _Two Old Bachelors, The_, 520
-
- _Learned Women, The_ (extract), Molière, 394
-
- LELAND, CHARLES GODFREY,
- _Ballad_ (from _Hans Breitmann Ballads_), 680
-
- LEOPARDI, GIACOMO,
- _Academy of Syllographs, The_, 616
-
- _Lerneans, The_, Unknown, 79
-
- LE SAGE, ALAN RENÉ, 406
-
- LESSING, GOTTHOLD EPHRAIM,
- _Decorated Bow, The_ (from _Fables_), 588
- Epigrams, 588
- _Fables_ (extracts), 588
- _Raven, The_ (from _Fables_), 588
-
- _Let the Toast Pass_ (from _The School for Scandal_), Richard
- Brinsley Sheridan, 437
-
- _Letters to His Son_ (extracts), Lord Chesterfield, 429
-
- LEVER, CHARLES, 481
- _Widow Malone_, 483
-
- _Lie, The_, Sir Walter Raleigh, 305
-
- _Like to the Thundering Tone_, Bishop Corbet, 302
-
- Limericks, Edward Lear, 519
-
- _Lines by a Person of Quality_, Alexander Pope, 419
-
- _Lines on Milton_, Cowper, 382
-
- _Lion, the Bear, the Monkey and the Fox, The_ (from _Æsop’s
- Fables_), 44
-
- _Lions Council of State, The_, Ivan Chemnitzer, 632
-
- _Little Billee_, William Makepeace Thackeray, 487
-
- _Little Breeches_ (from _Pike County Ballads_), John Hay, 690
-
- _Little Peach, The_, Eugene Field, 712
-
- _Living in Bed_ (from _Roland Enamored_), Francesco Berni, 352
-
- LOCKE, DAVID ROSS (Petroleum V. Nasby), 684
-
- LOCKER-LAMPSON, FREDERICK, 484, 503
- _My Mistress’s Boots_, 503
- _On a Sense of Humor_, 505
- _Some Ladies_, 505
- _Terrible Infant, A_, 505
-
- _Long and Short_, Unknown, 78
-
- LONGFELLOW, HENRY WADSWORTH, 666
- _Mr. Finney’s Turnip_, 667
- _There Was a Little Girl_, 667
-
- LOOMIS, CHARLES BATTELL,
- _Jack and Jill_ (a symposium), 735
-
- _Lord Erskine’s Simile_, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, 438
-
- _Lost Hatchet, The_ (from _Gargantua and Pantagruel_), François
- Rabelais, 329
-
- _Love in a Cottage_, Nathaniel Parker Willis, 661
-
- _Love Lesson, A_, Clement Marot, 321
-
- LOVELACE, RICHARD, 368
- _Song_, 369
-
- LOVER, SAMUEL,
- _Lanty Leary_, 482
- _Rory O’More_, 481
-
- _Lovers and a Reflection_, Charles Stuart Calverly, 511
-
- _Love’s Labour’s Lost_ (extract), Shakespeare, 15
-
- LOWELL, JAMES RUSSELL,
- _What Mr. Robinson Thinks_ (from _Biglow Papers_), 674
-
- LUCIAN,
- _Darkness_, 76
- _Odysseus’s Trick on Polyphemus_ (from _Dialogues of the Sea
- Gods_), 80
- _Question of Precedence, A_ (from _Dialogues of the Gods_), 79
-
- LUCILIUS,
- _Board or Lodging_, 78
- _Envy_, 77
- _False Charms_, 78
- _Professor with a Small Class, A_, 77
- _Schoolmaster with a Gay Wife, A_, 78
-
- LUCILLIUS,
- _A Miser’s Dream_, 190
-
- _Lying_, Thomas Moore, 479
-
-
- _Madame d’Albret’s Laugh_, Clement Marot, 321
-
- MAGINN, WILLIAM,
- _Irishman, The_, 471
-
- _Maid, the Monkey, and the Mendicant, The_, Unknown, 170
-
- _Making of Master Messerin, The_, Rustico di Filippo, 350
-
- _Man and Superman_, Martial, 109
-
- _Mark Twain: A Pipe Dream_, Oliver Herford, 746
-
- MAROT, CLEMENT,
- _Love Lesson, A_, 321
- _Madame d’Albret’s Laugh_, 321
-
- _Married Life_, Stephanus Paschasius, 194
-
- _Married State, The_, Sir John Davies, 310
-
- MARRYAT, FREDERICK (Captain Marryat),
- _Nautical Terms_ (from _Peter Simple_), 474
-
- MARSTON, JOHN,
- _Scholar and His Dog, The_, 310
-
- MARTIAL, Father of Epigrams, 106, 333
- _Between the Lines_, 107
- _Crede Experto_, 109
- _Man and Superman_, 109
- _Mere Suggestion, A_, 108
- _Millions in It_, 109
- _Mute Miltons_, 108
- _Numbers Sweet_, 109
- _Play’s the Thing_, 107
- _Rounded with a Sleep_, 108
- _To Aulus_, 107
- _To Catullus_, 107
- _To Linus_, 109
- _To Mamercus_, 110
- _To Postumus_, 107
- _To Sabidins_, 107
- _Total Abstainer, A_, 108
- _Vendetta_, 108
- _What Might Have Been_, 108
-
- MARTIN, THEODORE, 493
-
- MARVEL, IK. _See_ Mitchell, Donald G.
-
- Masks, 87
-
- MASSON, THOMAS L.,
- _Desolation_, 733
- _Kiss, The_, 732
-
- MATTHEWS BRANDER, on sense of humor, 13
-
- _Mavrone_, Arthur Guiterman, 742
-
- Maxims of François de La Rochefoucauld, 399
-
- _Meeting, The_, “Singing Mouse,” 53
-
- MELCHIOR DE SANTA CRUZ,
- Spanish Apothegms, 184–189
-
- MÉNAGE, GILLES,
- “La Galisse, now I wish to touch,” 407
-
- MENANDER, fragments, 82
-
- MENDOZA, HURTADO DE, 359
-
- _Merchant and His Friend, The_, Pilpay, 169
-
- _Merchant of Venice, The_ (extract), Shakespeare, 286
-
- _Merchaunte of London That Dyd Put Nobles in His Mouthe in Hys
- Dethe Bedde_ (from _C. Mery Talys_), 270
-
- _Mere Suggestion, A_, Martial, 108
-
- MEREDITH, GEORGE, on modification of Derision Theory, 12
-
- _Merie Tayles of Skelton_ (extracts), 263
-
- _Mery Tales of the Mad Men of Gotham_ (extracts), 266
-
- _Metamorphoses, or The Golden Ass_ (extracts), Apuleius, 112
-
- _Microbe, The_, Hilaire Belloc, 556
-
- _Mighty Must, The_, William Schwenck Gilbert, 528
-
- _Military Swagger_ (from _The Braggart Captain_), Plautus, 88
-
- _Milkmaid and the Banker, The_, Horace Smith, 468
-
- _Millennium, The_, James Kenneth Stephen, 549
-
- MILLER, JOAQUIN, 690
- _That Gentle Man from Boston Town_, 692
-
- _Millions in It_, Martial, 109
-
- MILTON,
- _Epitaph for an Old University Carrier_, 373
- _L’Allegro_ (extract), 371
-
- _Milton Compared with Homer and Virgil_, William Cowper, 382
-
- _Milton Compared with Homer and Virgil_, John Dryden, 382
-
- _Milton Compared with Homer and Virgil_, Selvaggi, 382
-
- _Mimi Pinson_ (extract), Louis Charles Alfred de Musset, 569
-
- Mimicry, 23, 28
-
- _Miniver Cheevy_, Edwin Arlington Robinson, 740
-
- Minstrels, 233, 234
-
- _Miser and the Mouse, The_, Plato, 190
-
- _Misers Dream, A_, Lucillius, 190
-
- _Mrs. Caudle’s Curtain Lectures_, Douglas Jerrold, 476
-
- _Mrs. Gamp’s Apartment_ (from _Martin Chuzzlewit_), Charles
- Dickens, 491
-
- _Mrs. Partington_ (extract), Benjamin Penhallow Shillaber, 664
-
- _Mrs. Partington_ (from Speech), Sydney Smith, 448
-
- _Mr. Finney’s Turnip_, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, 667
-
- MITCHELL, DONALD G. (Ik Marvel), 678
-
- MOLIÈRE, 277
- _Gentleman Cit, The_ (extract), 396
- _Learned Women, The_ (extract), 394
-
- _Mona Lisa_, John Kendrick Bangs, 731
-
- _Money_, Jehan du Pontalais, 322
-
- MONTAUDON, MONK OF, 238
- “I am a saint of good repute,” 239
-
- Montfaucon’s alphabet of men and animals, 227
-
- MOORE, CLEMENT C.,
- _Visit from St. Nicholas, A_, 652
-
- MOORE, THOMAS,
- _Lying_, 479
- _Nonsense_, 479
- _Of All the Men_, 480
- _On Taking a Wife_, 481
- _Upon Being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party_, 481
- _What’s My Thought Like?_ 480
-
- _Moral Man, A_, Nikolai Nekrasov, 637
-
- MORE, THOMAS, 277
-
- MORELL, JOSÉ, 411
- _Advice to an Innkeeper_, 412
- _To a Poet_, 412
-
- _Mother Bunches Merriments_ (extract), 267
-
- _Mountain and the Squirrel, The_, Ralph Waldo Emerson, 660
-
- _Much Ado About Nothing_ (extract), Shakespeare, 283
-
- _Much Married Gentleman, A_ (extract), Charles Paul de Kock, 572
-
- MÜLLER, WILHELM,
- _The Drunkard’s Fancy_, 606
-
- MUNKITTRICK, RICHARD KENDALL,
- _What’s in a Name?_, 715
-
- _Murder as One of the Fine Arts_, Thomas De Quincey, 458
-
- MURGER, HENRI,
- _An Evening Reception_ (from _Bohemian Life Sketches_), 579
-
- _Musicians, The_, Ivan Kryloff, 634
-
- MUSSET, LOUIS CHARLES ALFRED DE,
- _The Supper Party of the Three Cavaliers_ (from _Mimi Pinson_),
- 569
-
- _Mute Miltons_, Martial, 108
-
- “My boy, if you’d wish to make constant your Venus,” Rambaud
- d’Orange, 237
-
- _My Familiar_, John Godfrey Saxe, 669
-
- _My First Visit to Portland_, Seba Smith, 662
-
- _My Mistress’s Boots_, Frederick Locker-Lampson, 503
-
- _My Opinions and Betsy Bobbet’s_ (extracts), Marietta Holley, 702
-
- _Mystery, The_, Carolyn Wells, 751
-
-
- NASBY, PETROLEUM V. _See_ Locke, David Ross
-
- Nathan, story of, 31
-
- _Nautical Terms_ (from _Peter Simple_), Frederick Marryat, 474
-
- NEARCHUS,
- _Singer, A_, 77
-
- NEKRASOV, NIKOLAI,
- _Moral Man, A_, 637
-
- _Nephelidia_, Swinburne, 523
-
- NEWELL, PETER, 760
-
- NEWELL, ROBERT HENRY (Orpheus C. Kerr)
- _Rejected “National Hymns,”_ 695
-
- Newspaper humor, 663, 678, 698
-
- NICARCHUS,
- _Great Contention, The_, 190
-
- _No!_, Thomas Hood, 465
-
- _Nocturne at Danieli’s, A_, Sir Owen Seaman, 537
-
- _Nonsense_, Bishop Corbet, 302
-
- _Nonsense_, Thomas Moore, 479
-
- Noodle stories,
- origin, 72
- selections, 199–225, 341
- principle of humor in, 210
-
- _Novellino_, Massuchio di Salerno, 350
-
- _Numbers Sweet_, Martial, 109
-
- NYE, EDGAR WILSON (Bill Nye),
- _Garden Hose, The_, 714
-
-
- _Obedient Husbands_ (from _The Bachelor’s Banquet_), Thomas Dekker,
- 298
-
- Obstinate Family, The, tale of, 208
-
- _Obtrusive Company on the Sacred Way_ (from _Satires_), Horace, 98
-
- _Ode to Fortune_, Fitz-Greene Halleck and Joseph Rodman Drake, 657
-
- _Ode to Tobacco_, Charles Stuart Calverly, 513
-
- _Odysseus’s Trick on Polyphemus_ (from _Dialogues of the
- Sea-Gods_), Lucian, 80
-
- _Of a Certain Man_, Sir John Harington, 293
-
- _Of a Precise Tailor_, Sir John Harington, 292
-
- _Of a Queer Relationship_, Unknown, 174
-
- _Of All the Men_, Thomas Moore, 480
-
- _Of Hym That Sought His Wyfe Agaynst the Streme_ (from _C. Mery
- Talys_), 272
-
- _Of Loquacity_ (from _The Characters_), Theophrastus, 71
-
- _Of Sloth_ (from _Gesta Romanorum_), 243
-
- _Of Slovenliness_ (from _The Characters_), Theophrastus, 70
-
- _Of the Courtear That Ete the Hot Custarde_ (from _C. Mery Talys_),
- 272
-
- _Of the Deceits of the Devil_ (from _Gesta Romanorum_), 246
-
- _Of the Diseases This Year_, François Rabelais, 324
-
- _Of the Eclipses This Year_, François Rabelais, 323
-
- _Of the Foole That Thought Hym Selfe Deed_ (from _C. Mery Talys_),
- 273
-
- _Of the Fruits of the Earth This Year_, François Rabelais, 325
-
- _Of the Good, Who Alone Will Enter the Kingdom of Heaven_ (from
- _Gesta Romanorum_), 244
-
- _Of the Incarnation of Our Lord_ (from _Gesta Romanorum_), 245
-
- _Of the Merchaunte of London That Dyd Put Nobles in His Mouthe in
- Hys Dethe Bedde_ (from _C. Mery Talys_), 270
-
- _Of the Scoler of Oxforde That Proved by Sovestry II Chickens III_
- (from _C. Mery Talys_), 271
-
- _Of the Valorous Don Quixote’s ... Adventure of the Windmills_
- (from _Don Quixote_), Cervantes, 363
-
- _Of the Woman that Followed her Fourth Husband’s Bere and Wept_
- (from _Wit and Mirth_), 270
-
- _Of Three Girls and Their Talk_: A Sonnet, Giovanni Boccaccio, 344
-
- _Of Vigilance in Our Calling_ (from _Gesta Romanorum_), 247
-
- _Old Age--Dialogue_, Jalal uddin Rumi, 153
-
- _Old Grimes_, Albert Gorton Greene, 658
-
- OMAR KHAYYAM,
- _Rubaiyat_ (extract), 138
-
- _On a Fan_, Henry Austin Dobson, 524
-
- _On a Sense of Humor_, Frederick Locker-Lampson, 505
-
- _On a Wet Day_, Francho Sacchetti, 355
-
- _On Aufidius_, Actius Sannazarius, 192
-
- _On Aurispa_, Janus Pannonius, 192
-
- _On Celsus_, Paulus Thomas, 194
-
- _On Charinus, the Husband of an Ugly Wife_, Johannes Secundus, 193
-
- _On Clothes and Comforts_ (from _The Land of Dreams_), Kiokutei
- Bakin, 161
-
- _On Cotin_, Nicolas Boileau-Despreaux, 405
-
- _On Domineering Wives_ (from _Satires_), Juvenal, 111
-
- _On Expert Testimony_, Finley Peter Dunne, 720
-
- _On “Forts,”_ Charles Farrar Browne, 685
-
- _On His Own Deafness_, Jonathan Swift, 418
-
- _On His Own Love_, Catullus, 191
-
- _On Late-Acquired Wealth_, Unknown, 190
-
- _On Leonora_, Georgius Buchananus, 193
-
- _On Lying News-Writers_ (from _The Idler_), Samuel Johnson, 430
-
- _On Mental Reservations_ (from _Les Provinciales_), Blaise Pascal,
- 400
-
- _On Musical Instruments_, Antonio Ghislanzoni, 619
-
- _On Shadwell_, John Dryden, 380
-
- _On Sultan Mahmoud_, Firdausi, 142
-
- _On Taking a Wife_, Thomas Moore, 481
-
- _On the Duke of Buckingham_, John Dryden, 381
-
- _On the Inconstancy of Woman’s Love_, Unknown, 191
-
- ORANGE, RAMBAUD D’,
- _Song_: “My boy, if you’d wish to make constant your Venus,” 237
-
- _Ostrich and the Hen, The_, George Thomas Lanigan, 706
-
-
- PAIN, BARRY,
- _Poets at Tea, The_, 551
-
- _Palabras Grandiosas_ (from _Echo Club_), James Bayard Taylor, 683
-
- Palæolithic humor, 24, 25
-
- PANNONIUS, JANUS,
- _On Aurispa_, 192
-
- _Paper_, Benjamin Franklin, 645
-
- _Parasites and Gnathonites_ (from _Eunuchus_), Terence, 96
-
- _Paris_, Paul Scarron, 398
-
- Parodies
- _Select Passages from a Coming Poet_, T. A. Guthrie, 554
- After T. B. Aldrich
- _Palabras Grandiosas_, James Bayard Taylor, 683
- _Rejected “National Hymns,”_ Robert Henry Newell, 697
- After Browning
- _Cock and the Bull, The_, Charles Stuart Calverley, 507
- _Nocturne at Danieli’s, A_, Owen Seaman, 537
- _Poets at Tea, The_, Barry Pain, 552
- After Mrs. Browning
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, Carolyn Wells, 754
- After Bryant
- _Rejected “National Hymns,”_ Robert Henry Newell, 697
- After Burns
- _Poets at Tea, The_, Barry Pain, 554
- After Cowper
- _Poets at Tea, The_, Barry Pain, 552
- After Dinah Craik
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, Carolyn Wells, 750
- After Austin Dobson
- _Jack and Jill_, Charles Battell Loomis, 735
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, Carolyn Wells, 755
- After Emerson
- _Rejected “National Hymns,”_ Robert Henry Newell, 696
- After Hafiz, Abu Ishak, 154
- After Bret Harte
- _De Tea Fabula_, Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch, 546
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, Carolyn Wells, 758
- After Herrick
- _Song_, O. Herford, 747
- _To Julia under Lock and Key_, Owen Seaman, 540
- After Lady Arthur Hill
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, Carolyn Wells, 759
- After Hogg
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, Carolyn Wells, 756
- After Oliver Wendell Holmes
- _Rejected “National Hymns,”_ Robert Henry Newell, 696
- After Hood
- _I Remember_, Phœbe Cary, 676
- After Jean Ingelow
- _Lovers and a Reflection_, Charles Stuart Calverley, 511
- After Kipling
- _Here Is the Tale_, Anthony C. Deane, 543
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, Carolyn, Wells, 757
- After Longfellow
- _Rejected “National Hymns,”_ Robert Henry Newell, 695
- After Macaulay
- _Poets at Tea, The_, Barry Pain, 551
- After George Meredith
- _At the Sign of the Cock_, Owen Seaman, 541
- After Milton
- _The Splendid Shilling_, John Philips, 423
- After Thomas Moore
- “There’s a bower of bean vines,” Phœbe Cary, 677
- After E. A. Poe
- _Poets at Tea, The_, Barry Pain, 553
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, Carolyn Wells, 753
- After Rossetti
- _Ballad_, Charles Stuart Calverley, 506
- _Poets at Tea, The_, Barry Pain, 553
- After Southey
- _The Friend of Humanity and the Knife-Grinder_, George Canning,
- 439
- After Swinburne
- _Jack and Jill_, Charles Battell Loomis, 736
- _Nephilidia_, Algernon Charles Swinburne, 523
- _Poets at Tea, The_, Barry Pain, 551
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, Carolyn Wells, 757
- After Tennyson
- _Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell, The_, Algernon Charles
- Swinburne, 522
- _The Lay of the Lovelorn_, William Edmonstoune Aytoun, 495
- _Poets at Tea, The_, Barry Pain, 551
- After Walt Whitman
- _Jack and Jill_, Charles Battell Loomis, 7
- _Poets at Tea, The_, Barry Pain, 554
- After Whittier
- _Rejected “National Hymns,”_ Robert Henry Newell, 696
- After Oscar Wilde
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, Carolyn Wells, 759
- After Nathaniel P. Willis
- _Rejected “National Hymns,”_ Robert Henry Newell, 697
- After Charles Wolfe
- _“True and Original” Version, A_, Richard Harris Barham, 455
- After Wordsworth
- _Baby’s Début, The_, James Smith, 466
- _Jacob_, Phœbe Cary, 677
- _Poets at Tea, The_, Barry Pain, 552
- After a Popular Song
- _If I Should Die To-night_, Ben King, 728
-
- Parody, 30
-
- _Parson Gray_, Oliver Goldsmith, 434
-
- _Partial Judge, The_ (from _Æsop’s Fables_), 45
-
- PASCAL, BLAISE,
- _On Mental Reservations_ (from _Les Provinciates_), 400
-
- PASCHASIUS, STEPHANUS,
- _Married Life_, 194
-
- _Patient Cured, The_, Christian F. Gellert, 586
-
- _Paying with the Sound of a Penny_ (from _Eulenspiegel’s Pranks_),
- Tyll Eulenspiegel, 340
-
- _Peasant of Larcarà, The_, Pitrá, 218
-
- _Pegasus in the Yoke_, Friedrich von Schiller, 593
-
- PEPYS, SAMUEL,
- _Diary_ (extracts), 378
-
- _Perplexity_, Unknown, 79
-
- Persian humor, 73, 138–156, 196–199
-
- Persian Jest-Book, 73
-
- PERSIUS,
- _Poetic Fame_ (from _Satires_), 104
-
- _Pessimist, The_, Ben King, 727
-
- _Peter Simple_ (extracts), Frederick Marryat, 474
-
- PETRONIUS, 101
- _Ingenious Cook, An_ (from _Trimalchio’s Banquet_), 102
-
- PHILIPPIDES, Epigrams, 84
-
- PHILIPS, JOHN,
- _Splendid Shilling, The_, 423
-
- _Phillis’ Age_, Matthew Prior, 389
-
- _Philosopher, A_, Sam Walter Foss, 718
-
- _Philosopher, The_ (from _The Fables_), Ivan Chemnitzer, 631
-
- PHOENIX, JOHN. _See_ Derby, George Horatio
-
- _Phoenixiana_ (extract), George Horatio Derby, 678
-
- _Phyllis Lee_, Oliver Herford, 744
-
- Pictorial humor, 27, 46, 47, 48
-
- _Pigtail, The_, Adelbert von Chamisso, 605
-
- _Pike County Ballads_ (extract), John Hay, 690
-
- Pilpay (or Bidpai), _Fables_, 120;
- (Selections), 164–170
-
- PITRÁ,
- _The Peasant of Larcarà_, 218
-
- PLATO,
- idea of humor, 4
- _Miser and the Mouse, The_, 190
- _Thief and the Suicide, The_, 189
-
- PLATO COMICUS, fragments, 66
-
- PLAUTUS, 87
- _Military Swagger_ (from _The Braggart Captain_), 88
- _Suspicious Miser, The_ (from _The Pot of Gold_), 91
-
- Playfulness of animals, 18
-
- _Play’s the Thing_, Martial, 107
-
- _Pleasant Conceits of Old Hobson, The_ (extract), Richard Johnson,
- 265, 267
-
- _Pleasantries of Cogia Nasr Eddin Effendi, The_ (extracts), 199
-
- _Pleasure of Fishes, The_ (from _Autumn Floods_), Chwang Tze, 157
-
- _Poems in Prose_, Ivan Turgenieff, 638
-
- _Poetic Fame_ (from _Satires_), Persius, 104
-
- _Poets_, Samuel Butler, 377
-
- _Poets at Tea, The_, Barry Pain, 551
-
- POGGIO, Italian stories, 182
-
- Polish humor, 639–641
-
- PONTALAIS, JEHAN DU,
- _Money_, 322
-
- POPE, ALEXANDER, 17
- _Epigram on Mrs. Tofts_, 421
- _Lines by a Person of Quality_, 419
- _Worms_, 420
-
- _Pope and Sultan_ (German Student Song), 613
-
- _Pope and the Net, The_, Robert Browning, 502
-
- _Popularity_, Sung Yu, 158
-
- PRAED, WINTHROP MACKWORTH,
- _Song of Impossibilities, A_, 484
-
- _Praise of Folly, The_ (extracts), Desiderius Erasmus, 337
-
- _Prayer_, Ivan Turgenieff, 638
-
- PRIOR, MATTHEW, 386
- _Epitaph, An_, 387
- _Phillis’ Age_, 389
- _Reasonable Affliction, A_, 389
- _Simile, A_, 388
-
- _Prodigal Egg, The_, Oliver Herford, 747
-
- Professional entertainers of the Middle Ages, 231–236
-
- _Professor with a Small Class, A_, Lucilius, 77
-
- _Professor’s Malady, The_ (from _Water Babies_), Charles Kingsley,
- 498
-
- _Proverbial Wisdom_, Anton Chekov, 639
-
- _Provinciales, Les_ (extract), Blaise Pascal, 400
-
- _Psycholophon_, Frank Gelett Burgess, 749
-
- _Puffing_, Samuel Butler, 377
-
- “Punning” (from Speeches), Sydney Smith, 446
-
- _Purple Cow, The_, Frank Gelett Burgess, 748
-
- _Python, The_, Hilaire Belloc, 555
-
-
- _Question of Precedence, A_ (from _Dialogues of the Gods_), Lucian,
- 79
-
- QUILLER-COUCH, ARTHUR THOMAS. _See_ Couch, Arthur Thomas Quiller-
-
-
- RABELAIS, FRANÇOIS,
- _Of the Diseases This Year_, 324
- _Of the Eclipses This Year_, 323
- _Of the Fruits of the Earth This Year_, 325
- _Lost Hatchet, The_ (from _Gargantua and Pantagruel_), 329
- “_Rabelais Imitates Diogenes_” (from _Gargantua and Pantagruel_),
- 325
-
- RADHI BILLAH, the Kaliph,
- _To a Lady upon Seeing Her Blush_, 191
-
- _Raising the Devil_, Richard Harris Barham, 456
-
- RALEIGH, SIR WALTER,
- _Lie, The_, 305
-
- RASPE, RUDOLPH ERICH,
- _Horse Tied to a Steeple, A_ (from _Adventures of Baron
- Münchausen_), 589
- _Rather Large Whale, A_ (from _Adventures of Baron Münchausen_),
- 590
-
- _Raven, The_ (from Fables), Lessing, 588
-
- _Raven, a Fox and a Serpent, A_, Pilpay, 166
-
- _Reasonable Affliction, A_, Matthew Prior, 389
-
- REDI, FRANCESCA,
- _Diatribe Against Water_, 410
-
- _Rejected Addresses_ (extract), James and Horace Smith, 465
-
- _Rejected “National Hymns”_ (burlesque), Robert Henry Newell, 695
-
- _Religion of Hudibras, The_ (from _Hudibras_), Samuel Butler, 374
-
- _Remonstrance, The_, Sir John Suckling, 370
-
- _Reuben_, Phœbe Cary, 678
-
- _Reynard the Fox_,
- forms and origin, 226
- Goethe’s version (extracts), 596
-
- Riddles,
- Arabian, 35
- Homer’s, 35
- Samson’s, 35
- Sphinx’s, 35
-
- _Rig Vedas_ (extract), 34
-
- ROBINSON, EDWIN ARLINGTON,
- _Miniver Cheevy_, 740
- _Two Men_, 741
-
- ROCHE, JAMES JEFFREY,
- _Boston Lullaby, A_, 708
- _V-a-s-e, The_, 706
-
- _Roland Enamored_ (extract), Francesco Berni, 352
-
- _Roman Cockney, The_, Catullus, 97
-
- Roman humor, 86–119, 181–182
-
- _Rondeau, The_, Henry Austin Dobson, 525
-
- _Rory O’More_, Samuel Lover, 481
-
- _Rose Garden, The_ (_Gulistan_) (extracts), Sadi, 142
-
- _Rounded with a Sleep_, Martial, 108
-
- _Rubaiyat_ (extract), Omar Khayyam, 138
-
- RÜCKERT, FRIEDRICH,
- _Artist and Public_, 609
-
- Russian humor, 217, 631–639
-
- RUTEBŒUF, the Trouvère,
- _Ass’s Testament, The_, 312
-
-
- SACCHETTI, FRANCHO, 354
- _On a Wet Day_, 355
-
- _Sad End of Brer Wolf, The_ (from _Uncle Remus, His Songs and His
- Sayings_), Joel Chandler Harris, 708
-
- SADI,
- _Discomfort Better Than Drowning_, (from _The Rose Garden_
- [_Gulistan_]), 142
- _Hatefulness of Old Husbands_ (from _The Rose Garden_), 144
- _Strict Schoolmaster and the Mild, The_ (from _The Rose Garden_),
- 143
- _Wise Sayings_, 145
-
- _Saintship versus Conscience_ (from _Hudibras_), Samuel Butler, 375
-
- _Sakuntala_ (extract), Kaildasa, 121
-
- _Salad_, Sydney Smith, 448
-
- SALERNO, MASSUCHIO DI,
- _Inheritance of a Library, The_ (from _Novellino_), 350
-
- Samson’s Riddle, 35
-
- SAN SHROE BU,
- _Enforced Greatness_, 219
-
- SANNAZARIUS, ACTIUS,
- _On Aufidius_, 192
-
- _Satires_ (extract), Horace, 98
-
- _Satires_ (extract), Juvenal, 110
-
- _Satires_ (extract), Persius, 104
-
- Satires on dress, 230
-
- SAXE, JOHN GODFREY,
- _My Familiar_, 669
-
- SCARRON, PAUL,
- _Farewell to Chloris_, 398
- _Paris_, 398
-
- Schildburgers, the, tales of, 341–344
-
- SCHILLER, FRIEDRICH VON,
- _Pegasus in the Yoke_, 593
-
- _Scholar and His Dog, The_, John Marston, 310
-
- _School_, James Kenneth Stephen, 550
-
- _School for Scandal, The_ (extract), Richard Brinsley Sheridan, 437
-
- _Schoolmaster with a Gay Wife, A_, Lucilius, 78
-
- SCOGIN,
- _Jests_, 263, 265
-
- SEAMAN, SIR OWEN,
- _At the Sign of the Cock_, 541
- _Nocturne at Danieli’s, A_, 537
- _To Julia under Lock and Key_, 540
-
- _Select Passages from a Coming Poet_, T. A. Guthrie, 554
-
- Sense of humor, 13, 14
-
- SHAKESPEARE,
- on sense of humor, 15
- as humorist, 277, 278, 280
- _As You Like It_ (extract), 288
- _Hamlet_ (extract), 286
- _Henry IV, Part I_ (extract), 281
- _Henry IV, Part II_ (extract), 279
- _Love’s Labour’s Lost_ (extract), 15
- _Merchant of Venice, The_ (extract), 286
-
- SHAW, HENRY WHEELER (Josh Billings), 671
- _Hen, A_ (extract), 673
- _Tight Boots_ (extract), 671
-
- SHERIDAN, RICHARD BRINSLEY,
- _Calendar_, 438
- _Let the Toast Pass_ (from _The School for Scandal_), 437
- _Lord Erskine’s Simile_, 438
-
- _Sheridan’s Calendar_, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, 438
-
- SHILLABER, BENJAMIN PENHALLOW,
- _After a Wedding_ (from _Mrs. Partington_), 664
- _Sick Schoolmaster, The_ (from _Stories in Rime [Masnavi]_),
- Jalal uddin Rumi, 149
-
- SILL, EDWARD ROWLAND, 690
- _Eves Daughter_, 698
-
- _Simile, A_, Matthew Prior, 388
-
- SIMONIDES,
- _Fine Lady, The_, 65
-
- _Simpleton and the Sharper, The_ (from _The Arabian Nights’
- Entertainment_), 127
-
- _Singer, A_, Nearchus, 77
-
- “Singing Mouse, The,” 52
- _Meeting, The_, 53
-
- SKELTON, JOHN,
- _How Skelton Came Late Home to Oxford from Abington_ (from
- _Certayne Merye Tales_), 264
- _How the Welshman Dyd Desyre Skelton to Hyde Him in Hys Sute to
- the Kynge for a Patent to Sell Drynke_, 263
- _To Maistres Margaret Hussey_, 261
-
- _Sleep_, Baltazar del Alcazar, 359
-
- _Slight Misunderstanding, A_ (from _Contés Drolatiques_), Honoré de
- Balzac, 567
-
- SMITH, HORACE,
- _Jester Condemned to Death, The_, 469
- _Milkmaid and the Banker, The_, 468
-
- SMITH, JAMES,
- _Baby’s Debut, The_, 466
-
- SMITH, SEBA (Major Jack Downing),
- _My First Visit to Portland_, 662
-
- SMITH, SYDNEY,
- _Mrs. Partington_ (from Speech), 448
- “Punning” (from Speeches), 446
- _Salad_, 448
-
- SMOLLETT, 429
-
- _Society upon the Stanislaus, The_, Francis Bret Harte, 686
-
- “_Soldier, Rest!_” Robert Jones Burdette, 701
-
- SOMADEVA,
- _Kathá Sarit Ságara_, 214
-
- _Some Geese_, Oliver Herford, 744
-
- _Some Hallucinations_, Lewis Carroll, 518
-
- _Some Ladies_, Frederick Locker-Lampson, 505
-
- _Song_, Richard Lovelace, 369
-
- _Song--After Herrick_, Oliver Herford, 747
-
- _Song of Impossibilities, A_, Winthrop Mackworth Praed, 484
-
- _Sonnet_: “Two voices are there: one is of the deep,” James Kenneth
- Stephen, 548
-
- _Sorrows of Werther_, William Makepeace Thackeray, 490
-
- _Soul of the Cabbage, The_, Cyrano de Bergerac, 390
-
- SOUTHEY, ROBERT,
- _Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, The_, (from _The Doctor_), 450
- _Well of St. Keyne, The_, 451
-
- Spanish Apothegms of Melchior de Santa Cruz, 84
-
- Spanish humor, 184–189, 359–364, 411–412, 626–630
-
- Sphinx’s Riddle, 35
-
- _Splendid Shilling, The_, John Philips, 423
-
- _Stanza for a Tobacco-Pouch, A_, Yuan Mei, 158
-
- STEDMAN, EDMUND CLARENCE, 683
-
- STEPHEN, JAMES KENNETH,
- _Millennium, The_, 549
- _School_, 550
- _Sonnet_, “Two voices are there: one is of the deep,” 548
- _Thought, A_, 549
-
- STEPHENS, HENRY (Henri Estienne),
- _Noodle Stories_ from Introduction to _Apology for Herodotus_,
- 215
-
- STERNE, 429
-
- STEVENSON, ROBERT LOUIS,
- _Child’s Verses_ (extracts), 534
-
- STILL, JOHN,
- _Jolly Good Ale and Old_ (from _Gammer Gurton’s Needle_), 308
-
- STOCKTON, FRANK R.,
- _Lady and the Tiger, The_, 686
-
- _Stolen Pig, The_ (from the _Decameron_), Giovanni Boccaccio, 345
-
- _Stories in Rime_ (extracts), Jalal uddin Rumi, 149
-
- _Strict Schoolmaster and the Mild, The_ (from _The Rose Garden_
- [_Gulistan_]), Sadi, 143
-
- _Stupid Man_ (from _The Characters_), Theophrastus, 72
-
- SUCKLING, SIR JOHN, 368
- _Constant Lover, The_, 369
- _Remonstrance, The_, 370
-
- SUNG YU,
- _Popularity_, 158
-
- _Sunt Qui Servari Nolunt_, Jonathan Swift, 418
-
- _Supper-Party of the Three Cavaliers, The_ (from _Mimi Pinson_),
- Louis Charles Alfred de Musset, 569
-
- _Suspicious Miser, The_ (from _The Pot of Gold_), Plautus, 91
-
- _Swan, the Pike and the Crab, The_, Ivan Krylov, 633
-
- SWIFT, JONATHAN,
- _Against Abolishing Christianity_, 415
- _Furniture of a Woman’s Mind, The_, 416
- _On His Own Deafness_, 418
- _Sunt Qui Servari Nolunt_, 418
- _“To Mrs. Houghton of Bormount, upon praising her husband to Dr.
- Swift,”_ 419
-
- SWINBURNE, CHARLES ALGERNON, 521
- _Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell, The_, 522
- _Nephelidia_, 523
-
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, Carolyn Wells, 752
-
-
- _Tales of a Grandfather_ (extract), Victor Marie Hugo, 580
-
- _Talmud, The_ (extracts), 124
-
- _Tatler, The_ (extract), Joseph Addison, 422
-
- TAYLOR, JAMES BAYARD,
- _Palabras Grandiosas_ (from Echo Club), 683
-
- TAYLOR, JOHN,
- _Wit and Mirth_ (extracts), 74, 268, 270
-
- _Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, The_ (from _The Doctor_), Robert
- Southey, 450
-
- TENNYSON, ALFRED,
- _The Goose_, 500
-
- TERENCE,
- _Parasites and Gnathonites_ (from _Eunuchus_), 96
-
- _Ternary of Littles upon a Pipkin of Jelly sent to a Lady, A_,
- Robert Herrick, 365
-
- _Terrible Infant, A_, Frederick Locker-Lampson, 505
-
- THACKERAY, WILLIAM MAKEPEACE, 486
- _Little Billee_, 487
- _Sorrows of Werther_, 490
- _When Moonlike Ore the Hazure Seas_, 490
- _Wolfe New Ballad of Jane Roney and Mary Brown, The_, 488
-
- _That Gentle Man from Boston Town_, Joaquin Miller, 692
-
- THAYER, ERNEST LAWRENCE,
- _Casey at the Bat_, 729
-
- _Theophile’s Mother-in-Law_ (from _A Much Worried Gentleman_),
- Charles Paul de Kock, 572
-
- THEOPHRASTUS,
- _Of Loquacity_ (from _The Characters_), 71
- _Of Slovenliness_ (from _The Characters_), 70
- _Stupid Man, The_ (from _The Characters_), 72
-
- _There Was a Little Girl_, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, 667
-
- “There’s a Bower of Bean-Vines,” Phœbe Cary, 677
-
- _Thief and the Suicide, The_, Plato, 189
-
- _Thief Turned Merchant and the Other Thief, The_ (from _The Arabian
- Nights’ Entertainment_), 128
-
- THOMAS, PAULUS,
- _On Celsus_, 194
-
- _Thought, A_, James Kenneth Stephen, 549
-
- _Thoughts_, Jean de la Bruyère, 406
-
- _Threnody, A_, George Thomas Lanigan, 704
-
- _Through the Looking-Glass_ (extract), Lewis Carroll, 515
-
- _Tight Boots_, Henry Wheeler Shaw (Josh Billings), 671
-
- _Tithes_, a Hebrew Satire, 31
-
- _To a Friend in Distress_, Johannes Audœmus, 194
-
- _To a Lady Upon Seeing Her Blush_, The Kaliph Radhi Billah, 191
-
- _To a Mosquito_, William Cullen Bryant, 655
-
- _To a Poet_, José Morell, 412
-
- _To Aulus_, Martial, 107
-
- _To Catullus_, Martial, 107
-
- _To Julia under Lock and Key_, Sir Owen Seaman, 540
-
- _To Linus_, Martial, 109
-
- _To Maistres Margaret Hussey_, John Skelton, 261
-
- _To Mamercus_, Martial, 110
-
- _To Mrs. Houghton of Bormount, upon praising her husband to Dr.
- Swift_, Jonathan Swift, 419
-
- _To My Empty Purse_, Chaucer, 257
-
- _To My Nose_, Olivier Basselin, 316
-
- _To Perrault_, Nicolas Boileau-Despreaux, 405
-
- _To Philomusus_, Euricius Cordus, 192
-
- _To Postumus_, Martial, 107
-
- _To Sabidius_, Martial, 107
-
- _To Sally_, John Quincy Adams, 650
-
- _To the Ghost of Martial_, Ben Jonson, 295
-
- _To the Pliocene Skull_, Francis Bret Harte, 688
-
- _To the Terrestrial Globe_, William Schwenck Gilbert, 529
-
- _To the Vizier Cassim Obid Allah, On the Death of One of His Sons_,
- Aly Ben Ahmed Ben Mansour, 191
-
- _To Zoilus_, Georgius Buchananus, 193
-
- _Tooth for Tooth_, Edmondo de Amicis, 623
-
- _Total Abstainer, A_, Martial, 108
-
- _Touching the Olfactory Organ_, Alexander Dumas, the Elder, 574
-
- _Town of Göttingen, The_, Heinrich Heine, 611
-
- TOWNSEND, EDWARD WATERMAN,
- _Chimmie Fadden_ (extract), 716
-
- _Trimalchio’s Banquet_ (extract), Petronius, 101
-
- Troubadours, 236
-
- Troubadours’ Songs, 236–240
-
- Trouvères, 236, 253
-
- TROWBRIDGE, JOHN T., 681
-
- _“True and Original” Version, A_, Richard Harris Barham, 455
-
- _True to Poll_, Francis C. Burnand, 532
-
- TURGENIEFF, IVAN,
- _Beneficence and Gratitude_, 638
- Prayer, 638
-
- Turkish humor, 33, 199–204, 213
-
- _Tushmaker’s Tooth-Puller_, George Horatio Derby, 678
-
- TWAIN, MARK. _See_ Clemens, Samuel Langhorne
-
- _Two Men_, Edwin Arlington Robinson, 741
-
- _Two Old Bachelors, The_, Edward Lear, 520
-
- “Two voices are there: one is of the deep,” James Kenneth Stephen,
- 548
-
-
- UDALL, NICHOLAS, 277
-
- Ulysses, stories of, 46
-
- _Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings_ (extract), 708
-
- _Upon Being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party_, Thomas Moore, 481
-
-
- _V-a-s-e, The_, James Jeffrey Roche, 706
-
- Vega, Lope de, 359
-
- _Vendetta_, Martial, 108
-
- VENTADOUR, BERNARD DE,
- “You say the moon is all aglow,” 237
-
- _Vers de Société_, 503, 524, 706
-
- _Vicissitudes of a Donkey_ (from _The Golden Ass_), Apuleius, 116
-
- _Villanelle_, William Ernest Henley, 533
-
- _Villanelle of Things Amusing_, Frank Gelett Burgess, 748
-
- VILLON, FRANÇOIS,
- _Ballad of the Women of Paris_, 320
- _Ballade of Dead Ladies, The_, 318
- _Ballade of Old Time Ladies, A_, 319
-
- _Vintner, A_, Ben Johnson, 295
-
- _Visit from St. Nicholas, A_, Clement C. Moore, 652
-
- _Voice from the Grave, A_, Unknown, 190
-
- _Volpone_ (extract), Ben Jonson, 294
-
- VOLTAIRE (Francis Marie Arouet),
- _Candide_ (extract), 560
-
-
- WALLER, EDMUND, 368
-
- _Walloping Window-Blind, The_, Charles E. Carryl, 699
-
- WARD, ARTEMUS. _See_ Browne, Charles Farrar
-
- WARD, WILLIAM HAYES,
- on Greek humor, 44
-
- WARNER, CHARLES DUDLEY, 681
-
- _Water Babies_ (extract), Charles Kingsley, 498
-
- _Ways and Means_, Lewis Carroll, 516
-
- _Well of St. Keyne, The_, Robert Southey, 451
-
- WELLS, CAROLYN,
- _Idiot’s Delight, The_, 749
- _Mystery, The_, 751
- _Symposium of Poets, A_, 752
- _Woman_, 751
-
- WENGIERSKI, KAJETAN,
- _Dream Wife, The_, 639
-
- WESLEY, SAMUEL, 51
- Homer’s _The Battle of the Frogs and Mice_, 54
-
- _What’s In a Name?_ Richard Kendall Munkittrick, 715
-
- _What Might Have Been_, Martial, 108
-
- _What Mr. Robinson Thinks_ (from _Biglow Papers_), James Russell
- Lowell, 674
-
- _What Will We Do?_ Robert Jones Burdette, 700
-
- _What’s My Thought Like?_ Thomas Moore, 480
-
- _When Moonlike Ore the Hazure Seas_, William Makepeace Thackeray,
- 490
-
- WHITCHER, MRS. FRANCES MIRIAM, 664
-
- WHITE, RICHARD GRANT, 678
-
- _Why Don’t the Men Propose?_ Thomas Haynes Bayly, 472
-
- _Widow Malone_, Charles Lever, 483
-
- _Wife’s Ruse, A_: A Rabbinical Tale, 32
-
- _Will, The_, John Donne, 296
-
- _Will of a Virtuoso, The_ (from _The Tatler_), Joseph Addison, 422
-
- _William Tell_ (from _Tartarin in the Alps_), Alphonse Daudet, 583
-
- WILLIS, NATHANIEL PARKER,
- _Love in a Cottage_, 661
-
- Wit and humor,
- Hazlitt on the distinction between, 15–17
-
- _Wit and Mirth_ (extracts), John Taylor, 74, 268–270
-
- _Wolfe New Ballad of Jane Roney and Mary Brown, The_, William
- Makepeace Thackeray, 488
-
- _Woman_, Carolyn Wells, 751
-
- _Worms_, Alexander Pope, 420
-
- _Wreck of the “Julie Plante,” The_, William H. Drummond, M.D., 726
-
- WRIGHT, THOMAS, on caricature by prehistoric man, 25
-
-
- “You say the moon is all aglow,” Bernard de Ventadour, 237
-
- YRIARTE, THOMAS,
- _Ass and the Flute, The_, 626
- _Country Squire, The_, 628
- _Eggs, The_, 627
-
- YUAN MEI,
- _Recipes_ (from _Cookery Book_), 159
- _Stanza for a Tobacco-Pouch, A_, (from _Letters_), 158
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] For putting out the fire in a brasier or cooking-stove.
-
-[2] A Shrawn is a pure Gaelic noise, something like a groan, more like
-a shriek, and most like a sigh of longing.
-
-[3] Eire was daughter of Carne, King of Connaught. Her lover, Murdh of
-the Open Hand, was captured by Greatcoat Mackintosh, King of Ulster, on
-the plain of Carrisbool and made into soup. Eire’s grief on this sad
-occasion has become proverbial.
-
-[4] Garnim was second cousin to Manannan MacLir. His sons were always
-sad about something. There were twenty-two of them, and they were all
-unfortunate in love at the same time, just like a chorus at the opera.
-“Blitherin’ their drool” is about the same as “dreeing their weird.”
-
-[5] The Shee (or “Sidhe,” as I should properly spell it if you were
-not so ignorant) were, as everybody knows, the regular, stand-pat,
-organization fairies of Erin. The Crowdie was their annual convention,
-at which they made melancholy sounds. The Itt and Himm were the
-irregular, or insurgent, fairies. They _never_ got any offices or
-patronage. See MacAlester, _Polity of the Sidhe of West Meath_,
-page 985.
-
-[6] The Barryhoo is an ancient Celtic bird about the size of a
-Mavis, with lavender eyes and a black-crape tail. It continually
-mourns its mate (Barrywhich, feminine form), which has an hereditary
-predisposition to an early and tragic demise and invariably dies first.
-
-[7] Magraw, a Gaelic term of endearment, often heard on the baseball
-fields of Donnybrook.
-
-[8] These last six words are all that tradition has preserved of the
-original incantation by means of which Irish rats were rhymed to death.
-Thereby hangs a good Celtic tale, which I should be glad to tell you in
-this note; but the publishers say that being prosed to death is as bad
-as being rhymed to death, and that the readers won’t stand for any more.
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-1. Obvious printers’, punctuation and spelling errors have been
-corrected silently.
-
-2. Some hyphenated and non-hyphenated versions of the same words have
-been retained as in the original.
-
-3. Superscripts are represented using the caret character, e.g. D^r.
-or X^{xx}.
-
-4. Italics are shown as _xxx_.
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN OUTLINE OF HUMOR ***
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of An Outline Of Humor, by Carolyn Wells</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: An Outline Of Humor</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>Being a True Chronicle From Prehistoric Ages to the Twentieth Century</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: Carolyn Wells</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: May 24, 2022 [eBook #68163]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Charlene Taylor, Karin Spence and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN OUTLINE OF HUMOR ***</div>
-
-
-<h1>An<br />
-Outline of Humor</h1>
-
-<p class="center"><b>Being a True Chronicle From<br />
-Prehistoric Ages to the<br />
-Twentieth Century</b></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p4">Edited by</p>
-
-<p class="center p1 lg"><b>Carolyn Wells</b></p>
-
-<p class="center xs">Editor of<br />
-“The Book of Humorous Verse,”<br />
-“A Nonsense Anthology,” etc.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p4">G. P. Putnam’s Sons<br />
-<span class="sm">New York &amp; London</span><br />
-<span class="xs">The Knickerbocker Press<br />
-1923</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p6 xs">Copyright, 1923<br />
-by<br />
-Carolyn Wells Houghton</p>
-
- <div class="figcenter">
- <img
- class="p6"
- src="images/verso.jpg"
- alt="" />
- </div>
-
-<p class="center xs">Made in the United States of America</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p6 sm"><span class="smcap">Dedicated</span><br />
-
-<span class="allsmcap">WITH</span><br />
-
-<span class="smcap">Highest Regard</span><br />
-
-<span class="allsmcap">TO</span><br />
-
-DOCTOR HUBER GRAY BUEHLER</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[v]</span></p>
-
-<h2>FOREWORD</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Outlining is a modern art. For centuries we have collected and
-selected, compiled and compended, but only of late have we outlined.</p>
-
-<p>And an Outline is a result differing in kind from the other work
-mentioned, and presenting different conditions and contingencies.</p>
-
-<p>An Outline, owing to its sweep of magnificent distances, can touch
-only the high spots, and can but skim those. Not in its province is
-criticism or exhaustive commentary. Not in its scope are long effusions
-or lengthy extracts.</p>
-
-<p>Nor may it include everybody or everything that logically belongs to it.</p>
-
-<p>An Outline is at best an irregular proposition, and the Outliner must
-follow his irregular path as best he may. But one thing is imperative,
-the Outliner must be conscientious. He must weigh to the best of his
-knowledge and belief the claims to inclusion that his opportunities
-present. He must pick and choose with all the discernment of which he
-is capable and while following his best principles of taste he must
-sink his personal preferences in his regard for his Outline as a whole.</p>
-
-<p>Nor can he pick and choose his audience. To one reader,&mdash;or critic,&mdash;a
-hackneyed selection is tiresome, while to another it is a novelty and
-a revelation. And it must be remembered that a hackneyed poem is a
-favorite one and a favorite is one adjudged best, by a consensus of
-human opinion, and is therefore a high spot to be touched upon.</p>
-
-<p>While the Outline is generally chronological, it is not a history and
-dates are not given. Also, when it seemed advisable to desert the
-chronological path for the topographical one, that was done.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">[vi]</span></p>
-
-<p>Yet Foreign Literatures cannot be adequately treated in an Outline
-printed in English. Translations are at best misleading. If the
-translation is a poor one, the pith and moment of the original is
-partly, or wholly lost. And if the translation be of great merit, the
-work may show the merit of the new rendition rather than the original.</p>
-
-<p>And aside from all that, few translations of Humor are to be found.</p>
-
-<p>The translators of foreign tongues choose first the philosophy, the
-fiction or the serious poetry of the other nations, leaving the humor,
-if any there be, to hang unplucked on the tree of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>So the foreign material is scant, but the high spots are touched as far
-as could be found convenient.</p>
-
-<p>The Outline stops at the year 1900. Humor since then is too close to be
-viewed in proper perspective.</p>
-
-<p>But the present Outliner mainly hopes to show how, with steady
-footstep, from the Caveman to the current comics Humor has followed the
-Flag.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">C. W.</p>
-
-<p class="smcap sm p-min">New York,</p>
-
-<p class="left3 p-min sm"><i>April, 1923</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span></p>
-
-<h2>ACKNOWLEDGMENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>All rights on poems and prose in this volume are reserved by the
-authorized publisher, the author, or the holder of copyright, with whom
-special arrangements have been made for including such material in this
-work. The editor expresses thanks for such permission as indicated
-below.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">D. Appleton &amp; Company</span>: For “To a Mosquito” by William Cullen
-Bryant; “Tushmaker’s Tooth-Puller” by G. H. Derby; and for “The Sad End
-of Brer Wolf” by Joel C. Harris, from <i>Uncle Remus, His Songs and His
-Sayings</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">The Century Co.</span>: For an extract from the “Chimmie Fadden”
-stories; and for the poem “What’s in a Name?” by R. K. Munkittrick.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">David McKay Company</span>: For “Ballad of the Noble Ritter Hugo” by
-Charles G. Leland.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Dodd, Mead and Company</span>: For “At the Sign of the Cock” by Owen
-Seaman; “Here Is the Tale” by Anthony C. Deane; and “On a Fan” and “The
-Rondeau” by Austin Dobson.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Forbes &amp; Company</span>: For “If I Should Die To-Night” and “The
-Pessimist” by Ben King.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Harper &amp; Brothers</span>: For “Elegy” and “Mavrone” by Arthur
-Guiterman. With the permission of the Estate of Samuel L. Clemens, the
-Mark Twain Company, and Harper &amp; Brothers, publishers, with a full
-reservation of all copyright privileges is included an extract from the
-“Jumping Frog” by Mark Twain.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Hurst &amp; Company</span>: For an extract from “Bill Nye.”</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Houghton Mifflin Company</span>: With their permission and by special
-arrangement with them as authorized publishers of the following
-authors’ works, are used selections from: Charles E. Carryl, Guy
-Wetmore Carryl, Ralph Waldo Emerson, James T. Fields, Bret Harte, John
-Hay, Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, John G. Saxe, E. R.
-Sill, Bayard Taylor.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Little, Brown &amp; Company</span>: For five limericks and “The Two Old
-Bachelors” from <i>Nonsense Books</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[viii]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Lothrop, Lee &amp; Shepard Co.</span>: For “A Philosopher” by Sam Walter
-Foss from <i>Dreams in Homespun</i>; also for an extract from “The
-Partington Papers” by B. P. Shillaber.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">The Macmillan Company</span>: For verses from <i>Through the
-Looking-Glass</i> by Lewis Carroll.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Charles Scribner’s Sons</span>: For “Two Men” and “Miniver Cheevy” by
-E. A. Robinson from <i>The Children of the Night</i> and <i>The Town
-Down the River</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Small, Maynard &amp; Company</span>: For an extract from Finley Peter
-Dunne (Mr. Dooley).</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[ix]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="contents" class="smaller">
- <tr>
- <th></th>
- <th class="pag">PAGE</th>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht">Introduction</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_3">3</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht">Ancient Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht">Middle Division</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht1">Part I. Greece</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht1">Part II. Rome</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht1">Part III. Mediæval Ages</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_120">120</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht">Modern Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">English Wit and Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">French Wit and Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_312">312</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">German Wit and Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_337">337</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">Italian Wit and Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_343">343</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">Spanish Wit and Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_359">359</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht1">The Seventeenth Century</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_364">364</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">English Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_364">364</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">French Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_390">390</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">German Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_412">412</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht1">The Eighteenth Century</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_415">415</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">[x]</span></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht1">The Nineteenth Century</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_445">445</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">English Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_446">446</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">French Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_560">560</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">German Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_586">586</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">Italian Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_616">616</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">Spanish Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_626">626</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">Russian Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_631">631</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht2">American Humor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_643">643</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht">Index</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_761">761</a></td>
- </tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center p2 lg">An Outline of Humor</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span></p>
-
-<h2>INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Speaking exactly, an Outline of the World’s Humor is an impossibility.</p>
-
-<p>For surely the adjectives most applicable to humor are elusive,
-evasive, evanescent, ephemeral, intangible, imponderable, and other
-terms expressing unavailability.</p>
-
-<p>To outline such a thing is like trying to trap a sunbeam or bound an
-ocean.</p>
-
-<p>Yet an Outline of the History of the World’s recorded humor as evolved
-by the Human Race, seems within the possibilities.</p>
-
-<p>First of all, it must be understood that the term humor is here used in
-its broadest, most comprehensive sense. Including both wit and humor;
-including the comic, fun, mirth, laughter, gayety, repartee,&mdash;all types
-and classes of jests and jokes.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest reference to this mental element is that of Aristotle, and
-the word he uses to represent it is translated the Ridiculous.</p>
-
-<p>His definition states that the Ridiculous is that which is in itself
-incongruous, without involving the notion of danger or pai</p>
-
-<p>Coleridge thus refers to Aristotle’s definition:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Where the laughable is its own end, and neither inference nor moral
-is intended, or where at least the writer would wish it so to appear,
-there arises what we call drollery. The pure, unmixed, ludicrous
-or laughable belongs exclusively to the understanding, and must be
-presented under the form of the senses; it lies within the spheres of
-the eye and the ear, and hence is allied to the fancy. It does not
-appertain to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span> reason or the moral sense, and accordingly is alien
-to the imagination. I think Aristotle has already excellently defined
-the laughable, τò γελοíον, as consisting of, or depending on, what is
-out of its proper time and place, yet without danger or pain. Here
-the <i>impropriety</i>&mdash;τò ἄτοπον&mdash;is the positive qualification; the
-<i>dangerlessness</i>&mdash;τò ἀχίνδυνον&mdash;the negative. The true ludicrous
-is its own end. When serious satire commences, or satire that is felt
-as serious, however comically drest, free and genuine laughter ceases;
-it becomes sardonic. This you experience in reading Young, and also not
-unfrequently in Butler. The true comic is the blossom of the nettle.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Yet, notwithstanding Coleridge’s scientific views on the subject, Humor
-is not an exact science. It is, more truly, an art, whose principles
-are based on several accepted theories, and some other theories, not so
-readily accepted or admitted only in part by these who have thought and
-written on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>A true solution of the mystery of why a joke makes us laugh, has yet to
-be found. To the mind of the average human being, anything that makes
-him laugh is a joke. Why it does so, there are very few to know and
-fewer still to care.</p>
-
-<p>Nor are the Cognoscenti in much better plight. A definition of humor
-has been attempted by many great and wise minds. Like squaring the
-circle, it has been argued about repeatedly, it has been written about
-voluminously. It has been settled in as many different ways as there
-have been commentators on the subject. And yet no definition, no
-formula has ever been evolved that is entirely satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle’s theory of the element of the incongruous has come to be
-known as the Disappointment theory, or Frustrated Expectation.</p>
-
-<p>But Aristotle voiced another theory, which he, in turn, derived from
-Plato.</p>
-
-<p>Plato said, though a bit indefinitely, that the pleasure we derive in
-laughing at the comic is an enjoyment of other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span> people’s misfortune,
-due to a feeling of superiority or gratified vanity that we ourselves
-are not in like plight.</p>
-
-<p>This is called the Derision theory, and as assimilated and expressed
-by Aristotle comes near to impinging on and coinciding with his own
-Disappointment theory.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, he attempted to combine the two.</p>
-
-<p>For, he said, we always laugh at someone, but in the case, where
-laughter arises from a deceived expectation, our mistake makes us laugh
-at ourselves.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, Plato held, in his vague and indefinite statements that there
-is a disappointment element, a satisfaction element, and sometimes a
-combination of the two in the make-up of the thing we are calling Humor.</p>
-
-<p>All of which is not very enlightening, but it is to be remembered that
-those were the first fluttering flights of imagination that sought to
-pin down the whole matter; yet among the scores that have followed,
-diverging in many directions, we must admit few, if any, are much more
-succinct or satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>The Derision or Discomfiture Theory holds that all pleasure in laughing
-at a comic scene is an enjoyment of another’s discomfiture. Yet it must
-be only discomfiture, not grave misfortune or sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>If a man’s hat blows off and he runs out into the street after it, we
-laugh; but if he is hit by a passing motor car, we do not laugh. If a
-fat man slips on a banana peel and lands in a mud puddle, we laugh; but
-if he breaks his leg we do not laugh.</p>
-
-<p>It is the ridiculous discomfiture of another that makes a joke, not the
-serious accident, and though there are other types and other theories
-of the cause of humor, doubtless the majority of jokes are based on
-this principle.</p>
-
-<p>From the Circus Clown to Charlie Chaplin, episodes of discomfiture
-make us laugh. Every newspaper cartoon or comic series hinges on the
-discomfiture of somebody. The fly on the bald head, the collar button
-under the bureau, the henpecked husband, all depend for their humor on
-the trifling misfortune that makes its victim ridiculous.</p>
-
-<p>An enjoyment of this discomfiture of a fellow man is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span> inherent in human
-nature, and though there are subtler jests, yet this type has a grip on
-the risibilities that can never be loosened.</p>
-
-<p>Can we doubt that it was the Serpent’s laughing at the discomfiture of
-Adam and Eve, caught in <i>deshabille</i>, that caused them to rush for
-the nearest fig tree? Or perhaps, their eyes being opened, they laughed
-at one another. Anyway, they were decidedly discomfited, and did their
-best to remedy matters.</p>
-
-<p>This Derision Theory includes also the jests at the ignorance or
-stupidity of another. The enormous vogue of the Noodle jokes, some
-centuries ago, hinged on the delight felt in the superiority of the
-hearer over the subject of the jest. All laughable blunders, every
-social <i>faux pas</i>, all funny stories of children’s sayings and
-doings are based on the consciousness of superiority. Practical jokes
-represent the simplest form of this theory, as in them the discomfiture
-of the other person is the prime element, with no subtle byplay to
-relieve it.</p>
-
-<p>A mild example is the polite rejoinder of the street car conductor when
-a lady asked at which end of the car she should get off.</p>
-
-<p>“Either end, madame,” he responded, “both ends stop.”</p>
-
-<p>An extreme specimen is the man who told the story of a burning
-house&mdash;“I saw a fellow up on the roof,” he related, “and I called to
-him, ‘Jump, and I’ll catch you in a blanket!’ Well, I had to laugh,&mdash;he
-jumped,&mdash;and I didn’t have no blanket!”</p>
-
-<p>Implied discomfiture is in the story of the agnostic, who was buried
-in his evening clothes. “Poor Jim,” said a funeral guest; “he didn’t
-believe in Heaven and he didn’t believe in Hell; and there he lies, all
-dressed up and no place to go!”</p>
-
-<p>Almost a practical joke is the man who, reading a newspaper, suddenly
-exclaimed, “Why, here’s a list of people who won’t eat onions any
-more!” And when his hearer asked to see the list, he handed over the
-obituary column.</p>
-
-<p>The Disappointment Theory, though overlapping the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span> Derision Theory at
-times, is based on the idea that the essence of the laughable is the
-incongruous.</p>
-
-<p>Hazlitt says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“We laugh at absurdity; we laugh at deformity. We laugh at a
-bottle-nose in a caricature; at a stuffed figure of an alderman in a
-pantomime, and at the tale of Slaukenbergius. A dwarf standing by a
-giant makes a contemptible figure enough. Rosinante and Dapple are
-laughable from contrast, as their masters from the same principle make
-two for a pair. We laugh at the dress of foreigners, and they at ours.
-Three chimney-sweepers meeting three Chinese in Lincoln’s Inn Fields,
-they laughed at one another till they were ready to drop down. Country
-people laugh at a person because they never saw him before. Any one
-dressed in the height of the fashion, or quite out of it, is equally an
-object of ridicule. One rich source of the ludicrous is distress with
-which we cannot sympathize from its absurdity or insignificance. It is
-hard to hinder children from laughing at a stammerer, at a negro, at
-a drunken man, or even at a madman. We laugh at mischief. We laugh at
-what we do not believe. We say that an argument or an assertion that is
-very absurd, is quite ludicrous. We laugh to show our satisfaction with
-ourselves, or our contempt for those about us, or to conceal our envy
-or our ignorance. We laugh at fools, and at those who pretend to be
-wise&mdash;at extreme simplicity, awkwardness, hypocrisy, and affectation.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A beautiful definition of the Disappointment Theory is Max Eastman’s,
-“The experience of a forward motion of interest sufficiently definite
-so that its ‘coming to nothing’ can be felt.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Eastman says further:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It is more like a reflex action than a mental result. It arises
-in the very act of perception, when that act is brought to nothing
-by two conflicting qualities of fact or feeling. It arises when
-some numb habitual activity, suddenly obstructed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span> first appears in
-consciousness with an announcement of its own failure. The blockage
-of an instinct, a collision between two instincts, the interruption
-of a habit, a ‘conflict of habit systems,’ a disturbed or misapplied
-reflex&mdash;all these catastrophes, as well as the coming to nothing of an
-effort at conceptual thought, must enter into the meaning of the word
-<i>disappointment</i>, if it is to explain the whole field of practical
-humor. The ‘strain’ in that expectation is what makes it capable of
-humorous collapse. It is an active expectation. The feelings are
-involved.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The point of the Disappointment Theory, that of frustrating a carefully
-built up expectation is exemplified in jests like these.</p>
-
-<p>“Is your wife entertaining this winter?” asks one society man of
-another. “Not very,” is the reply.</p>
-
-<p>“I have to go to Brooklyn&mdash;” says a perplexed-looking old lady to a
-traffic policeman. “Are you asking directions, ma’am, or just telling
-me your troubles?”</p>
-
-<p>The incongruity may be merely a collocution of words.</p>
-
-<p>Mark Twain described Turner’s Slave Ship as “A tortoise-shell cat
-having a fit in a platter of tomatoes.”</p>
-
-<p>In a newspaper cartoon, a wife says to her husband, “Even if it is
-Sunday morning and a terribly hot day, that’s no reason you should go
-around looking like the dog’s breakfast!”</p>
-
-<p>So we see the element of surprise must be combined with the element of
-appropriate inappropriateness to gain the desired result.</p>
-
-<p>In this story expectation is aroused for a human tragedy. The
-incongruity and disappointment make its humor.</p>
-
-<p>As Mr. Caveman was gnawing at a bone in his cave one morning, Mrs.
-Caveman rushed in, exclaiming, “Quick! get your club! Oh, quick!”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” growled Mr. Caveman.</p>
-
-<p>“A sabre-toothed tiger is chasing mother!” gasped his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Caveman uttered an expression of annoyance.</p>
-
-<p>“And what the deuce do I care,” he said, “what happens to a
-sabre-toothed tiger?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span></p>
-
-<p>It must be admitted that a hard and fast line cannot be drawn between
-the two theories given us by the Greek philosophers.</p>
-
-<p>Cicero subscribed to the Derision theory, and said the ridiculous
-rested on a certain meanness and deformity, and a joke to be pleasing
-must be <i>on</i> somebody. But he declared, also, that the most
-eminent kind of the ridiculous is that in which we expect to hear one
-thing and hear another said.</p>
-
-<p>Several other Greek and Roman philosophers tackled the subject without
-adding anything of importance, and some of them, as well as later
-writers declared that the comic could never be defined, but is to be
-appreciated only by taste and natural discernment; while many moderns
-agree that all theories are inadequate and contradictory, however
-useful they may be for convenience in discussion.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the trouble may be that only serious-minded people attempt a
-definition of humor, and they are not the ones best fitted for the work.</p>
-
-<p>For the discussion goes on still, and is as fascinating to some types
-of mentality as is the question of perpetual motion or the Fountain of
-Immortal Youth.</p>
-
-<p>A useful commentary on the matter, and one appropriate at this juncture
-is the following extract from the works of the celebrated theologian,
-Dr. Isaac Barrow, an Englishman of the Seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It may be demanded,” says he, “what the thing we speak of is, and what
-this facetiousness doth import; to which question I might reply, as
-Democritus did to him that asked the definition of a man&mdash;<i>’Tis that
-which we all see and know!</i> and one better apprehends what it is
-by acquaintance, than I can inform him by description. It is indeed a
-thing so versatile and multiform, appearing in so many shapes, so many
-postures, so many garbs, so variously apprehended by several eyes and
-judgments, that it seemeth no less hard to settle a clear and certain
-notice thereof, than to make a portrait of Proteus, or to define the
-figure of fleeting air. Sometimes it lieth in pat allusion to a known
-story, or in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span> seasonable application of a trivial saying, or in forging
-an apposite tale; sometimes it playeth in words and phrases, taking
-advantage from the ambiguity of their sense, or the affinity of their
-sound; sometimes it is wrapped in a dress of luminous expression;
-sometimes it lurketh under an odd similitude. Sometimes it is lodged in
-a sly question; in a smart answer; in a quirkish reason; in a shrewd
-intimation; in cunningly diverting or cleverly restoring an objection;
-sometimes it is couched in a bold scheme of speech; in a tart irony; in
-a lusty hyperbole; in a startling metaphor; in a plausible reconciling
-of contradictions; or in acute nonsense. Sometimes a scenical
-representation of persons or things, a counterfeit speech, a mimical
-look or gesture, passeth for it. Sometimes an affected simplicity,
-sometimes a presumptuous bluntness, gives it being. Sometimes it riseth
-only from a lucky hitting upon what is strange; sometimes from a crafty
-wresting obvious matter to the purpose. Often it consisteth in one
-knows not what, and springeth up one can hardly tell how. Its ways are
-unaccountable and inexplicable, being answerable to the numberless
-rovings of fancy and windings of language. It is, in short, a manner
-of speaking out of the simple and plain way (such as reason teacheth
-and knoweth things by), which by a pretty surprising uncouthness
-in conceit or expression doth affect and amuse the fancy, showing
-in it some wonder, and breathing some delight thereto. It raiseth
-admiration, as signifying a nimble sagacity of apprehension, a special
-felicity of invention, a vivacity of spirit, and reach of wit more
-than vulgar; it seeming to argue a rare quickness of parts, that one
-can fetch in remote conceits applicable; a notable skill that he can
-dexterously accommodate them to a purpose before him; together with a
-lively briskness of humour not apt to damp those sportful flashes of
-imagination. Whence in Aristotle such persons are termed επιδéξιοι,
-dexterous men, and ευτροποι, men of facile and versatile manners,
-who can easily turn themselves to all things, or turn all things to
-themselves. It also procureth delight, by gratifying curiosity with its
-rareness or semblance of difficulty (as monsters, not for their beauty
-but their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span> rarity&mdash;as juggling tricks, not for their use but their
-abstruseness&mdash;are beheld with pleasure); by diverting the mind from its
-road of serious thoughts; by instilling gaiety and airiness of spirit;
-by provoking to such dispositions of spirit in way of emulation or
-compliance; and by seasoning matter, otherwise distasteful or insipid,
-with an unusual and thence grateful tang.”&mdash;<i>Barrow’s Works</i>,
-Sermon 14.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Also in the Seventeenth century there sprang into being a definition
-that has lived, possibly because of the apt wording of its phrase.</p>
-
-<p>It is by Thomas Hobbes, who declared for the Derision Theory, but with
-less sweetness and light than it had hitherto enjoyed.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“<i>Sudden glory</i> is the passion which maketh those <i>Grimaces</i>
-called <span class="smcap">Laughter</span>,” said Hobbes in the “Leviathan,” “and is
-caused either by some sudden act of their own, that pleaseth them; or
-by the apprehension of some deformed thing in another, by comparison
-whereof they suddenly applaud themselves. And it is incident most to
-them, that are conscious of the fewest abilities in themselves; who
-are forced to keep themselves in their own favour, by observing the
-imperfections of other men. And therefore much laughter at the defects
-of others, is a signe of Pusillanimity. For of great minds, one of
-the proper workes is, to help and free others from scorn; and compare
-themselves onely with the most able.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">and, also from Hobbes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The passion of laughter is nothing else but <i>sudden glory</i>
-arising from a sudden conception of some <i>eminency in ourselves</i>
-by comparison with the infirmity of others, or with our own formerly:
-for men laugh at the <i>follies</i> of themselves past, when they
-come suddenly to remembrance, except they bring with them any present
-dishonour.”&mdash;<i>Treatise on Human Nature</i>, chap. ix.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>There is small doubt that the vogue of Hobbes’ definition of this
-theory rests on the delightfully expressive, “Sudden Glory,” for those
-two words beautifully picture the emotion caused by the unexpected
-opportunity to laugh at the discomfiture of another.</p>
-
-<p>Locke followed with a dry and meaningless dissertation, and Coleridge
-wrote his discerning but all too brief remarks.</p>
-
-<p>Many German writers gave profound if unimportant opinions.</p>
-
-<p>Addison wrote pleasantly about it, and George Meredith, while accepting
-the Derision Theory, modified its harshness thus:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“If you believe that our civilization is founded in common-sense
-(and it is the first condition of sanity to believe it), you will,
-when contemplating men, discern a Spirit overhead; not more heavenly
-than the light flashed upward from glassy surfaces, but luminous and
-watchful; never shooting beyond them, nor lagging in the rear; so
-closely attached to them that it may be taken for a slavish reflex,
-until its features are studied. It has the sage’s brows, and the sunny
-malice of a faun lurks at the corners of the half-closed lips drawn in
-an idle wariness of half tension. That slim feasting smile, shaped like
-the long-bow, was once a big round satyr’s laugh, that flung up the
-brows like a fortress lifted by gunpowder. The laugh will come again,
-but it will be of the order of the smile, finely tempered, showing
-sunlight of the mind, mental richness rather than noisy enormity. Its
-common aspect is one of unsolicitous observation, as if surveying a
-full field and having leisure to dart on its chosen morsels without
-any fluttering eagerness. Men’s future upon earth does not attract it;
-their honesty and shapeliness in the present does; and whenever they
-wax out of proportion, overblown, affected, pretentious, bombastical,
-hypocritical, pedantic, fantastically delicate; whenever it sees them
-self-deceived or hoodwinked, given to run riot in idolatries, drifting
-into vanities, congregating in absurdities, planning shortsightedly,
-plotting dementedly; whenever they are at variance with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span> their
-professions, and violate the unwritten but perceptible laws binding
-them in consideration one to another; whenever they offend sound
-reason, fair justice; are false in humility or mined with conceit,
-individually, or in the bulk&mdash;the Spirit overhead will look humanely
-malign and cast an oblique light on them, followed by volleys of
-silvery laughter. That is the Comic Spirit.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>With Kant, however, the other theory of Aristotle came into notice.
-Kant declared, “Laughter is the affection arising from the sudden
-transformation of a strained expectation into nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>This was dubbed by Emerson, “Frustrated Expectation,” and describes the
-Disappointment Theory as Sudden Glory describes the Derision Theory.</p>
-
-<p>On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets of the
-World of Humor.</p>
-
-<p>There are many other theories and sub-theories, there are long and
-prosy books written about them, but are outside our Outline.</p>
-
-<p>A general understanding of the humorous element is all we are after and
-that has now been set forth.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A question closely akin to What is Humor? is What is a Sense of Humor?</p>
-
-<p>The phrase seems self-explanatory, and is by no means identical with
-the thing itself. Nor are the two inseparable. Humor and the sense of
-humor need not necessarily lie in the same brain.</p>
-
-<p>Two erudite writers on this subject have chosen to consider the phrase
-as a unique bit of terminology.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Max Eastman says; “The creation of that name is the most original
-and the most profound contribution of modern thought to the problem of
-the comic.”</p>
-
-<p>While Professor Brander Matthews says; “Ample as the English vocabulary
-is today, it is sometimes strangely deficient in needful terms. Thus it
-is that we have nothing but the inadequate phrase <i>sense of humor</i>
-to denominate a quality<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span> which is often confounded with humor itself,
-and which should always be sharply discriminated from it.”</p>
-
-<p>Now it would seem that the phrase was simply a matter of evolution,
-coming along when the time was ripe. Surely it is no stroke of genius,
-nor yet is it hopelessly inadequate.</p>
-
-<p>It must be granted that a sense of the humorous is as logical a thought
-as a sensitive ear for music, or, to be more strictly analogous, a
-sense of moderation or that very definite thing, card sense.</p>
-
-<p>Sense, used thus, is almost synonymous with taste, and a taste for
-literature or for the Fine Arts in no way implies a productive faculty
-in those fields. A taste for humor would mean precisely the same thing
-as a sense of humor, and the taste or the sense may be more or less
-natural and more or less cultivated, as in the matter of books or
-pictures.</p>
-
-<p>A taste for music is a sense of music, and one may appreciate and enjoy
-music and its rendition to the utmost without being able to sing a note
-or play upon any instrument whatever.</p>
-
-<p>One may be a music critic or an art critic, or even a critic of
-literature, without being able to create any of these things.</p>
-
-<p>Why, then, put forth as a discovery that one may have a sense of humor
-without being humorous and <i>vice versa</i>?</p>
-
-<p>Humor is creative, while the sense of humor is merely receptive and
-appreciative.</p>
-
-<p>Many great humorists have little or no sense of humor. Try to tell
-a joke to an accredited joker and note his blank expression of
-uncomprehension. It is because he has no sense of humor that he takes
-himself seriously.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the case with Dickens, with Carlyle, with many renowned wits.
-The humorist without the sense of humor is a bore. He tells long,
-detailed yarns, proud of himself, and not seeing his hearers’ lack of
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>The man with a sense of humor is a joy to know and to be with.</p>
-
-<p>The man who possesses both is already an immortal.</p>
-
-<p>Now as the sense of humor is negative, recipient, while<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span> humor is
-positive and creative, it follows that a sense of humor alone cannot
-produce humorous literature.</p>
-
-<p>These mute, inglorious Miltons, therefore, have no place in our
-Outline, but they deserve a passing word of recognition for the
-assistance they have been to the humorists, by way of being applauding
-audiences.</p>
-
-<p>For humor, like beauty is in the eye of the beholder. One with an
-acute sense of humor will see comic in stones, wit in the running
-brooks,&mdash;while a dull or absent sense of humor can see no fun save in
-the obvious jest.</p>
-
-<p>The lines,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“A jest’s prosperity lies in the ear</div>
- <div>Of him who hears it. Never in the tongue</div>
- <div>Of him who makes it.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">in <i>Love’s Labour’s Lost</i> proves that Shakespeare understood the
-meaning and value of a sense of humor.</p>
-
-<p>Although it was at a much later date that the word humor came to be
-used as now, to mean a gentle, good-natured sort of fun.</p>
-
-<p>All types of humor are universal and of all time. But the first
-definitions were arrived at by the men of Greece and Rome, who were
-scholarly and analytical, hence the hair-splitting and meticulous
-efforts to treat it metaphysically.</p>
-
-<p>Humor today rarely is used in a caustic or biting sense,&mdash;that is
-reserved for wit.</p>
-
-<p>Which brings us to another great and futile question,&mdash;the distinction
-between wit and humor.</p>
-
-<p>There is not time or space to take up this subject fully here. But we
-can sum up the decisions and opinions of some few of the thinking minds
-that have been bent upon it.</p>
-
-<p>As the best and most comprehensive is the dissertation by William
-Hazlitt, most of this is here given.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Humour is the describing the ludicrous as it is in itself; wit is the
-exposing it, by comparing or contrasting it with something else. Humour
-is, as it were, the growth of nature<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span> and accident; wit is the product
-of art and fancy. Humour, as it is shown in books, is an imitation of
-the natural or acquired absurdities of mankind, or of the ludicrous
-in accident, situation, and character; wit is the illustrating and
-heightening the sense of that absurdity by some sudden and unexpected
-likeness or opposition of one thing to another, which sets off the
-quality we laugh at or despise in a still more contemptible or striking
-point of view. Wit, as distinguished from poetry, is the imagination
-or fancy inverted and so applied to given objects, as to make the
-little look less, the mean more light and worthless; or to divert
-our admiration or wean our affections from that which is lofty and
-impressive, instead of producing a more intense admiration and exalted
-passion, as poetry does. Wit may sometimes, indeed, be shown in
-compliments as well as satire; as in the common epigram&mdash;</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“‘Accept a miracle, instead of wit:</div>
- <div>See two dull lines with Stanhope’s pencil writ.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>But then the mode of paying it is playful and ironical, and contradicts
-itself in the very act of making its own performance an humble foil
-to another’s. Wit hovers round the borders of the light and trifling,
-whether in matters of pleasure or pain; for as soon as it describes the
-serious seriously, it ceases to be wit, and passes into a different
-form. Wit is, in fact, the eloquence of indifference, or an ingenious
-and striking exposition of those evanescent and glancing impressions
-of objects which affect us more from surprise or contrast to the train
-of our ordinary and literal preconceptions, than from anything in the
-objects themselves exciting our necessary sympathy or lasting hatred.</p>
-
-<p>“That wit is the most refined and effectual, which is founded on the
-detection of unexpected likeness or distinction in things, rather than
-in words.</p>
-
-<p>“Wit is, in fact, a voluntary act of the mind, or exercise of the
-invention, showing the absurd and ludicrous consciously, whether in
-ourselves or another. Cross-readings,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span> where the blunders are designed,
-are wit; but if any one were to light upon them through ignorance or
-accident, they would be merely ludicrous.</p>
-
-<p>“Lastly, there is a wit of sense and observation, which consists in the
-acute illustration of good sense and practical wisdom by means of some
-far-fetched conceit or quaint imagery. The matter is sense, but the
-form is wit. Thus the lines in Pope&mdash;</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“’Tis with our judgments as our watches, none</div>
- <div>Go just alike; yet each believes his own&mdash;’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">are witty rather than poetical; because the truth they convey is a mere
-dry observation on human life, without elevation or enthusiasm, and the
-illustration of it is of that quaint and familiar kind that is merely
-curious and fanciful.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus Hazlitt: yet it is not necessary to be so verbose in the matter of
-discriminating wit from humor.</p>
-
-<p>They are intrinsically different though often outwardly alike.</p>
-
-<p>Wit is intensive or incisive, while humor is expansive. Wit is rapid,
-humor is slow. Wit is sharp, humor is gentle. Wit is intentional, humor
-is fortuitous.</p>
-
-<p>But to my mind the great difference lies in the fact that wit is
-subjective while humor is objective.</p>
-
-<p>Wit is the invention of the mind of its creator; humor lies in the
-object that he observes. Wit originates in one’s self, humor outside
-one’s self.</p>
-
-<p>Again, wit is art, humor is nature. Wit is creative fancy, more or
-less educated and skilled. Humor is found in a simple object, and is
-unintentional.</p>
-
-<p>Yet in these, as in all definitions, we must stretch a point when
-necessary; we must make allowances for viewpoints and opinions, and we
-must agree that the question is not one that may be answered by the
-card.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is it necessary in the present undertaking.</p>
-
-<p><i>An Outline of Humor</i> is planned to include all sorts and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-conditions of fun, all types and distinctions of wit and humor from the
-earliest available records, or deductions from records, down to the
-dawn of the Twentieth Century.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Man has been defined as the animal capable of laughter. Although this
-definition has been attacked by lovers of quadrupeds, it has held
-in the minds of thinkers and students. Aristotle, Milton, Hazlitt,
-Voltaire, Schopenhauer, Bergson and many other distinguished scholars
-hold that the playfulness seen in animals is in no way an indication of
-their sense of humor.</p>
-
-<p>The Laughing Hyena and the Laughing Jackass are so called only because
-their cry has a likeness to the sound of raucous human laughter, but it
-is no result of mirthful feeling.</p>
-
-<p>Hazlitt says man is the only animal that laughs and weeps, for he is
-the only animal that is struck with the difference between what things
-are and what they ought to be.</p>
-
-<p>The playfulness of dogs or kittens is often assumed to be humor, when
-it is mere imitative sagacity. The stolid, imperturbable gravity of
-animals’ faces shows no appreciation of mirth.</p>
-
-<p>Oliver Wendell Holmes speaks of the large brown eyes of oxen as
-imperfect organisms, because they may show no sign of fun.</p>
-
-<p>Yet it is, in a way, a matter of opinion, for the instinct of humor was
-among the latest to evolve in the human race, and rudimentary hints of
-it may be present in other animals as in our own children. A monkey
-or a baby will show amusement when tickled, but this is mere physical
-reflex action, and cannot be called a true sense of humor.</p>
-
-<p>Many animal lovers assume intelligences in their pets that are mere
-reflections of their own mental processes or are thoughts fathered by
-their own wishes.</p>
-
-<p>It is, however, of little importance, for however appreciative of fun
-an animal may be, it cannot create or impart wit or humor, and most
-certainly it cannot laugh.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span></p>
-
-<p>Bergson goes even farther. He declares the comic does not exist outside
-the pale of what is strictly human.</p>
-
-<p>He states: You may laugh at an animal, but only because you have
-detected in it some human attitude or expression.</p>
-
-<p>This is easily proved by the recollection of the fun of Puss In Boots
-or The Three Bears, and the gravity of a Natural History.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, Bergson argues, man is not only the only animal that laughs,
-he is the only animal which is laughed at, for if any other animal
-or any lifeless object provokes mirth, it is only because of some
-resemblance to man in appearance or intent.</p>
-
-<p>So, with such minor exceptions as to be doubtful or negligible, we must
-accept man as the only exponent or possessor of humor.</p>
-
-<p>And it is one of the latest achievements of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>First, we assent, was the survival of the fittest. Followed a sense
-of hunger, a sense of safety, a sense of warfare, a sense of Tribal
-Rights,&mdash;through all these stages there was no time or need for humor.</p>
-
-<p>Among the earliest fossilized remains no funny bone has been found.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless, too, a sense of sorrow came before the sense of humor
-dawned. Death came, and early man wept long before it occurred to him
-to laugh and have the world laugh with him. Gregariousness and leisure
-were necessary before mirth could ensue. All life was subjective;
-dawning intelligence learned first to look out for Number One.</p>
-
-<p>Yet it was early in the game that our primordial ancestors began to see
-a lighter side of life.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, as Mr. Wells tells us, they mimicked very cleverly, gestured,
-danced and laughed before they could talk!</p>
-
-<p>And the consideration of the development of this almost innate human
-sense is our present undertaking.</p>
-
-<p>The matter falls easily,&mdash;almost too easily,&mdash;into three divisions.</p>
-
-<p>Let us call them, Ancient, Middle and Modern.</p>
-
-<p>This is perhaps not an original idea of division, but it is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span> certainly
-the best for a preliminary arrangement. And it may not be convenient to
-stick religiously to consecutive dates; our progress may become logical
-rather than chronological.</p>
-
-<p>As to a general division, then, let us consider Ancient Humor as a
-period from the very beginning down to the time of the Greeks. The
-Middle Division to continue until about the time of Chaucer. And the
-Modern Period from that time to the present.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span></p>
-
-<h2>ANCIENT HUMOR</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>After careful consideration of all available facts and theories of the
-earliest mental processes of our race, we must come to the conclusion
-that mirth had its origin in sorrow; that laughter was the direct
-product of tears.</p>
-
-<p>Nor are they even yet completely dissevered. Who has not laughed till
-he cried? Who has not cried herself into hysterical laughter? All
-theories of humor include an element of unhappiness; all joy has its
-hint of pain.</p>
-
-<p>And so, when our archæologists hold the mirror up to prehistoric
-nature, we see among the earliest reflected pictures, a procession
-or group of evolving humanity about to sacrifice human victims to
-their monstrous superstitions and, withal, showing a certain festival
-cheerfulness. Moreover, we note that they are fantastically dressed,
-and wear horns and painted masks. Surely, the first glimmerings of a
-horrid mirth are indubitably the adjunct of such celebrations.</p>
-
-<p>Since we have reason to believe that man mimicked before he could
-talk,&mdash;and, observing a baby, we have no difficulty in believing
-this,&mdash;we readily believe that his earliest mimicries aroused a feeling
-of amusement in his auditors, and as their applause stimulated him to
-fresh effort, the ball was set rolling and the fun began.</p>
-
-<p>From mimicry was born exaggeration and the horns and painted masks were
-grotesque and mirth-provoking.</p>
-
-<p>Yet were they also used to inculcate fear, and moreover had
-significance as expressions of sorrow and woe.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the emotions, at first, were rather inextricably intermingled, nor
-are they yet entirely untangled and straightened out.</p>
-
-<p>Not to inquire too closely into the vague stories of these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span> prehistoric
-men, not to differentiate too exactly between Cro-Magnards and
-Grimaldis, we at least know a few things about the late Palæolithic
-people, and one indicative fact is that they had a leaning toward paint.</p>
-
-<p>They buried their dead after painting the body, and they also painted
-the weapons and ornaments that were interred with him.</p>
-
-<p>It is owing to this addiction to paint that scientists have been
-enabled to learn so much of primordial life, for the pigments of black,
-brown, red, yellow and white still endure in the caves of France and
-Spain.</p>
-
-<p>And, since it is known that they painted their own faces and bodies we
-can scarce help deducing that they presented grotesque appearances and
-moved their fellows to laughter.</p>
-
-<p>But any earnest thinker or student is very likely to get out of his
-subject what he brings to it, at least, in kind. And so, archæologists
-and antiquarians, being of grave and serious nature, have found no fun
-or humor in these early peoples,&mdash;perhaps, because they brought none to
-their search.</p>
-
-<p>It remains, therefore, for us to sift their findings, and see, if by a
-good chance we may discover some traces of mirth among the evidential
-remains of prehistoric man.</p>
-
-<p>It would not be, of course, creative or even intentional humor, but
-since we know he was a clever mimic, we must assume the appreciation of
-his mimicry by his fellows.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, he was deeply impressed by his dreams, and it must have been
-that some of those dreams were of a humorous nature.</p>
-
-<p>We are told his mentality was similar to that of a bright little
-contemporary boy of five. This theory would give him the power of
-laughter at simple things and it seems only fair to assume that he
-possessed it.</p>
-
-<p>In the beginnings of humanity there was very close connection between
-man and the animals. Not only did man kill and eat the other animals,
-but he cultivated and bred them, he watched them and studied their
-habits.</p>
-
-<p>It is, therefore, not surprising that man’s earliest efforts at drawing
-should represent animals.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span></p>
-
-<p>The earliest known drawings, those of the Palæolithic men show the
-bison, horse, ibex, cave bear and reindeer. The drawing at first was
-primitive, but later it became astonishingly clever and life-like.</p>
-
-<p>Also, among these primitive peoples, there was some attempt at
-sculpture, in the way of little stone or ivory statuettes. These
-incline to caricature, and are probably the first dawning of that
-tendency of the human brain.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the accounts of these earliest men show little that can be
-definitely styled humorous, and while we cannot doubt they possessed
-a sense of mirth, they have left us scant traces of it, or else the
-solemn archæologists have overlooked such.</p>
-
-<p>The latter may be the case, for a scholar with a sense of humor, Thomas
-Wright, declares as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“A tendency to burlesque and caricature appears, indeed, to be a
-feeling deeply implanted in human nature, and it is one of the earliest
-talents displayed by people in a rude state of society. An appreciation
-of, and sensitiveness to, ridicule, and a love of that which is
-humorous, are found even among savages, and enter largely into their
-relations with their fellow men. When, before people cultivated either
-literature or art, the chieftain sat in his rude hall surrounded by his
-warriors, they amused themselves by turning their enemies and opponents
-into mockery, by laughing at their weaknesses, joking on their defects,
-whether physical or mental, and giving them nicknames in accordance
-therewith,&mdash;in fact, caricaturing them in words, or by telling stories
-which were calculated to excite laughter. When the agricultural slaves
-(for the tillers of the land were then slaves) were indulged with a
-day of relief from their labours, they spent it in unrestrained mirth.
-And when these same people began to erect permanent buildings, and
-to ornament them, the favourite subjects of their ornamentation were
-such as presented ludicrous ideas. The warrior, too, who caricatured
-his enemy in his speeches over the festive board, soon sought to give
-a more permanent form to his ridicule, which he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span> endeavoured to do by
-rude delineations on the bare rock, or on any other convenient surface
-which presented itself to his hand. Thus originated caricature and
-the grotesque in art. In fact, art itself, in its earliest forms, is
-caricature; for it is only by that exaggeration of features which
-belongs to caricature, that unskilful draughtsmen could make themselves
-understood.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>An early development of humor was seen in the recognition of the fool
-or buffoon.</p>
-
-<p>It is not impossible that this arose because of the discovery or
-invention of intoxicating drinks.</p>
-
-<p>This important date is set, not very definitely, somewhere between
-10,000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> and 2,000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Its noticeable results
-were merriment and feast-making. At these feasts the fool, who was not
-yet a wit, won the laughter of the guests by his idiocy, or, often by
-his deformity. The wise fool is a later development.</p>
-
-<p>But at these feasts also appeared the bards or rhapsodists, who
-entertained the company by chanting or reciting stories and jokes.</p>
-
-<p>These are called the artists of the ear as the rock painters are
-called the artists of the eye. And with them language grew in beauty
-and power. They were living books, the only books then extant. For
-writing came slowly and was a clumsy affair at best for a long period.
-The Bards sang and recited and so kept alive folk-tales and jests that
-remain to this day.</p>
-
-<p>Writing, like most of the inventions of man served every other purpose
-before that of humor.</p>
-
-<p>At first it was only for accounts and matters of fact. In Egypt it was
-used for medical recipes and magic formulas. Accounts, letters, name
-lists and itineraries followed; but for the preservation of humorous
-thought writing was not used. That was left to the bards, and of
-course, to the caricaturists.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, Egyptian art usually presents itself in solemn and dignified
-effects with no lightness or gayety implied.</p>
-
-<p>Yet we are told by Sir Gardner Wilkinson, the early Egyptian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span> artists
-cannot always conceal their natural tendency to the humorous, which
-creeps out in a variety of little incidents. Thus, in a series of grave
-historical pictures on one of the great monuments at Thebes, we find
-a representation of a wine party, where the company consists of both
-sexes, and which evidently shows that the ladies were not restricted
-in the use of the juice of the grape in their entertainments; and,
-as he adds, “the painters, in illustrating this fact, have sometimes
-sacrificed their gallantry to a love of caricature.” Among the females,
-evidently of rank, represented in this scene, “some call the servants
-to support them as they sit, others with difficulty prevent themselves
-from falling on those behind them, and the faded flower, which is ready
-to drop from their heated hands, is intended to be characteristic of
-their own sensations.” Sir Gardner observes that “many instances of
-a talent for caricature, are observable in the compositions of the
-Egyptian artists, who executed the paintings of the tombs at Thebes,
-which belong to a very early period of the Egyptian annals. Nor is the
-application of this talent restricted always to secular subjects, but
-we see it at times intruding into the most sacred mysteries of their
-religion.”</p>
-
-<p>A class of caricatures which dates from a very remote period, shows
-comparisons between men and the particular animals whose qualities they
-possess.</p>
-
-<p>As brave as a lion, as faithful as a dog, as sly as a fox or as
-swinish as a pig,&mdash;these things are all represented in these ancient
-caricatures.</p>
-
-<p>More than a thousand years <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> there was drawn on an Egyptian
-papyrus a cat carrying a shepherd’s crook and driving a flock of geese.
-This is but one section of a long picture, in which the animals are
-often shown treating their human tyrants in the manner they are usually
-treated by them.</p>
-
-<p>All sorts of animals are shown, in odd contortions and grotesque
-attitudes, and not infrequently the scene or episode depicted refers to
-the state or condition of the human soul after death.</p>
-
-<p>It is deduced that from these animal pictures arose the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span> class
-of stories called fables, in which animals are endued with human
-attributes.</p>
-
-<p>And also connected with them is the belief in metempsychosis or the
-transmission of the human soul into the body of an animal after death,
-which is a strong factor in the primitive religions.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, the intermingling of humans and animals is inherent in all art
-and literature, as, instance the calling of Our Lord a Lamb, or the
-Holy Ghost, a Dove.</p>
-
-<p>Or, as to this day we call our children lambs or kittens, or, slangily,
-kids. As we still call a man an ass or a puppy; or a woman, a cat.</p>
-
-<p>An argument for evolution can perhaps be seen in the inevitable turning
-back to the animals for a description or representation of human types.</p>
-
-<p>At any rate, early man used this sort of humor almost exclusively, and
-so combined it with his serious thought, even his religions, that it
-was a permanently interwoven thread.</p>
-
-<p>And the exaggeration of this mimicry of animals resulted in the
-grotesque and from that to the monstrous, as the mind grew with what it
-fed on, and caricature developed and progressed.</p>
-
-<p>Also, a subtler demonstration of dawning wit and humor is seen in the
-deliberate and intentional burlesque of one picture by another.</p>
-
-<p>In the British Museum is an Egyptian papyrus showing a lion and a
-unicorn playing chess, which is a caricature of a picture frequently
-seen on ancient monuments. And in the Egyptian collection of the New
-York Historical Society there is a slab of limestone, dating back three
-thousand years, which depicts a lion, seated upon a throne as king. To
-him, a fox, caricaturing a High Priest, offers a goose and a fan. This,
-too, is a burlesque of a serious picture.</p>
-
-<p>Again, a lion is engaged in laying out the dead body of another animal,
-and a hippopotamus is washing his hands in a water jar.</p>
-
-<p>One of these burlesque pictures shows a soul doomed to return to its
-earthly home in the form of a pig. This picture,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span> of such antiquity
-that it deeply impressed the Greeks and Romans, is part of the
-decoration of a king’s tomb.</p>
-
-<p>The ancient Egyptians, it may be gathered from their humorous pictures,
-were not averse to looking on the wine when it was red. Several
-delineations of Egyptian servants carrying home their masters after a
-carouse, are graphic and convincing; while others, equally so, show
-the convivial ones dancing, standing on their heads or belligerently
-wrestling.</p>
-
-<p>The tombs of the ancient Egyptians abound in these representations of
-over-merry occasions, and it all goes to prove the close connection in
-the primitive mind of the emotions of grief and mirth.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, <i>The Book of the Dead</i> that monument of Egyptian literature,
-and the oldest in the world, contains only records of conquests and
-a few stories and moral sayings,&mdash;not a trace of humor. That, in
-ancient Egypt is represented solely by the ready and deft pencil of the
-caricaturist.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Though humor came to them later, the earliest records of the Eastern
-and Oriental countries show little or no traces of the comic.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed eminent authorities state that there is not a single element of
-the amusing in the art or literature of the Babylonians or Assyrians.
-It may be that the eminent authorities hadn’t a nose for nonsense, or
-the statement may be true. We never shall know.</p>
-
-<p>But both these peoples had great skill in drawing and sculpture, and
-though their records are chiefly historical or religious, we cannot
-help feeling there may have been some jesting at somebody’s expense.</p>
-
-<p>However, there are no existing records of any sort, and we fear
-the ancient Assyrians and Babylonians must go down in history as
-serious-minded folk.</p>
-
-<p>The Hebrews show up much better.</p>
-
-<p>In recent years Renan and Carlyle both declared the Jewish race
-possessed no sense of humor, but their opinions probably reflected
-their own viewpoint.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span></p>
-
-<p>For the early examples of Hebrew Satire and Parody are distinctly
-humorous both in intent and in effect.</p>
-
-<p>Parody is, of course, the direct outcome of the primeval passion for
-mimicry. The first laugh-provoker was no doubt an exaggerated imitation
-of some defect or peculiarity of another. And the development of the
-art of amusement took centuries to get past that preliminary thought.</p>
-
-<p>The tendency to imitation was the impetus that turned the religious
-hymns into ribaldry and wine-songs, and the religious or funeral
-festivals into orgies of grotesque masquerading.</p>
-
-<p>And Hebrew literature is renowned for its parodies of serious matters
-both of church and state.</p>
-
-<p>With this race, satire sprang from parody and grew and thrived rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>To quote from the learned Professor Chotzner:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Since the birth of Hebrew literature, many centuries ago, satire
-has been one of its many characteristics. It is directed against the
-foibles and follies of the miser, the hypocrite, the profligate, the
-snob. The dull sermonizer, who puts his congregation to sleep, fares
-badly, and even the pretty wickednesses of the fair sex do not escape
-the hawk-eye of the Hebrew satirist. The luxury and extravagance of
-the ‘Daughters of Zion’ were attacked by no less a person than Isaiah
-himself; but human nature, especially that of a feminine kind, was too
-strong even for so eminent a prophet as he was, and there is no reason
-to suppose that the lady of those days wore one trinket the less in
-deference to his invective.</p>
-
-<p>“There are, in fact, several incidents mentioned here and there in the
-pages of the Bible, which are decidedly of a satirical nature. Most
-prominent among them are the two that refer respectively to Bileam,
-who was sermonized by his ass, and to Haman who, as the Prime Minister
-of Persia, had to do homage publicly to Mordecai, the very man whom he
-greatly hated and despised. Nay, we are told, that, by the irony of
-fate, Haman himself ended his life on the exceptionally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span> huge gallows
-which, while in a humorous turn of mind, he had ordered to be erected
-for the purpose of having executed thereon the object of his intense
-hatred.</p>
-
-<p>“And again, there are two excellent satires to be found respectively in
-the 14th chapter of Isaiah, and in the 18th chapter of the 1st Book of
-Kings. In the first, one of the mighty Babylonian potentates is held
-up to derision, on account of the ignominious defeat he had sustained
-in his own dominions, after he had been for a long time a great terror
-to contemporary nations, living in various parts of the ancient world.
-Even the trees of the forests are represented there as having mocked
-at his fall, saying: ‘Since thou art laid down, no feller is come up
-against us.’ In the second satire, the false prophets of Baal are
-ridiculed by Elijah for having maimed their bodies, in order to do
-thereby honour to a deity which is sometimes sarcastically referred to
-in the Bible as being ‘the god of flies.’</p>
-
-<p>“Delightfully satirical are also the two fables quoted in the Bible in
-connection with <i>Jotham</i> and <i>Nathan</i>, the Prophet. These are
-commonly well-known, and no extracts from them need be given here.</p>
-
-<p>“The satirical turn of mind manifested by Hebrew writers living in
-Biblical times, has been transmitted by them as a legacy to their
-descendants, who flourished in subsequent ages down to the present day.
-The first among them was Ben Sira who, in 180 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, wrote a
-book, some of the contents of which are satirical, for there the vanity
-of contemporary women, and the arrogance of some of the rich in the
-community are ridiculed with mild sarcasm.</p>
-
-<p>“But much more keen was the sense of the satirical that was possessed
-by some of the ancient Rabbis, who were among those that brought into
-existence the vast and interesting Talmudical literature. One of their
-satires, called ‘Tithes,’ runs as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“In Palestine there once lived a widow with her two daughters, whose
-only worldly possessions consisted of a little field. When she began to
-plough it, a Jewish official quoted to her the words of the lawgiver
-Moses: ‘Thou shalt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span> not plough with ox and ass together.’ When she
-began to sow, she was admonished in the words of the same lawgiver not
-to sow the fields with two kinds of seed. When she began to reap and
-pile up the stacks, she was told that she must leave ‘gleanings,’ the
-poor man’s sheaf, and the ‘corner.’</p>
-
-<p>“When the harvest time came, she was informed that it was her duty to
-give the priest’s share, consisting of the first and second ‘tithes.’
-She quietly submitted, and gave what was demanded of her. Then she sold
-the field, and bought two young ewes, in order that she might use their
-wool, and profit by their offspring. But, as soon as the ewes gave
-birth to their young, a priest came, and quoted to her the words of
-Moses: ‘Give <i>me</i> the first-born, for so the Lord hath ordained.’
-Again she submitted, and gave him the young.</p>
-
-<p>“When the time of shearing came, the priest again made his appearance,
-and said to her that, according to the Law, she was obliged to give him
-‘the shoulder, the two cheeks, and the maw.’</p>
-
-<p>“In a moment of despair, the widow said: ‘Let all the animals be
-consecrated to the Lord!’ ‘In that case,’ answered the priest,
-‘they belong altogether to me; for the Lord hath said: “Everything
-consecrated in Israel shall be thine.”’ So, he took the sheep, and went
-his way, leaving the widow and her two daughters in great distress, and
-bathed in tears!”</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h4><i>A WIFE’S RUSE</i><br />
-<span class="subhed2">(A Rabbinical Tale)</span></h4>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“There is a Rabbinical law which makes it obligatory upon every Jewish
-husband to divorce his wife, if after ten years of married life she
-shall remain childless. Now, there once lived in an Oriental town a
-man and his wife who were greatly attached to each other, but who
-had, unfortunately, no children, though they had been married for a
-considerable time.</p>
-
-<p>“When the end of the tenth year of their marriage was approaching,
-they both went to the Rabbi, and asked him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span> for his advice. The Rabbi
-listened with great sympathy, but declared his inability to alter or
-modify the law in their favour. The only suggestion, he said, that he
-could make, was, that on the last night before their final separation,
-they should celebrate a little feast together, and that the wife should
-take some keepsake from her husband which would be a permanent token of
-her husband’s unchangeable affection for her.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus, on the last night, the wife prepared a sumptuous meal for the
-two of them, and, amidst much merriment and laughter, she filled and
-refilled her husband’s goblet with sparkling wine. Under its influence,
-he fell into a heavy sleep, and while in this condition, he was carried
-by his wife’s orders to her father’s abode, where he continued to
-sleep till the following morning. When he awoke, and was wondering at
-his strange surroundings, his cunning wife came smilingly into the
-room, and said: ‘Of, my dear husband, I have actually carried out the
-Rabbi’s suggestion, inasmuch as I have taken away from home a most
-precious keepsake. This is your own dear self, without whom it would be
-impossible for me to live.’</p>
-
-<p>“The husband, moved to tears, embraced her most affectionately, and
-promised that they should live together to the end. Thereupon they
-joyfully returned home, and, going again to the Rabbi, they told him
-what had happened, and asked him for his forgiveness and blessing,
-which he readily accorded them. And, indeed, the Rabbi’s blessing
-had an excellent result. For after the lapse of some time, they both
-enjoyed the happiness of fondling a bright little child of their own.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Arabian and Turkish thought and speech seem to be tinged with the sense
-of the bizarre and strange rather than the grotesque. Their earliest
-folk tales and pleasant stories, from which later grew the <i>Arabian
-Nights</i>, form a cumulative, though broken chain from ancient to
-modern times.</p>
-
-<p>Persian humor leans toward the romantic and sentimental, but no ancient
-fragments are available. From the later<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span> writers, as Omar and Sadi, we
-feel convinced there was an early literature but we can find none to
-quote.</p>
-
-<p>India shows the oldest and most definite signs of early folk lore and
-retold tales.</p>
-
-<p>Buddha’s <i>Jatakas</i> produced the stories that later proved the
-germs of merry tales by Boccaccio and Chaucer. That these later writers
-put in all the fun is not entirely probable.</p>
-
-<p>Some antiquarians claim to find humor in the hymns of the Rig Vedas,
-whose date is indefinitely put at between 2,000 and 1,500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>
-while others of different temperament deny it.</p>
-
-<p>From this example the reader may judge for himself.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE HYMN OF THE FROGS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“When the first shower of the rainy season</div>
- <div>Has fallen on them, parched with thirst and longing,</div>
- <div>In glee each wet and dripping frog jumps upward;</div>
- <div>The green one and the speckled join their voices.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“They shout aloud like Brahmans drunk with soma,</div>
- <div>When they perform their annual devotions:</div>
- <div>Like priests at service sweating o’er the kettle,</div>
- <div>They issue forth; not one remains in hiding.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“The frogs that bleat like goats, that low like cattle,</div>
- <div>The green one and the speckled give us riches;</div>
- <div>Whole herds of cows may they bestow upon us,</div>
- <div>And grant us length of days through sacrificing.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The <i>Jatakas</i> of Buddha, though religious writings, and teachings
-by parables, are not without humor. The one about the silly son who
-killed the mosquito on his father’s bald head with a heavy blow of an
-ax, has its funny side. Or the old monarch who had reigned 252,000
-years and still had 84,000 years more ahead of him, and went into
-solitary retirement because he discovered a gray hair in his head.
-Another shrewd fellow made an enormous fortune out of the sale of a
-dead mouse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span></p>
-
-<p>Of course, the animals figure largely. There is the tale of the monkeys
-who watered a garden and then pulled up the plants to see if their
-roots were wet, and the angry crows who tried to drink up the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Riddles, too, must be remembered.</p>
-
-<p>Though not many specimens have been preserved, yet we remember Samson’s
-riddle, so disastrous to the Philistines.</p>
-
-<p>“Out of the eater came forth meat; and out of the strong came forth
-sweetness.”</p>
-
-<p>And when his susceptibility to cajolery led him to tell his wife the
-answer, and she tattled, his comment was the pithy; “If ye had not
-plowed with my heifer, ye had not found out my riddle.”</p>
-
-<p>The Sphinx’s riddle is well known. “What animal goes on four legs in
-the morning, on two at noon, and on three at night?”</p>
-
-<p>The answer being: Man, who goes on all-fours in infancy, walks upright
-in middle life, and adds a staff in old age.</p>
-
-<p>An ancient riddle is ascribed to the problematical personality of
-Homer, though it was doubtless originated before his time,&mdash;if he had a
-time.</p>
-
-<p>Homer, the tale goes, met some boys coming home from a fishing trip. On
-his asking them of their luck, they replied, “What we caught we threw
-away; what we didn’t catch, we have.”</p>
-
-<p>It seems they referred to fleas, not fish, and his inability to guess
-this so enraged Homer, that he killed himself.</p>
-
-<p>And here is a free translation of an ancient Arabian riddle.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“The loftiest cedars I can eat,</div>
- <div class="i1">Yet neither paunch nor mouth have I.</div>
- <div>I storm whene’er you give me meat,</div>
- <div class="i1">Whene’er you give me drink, I die.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The answer is Fire, and as may be seen, the type of riddle is precisely
-such as are found in the puzzle columns of today’s papers.</p>
-
-<p>Riddles are frequently mentioned in Ancient Literature,&mdash;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span> every
-country or race indulging in them. Josephus tells us that Solomon and
-Hiram of Tyre were in the habit of exchanging riddles.</p>
-
-<p>So we find that a love of fun or playfulness was inherent in our early
-ancestors, yet it did not reach a height to be called genuine creative
-humor.</p>
-
-<p>But there is always the feeling that if more of the translators
-themselves possessed more humor, they might find more in the originals.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule, translators and antiquarian researchers are so engaged in
-serious seeking that they would probably pass over humor if they ran
-across it.</p>
-
-<p>When a man is prospecting for iron or coal, he may easily be blind to
-indications of wells of natural oil.</p>
-
-<p>More wit and humor of Ancient India has come down to us through the
-caricatures and grotesque drawings than in words.</p>
-
-<p>The innumerable pictures of the God Krishna are the most humorous of
-these.</p>
-
-<p>Krishna appears to have been a veritable Don Juan, and his multitude of
-lady friends numbered up to many thousands.</p>
-
-<p>It is narrated that a friend of his, who had no wife, begged for just
-one from Krishna’s multiplicity.</p>
-
-<p>“Court any one you wish,” said the light-hearted god, pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>So the friend went from house to house of Krishna’s various wives, but
-one and all, they declared themselves quite satisfied with husband,
-Krishna, and moreover each one was convinced that he was hers alone.
-The seeker visited sixteen thousand and eight houses, and then gave it
-up.</p>
-
-<p>The endless pictures of Krishna represent him surrounded by lovely
-ladies, and a curious detail of these drawings is that in many
-instances the group of girls is wreathed and twisted into the shape
-or semblance of a bird or a horse or an elephant, presenting an
-interesting and not unpleasing effect.</p>
-
-<p>Now, all we have given so far, seems indeed a meager grist<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span> for the
-first division of our Outline. But one may not find what does not exist.</p>
-
-<p>There is no doubt that humor was known and loved from the dawning
-of independent thought, but as it was not recorded, save for a few
-drawings, on the enduring rocks, it died with its originators.</p>
-
-<p>Humor was the last need of a self-providing race, and even when found
-it was a luxury rather than a necessity.</p>
-
-<p>As a fair example of the earliest tales that have lived in various
-forms ever since their first recital, is appended the bit of ancient
-Hindoo folk-lore, called</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE GOOD WIFE AND THE BAD HUSBAND</i></h4>
-
-<p>In a secluded village there lived a rich man, who was very miserly,
-and his wife, who was very kind-hearted and charitable, but a stupid
-little woman that believed everything she heard. And there lived in
-the same village a clever rogue, who had for some time watched for an
-opportunity for getting something from this simple woman during her
-husband’s absence. So one day, when he had seen the old miser ride
-out to inspect his lands, this rogue of the first water came to the
-house, and fell down at the threshold as if overcome by fatigue. The
-woman ran up to him at once and inquired whence he came. “I am come
-from Kailása,” said he; “having been sent down by an old couple living
-there, for news of their son and his wife.” “Who are those fortunate
-dwellers in Siva’s mountain?” she asked. And the rogue gave the names
-of her husband’s deceased parents, which he had taken good care, of
-course, to learn from the neighbours. “Do you really come from them?”
-said the simple woman. “Are they doing well there? Dear old people!
-How glad my husband would be to see you, were he here! Sit down,
-please, and rest until he returns. How do they live there? Have they
-enough to eat and dress themselves withal?” These and a hundred other
-questions she put to the rogue, who, for his part, wished to get away
-as soon as possible, knowing full well how he would be treated if
-the miser should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span> return while he was there. So he replied, “Mother,
-language has no words to describe the miseries they are undergoing in
-the other world. They have not a rag of clothing, and for the last six
-days they have eaten nothing, and have lived on water only. It would
-break your heart to see them.” The rogue’s pathetic words deceived the
-good woman, who firmly believed that he had come down from Kailása, a
-messenger from the old couple to herself! “Why should they so suffer,”
-said she, “when their son has plenty to eat and clothe himself withal,
-and when their daughter-in-law wears all sorts of costly garments?”
-So saying, she went into the house, and soon came out again with two
-boxes containing all her own and her husband’s clothes, which she
-handed to the rogue, desiring him to deliver them to the poor old
-couple in Kailása. She also gave him her jewel-box, to be presented to
-her mother-in-law. “But dress and jewels will not fill their hungry
-stomachs,” said the rogue. “Very true; I had forgot: wait a moment,”
-said the simple woman, going into the house once more. Presently
-returning with her husband’s cash chest, she emptied its glittering
-contents into the rogue’s skirt, who now took his leave in haste,
-promising to give everything to the good old couple in Kailása; and
-having secured all the booty in his upper garment, he made off at the
-top of his speed as soon as the silly woman had gone indoors.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after this the husband returned home, and his wife’s pleasure
-at what she had done was so great that she ran to meet him at the door,
-and told him all about the arrival of the messenger from Kailása, how
-his parents were without clothes and food, and how she had sent them
-clothes and jewels and store of money. On hearing this, the anger of
-the husband was great; but he checked himself, and inquired which road
-the messenger from Kailása had taken, saying that he wished to follow
-him with a further message for his parents. So she very readily pointed
-out the direction in which the rogue had gone. With rage in his heart
-at the trick played upon his stupid wife, he rode off in hot haste,
-and after having proceeded a considerable distance, he caught<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span> sight
-of the flying rogue, who, finding escape hopeless, climbed up into a
-<i>pipal</i> tree. The husband soon reached the foot of the tree, when
-he shouted to the rogue to come down. “No, I cannot,” said he; “this
-is the way to Kailása,” and then climbed to the very top of the tree.
-Seeing there was no chance of the rogue coming down, and there being
-no one near to whom he could call for help, the old miser tied his
-horse to a neighbouring tree, and began to climb up the <i>pipal</i>
-himself. When the rogue observed this, he thanked all his gods most
-fervently, and having waited until his enemy had climbed nearly up to
-him, he threw down his bundle of booty, and then leapt nimbly from
-branch to branch till he reached the ground in safety, when he mounted
-the miser’s horse and with his bundle rode into a thick forest, where
-he was not likely to be discovered. Being thus balked the miser came
-down the <i>pipal</i> tree slowly, cursing his own stupidity in having
-risked his horse to recover the things which his wife had given the
-rogue, and returned home at leisure. His wife, who was waiting his
-return, welcomed him with a joyous countenance, and cried, “I thought
-as much: you have sent away your horse to Kailása, to be used by your
-old father.” Vexed at his wife’s words, as he was, he replied in the
-affirmative, to conceal his own folly.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span></p>
-
-<h2>MIDDLE DIVISION</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>PART I<br />
-<span class="subhed">GREECE</span></h3>
-
-<p>In essaying an Outline of the World’s Humor, the greatest obstacle to
-our work is the insufficiency of data.</p>
-
-<p>While we are sure there was humor in the early days, we cannot get much
-of it for publication. The Fables and Folk Tales that come down to us
-are of uncertain origin and date. Traditions have been traced to their
-inception but the tracery is of vague and shadowy lines.</p>
-
-<p>Wherefore it is well nigh impossible to formulate or systematize our
-chronology.</p>
-
-<p>The simple division of Ancient, Middle and Modern must serve for a main
-arrangement, with the subdivision of the Middle into Greece, Rome, and
-the Mediæval Ages.</p>
-
-<p>Greece will include generally the time from 500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> to
-500 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>, although its traditions reach farther back into
-antiquity.</p>
-
-<p>The whole Middle Division must include all from 500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> to
-about 1300 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span></p>
-
-<p>So, we see the boundaries are inevitable if not entirely satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>Greece was the primeval European civilization, and in the year 500
-<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> it already had its own literature and the Iliad and
-Odyssey were even then antique.</p>
-
-<p>These, at this time, were traditionally ascribed to Homer as they have
-ever since remained. But Homer’s individual existence is a matter of
-doubt, and his history and personality are as unknown as those of the
-ancient patriarchs of the Old Testament.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span></p>
-
-<p>Even from this distant viewpoint the humor of antiquity is, like
-beauty, in the eye of the beholder.</p>
-
-<p>Coleridge says definitely, “Amongst the classic ancients there was
-little or no humor.” But, on the other hand, that eminent antiquarian,
-William Hayes Ward says, “The Greeks were the maddest, jolliest race of
-men that ever inhabited our planet. As they loved games and play, they
-loved the joke.”</p>
-
-<p>So, as more than any other human emotion, humor is a matter of
-opinion, we must dig up whatever nuggets we can and not assay them too
-meticulously.</p>
-
-<p>Like Homer, Æsop, is wrapped in mystery. Like Homer, too, various
-cities claimed the honor of being his birthplace. The truth is not
-known.</p>
-
-<p>Tradition places Æsop in the sixth century, <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> and makes him
-a dwarf and, originally, a slave.</p>
-
-<p>Though probably not a historic personage, his name is inseparably
-connected with the Fables that have been known to us for centuries;
-and, according to scholars, some of them were known a thousand years
-earlier to the Egyptians.</p>
-
-<p>Of these things we cannot speak positively, but <i>Æsop’s Fables</i>
-certainly come at or near the beginnings of Greek Literature, and their
-place is here.</p>
-
-
-<h4>ÆSOP’S FABLES</h4>
-
-<h5><i>THE LION, THE BEAR, THE MONKEY, AND THE FOX</i></h5>
-
-<p>The Tyrant of the forest issued a proclamation, commanding all his
-subjects to repair immediately to his royal den. Among the rest, the
-Bear made his appearance; but pretending to be offended with the steams
-which issued from the Monarch’s apartments, he was imprudent enough
-to hold his nose in his Majesty’s presence. This insolence was so
-highly resented, that the Lion in a rage laid him dead at his feet.
-The Monkey, observing what had passed, trembled for his carcass; and
-attempted to conciliate favor by the most abject flattery. He began
-with protesting, that for his part he thought the apartments were
-perfumed with Arabian spices; and exclaiming against the rudeness of
-the Bear, admired the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span> beauty of his Majesty’s paws, so happily formed,
-he said, to correct the insolence of clowns. This fulsome adulation,
-instead of being received as he expected, proved no less offensive
-than the rudeness of the Bear; and the courtly Monkey was in like
-manner extended by the side of Sir Bruin. And now his Majesty cast his
-eye upon the Fox. “Well, Reynard,” said he, “and what scent do you
-discover here?” “Great Prince,” replied the cautious Fox, “my nose was
-never esteemed my most distinguishing sense; and at present I would
-by no means venture to give my opinion, as I have unfortunately got a
-terrible cold.”</p>
-
-
-<h6><i>Reflection</i></h6>
-
-<p>It is often more prudent to suppress our sentiments, than either to
-flatter or to rail.</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>THE PARTIAL JUDGE</i></h5>
-
-<p>A Farmer came to a neighbouring Lawyer, expressing great concern for an
-accident which he said had just happened. “One of your oxen,” continued
-he, “has been gored by an unlucky bull of mine, and I shall be glad
-to know how I am to make you a reparation.” “Thou art a very honest
-fellow,” replied the Lawyer, “and wilt not think it unreasonable that
-I expect one of thy oxen in return.” “It is no more than justice,”
-quoth the Farmer, “to be sure: but what did I say!&mdash;I mistake&mdash;It is
-your bull that has killed one of my oxen.” “Indeed,” says the Lawyer,
-“that alters the case: I must inquire into the affair; and if”&mdash;“And
-<i>if</i>!” said the Farmer, “the business I find would have been
-concluded without an <i>if</i>, had you been as ready to do justice to
-others as to exact it from them.”</p>
-
-
-<h6><i>Reflection</i></h6>
-
-<p>The injuries we do, and those we suffer, are seldom weighed in the same
-scales.</p>
-
-<p>It is all very well for some wiseacres to say, “Humor came in with
-civilization,” for others to say, “Humor took its rise in the Middle
-Ages,” or to set any other arbitrary time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span></p>
-
-<p>The truth is that Humor, is an innate emotion, and in a general sense,
-it is the child of religion.</p>
-
-<p>The primitive religions were conducted with Festival Ceremonies, whose
-celebrations were of such symbolic nature, and later, such burlesque of
-symbolism that gaiety ensued and then ribaldry.</p>
-
-<p>The worship of the god Dionysus,&mdash;later mixed up in tradition with
-Bacchus,&mdash;was responsible for much reckless license that was the
-earliest form of comedy.</p>
-
-<p>Dionysus, being deity of the vineyard, as well as of phallic worship,
-lent himself readily to the grotesque representations and hysterical
-orgies of his followers and Greek Comedy was probably the outcome of
-this.</p>
-
-<p>In these Dionysiac festivals the processions and parades represented
-everything imaginable that was bizarre or ridiculous.</p>
-
-<p>As in all ages, before and since, the mummers clothed themselves in the
-likeness of animals, and invented horrible masks.</p>
-
-<p>Comedy came to be abuse, ridicule and parody of sacred things.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding Coleridge’s comment, laughter was universal in Greece
-and Plato declared the <i>agelastoi</i> or non-laughers to be the least
-respectable of mortals.</p>
-
-<p>Small wonder then that their mirth exhibited itself in drawings and
-paintings. These mediums were easier to come by than writings, and the
-early grotesques and caricatures of the Greeks are drawings on Greek
-vases which show the playfulness as well as the serious purpose of
-the artist-potter. The first and greatest of Greek poets adds strokes
-of wit to his stories of the Trojan war. When Ulysses returns from
-the siege of Ilium he stops at the island of Sicily, and he and his
-companions are caught by the one-eyed giant Polyphemus and imprisoned
-in his cave. Then comes the story of the crafty leader’s escape, after
-some of his companions had been slain and eaten by the monster. It
-is a most amusing story, told with all Greek humor, how the giant
-was blinded with the burnt stick which gouged out his eye while in a
-drunken sleep; how the Greeks escaped through the entrance by clinging<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-under the bodies of his sheep, while he felt of them one by one to see
-that not a Greek escaped. Then comes the giant’s howling call to his
-distant companions, and in answer to their question, who had blinded
-him, his telling them that “Outis” (Nobody) had done it, <i>Outis</i>
-(<i>Nobody</i>) being the name Ulysses had given the giant as his own.
-“If nobody has done it”, replied his companions, “then it is the act of
-the gods”, and they left him to endure his loss. Thus the Greeks escape
-to their ships and taunt the monster as they flee away, followed by his
-vain pursuit. Homer relieves the wisdom of Ulysses and the dignity of
-Agamemnon with the gibes of Thersites or the rude humor of the suitors
-of Penelope, the trick of whose embroidery is itself an amusing story.</p>
-
-<p>Greece, of course, was the cradle of all that we now call art.
-Landscape painters, painters of animals and portrait limners, as well
-as still life artists and sculptors and workers in mosaics reached a
-high state of perfection.</p>
-
-<p>Then naturally the caricaturists and comic artists could not be wanting
-there. Burlesque affected their pencils and brushes as it had their
-speech and caricature and parody were rampant.</p>
-
-<p>A marvelous example is the parody or caricature of the Oracle of
-Apollo at Delphi. It is taken from an oxybaphon which was brought from
-the Continent to England, where it passed into the collection of Mr.
-William Hope. The <i>oxybaphon</i>, or, as it was called by the Romans,
-<i>acetabulum</i>, was a large vessel for holding vinegar, which formed
-one of the important ornaments of the table, and was therefore very
-susceptible of pictorial embellishment of this description. It is
-one of the most remarkable Greek caricatures of this kind yet known,
-and represents a parody on one of the most interesting stories of
-the Grecian mythology, that of the arrival of Apollo at Delphi. The
-artist, in his love of burlesque, has spared none of the personages who
-belonged to the story. The Hyperborean Apollo himself appears in the
-character of a quack doctor, on his temporary stage, covered by a sort
-of roof, and approached by wooden steps. On the stage lies Apollo’s
-luggage, consisting of a bag, a bow, and his Scythian cap. Chron is
-represented as labouring under the effects of age and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span> blindness, and
-supporting himself by the aid of a crooked staff, as he repairs to the
-Delphian quack doctor for relief. The figure of the centaur is made to
-ascend by the aid of a companion, both being furnished with the masks
-and other attributes of the comic performers. Above are the mountains,
-and on them the nymphs of Parnassus, who, like all the other actors
-in the scene, are disguised with masks, and those of a very grotesque
-character. On the right-hand side stands a figure which is considered
-as representing the <i>epoptes</i>, the inspector or overseer of
-the performance, who alone wears no mask. Even a pun is employed to
-heighten the drollery of the scene, for instead of ΠΥΘΙΑΣ, the Pythian,
-placed over the head of the burlesque Apollo, it seems evident that the
-artist had written ΠΕΙΘΙΑΣ, the consoler in allusion, perhaps, to the
-consolation which the quack-doctor is administering to his blind and
-aged visitor.</p>
-
-<p>The comic and grotesque led on to the representation of the monstrous,
-and queer, strange figures became part of their art and architecture.
-Out of these, perhaps, grew the hideous masks and strange distortions
-of the human figure.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps this is why Æsop was represented as a dwarf and a hunchback.</p>
-
-<p>But the whole trend of the grotesque and monstrous in religious
-ornamentation grew and flourished on into the Middle Ages and later,
-and the gargoyles of our latest churches show the persisting influence.</p>
-
-<p>The old comedy of Greece has been called the comedy of caricature, and
-hand in hand, verbal and pictorial parody have come to us down the
-centuries.</p>
-
-<p>Pictorial burlesque, however, was not placed on the public monuments,
-but lent itself more readily to objects of common usage or individual
-belongings. It is found abundantly on the pottery of Greece and Rome
-and abounded in the wall paintings of Herculaneum and Pompeii.</p>
-
-<p>This is not the place to discuss the identity of Homer. Whether a real
-man, a group of men or a myth, the works of Homer are immortal and, for
-the most part serious.</p>
-
-<p>Our task is to find anything humorous in the Greek epics.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span></p>
-
-<p>It is not easy, indeed, it is almost impossible. But we subjoin an
-extract which, we may say, comes the nearest to humor in Homer.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE BEATING OF THERSITES</i></h4>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i11">Ulysses’ ruling thus restrained</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The host from flight; and then again the Council was maintained</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">With such a concourse that the shore rang with the tumult made;</div>
- <div>As when the far-resounding sea doth in its rage invade</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">His sandy confines, whose sides groan with his involved wave,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And make his own breast echo sighs. All sate, and audience gave.</div>
- <div>Thersites only would speak all. A most disordered store</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Of words he foolishly poured out, of which his mind held more</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Than it could manage; anything with which he could procure</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Laughter, he never could contain. He should have yet been sure</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">To touch no kings; t’oppose their states becomes not jesters’ parts.</div>
- <div>But he the filthiest fellow was of all that had deserts</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">In Troy’s brave siege. He was squint-eyed, and lame of either foot;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">So crookbacked that he had no breast; sharp-headed, where did shoot</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">(Here and there ’spersed) thin, mossy hair. He most of all envied</div>
- <div>Ulysses and Æacides, whom still his spleen would chide.</div>
- <div>Nor could the sacred king himself avoid his saucy vein;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Against whom since he knew the Greeks did vehement hates sustain,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Being angry for Achilles’ wrong, he cried out, railing thus:</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“Atrides, why complain’st thou now? What wouldst thou more of us?</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Thy tents are full of brass; and dames, the choice of all, are thine,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">With whom we must present thee first, when any towns resign<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent">To our invasion. Want’st thou, then, besides all this, more gold</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">From Troy’s knights to redeem their sons, whom to be dearly sold</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">I or some other Greek must take? Or wouldst thou yet again</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Force from some other lord his prize, to soothe the lusts that reign</div>
- <div>In thy encroaching appetite? It fits no prince to be</div>
- <div>A prince of ill, and govern us, or lead our progeny</div>
- <div>By rape to ruin. Oh, base Greeks, deserving infamy,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And ills eternal, Greekish girls, not Greeks, ye are! Come, flee</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Home with our ships; leave this man here to perish with his preys,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And try if we helped him or not. He wronged a man that weighs</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Far more than he himself in worth. He forced from Thetis’ son,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And keeps his prize still. Nor think I that mighty man hath won</div>
- <div>The style of wrathful worthily; he’s soft, he’s too remiss;</div>
- <div>Or else, Atrides, his had been thy last of injuries.”</div>
- <div class="hangingindent i1">Thus he the people’s pastor chid; but straight stood up to him</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Divine Ulysses, who, with looks exceeding grave and grim,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">This bitter check gave: “Cease, vain fool, to vent thy railing vein</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">On kings thus, though it serve thee well; nor think thou canst restrain,</div>
- <div>With that thy railing faculty, their wills in least degree;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">For not a worse, of all this host, came with our king than thee,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">To Troy’s great siege; then do not take into that mouth of thine</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The names of kings, much less revile the dignities that shine</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">In their supreme states, wresting thus this motion for our home,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">To soothe thy cowardice; since ourselves yet know not what will come<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span></div>
- <div>Of these designments, if it be our good to stay, or go.</div>
- <div>Nor is it that thou stand’st on; thou revil’st our general so,</div>
- <div>Only because he hath so much, not given by such as thou,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But our heroes. Therefore this thy rude vein makes me vow,</div>
- <div>Which shall be curiously observed, if ever I shall hear</div>
- <div>This madness from thy mouth again, let not Ulysses bear</div>
- <div>This head, nor be the father called of young Telemachus,</div>
- <div>If to thy nakedness I take and strip thee not, and thus</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Whip thee to fleet from council; send, with sharp stripes, weeping hence</div>
- <div>This glory thou affect’st to rail.” This said, his insolence</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">He settled with his scepter; struck his back and shoulders so</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">That bloody wales rose. He shrunk round, and from his eyes did flow</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Moist tears, and, looking filthily, he sate, feared, smarted, dried</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">His blubbered cheeks; and all the press, though grieved to be denied</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Their wished retreat for home, yet laughed delightsomely, and spake</div>
- <div>Either to other: “Oh, ye gods, how infinitely take</div>
- <div>Ulysses’ virtues in our good! Author of counsels, great</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">In ordering armies, how most well this act became his heat,</div>
- <div>To beat from council this rude fool. I think his saucy spirit</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Hereafter will not let his tongue abuse the sovereign merit,</div>
- <div>Exempt from such base tongues as his.”</div>
- <div class="right">&mdash;<i>The Iliad.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Attributed to Homer by many, and stoutly denied by others, is a comedy
-called <i>The Battle of the Frogs and Mice</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Again we note the device of animals masquerading as human beings.</p>
-
-<p>Samuel Wesley, himself a humorist, calls this the oldest burlesque in
-the world, and he also dubs it, <i>The Iliad in a Nutshell</i>. He
-holds that Homer wrote it as a parody of his own masterpiece, while,
-conversely, Statius contends that it is a work of youth, written by
-Homer before he wrote <i>The Iliad</i>. Chapman deems it the work of
-the poet’s old age, and as none may decide when doctors disagree, many
-scholars deny a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span> Homeric authorship to it at all. Plutarch asserts the
-real author was Pigres of Halicarnassus, who flourished during the
-Persian war.</p>
-
-<p>This first burlesque known to literature has the following plot.</p>
-
-<p>A mouse, while slaking his thirst on the margin of a pond, after a
-hot pursuit by a weasel, enters into conversation with a frog on the
-merits of their respective modes of life. The frog invites the mouse
-to a nearer inspection of the abode and habits of his own nation, and
-for this purpose offers him a sail on his back. When the party are at
-some distance from land, the head of an otter suddenly appears on the
-surface. The terrified frog at once dives to the bottom, disengaging
-himself from his rider, who, with many a struggle and bitter
-imprecations on his betrayer, is involved in a watery grave. Another
-mouse, who from the shore had witnessed the fate of his unfortunate
-comrade, reports it to his fellow-citizens. A council is held, and war
-declared against the nation of the offender.</p>
-
-<p>“Jupiter and the gods deliberate in Olympus on the issue of the
-contest. Mars and Minerva decline personal interference, as well from
-the awe inspired by such mighty combatants as from previous ill-will
-towards both contending powers, in consequence of injuries inflicted by
-each on their divine persons or properties. A band of mosquitoes sound
-the war-alarum with their trumpets, and, after a bloody engagement,
-the frogs are defeated with great slaughter. Jupiter, sympathising
-with their fate, endeavours in vain by his thunders to intimidate the
-victors from further pursuit. The rescue of the frogs, however, is
-effected by an army of land-crabs, who appear as their allies, and
-before whom the mice, in their turn, are speedily put to flight.”</p>
-
-<p><i>The Battle of the Frogs and Mice</i>, then, is well described as the
-earliest and most successful extant specimen of the “mock-heroic,” the
-double object of which is, according to Barrow’s famous definition, to
-debase things pompous and elevate things mean. An amusing version of
-this Homeric <i>jeu d’esprit</i> was published in 1851 by an author
-who gave himself out as the “Singing Mouse,” “the last minstrel of his
-race.” “The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span> theme,” he says, “belongs to that heroic age of which
-history has recorded that the very mountains laboured when a mouse was
-born.” The metre of this translation has been altered from the stately
-elegance of the original to one which is perhaps better fitted to the
-subject in itself than to its special object as a travestie on the
-epic style of the <i>Iliad</i>. The names of the heroes are happily
-rendered; but it will be seen that some difference exists between this
-author and the one just cited as to certain of the zoological terms in
-the poem.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE MEETING</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <p class="center">I</p>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>It fell on a day that a mouse, travel-spent,</div>
- <div class="i1">To the side of a river did wearily win;</div>
- <div>Of the good house-cat he had baffled the scent,</div>
- <div class="i1">And he thirstily dipt his whiskered chin;</div>
- <div>When, crouched in the sedge by the water’s brink,</div>
- <div class="i1">A clamorous frog beheld him drink.</div>
- <div>“And tell me, fair sir, thy title and birth,</div>
- <div class="i1">For of high degree thou art surely come;</div>
- <div>I have room by my hearth for a stranger of worth,</div>
- <div class="i1">And a welcome to boot to my royal home.</div>
- <div>For, sooth to speak, my name is <i>Puffcheek</i>,</div>
- <div class="i1">And I come of <i>Bullfrog’s</i> lordly line;</div>
- <div>I govern the bogs, the realm of the frogs,</div>
- <div class="i1">A sceptred king by right divine.”</div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="center">II</p>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then up and spake the mighty mouse:</div>
- <div class="i1">“And, courteous stranger, ask’st thou, then,</div>
- <div class="i1">What’s known alike to gods and men,</div>
- <div>The lineage of <i>Crumplunderer’s</i> house?</div>
- <div>Me Princess <i>Lickfarina</i> bare,</div>
- <div class="i1">Daughter of good King <i>Nibble-the-flitch</i>,</div>
- <div>And she weaned me on many a dainty rare,</div>
- <div>As became great <i>Pie-devourer’s</i> heir,</div>
- <div class="i1">With filberts and figs and sweetmeats rich.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span></div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="center">III</p>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Never mortal mouse, I ween,</div>
- <div>Better versed in man’s cuisine;</div>
- <div>Not a bun or tartlet, graced</div>
- <div>With sweeping petticoat of paste,</div>
- <div>Not an oily rasher or creamy cheese,</div>
- <div>Or liver so gay in its silver chemise;</div>
- <div>Not a dish by artiste for alderman made,</div>
- <div>Ever escaped my foraging raid</div>
- <div>For when the mice pour on pantry and store,</div>
- <div>In foray or fight, I am aye to the fore.</div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="center">IV</p>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I fear not man’s unwieldy size,</div>
- <div class="i1">To his very bedside I merrily go;</div>
- <div>At his lubberly length the ogre lies,</div>
- <div>And sleep never leaves his heavy-sealed eyes</div>
- <div class="i1">Though I pinch his heel and nibble his toe.</div>
- <div>But enemies twain do work my bane,</div>
- <div class="i1">And both from my inmost soul I hate,</div>
- <div>The cat and the kite, who bear me spite;</div>
- <div class="i1">And, third, the mouse-trap’s fatal bait;</div>
- <div>And the ferret foul I abhor from my soul,</div>
- <div>The robber! he follows me into my hole!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Wesley’s rendering of the <i>dénouement</i> is a thoroughly good
-specimen of the mock-heroic style which runs through the original:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">The Muses knowing all things list not show</div>
- <div class="i1">The Wailings for the Dead and Funeral Rites,</div>
- <div class="i1">To blameless Æthiopians must they go</div>
- <div class="i1">To feast with Jove for twelve succeeding nights.</div>
- <div class="i1">Therefore abrupt thus end they. Let suffice</div>
- <div class="i1">The gods’ august assembly to relate,</div>
- <div class="i1">Heroic Frogs and Demigods of Mice,</div>
- <div class="i1">Troxartes’ vengeance and Pelides’ fate.</div>
- <div class="i1">Hosts routed, lakes of gore, and hills of slain,</div>
- <div>An Iliad, work divine! raised from a day’s campaign.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span></p>
-
-<p>By this time Greece was ready for definite mirth and laughter. What has
-come to be known as the Old Comedy was to the Athenians, we are told,
-what is now shown in the influences of the newspaper, the review, the
-Broadside, the satire, the caricature of the times and manners.</p>
-
-<p>Nor were cartoons missing, for the grotesque pictures were as important
-a factor as the verbal or written words.</p>
-
-<p>The Old Comedy is marked by political satire of a virulent personality.
-This is prohibited in the Middle Comedy, and replaced by literary and
-philosophical criticism of the ways of the citizens. The New Comedy,
-more repressed still, is the comedy of manners, and its influence
-continued to the Roman stage and further.</p>
-
-<p>Of the Old Comedy, save for a few lesser lights, Aristophanes is the
-sole representative.</p>
-
-<p>At the festivals of the god Dionysus, two elements were present. One
-the solemn rites, which developed into tragedy, and the other the
-grotesque and ribald orgies which were equally in evidence and which
-culminated in the idea of comedy.</p>
-
-<p>The license of these symbolic representations was unbridled and all
-rules of decorum and decency were violated in the frenzied antics.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless many writings now lost to us were filled with the broad humor
-of the day, but we have only the plays of Aristophanes left.</p>
-
-<p>Of the life of this Athenian not much is known. He was born after 450
-<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> and it was after the Peloponnesian War that he wrote his
-plays.</p>
-
-<p>The principal and best known of his eleven extant plays is <i>The
-Frogs</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Of this, two clever translations are given.</p>
-
-<p>One, is thus introduced by a writer in <i>The Quarterly Review</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“One of the temples or theatres appropriated to the service of Bacchus
-in Athens, and in which the scenic performances of the old Greeks
-took place, was situated near a part of that metropolis usually
-called ‘The Marshes,’ and those who know<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span> by experience what tenants
-such places commonly harbour in more southern climates will think
-it not impossible that the representatives of the stage, and more
-particularly in theatres which were generally without a roof, were
-occasionally disturbed, to the great annoyance of the dramatists, by
-the noisy vociferations of these more ancient and legitimate Lords of
-the Marshes. One of them was not a man to be offended with impunity
-by biped or quadruped; and wherever the foes of Aristophanes were to
-be found, on land or in water, he had shafts both able and willing to
-reach them.</p>
-
-<p>“In his descent to the lower world, the patron of the stage is
-accordingly made to encounter a band of most pertinacious and
-invincible frogs; and the gradations through which the mind of Bacchus
-runs, after the first moments of irritation have subsided, from coaxing
-to bullying, from affected indifference to downright force, are
-probably a mere transcript of the poet’s own feelings under similar
-circumstances.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Scene.</span>&mdash;<i>The Acherusian Lake</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Bacchus</span> <i>at the
-oar in</i> <span class="smcap">Charon’s</span> <i>Boat</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Charon</span>&mdash;<i>Chorus of
-Frogs&mdash;In the background a view of Bacchus’s Temple or Theatre, from
-which are heard the sounds of a Scenic Entertainment.</i></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>Semich.</i>1.&ensp;Croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Semich.</i>2.&ensp;Croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div class="right">[<i>In answer, with music 8ve lower.</i></div>
- <div><i>Full Chorus.</i>&ensp;Croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Leader of the Chorus.</i>&ensp;When flagons were foaming,</div>
- <div class="i9h">And roysterers roaming,</div>
- <div class="i3 hangingindent">And bards flung about them their gibe and their joke;</div>
- <div class="i9h">The holiest song</div>
- <div class="i9h">Still was found to belong</div>
- <div class="i3">To the Sons of the Marsh with their&mdash;</div>
- <div><i>Full Chorus.</i><span style="margin-left: 11em;">Croak! croak!</span></div>
- <div><i>Leader.</i><span style="margin-left: 6.75em;">Shall we pause in our strain,</span></div>
- <div class="i9h">Now the months bring again</div>
- <div class="i3">The pipe and the minstrel to gladden the folk?</div>
- <div class="i9h">Rather strike on the ear,</div>
- <div class="i9h">With a note sharp and clear,</div>
- <div class="i3">A chant corresponding of&mdash;</div>
- <div><i>Chorus.</i><span style="margin-left: 6.6em;">Croak! croak!</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Bacchus</i> (<i>mimicking</i>).&emsp;Croak! croak! By the Gods, I shall choke</div>
- <div class="i4h">If you pester and bore my ears any more</div>
- <div class="i5h">With your croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Leader.</i>&emsp;&ensp;Rude companion and vain,</div>
- <div class="i4h">Thus to carp at my strain,</div>
- <div class="i4h">But keep in the vein,</div>
- <div class="i4h">And attack him again</div>
- <div class="i4h">With a croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Chorus</i> (<i>crescendo</i>).&ensp;Croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus</i> (<i>mimicking</i>).&ensp;Croak! croak! Vapour and smoke!</div>
- <div class="i4h">Never think it, old huff,</div>
- <div class="i4h">That I care for such stuff</div>
- <div class="i4h">As your croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Chorus</i> (<i>fortissimo</i>).&ensp;Croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i>&emsp;Now fires light on thee</div>
- <div class="i5h">And waters soak,</div>
- <div class="i4h">And March winds catch thee</div>
- <div class="i5h">Without any cloak.</div>
- <div class="i4h">For within and without,</div>
- <div class="i4h">From the tail to the snout,</div>
- <div class="i3h">Thou’rt nothing but&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i6">Croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Leader.</i>&ensp;And what else, captious newcomer, say, should I be?</div>
- <div class="i3h">But you know not to whom you are talking, I see.</div>
- <div class="right">[<i>With dignity.</i></div>
- <div class="i3h hangingindent">I’m the friend of the Muses, and Pan with his pipe</div>
- <div class="i3h">Loves me better by far than a cherry that’s ripe:</div>
- <div class="i3h hangingindent">Who gives them their tone and their moisture but I?</div>
- <div class="i3h">And therefore for ever I’ll utter my cry</div>
- <div class="i3h">Of&mdash;</div>
- <div><i>Chorus.</i><span style="margin-left: 3.25em;">Croak! croak! croak!</span></div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i>&ensp;I’m blistered, I’m flustered, I’m sick, I’m ill.</div>
- <div><i>Chorus.</i><span style="margin-left: 3.25em;">Croak! croak! croak!</span></div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i>&ensp;My dear little bull-frog, do prithee keep still.</div>
- <div><i>Chorus.</i><span style="margin-left: 3.25em;">Croak! croak! croak!</span></div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i>&ensp;’Tis a sorry vocation, that reiteration;</div>
- <div class="i3h">I speak on my honour, most musical nation</div>
- <div class="i5h">Of croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Leader</i> (<i>maestoso</i>).&ensp;When the sun rides in glory and makes a light day</div>
- <div class="i3h">’Mid lilies and plants of the water I stray;</div>
- <div class="i3h">Or when the sky darkens with tempest and rain,</div>
- <div class="i3h">I sink like a pearl in my watery domain.</div>
- <div class="i3h">But sinking or swimming I lift up my song,</div>
- <div class="i3h">Or drive a gay dance with my eloquent throng.</div>
- <div class="i5h">Then hey, bubble, bubble,</div>
- <div class="i5h">For a knave’s petty trouble</div>
- <div class="i3h">Shall I my high charter and birthright revoke?</div>
- <div class="i5h">Nay, my efforts I’ll double</div>
- <div class="i5h">And drive him like stubble</div>
- <div class="i3h">Before me with&mdash;</div>
- <div><i>Chorus.</i><span style="margin-left: 9em;">Croak! croak! croak!</span></div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">I’m ribs of steel, I’m heart of oak,</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">Let us see if a note</div>
- <div class="i5h">Can be found in this throat,</div>
- <div class="i3h hangingindent">To answer their (<i>croaks loudly</i>) croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Leader.</i><span style="margin-left: 2.75em;">Poor vanity’s son!</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">And dost think me undone</div>
- <div class="i5h">With a clamour no bigger</div>
- <div class="i5h">Than a maiden’s first snigger?</div>
- <div class="i5h">But strike up a tune</div>
- <div class="right">[<i>To Chorus.</i></div>
- <div class="i5h">He’ll not forget soon</div>
- <div class="i5h">Of our croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Chorus</i> (<i>with discordant crash of music</i>). Croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 1.95em;">I’m cinder, I’m coke!</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">I have got my death-stroke.</div>
- <div class="i5h">O that ever I woke</div>
- <div class="i5h">To be galled by the yoke</div>
- <div class="i5h">Of this croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Leader.</i>&ensp;Friend, friend, I may not be still,</div>
- <div class="i3h">My destinies high I must needs fulfil.</div>
- <div class="i3h">And the march of creation, despite reprobation,</div>
- <div class="i3h">Must proceed with&mdash;,</div>
- <div class="right">[<i>To Chorus.</i></div>
- <div class="i3h">My lads, may I make application</div>
- <div class="i3h">For a&mdash;</div>
- <div><i>Chorus.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Croak! croak! croak!</span></div>
- <div><i>Bacchus</i>&ensp;(<i>in a minor key</i>). Nay, nay! Take your own way,</div>
- <div class="i5h">I’ve said out my say,</div>
- <div class="i5h">And care nought by my fai’</div>
- <div class="i5h">For your croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Leader.</i>&emsp;Care or care not, ’tis the same thing to me;</div>
- <div class="i3h">My voice is my own, and my actions are free.</div>
- <div class="i3h">I have but one note, and I chant it with glee,</div>
- <div class="i3h">And from morning to night that note it shall be</div>
- <div><i>Chorus.</i>&ensp;Croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nay then, old rebel,</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">I’ll stop your treble</div>
- <div class="i3h">With a poke! poke! poke!</div>
- <div class="right">[<i>Dashing at the Frogs.</i></div>
- <div class="i3h">Take this from my rudder, and that from my oar,</div>
- <div class="i3h">And now let us see if you’ll trouble us more</div>
- <div class="i4h">With your croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Leader.</i><span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">You may batter and bore,</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">You may thunder and roar,</div>
- <div class="i5h">Yet I’ll never give o’er</div>
- <div class="i5h">Till I’m hard at death’s door&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i3h">This rib, by the way, is confoundedly sore).</div>
- <div><i>Semich. 1.</i>&nbsp;With my croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Semich. 2</i> (<i>dim.</i>).&nbsp;Croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div><i>Full Chorus</i> (<i>in a dying cadence</i>).&nbsp;Croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div class="right">[<i>The Frogs disappear.</i></div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Bacchus</i> (<i>looking over the boat’s edge</i>).&nbsp;Spoke! spoke! spoke!</div>
- <div class="right">[<i>To CHARON.</i></div>
- <div class="i5h">Pull away, my old friend,</div>
- <div class="i5h">For at last there’s an end</div>
- <div class="i5h">To their croak! croak! croak!</div>
- <div class="right">[BACCHUS <i>pays his two oboli and is landed.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<h4><i>THE PASSAGE OF THE STYX</i></h4>
-
-<p class="center sm">CHARON, BACCHUS, <i>and</i> XANTHIAS</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Hoy! Bear a hand there! Heave ashore!</span></div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 14em;">What’s this?</span></div>
- <div><i>Xanthias.</i><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">The lake it is&mdash;the place he told us of.</span></div>
- <div class="i5h hangingindent">By Jove! and there’s the boat&mdash;and here’s old Charon!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 1.75em;">Well, Charon! Welcome, Charon! Welcome kindly!</span></div>
- <div><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Who wants the ferryman? Anybody waiting</span></div>
- <div class="i5h hangingindent">To leave the pangs of life? A passage, anybody?</div>
- <div class="i5h">To Lethe’s wharf? To Cerberus’ reach?</div>
- <div class="i5h">To Tartarus? To Tænarus? To Perdition?</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 1.75em;">Yes, I.</span></div>
- <div><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Get in then.</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 9em;">Tell me, where are you going?</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">To perdition, really?</div>
- <div><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 9em;">Yes, to oblige you, I will&mdash;</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">With all my heart. Step in there.</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 13em;">Have a care!</span></div>
- <div class="i5h hangingindent">Take care, good Charon! Charon, have a care!</div>
- <div class="right">(<i>Getting into the boat.</i>)</div>
- <div class="i5h">Come, Xanthias, come!</div>
- <div><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 9em;">I take no slaves aboard,</span></div>
- <div class="i5h hangingindent">Except they’ve volunteer’d for the naval victory.</div>
- <div><i>Xanthias.</i><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">I could not; I was suffering with sore eyes.</span></div>
- <div><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Off with you, round by the end of the lake.</span></div>
- <div><i>Xanthias.</i><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And whereabouts shall I wait?</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 11em;">At the Stone of Repentance,</span></div>
- <div class="i5h hangingindent">By the Slough of Despond, beyond the Tribulations.</div>
- <div class="i5h">You understand me?</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Xanthias.</i><span style="margin-left: 11em;">Yes, I understand you&mdash;</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">A lucky, promising direction, truly.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Charon</i>&nbsp;(<i>to</i> BACCHUS). Sit down at the oar. Come, quick, if there are more coming!&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i5h">Hullo! what’s that you’re doing?</div>
- <div class="i2 hangingindent">(BACCHUS <i>is seated in a buffoonish attitude in the side</i>
-<i>of the boat where the oar was fastened.</i>)</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 12em;">What you told me.</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">I’m sitting at the oar.</div>
- <div><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 11em;">Sit <i>there</i>, I tell you,</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">You fatguts; that’s your place.</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus</i> (<i>changes his place</i>).<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Well, so I do.</span></div>
- <div><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Now ply your hands and arms.</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Bacchus</i>&ensp;(<i>makes a silly motion with his arms</i>). Well, so I do.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">You’d best leave off your fooling. Take to the oar,</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">And pull away.</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 8em;">But how shall I contrive?</span></div>
- <div class="i5h hangingindent">I’ve never served on board; I’m only a landsman;</div>
- <div class="i5h">I’m quite unused to it.</div>
- <div><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">We can manage it.</span></div>
- <div class="i5h hangingindent">As soon as you begin you shall have some music;</div>
- <div class="i5h">That will teach you to keep time.</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 12em;">What music’s that?</span></div>
- <div><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">A chorus of frogs&mdash;uncommon musical frogs.</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 7em;">Well, give me the word and the time.</span></div>
- <div><i>Charon.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Whooh, up, up! Whooh, up, up!</span></div>
- </div>
-<p class="center sm p1">CHORUS OF FROGS</p>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5h">Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div class="i5h">Shall the choral quiristers of the marsh</div>
- <div class="i5h hangingindent">Be censured and rejected as hoarse and harsh,</div>
- <div class="i7">And their chromatic essays</div>
- <div class="i7">Deprived of praise?</div>
- <div class="i5h">No; let us raise afresh</div>
- <div class="i5h">Our obstreperous brekeke-kesh!</div>
- <div class="i5h">The customary croak and cry</div>
- <div class="i7">Of the creatures</div>
- <div class="i7">At the theaters</div>
- <div class="i5h">In their yearly revelry.</div>
- <div class="i5h">Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus</i> (<i>rowing in great misery</i>).</div>
- <div class="i7">How I’m maul’d!</div>
- <div class="i7">How I’m gall’d!</div>
- <div class="i5h">Worn and mangled to a mash&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i5h">There they go! Koash, koash!</div>
- <div><i>Frogs.</i>Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oh, beshrew,</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">All your crew!</div>
- <div class="i5h">You don’t consider how I smart.</div>
- <div><i>Frogs.</i>Now for a sample of the art!</div>
- <div class="i5h">Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">I wish you hanged, with all my heart!</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">Have you nothing else to say?</div>
- <div class="i5h">Brekeke-kesh, koash, all day!</div>
- <div><i>Frogs.</i><span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">We’ve a right,</span></div>
- <div class="i7">We’ve a right,</div>
- <div class="i5h">And we croak at ye for spite.</div>
- <div class="i7">We’ve a right,</div>
- <div class="i7">We’ve a right,</div>
- <div class="i7">Day and night,</div>
- <div class="i7">Day and night,</div>
- <div class="i7">Night and day,</div>
- <div class="i5h">Still to creak and croak away.</div>
- <div class="i4">Phœbus and every Grace</div>
- <div class="i4">Admire and approve of the croaking race;</div>
- <div class="i4">And the egregious guttural notes</div>
- <div class="i4 hangingindent">That are gargled and warbled in their lyrical throats.</div>
- <div class="i7">In reproof</div>
- <div class="i7">Of your scorn,</div>
- <div class="i7">Mighty Pan</div>
- <div class="i7">Nods his horn;</div>
- <div class="i7">Beating time</div>
- <div class="i7">To the rime</div>
- <div class="i7">With his hoof,</div>
- <div class="i7">With his hoof.</div>
- <div class="i4">Persisting in our plan,</div>
- <div class="i4">We proceed as we began.</div>
- <div class="i4">Brekeke-kesh, brekeke-kesh,</div>
- <div class="i4">Koash, koash!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i>&ensp;Oh, the frogs, consume and rot ’em!</div>
- <div class="i4">I’ve a blister on my bottom!</div>
- <div class="i4">Hold your tongues, you noisy creatures!</div>
- <div><i>Frogs.</i>&emsp;&ensp;Cease with your profane entreaties,</div>
- <div class="i4">All in vain forever striving;</div>
- <div class="i4">Silence is against our natures;</div>
- <div class="i4">With the vernal heat reviving,</div>
- <div class="i4">Our aquatic crew repair</div>
- <div class="i4">From their periodic sleep,</div>
- <div class="i4">In the dark and chilly deep,</div>
- <div class="i4">To the cheerful upper air.</div>
- <div class="i4">Then we frolic here and there</div>
- <div class="i4">All amid the meadows fair;</div>
- <div class="i4">Shady plants of asphodel</div>
- <div class="i4">Are the lodges where we dwell;</div>
- <div class="i4">Chanting in the leafy bowers</div>
- <div class="i4">All the livelong summer hours,</div>
- <div class="i4">Till the sudden gusty showers</div>
- <div class="i4">Send us headlong, helter-skelter,</div>
- <div class="i4">To the pool to seek for shelter.</div>
- <div class="i4">Meager, eager, leaping, lunging,</div>
- <div class="i4">From the sedgy wharfage plunging</div>
- <div class="i4">To the tranquil depth below,</div>
- <div class="i4">There we muster all a-row;</div>
- <div class="i4">Where, secure from toil and trouble,</div>
- <div class="i4">With a tuneful hubble-bubble,</div>
- <div class="i4">Our symphonious accents flow.</div>
- <div class="i4">Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i>&ensp;I forbid you to proceed.</div>
- <div><i>Frogs.</i>&emsp;&ensp;That would be severe, indeed,</div>
- <div class="i4">Arbitrary, bold, and rash&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i4">Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i>&ensp;I command you to desist&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i4">Oh, my back, there! Oh, my wrist</div>
- <div class="i6">What a twist!</div>
- <div class="i6">What a sprain!</div>
- <div><i>Frogs.</i>&emsp;&ensp;Once again</div>
- <div class="i4">We renew the tuneful strain&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i4">Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i>&ensp;I disdain&mdash;hang the pain!&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i4">All your nonsense, noise, and trash.</div>
- <div class="i4">Oh, my blister! Oh, my sprain!</div>
- <div><i>Frogs.</i>&emsp;&ensp;Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div class="i4">Friends and frogs, we must display</div>
- <div class="i4">All our powers of voice to-day.</div>
- <div class="i4">Suffer not this stranger here,</div>
- <div class="i4">With fastidious, foreign ear,</div>
- <div class="i4">To confound us and abash</div>
- <div class="i4">Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i>&ensp;Well, my spirit is not broke;</div>
- <div class="i4">If it’s only for the joke,</div>
- <div class="i4">I’ll outdo you with a croak.</div>
- <div class="i4 hangingindent">Here it goes&mdash;(<i>very loud</i>) “Koash, koash!”</div>
- <div><i>Frogs.</i>&emsp;&ensp;Now for a glorious croaking crash,</div>
- <div class="i8h">(still louder)</div>
- <div class="i4">Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus</i> (<i>splashing with his oar</i>).</div>
- <div class="i4">I’ll disperse you with a splash.</div>
- <div><i>Frogs.</i>&emsp;&ensp;Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i>&ensp;I’ll subdue</div>
- <div class="i4">Your rebellious, noisy crew&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i4">Have among you there, slap-dash!</div>
- <div class="i8h">(<i>Strikes at them.</i>)</div>
- <div><i>Frogs.</i>&emsp;&ensp;Brekeke-kesh, koash, koash!</div>
- <div class="i4">We defy your oar, and you.</div>
- <div><i>Charon.</i>&emsp;Hold! We’re ashore. Now shift your oar.</div>
- <div class="i4">Get out. Now pay your fare.</div>
- <div><i>Bacchus.</i>&ensp;There&mdash;there it is&mdash;the twopence.</div>
- <div class="right">&mdash;<i>The Frogs.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span></p>
-
-<p>Another play of Aristophanes is <i>The Birds</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The plot of this is simply that two Athenians, disgusted with the state
-of things in their native city, form the idea of building a city where
-the birds shall regain their old traditional supremacy.</p>
-
-<p>The proposal is happily received by the birds and the city of
-Nephelococyggia, or Cloud-cuckoo-town is the result.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was merely a burlesque on the Athenians who were given to building
-castles in the air.</p>
-
-<p>Lack of space forbids further quotation from Aristophanes, but his
-comedies are available to all who wish to read them.</p>
-
-<p>Among the predecessors of Aristophanes was Cratinus, who was an enemy
-of water drinkers, and expressed the dictum that no verses written by
-abstainers could ever please or live!</p>
-
-<p>Another, whose fragmentary lines have a certain modern ring, is
-Simonides, who left us a poem of the ladies, which, it has been said,
-gave the tone to all the Greek pasquinades of the same class. He
-compares the different types of ladies to various members of the lower
-orders in creation; and the “Fine Lady” is represented by a high-bred
-steed.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE FINE LADY. BY SIMONIDES.</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Next in the lot a gallant dame we see,</div>
- <div>Sprung from a mare of noble pedigree;</div>
- <div>No servile work her spirit proud can brook,</div>
- <div>Her hands were never taught to bake or cook;</div>
- <div>The vapour of the oven makes her ill,</div>
- <div>She scorns to empty slops or turn the mill.</div>
- <div>To wash or scour would make her soft hands rough,</div>
- <div>Her own ablutions give pursuit enough;</div>
- <div>Three baths a day, with balms and perfumes rare,</div>
- <div>Refresh her tender limbs. Her long rich hair</div>
- <div>Each time she combs and decks with blooming flowers.</div>
- <div>No spouse more fit than she the idle hours</div>
- <div>Of wealthy lords or kings to recreate,</div>
- <div>And grace the splendour of their courtly state;</div>
- <div>For men of humbler sort no better guide</div>
- <div>Heaven in its wrath to ruin can provide.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Two more examples of the wit of Cratinus follow:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Apollo, of fine verses here’s a gush!</div>
- <div>They come, like springs and fountains, with a rush.</div>
- <div>A river’s in his windpipe! Turn the tap;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">This spouting, if not stopped, will cause some dire mishap.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“How can one stop him from this thirst for drink?</div>
- <div>How <i>can</i> one? Well, I’ve found a way, I think.</div>
- <div>For every cup and every mug I’ll smash,</div>
- <div>His flasks and pitchers into fragments dash,</div>
- <div>Shiver all kinds of pots that come to table,</div>
- <div>And not one crock to keep shall he be able.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Plato Comicus (as distinguished from the philosopher), who carried on a
-poetic contest with Aristophanes, ranks among the best of the poets of
-the Old Comedy, but only a few fragments of his work remain.</p>
-
-<p>Here are two of them:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Henceforth no four-legged creature should be slain,</div>
- <div>Except the pig; of this the reason’s plain.</div>
- <div>Its use&mdash;unless for food&mdash;man vainly seeks;</div>
- <div>It only gives him bristles, dirt, and squeaks.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“We’re swamped with ‘public men’; for one scamp dead,</div>
- <div>Two louder talkers, greater scamps, instead</div>
- <div>Spring up like Hydra’s heads: the more’s the pity</div>
- <div>We have no Iolaus in the city</div>
- <div>To singe the necks from which these pests arise,</div>
- <div>In whom foul lives alone secure the prize.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>As students of the Classics themselves find great difficulty in drawing
-strict boundaries between the Old and Middle Comedy, we need not pay
-careful attention to exact dates, but accept the general idea that one
-passed into the other at about the time the Peloponnesian War ended.</p>
-
-<p>This was 404 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> and Middle Comedy may be said to extend from
-that date until the overthrow of the Athenians by Philip of Macedon in
-338 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p>The most distinguished poet of the Middle Comedy was Antiphanes, who
-lived in the Fourth Century, <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p>His lines are epigrammatic and frequently refer to the prevailing theme
-of drunkenness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“No trade more pleasant is, no art,</div>
- <div>Than ours who play the flatterer’s part.</div>
- <div>The painter overworked gets cross,</div>
- <div>Your farmer learns his risk by loss;</div>
- <div>While care and pains each workman takes,</div>
- <div>“Laugh and get fat” <i>our</i> motto makes.</div>
- <div>Fun, laughter, banter, drink, I hold</div>
- <div>Are life’s chief pleasures&mdash;next to gold.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“I have a vintner near who keeps a shop,</div>
- <div>The only man who, when I want a drop,</div>
- <div>Mixes my grog to suit my special taste;</div>
- <div>Not neat,&mdash;nor letting water run to waste.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Wives are bad property, I’d have you know,&mdash;</div>
- <div>Except in countries where grapes do not grow.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“’Tis life in paradise to find a host</div>
- <div>To dine with, where you’ve not to count the cost.</div>
- <div>And so new shifts to try I shall not pause,</div>
- <div>To get a bite that’s toothsome for my jaws.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“One single thing I trust a woman saying,</div>
- <div>To other statements no attention paying:</div>
- <div>‘When I am dead, I won’t return to grieve you.’</div>
- <div>Till death takes place, in naught else I’ll believe you.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“What! when you court concealment, will you tell</div>
- <div>The matter to a woman? Just as well</div>
- <div>Tell all the criers in the public squares!</div>
- <div>’Tis hard to say which of them louder blares.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Married? He’s done for! Ah! I had misgiving.</div>
- <div>And yet I only lately left him living.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Two states there are that we can always prove,&mdash;</div>
- <div>If one’s in liquor, and if one’s in love.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span></div>
- <div>Both words and looks these two conditions show;</div>
- <div>By these if the denial’s false we know.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Another epigrammatist was</p>
-
-<h4 class="smcap">Anaxandriades</h4>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He who composed the ditty, “Health is best,</div>
- <div>Good looks come next, then money,” and the rest,</div>
- <div>Right in the first, in the other two was wrong.</div>
- <div>None but a madman could have made that song!</div>
- <div>Next after “health” comes “wealth”; your handsome face,</div>
- <div>When pinched by famine, loses all its grace.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A man who doubts if he should marry,</div>
- <div>Or thinks he has good cause to tarry,</div>
- <div>Is foolish if he takes a wife,</div>
- <div>The source of half the plagues in life!</div>
- <div>A poor man to a rich wife sold</div>
- <div>Exchanges liberty for gold.</div>
- <div>If she has nothing, then, ’tis true,</div>
- <div>There is a different ill to rue;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For now he has, with all his need,</div>
- <div>Two mouths instead of one to feed.</div>
- <div>Perhaps she’s ugly; married life</div>
- <div>Thenceforth is never-ending strife!</div>
- <div>Perhaps she’s pretty; then <i>your</i> boast</div>
- <div>Is made by all your friends their toast.</div>
- <div>Does ugly, handsome, poor, or rich,</div>
- <div>Bring most ill luck?&mdash;I know not which.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One course in life there is that’s hard to roam,</div>
- <div>Back from a husband’s to a father’s home;</div>
- <div>And every decent wife should fear to tread it;</div>
- <div>The “homing heat” wins nothing but discredit.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Other Greek wits offer these:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span></p>
-
-<h4 class="smcap">Eubulus</h4>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He who first drew or modelled Love with wings</div>
- <div>Might paint a swallow; but how many things</div>
- <div>In Love are different from a bird! Not light</div>
- <div>To him who bears the weight, nor quick in flight,</div>
- <div>Unmoved the imp upon his shoulders sits.</div>
- <div>How can a thing have <i>wings</i> that never flits?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For sober folk three bowls alone I mix,</div>
- <div>For health, cheer, sleep; the order thus I fix.</div>
- <div>The first they toss off; <i>that’s</i> for stomach’s sake.</div>
- <div>The next, for love and pleasure, all may take.</div>
- <div>The third, the few who are with wisdom blessed;</div>
- <div>It sends them home to bed, to take their rest.</div>
- <div>The fourth’s no longer <i>mine</i>! ’tis “drinkers’ bowl.”</div>
- <div>A fifth they call for; then they shout and howl.</div>
- <div>The sixth sends forth the party for a lark.</div>
- <div>The seventh to fight and bear the drunkard’s mark.</div>
- <div>Lawsuits the eighth. The ninth breeds furious talking;</div>
- <div>The tenth, to rave and lose the power of walking.</div>
- <div>Small though the bowl, much wine, if poured in neat,</div>
- <div>The head at first affects, and last the feet.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<h4 class="smcap">Aristophon</h4>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Bad luck to him who <i>second</i> came to wed!</div>
- <div>The first I blame not; home a wife he led</div>
- <div>Not knowing what a curse a wife might prove,</div>
- <div>What deadly feuds oft spring from miscalled love.</div>
- <div>But he who married next, in haste unwise</div>
- <div>Rushed to his fate with fully opened eyes.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<h4 class="smcap">Alexis</h4>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Your Sophists say, it is not Love almighty</div>
- <div>That roams on wings, but <i>lovers</i> that are flighty.</div>
- <div>Love wrongly bears the blame; ’twas one who knew</div>
- <div>Nought of his ways who first winged Cupids drew.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span></div>
- <div>A drunken party coming up! To evade them I must try.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">My sole chance now to keep my cloak is having wings to fly.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Old Chaerephon some trick is always trying,</div>
- <div>As now, to dine without his share supplying,</div>
- <div>Early he goes to shops which cooks beset,</div>
- <div>To whom by contract crockery is let,</div>
- <div>And when he sees one choosing dishes, “Say,”</div>
- <div>He cries, “what house do <i>you</i> cook for to-day?”</div>
- <div>So, when the door’s left gaping, he contrives</div>
- <div>To slip in as the first guest that arrives.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In wine and man this difference appears:</div>
- <div>The old man bores you, but the old wine cheers.</div>
- <div>Men do not, like your wine, improve by age;</div>
- <div>The more their years, the less their ways engage.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Aristotle, though the first to put into words the definition of the
-ridiculous, can furnish no extracts which come within our present scope.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed the great teacher considered comedy from its dramatic side
-rather than as mere humor.</p>
-
-<p>One of his pupils, Theophrastus, left us some fragments, especially a
-short collection of character sketches which show both wit and humor.</p>
-
-<h4><i>OF SLOVENLINESS</i></h4>
-
-<p>This vice is a lazy and beastly negligence of a man’s person, whereby
-he becomes so filthy as to be offensive to those who are about him.
-You’ll see him come into a company when he is covered all over with a
-leprosy or scurf, or with very long nails, and he says those distempers
-are hereditary, that his father and grandfather had them before him.
-He will speak with his mouth full, and gurgle at his cup in drinking.
-He will intrude into the best company in ragged clothes. If he goes
-with his mother to the soothsayers, he cannot even then refrain from
-coarse and profane expressions. When he is making his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span> oblations at
-the temple, he will let the dish fall out of his hand, and laugh as at
-some jocular exploit. At the finest concert of music he cannot forbear
-clapping his hands and making a rude noise. He will pretend to sing
-along with the singers, and rail at them when they leave off.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>The Characters.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF LOQUACITY</i></h4>
-
-<p>If we would define loquacity, it is an excessive affluence of words.
-The prater will not suffer any person in company to tell his own story,
-but, let it be what it will, tells you you mistake the matter, that
-he takes the thing right, and that if you will listen, he will make
-it clear to you. If you make any reply, he suddenly interrupts you,
-saying, “Why, sir, you forget what you were talking about; it’s very
-well you should begin to remember, since it is most beneficial for
-people to inform one another.” Then presently he says, “But what was I
-going to say? Why, truly, you very soon apprehend a thing, and I was
-waiting to see if you would be of my sentiment in this matter.” And
-thus he always takes such occasions as these to prevent the person
-he talks with the liberty of breathing. After he has thus tormented
-all who will hear him, he is so rude as to break into the company of
-persons met to discuss important affairs, and drives them away by his
-troublesome impertinence. Thence he goes into the public schools and
-places of exercise, where he interrupts the masters by his foolish
-prating, and hinders the scholars from improving by their instruction.
-If any person shows an inclination to go away, he will follow him, and
-will not part from him till he comes to his own door. If he hears of
-anything transacted in the public assembly of the citizens, he runs
-up and down to tell it to everybody. He gives you a long account of
-the famous battle that was fought when Aristophanes the orator was
-governor, or when the Lacedæmonians were under the command of Lysander;
-then tells you with what general applause he made a speech in public,
-repeating a great deal of it, with invectives against the common
-people, which are so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span> tiresome to those that hear him that some forget
-what he says as soon as it is out of his mouth, others fall asleep,
-and others leave him in the midst of his harangue. If this talker be
-sitting on the bench, the judge will be unable to determine matters.
-If he’s at the theater, he’ll neither let you hear nor see anything;
-nor will he even permit him that sits next to him at the table to eat
-his meat. He declares it very hard for him to be silent, his tongue
-being so very well hung that he’d rather be accounted as garrulous as
-a swallow than be silent, and patiently bears all ridicule, even that
-of his own children, who, when they want to go to rest, request him to
-talk to them that they may the sooner fall asleep.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>The Characters.</i></p>
-
-<p>One of the Characters described by Theophrastus is <i>The Stupid
-Man</i>, and runs thus:</p>
-
-<p>“The stupid man is one who, after doing a sum and setting down the
-total, will ask the person next him, ‘What does it come to?’”</p>
-
-<p>It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that this is the beginning
-or at least the popularizing of the class of jests known as Noodles or
-Noodle Stories.</p>
-
-<p>For all nations and races have folk-lore that details the sayings and
-doings of the witless or silly.</p>
-
-<p>The Literature of the Orient abounds in these tales and European
-stories of the same sort are equally abundant.</p>
-
-<p>The collection of jokes ascribed to Hierocles, may or may not have
-been gathered by that Alexandrian philosopher. The only form in which
-we may read them is said to have been made not earlier than the Ninth
-Century, but the stories themselves are among the very earliest of the
-traditional jests of all time.</p>
-
-<p>Some of these old jokemongers’ witticisms are capital&mdash;so good, in
-fact, that the parentage of many of them has been claimed by modern
-wits. No doubt we shall recognise some old friends as we read:</p>
-
-<p>I. A pedant (for so we must probably translate, in conventional<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-phrase, the pervading Scholastichus of the old jokemonger) wishing to
-teach his horse not to eat much, gave him no food. Eventually the horse
-died of starvation; and he complained to his friends, “I have suffered
-a great loss, for just when I had taught my horse to live upon nothing
-he died.”</p>
-
-<p>II. A pedant having bought a cask of wine, sealed it. But his slave
-bored a hole and stole the wine. The master was amazed to find that,
-though his seals were unbroken, the wine gradually diminished. Someone
-suggested that he should examine whether it had been taken out from the
-bottom. “Fool,” he replied, “it isn’t the lower part that’s gone. It’s
-the upper.”</p>
-
-<p>III. A pedant suffered shipwreck in a tempest, and seeing the
-passengers tie themselves to different articles on board, fastened
-himself to one of the anchors.</p>
-
-<p>IV. Another had to cross a river, and went on board the ferry-boat on
-horseback. Somebody asked him why he did so, and he replied because he
-was in a hurry.</p>
-
-<p>V. Yet another, anxious to know whether he looked well when he was
-asleep, stood before a looking-glass with his eyes shut to see.</p>
-
-<p>VI. A landlord, who had a house to sell, went about amongst his
-friends, carrying a brick as a specimen.</p>
-
-<p>In connection with these stories may be cited the following, from a
-Persian jest-book: A poor wrestler, who had passed all his life in
-forests, resolved to try his fortune in a great city, and as he drew
-near it he observed with wonder the crowds on the road, and thought,
-“I shall certainly not be able to know myself among so many people if
-I have not something about me that the others have not.” So he tied a
-pumpkin to his right leg and, thus decorated, entered the town. A young
-wag, perceiving the simpleton, made friends with him, and induced him
-to spend the night at his house. While he was asleep, the joker removed
-the pumpkin from his leg and tied it to his own, and then lay down
-again. In the morning, when the poor fellow awoke and found the pumpkin
-on his companion’s leg, he called to him, “Hey! get up, for I am
-perplexed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span> in my mind. Who am I, and who are you? If I am myself, why
-is the pumpkin on your leg? And if you are yourself, why is the pumpkin
-not on my leg?”</p>
-
-<p>Modern counterparts of the following jest are not far to seek: Quoth
-a man to a pedant, “The slave I bought of you has died.” Rejoined the
-other, “By the gods, I do assure you that he never once played me such
-a trick while I had him.” The old Greek pedant is transformed into an
-Irishman, in our collections of facetiæ, who applied to a farmer for
-work. “I’ll have nothing to do with you,” said the farmer, “for the
-last five Irishmen I had all died on my hands.” Quoth Pat, “Sure, sir,
-I can bring you characters from half a dozen gentlemen I’ve worked for
-that I never did such a thing.” And the jest is thus told in an old
-translation of <i>Les Contes Facetieux de Sieur Gaulard</i>: “Speaking
-of one of his Horses which broake his Neck at the descent of a Rock, he
-said, Truly it was one of the handsomest and best Curtalls in all the
-Country; he neuer shewed me such a trick before in all his life.”</p>
-
-<p>Equally familiar is the jest of the pedant who was looking out for a
-place to prepare a tomb for himself, and on a friend indicating what he
-thought to be a suitable spot, “Very true,” said the pedant, “but it is
-unhealthy.” And we have the prototype of a modern “Irish” story in the
-following: A pedant sealed a jar of wine, and his slaves perforated it
-below and drew off some of the liquor. He was astonished to find his
-wine disappear while the seal remained intact. A friend, to whom he
-had communicated the affair, advised him to look and ascertain if the
-liquor had not been drawn off from below. “Why, you fool,” said he, “it
-is not the lower, but the upper, portion that is going off.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a Greek pedant who stood before a mirror and shut his eyes
-that he might know how he looked when asleep&mdash;a jest which reappears
-in Taylor’s <i>Wit and Mirth</i> in this form: “A wealthy monsieur in
-France (hauing profound reuenues and a shallow braine) was told by his
-man that he did continually gape in his sleepe, at which he was angry
-with his man, saying he would not belieue it. His man verified it to
-be true; his master said that he would neuer belieue any that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span> told
-him so, except (quoth hee) I chance to see it with mine owne eyes; and
-therefore I will have a great Looking glasse at my bed’s feet for the
-purpose to try whether thou art a lying knaue or not.”</p>
-
-<p>Not unlike some of our “Joe Millers” is the following: A citizen
-of Cumæ, on an ass, passed by an orchard, and seeing a branch of a
-fig-tree loaded with delicious fruit, he laid hold of it, but the
-ass went on, leaving him suspended. Just then the gardener came up,
-and asked him what he did there. The man replied, “I fell off the
-ass.”&mdash;An analogue to this drollery is found in an Indian story-book,
-entitled <i>Kathȧ Manjari</i>: One day a thief climbed up a cocoanut
-tree in a garden to steal the fruit. The gardener heard the noise,
-and while he was running from his house, giving the alarm, the thief
-hastily descended from the tree. “Why were you up that tree?” asked the
-gardener. The thief replied, “My brother, I went up to gather grass for
-my calf.” “Ha! ha! is there grass, then, on a cocoanut tree?” said the
-gardener. “No,” quoth the thief; “but I did not know; therefore I came
-down again.”&mdash;And we have a variant of this in the Turkish jest of the
-fellow who went into a garden and pulled up carrots, turnips, and other
-kinds of vegetables, some of which he put into a sack, and some into
-his bosom. The gardener, coming suddenly on the spot, laid hold of him,
-and said, “What are you seeking here?” The simpleton replied, “For some
-days past a great wind has been blowing, and that wind blew me hither.”
-“But who pulled up these vegetables?” “As the wind blew very violently,
-it cast me here and there; and whatever I laid hold of in the hope of
-saving myself remained in my hands.” “Ah,” said the gardener, “but who
-filled this sack with them?” “Well, that is the very question I was
-about to ask myself when you came up.”</p>
-
-<p>The Greek Anthology brings together short poems and epigrams written
-during the thousand years between Simonides’ time and the sixth century
-<span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span></p>
-
-<p>Collected shortly before the beginning of the Christian Era and added
-to later, they comprise about four thousand five hundred specimens, by
-three hundred authors. Few of these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span> are witty, as, indeed, few are
-epigrammatic, but of them we quote some which seem most appurtenant.</p>
-
-
-<h3>FROM THE GREEK ANTHOLOGY</h3>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Lucian</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>DARKNESS</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“A blockhead bit by fleas put out the light,</div>
- <div>And, chuckling, cried, ‘Now you can’t see to bite!’”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Crates</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>CURES FOR LOVE</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Hunger, perhaps, may cure your love,</div>
- <div>Or time your passion greatly alter;</div>
- <div>If both should unsuccessful prove,</div>
- <div>I strongly recommend a halter.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Julian</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>BEER</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“What! whence this, Bacchus? For, by Bacchus’ self,</div>
- <div>The son of Jove, I know not this strange elf.</div>
- <div>The other smells like nectar; but thou here</div>
- <div>Like the he-goat. Those wretched Celts, I fear,</div>
- <div>For want of grapes, made thee of ears of corn.</div>
- <div>Demetrius art thou, of Demeter born,</div>
- <div>Not Bacchus, Dionysus, nor yet wine&mdash;</div>
- <div>Those names but fit the products of the vine;</div>
- <div>Beer thou mayst be from barley; or, that failing,</div>
- <div>We’ll call thee ale, for thou wilt keep us ailing.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Agathias</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>GRAMMAR AND MEDICINE</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“A thriving doctor sent his son to school</div>
- <div>To gain some knowledge, should he prove no fool;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span></div>
- <div>But took him soon away with little warning,</div>
- <div>On finding out the lesson he was learning&mdash;</div>
- <div>How great Pelides’s wrath, in Homer’s rime,</div>
- <div>Sent many souls to Hades ere their time.</div>
- <div>‘No need for this my boy should hither come;</div>
- <div>That lesson he can better learn at home;</div>
- <div>For I myself, now, I make bold to say,</div>
- <div>Sent many souls to Hades ere their day,</div>
- <div>Nor e’er found want of grammar stop my way.’”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Nearchus</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>A SINGER</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Men die when the night-raven sings or cries;</div>
- <div>But when Dick sings, e’en the night-raven dies.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Ammianus</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>AN EPITAPH</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Light lie the earth, Nearchus, on thy clay,</div>
- <div>That so the dogs may easier find their prey.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Lucilius</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>ENVY</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Poor Diophon of envy died,</div>
- <div class="i1">His brother thief to see</div>
- <div>Nailed next to him and crucified</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon a higher tree.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A PROFESSOR WITH A SMALL CLASS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Hail, Aristides, rhetoric’s great professor!</div>
- <div>Of wondrous words we own thee the possessor.</div>
- <div>Hail ye, his pupils seven, that mutely hear him&mdash;</div>
- <div>His room’s four walls, and the three benches near him.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>FALSE CHARMS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Chloe, those locks of raven hair,</div>
- <div class="i1">Some people say you dye with black;</div>
- <div>But that’s a libel, I can swear,</div>
- <div class="i1">For I know where you buy them black.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A SCHOOLMASTER WITH A GAY WIFE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“You in your school forever flog and flay us,</div>
- <div>Teaching what Paris did to Menelaus;</div>
- <div>But all the while, within your private dwelling,</div>
- <div>There’s many a Paris courting of your Helen.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>BOARD OR LODGING</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Asclepiades, the miser, in his house</div>
- <div>Espied one day, to his surprise, a mouse.</div>
- <div>‘Tell me, dear mouse,’ he cried, ‘to what cause is it</div>
- <div>I owe this pleasant but unlooked-for visit?’</div>
- <div>The mouse said, smiling, ‘Fear not for your hoard;</div>
- <div>I come, my friend, to lodge, and not to board.’”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Anon</span><br />
-<span class="subhed2"><i>CONVENIENT PARTNERSHIP</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Damon, who plied the undertaker’s trade,</div>
- <div>With Doctor Crateas an agreement made.</div>
- <div>What linens Damon from the dead could seize,</div>
- <div>He to the doctor sent for bandages;</div>
- <div>While the good doctor, here no promise-breaker,</div>
- <div>Sent all his patients to the undertaker.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Anon</span><br />
-<span class="subhed2"><i>LONG AND SHORT</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Dick cannot blow his nose whene’er he pleases</div>
- <div class="i1">His nose so long is, and his arm so short;</div>
- <div>Nor ever cries, ‘God bless me!’ when he sneezes&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">He cannot hear so distant a report.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Anon</span><br />
-<span class="subhed2"><i>THE LERNEANS</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Lerneans are bad: not some bad and some not</div>
- <div>But all; there’s not a Lernean in the lot,</div>
- <div>Save Procles, that you could a good man call.</div>
- <div>But Procles&mdash;is a Lernean, after all.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Anon</span><br />
-<span class="subhed2"><i>PERPLEXITY</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Sad Heraclitus, with thy tears return;</div>
- <div>Life more than ever gives us cause to mourn.</div>
- <div>Democritus, dear droll, revisit earth;</div>
- <div>Life more than ever gives us cause for mirth.</div>
- <div>Between you both I stand in thoughtful pother,</div>
- <div>How I should weep with one, how laugh with t’other.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Beside his short poems, we quote a little of the prose of</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Lucian</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>A QUESTION OF PRECEDENCE</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="center sm p1"><span class="allsmcap">ZEUS</span>, <span class="allsmcap">ÆSCULAPIUS</span>, <i>and</i> <span class="allsmcap">HERACLES</span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>Zeus.</i> Do, Æsculapius and Heracles, stop your wrangling, in
-which you indulge as if you were a couple of mortals; for this sort of
-behavior is unseemly, and quite strange to the banquets of the gods.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Heracles.</i> But, Zeus, would you have that quack drug-dealer
-there take his place at table above me?</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Æsculapius.</i> By Zeus, yes, for I am certainly the better man.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Heracles.</i> How, you thunderstruck fellow, is it, pray, because
-Zeus knocked you on the head with his bolt for your unlawful actions,
-and because now, out of mere pity, by way of compensation, you have got
-a share of immortality?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>Æsculapius.</i> What! have you, for your part, Heracles, altogether
-forgotten your having been burned to ashes on Mount Œta, that you throw
-in my teeth this fire you talk of?</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Heracles.</i> We have not lived at all an equal or similar sort of
-life&mdash;I, who am the son of Zeus, and have undergone so many and great
-labors, purifying human life, contending against and conquering wild
-beasts, and punishing insolent and injurious men; whereas you are a
-paltry herb-doctor and mountebank, skilful, possibly, in palming off
-your miserable drugs upon sick fools, but who have never given proof of
-any noble, manly disposition.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Æsculapius.</i> You say well, seeing I healed your burns when you
-came up but now half-burned, with your body all marred and destroyed by
-the double cause of your death&mdash;the poisoned shirt, and afterward the
-fire. Now I, if I have done nothing else, at least have neither worked
-like a slave, as you have, nor have I carded wool in Lydia, dressed in
-a fine purple gown; nor have I been beaten by that Omphale of yours,
-with her golden slipper. No, nor did I, in a mad fit, kill my children
-and my wife!</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Heracles.</i> If you don’t stop your ribald abuse of me at once,
-you shall very speedily learn your immortality will not avail you much;
-for I will take and pitch you head first out of heaven, so that not
-even the wonderful Pæon himself shall cure you and your broken skull.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Zeus.</i> Have done, I say, and don’t disturb the harmony of the
-company, or I will pack both of you off from the supper-room; although,
-to speak the truth, Heracles, it is fair and reasonable Æsculapius
-should have precedence of you at table, inasmuch as he even took
-precedence of you in death.”</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;“<i>Dialogues of the Gods.</i>”</p>
-
-<h4><i>ODYSSEUS’S TRICK ON POLYPHEMUS</i><br />
-<span class="subhed"><span class="smcap">Poseidon</span> <i>and</i> <span class="smcap">Polyphemus</span></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">“<i>Polyphemus.</i> Oh, father, what have I endured at the hands of the
-cursed stranger, who made me drunk and put out my eye, assaulting me
-when I was lulled to sleep!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>Poseidon.</i> Who dared to do this, my poor Polyphemus?</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Polyphemus.</i> In the first instance, he called himself Outis; but
-when he had got clear away, and was out of reach of my arrow, he said
-that his name was Odysseus.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Poseidon.</i> I know whom you speak of&mdash;him of Ithaca, and he was
-on his return voyage from Ilium. But how did he do it, for he is by no
-means a man of too much courage?</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Polyphemus.</i> Returning from my accustomed attending of my flock,
-I caught a number of fellows in my cave, evidently having designs on
-my herds; for when I placed the stone block against the door&mdash;the rock
-is of huge size&mdash;and had lighted the fire by igniting the tree which
-I brought from the mountain, evidently they appeared to be trying
-to conceal themselves. Well, when I had got hold of some of them I
-devoured them for a pack of thieves, as was reasonable. Hereupon that
-most villainous rascal, whether he was Outis or Odysseus, pours out a
-sort of drug and gives me to drink&mdash;sweet, indeed, and of delicious
-smell, but most insidious, and which caused great disorder in my head;
-for, immediately upon my drinking, everything seemed to me to be in a
-whirl, and the cave itself was turned upside down, and I was no longer
-at all in my senses; and at last I was dragged down into sleep. Then
-sharpening the bar, and igniting it besides, he blinded me as I slept,
-and from that time I am a blind man, at your service, Poseidon.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Poseidon.</i> How soundly you slept, my son, that you did not
-jump up while you were being blinded! But as for this Odysseus, then,
-how did he escape? For he could not&mdash;I am well assured that he could
-not&mdash;move away the rock from the door.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Polyphemus.</i> Yes, but it was I who removed it, that I might the
-better catch him as he was going out; and, sitting down close to the
-door, I groped for him with extended hands, letting only my sheep go
-out to pasture, after having given instructions to the ram what he was
-to do in my place.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Poseidon.</i> I perceive: they slipped away unnoticed, under the
-sheep. But you ought to have shouted, and called the rest of the
-Cyclopes to your aid.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>Polyphemus.</i> I did summon them, father, and they came. But
-when they asked the sneaking rascal’s name, and I said it was Outis,
-thinking I was in a mad fit, they took themselves off at once. Thus the
-cursed fellow tricked me with his name; and what especially vexes me
-is, that he actually threw my misfortune in my teeth. ‘Not even,’ said
-he, ‘will your father Poseidon cure you.’</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Poseidon.</i> Never mind, my child, for I will revenge myself upon
-him; he shall learn that, even if it is not possible for me to heal the
-mutilation of people’s eyes, at all events the fate of voyagers is in
-my hands. And he is still at sea.”</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Dialogues of the Sea-Gods.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p1">Remembering that the dividing lines may not be too strictly drawn, we
-close our survey of Greek Humor with some of the fragments of Menander.</p>
-
-<p>Menander, who was to the Middle or New Comedy what Aristophanes was
-to the Old Comedy, left only fragments. One bit, rather longer than
-the others, shows, with the inevitable animal element not lacking, a
-surprisingly modern spirit of satire.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Suppose some god should say: Die when thou wilt,</div>
- <div>Mortal, expect another life on earth;</div>
- <div>And for that life make choice of all creation</div>
- <div>What thou wilt be&mdash;dog, sheep, goat, man, or horse;</div>
- <div>For live again thou must; it is thy fate;</div>
- <div>Choose only in what form; there thou art free.</div>
- <div>So help me, Crato, I would fairly answer</div>
- <div>Let me be all things, anything but man.</div>
- <div>He only of all creatures feels afflictions.</div>
- <div>The generous horse is valued for his worth.</div>
- <div>And dog by merit is preferred to dog,</div>
- <div>And warrior cock is pampered for his courage,</div>
- <div>And awes the baser brood. But what is man?</div>
- <div>Truth, virtue, valour, how do they avail him?</div>
- <div>Of this world’s good the first and greatest share</div>
- <div>Is flattery’s prize. The informer takes the next.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span></div>
- <div>And barefaced knavery garbles what is left.</div>
- <div>I’d rather be an ass than what I am</div>
- <div>And see these villains lord it o’er their betters.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Other Fragments of Menander follow.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Be off! these shams of golden tresses spare;</div>
- <div>No honest woman ever dyes her hair.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Better to have, if good you rightly measure,</div>
- <div>Little with joy than much that brings not pleasure,</div>
- <div>Scant means with peace than piles of anxious treasure.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Marriage, if truth be told (of this be sure),</div>
- <div>An evil is&mdash;but one we must endure.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Wretched is he that has one son; or, rather,</div>
- <div>More wretched he who of more sons is father.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Think this, on marriage when your mind is set:</div>
- <div>If the harm is small, ’tis the chief good you’ll get.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Slave not for one who has been himself a slave;</div>
- <div>Steers, loosed from ploughs, of toil small memory have.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“A handsome person, with perverted will,</div>
- <div>Is a fine craft that’s handled without skill.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Let not a friend your cherished secrets hear;</div>
- <div>Then, if you quarrel, you’ve no cause for fear.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“More love a mother than a father shows:</div>
- <div>He <i>thinks</i> this is his son; she only <i>knows</i>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Fathers’ and lovers’ threats no truth have got.</div>
- <div>They swear dire vengeance,&mdash;but they mean it not.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Your petty tyrant’s insolence I hate;</div>
- <div>If wrong is done me, be it from the great.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“A lie has often, I have known before,</div>
- <div>More weight than truth, and people trust it more.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Don’t talk of birth and family; all of those</div>
- <div>Who have no natural worth on that repose.</div>
- <div>Blue blood, grand pedigree, illustrious sires</div>
- <div>He boasts of, who to nothing more aspires.</div>
- <div>What use long ancestry your <i>pride</i> to call?</div>
- <div>One must have had them to be born at all!</div>
- <div>And those who have no pedigree to show,</div>
- <div>Or who their grandsires were but scantly know.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“From change of homes or lack of friends at need,</div>
- <div>And so have lost all record of their breed,</div>
- <div>Are not more “low-born” than your men of blood;</div>
- <div>A nigger’s well-born, if he makes for good!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The following are a few more epigrammatic bits from the writings of
-less noted contemporaries.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4 class="smcap">Philippides</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Tis easy, while at meals you take your fill,</div>
- <div>To say to sickly people, Don’t be ill!</div>
- <div>Easy to blame bad boxing at a fight,</div>
- <div>But not so for oneself to do it right.</div>
- <div>Action is one thing, talk another quite.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Your fortune differs as to bed and board;</div>
- <div>Your wife&mdash;if ugly&mdash;can good fare afford.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4 class="smcap">DIPHILUS</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Learn, mortal, learn thy natural ills to bear:</div>
- <div>These, these alone thou <i>must</i> endure; but spare</div>
- <div>A heavier load upon thyself to bring</div>
- <div>By burdens that from thine own follies spring.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When I am asked by some rich man to dine,</div>
- <div>I mark not if the walls and roofs are fine,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span></div>
- <div>Nor if the vases such as Corinth prizes,&mdash;</div>
- <div>But <i>solely</i> how the smoke from cooking rises.</div>
- <div>If dense it runs up in a column straight,</div>
- <div>With fluttering heart the dinner-hour I wait.</div>
- <div>If, thin and scant, the smoke-puffs sideway steal,</div>
- <div>Then I forebode a thin and scanty meal.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So plain is she, her father shuns the sight:</div>
- <div>She holds out bread; no dog will take a bite.</div>
- <div>So dark is she, that entering a room</div>
- <div>Night seems to follow her, and all is gloom.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<h4 class="smcap">Apollodorus</h4>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Sweet is a life apart from toil and care;</div>
- <div>Blessed lot, with others such repose to share!</div>
- <div>But if with beasts and apes you have to do,</div>
- <div>Why, <i>you</i> must play the brute and monkey too!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In youth I felt for the untimely doom</div>
- <div>Of offspring carried to an early tomb.</div>
- <div>But now I weep when old men’s death I see;</div>
- <div>That moved my pity; this comes home to <i>me</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Seek not, my son, an old man’s ways to spurn;</div>
- <div>To these in old age you yourself will turn.</div>
- <div>Herein we fathers lose a point you gain;</div>
- <div>When you of “father’s cruelty” complain,</div>
- <div>“<i>You</i> once were young,” we tauntingly are told.</div>
- <div>We can’t retort, “My son, you once were old.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span></p>
-
-<h3>PART II<br />
-<span class="subhed">ROME</span></h3></div>
-
-<p>The Roman Juvenal observed, “All Greece is a comedian.” But he could
-not say the same of his own country.</p>
-
-<p>Though there was Roman Comedy and Roman Satire, the real and
-spontaneous spirit of fun was conspicuously lacking in the tastes and
-tendencies of the Romans.</p>
-
-<p>Glory is attributed to Greece and grandeur to Rome, and it may be the
-“sudden glory” of humor was an integral part of the Grecian nature.</p>
-
-<p>Yet we must not differentiate too carefully between the two, for the
-literature of Greece and Rome is so fused and intermingled that only a
-historian may take up the chronological tabulation.</p>
-
-<p>For our purpose it is well to let the literature of the two countries
-merge and continue the consideration of classic comedy without over
-cautious regard for dates.</p>
-
-<p>The Greek influence on literature of all ages will never disappear, but
-the Greek spirit of pure joy and gaiety will, probably never reappear.</p>
-
-<p>From the beginnings of Greece, on through the existence of Rome,
-and down through the Mediæval Ages, the world of letters was
-self-contained, a single proposition. From 500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> to 1300
-<span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> the traditions of primal Greece and Rome continued to be
-the common possession of all Europe.</p>
-
-<p>After that, literature became diverse and divergent among the
-countries. It was independent as well as interdependent, but this
-condition makes an inevitable division of time.</p>
-
-<p>Greece, Rome, Mediæval Times,&mdash;these are the three sections of the
-Middle portion of this book.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span></p>
-
-<p>Rome, then, considered by herself, brought forth little quotable
-humorous literature, and what we have to choose from is ponderous and
-heavy.</p>
-
-<p>Like Greece, the first germs of Roman comic literature may be traced to
-the religious festivals, which were marked by an admixture of religious
-rites and riotous Bacchanalian orgies, where as the crowds danced and
-sang and feasted, they became first hilarious and then abusive and
-indecent.</p>
-
-<p>Like the Greeks, the Romans used grotesque masks, large enough to
-represent face and hair, too, the duplicates of which we see decorating
-our theater proscenium arches and drop curtains to this day.</p>
-
-<p>It would seem these masks were universally made use of in their
-dramatic performances, for all caricatures and grotesque drawings show
-them.</p>
-
-<p>In the burlesque entertainments there was a Buffoon, corresponding to
-our clown, called a Sannio, from the Greek word meaning a fool.</p>
-
-<p>Later, undoubtedly, the Court Fool and the King’s Jester were the
-natural successors of this character.</p>
-
-<p>In all these masks the features were exaggerated and made monstrous of
-form and size. But one reason for the greatly enlarged mouth is that
-it was so shaped in order to form a sort of speaking trumpet, that the
-actors’ voices might be heard at greater distance.</p>
-
-<p>In contrast to the grotesquerie of enlargement, there was also a branch
-of caricature which depicted the pigmies.</p>
-
-<p>The legend of the pigmies and cranes is as ancient, at least, as Homer,
-and many examples are found in the buried cities of Herculaneum and
-Pompeii.</p>
-
-<p>Comic Literature was not plentiful in the days of Early Rome. Up to the
-second century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> we can glean but the two names, Plautus
-and Terence.</p>
-
-<p>These two, nearly contemporary, founded their plays on the comedies of
-Menander and a few other earlier dramatic writers.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps twenty plays are left us from the hands of these two Romans,
-and these, though pronounced amusing by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span> scholars who can read the
-original text, are not what the modern layman deems very humorous.</p>
-
-<p>A few examples of them will suffice.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Plautus</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>MILITARY SWAGGER</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="center sm"><span class="allsmcap">PYRGOPOLINICES</span>, <span class="allsmcap">ARTOTROGUS</span>, <i>and</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">SOLDIERS</span></p>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> Take care that the luster of my shield is more
-bright than the rays of the sun when the sky is clear, that, when
-occasion comes, the battle being joined, ’mid the fierce ranks right
-opposite it may dazzle the eyesight of the enemy. But I must console
-this saber of mine, that it may not lament nor be downcast in spirits,
-because I have thus long been wearing it keeping holiday, though it so
-dreadfully longs to make havoc of the enemy. But where is Artotrogus?</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Here he is; he stands close by the hero, valiant and
-successful, and of princely form. Mars could not dare to style himself
-so great a warrior, nor compare his prowess with yours.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> Him you mean whom I spared on the Gorgonidonian
-plains, where Bumbomachides Clytomestoridysarchides, the grandson of
-Neptune, was the chief commander?</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> I remember him; him, I suppose you mean, with the
-golden armor, whose legions you puffed away with your breath, just as
-the wind blows away leaves or the reed-thatched roof.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> That, by my troth, was really nothing at all.</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Faith, that really was nothing at all in comparison
-with other things I could mention (<i>aside</i>) which you never did.
-If any person ever beheld a more perjured fellow than this, or one more
-full in vain boasting, let him have me for himself: I’ll become his
-slave.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> What are you saying?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Why, that I remember in what fashion you broke the
-foreleg of an elephant, in India, with your fist.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> How&mdash;the foreleg?</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> I meant to say the thigh.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> I struck the blow without an effort.</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Troth, if, indeed, you had put forth your strength,
-your arm would have passed right through the hide, the entrails, and
-the frontispiece of the elephant.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> I don’t care to talk about these things just now.</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> I’ faith, ’tis really not worth while for you to
-tell me of it, who know your prowess well. (<i>Aside.</i>) My appetite
-creates all these tales. I must hear him right out with my ears, that
-my teeth mayn’t have time to grow, and whatever lie he shall tell I
-must agree to it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> What was it I was saying?</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Oh, I know what you were going to say just now. I’
-faith ’twas bravely done; I remember its being done.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> What was that?</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Whatever it was you were going to say.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> Have you got your tablets?</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Are you intending to enlist some one? I have them,
-and a pen as well.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> How quickly you guess my thoughts!</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> ’Tis fit that I should study your inclinations, so
-that whatever you wish should first occur to me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> What do you remember?</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> I do remember this: In Cilicia there were a hundred
-and fifty men, a hundred in Cryphiolathronia, thirty at Sardis, sixty
-men of Macedon, whom you slaughtered altogether in one day.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> What is the sum total of those men?</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Seven thousand.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> It must be as much; you keep the reckoning well.</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Yet I have none of them written down; still, I
-remember it was so.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> By my troth, you have a right good memory.</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus</i> (<i>aside</i>). ’Tis the flesh-pots give it a fillip.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> So long as you shall do as you have done
-hitherto, you shall always have something to eat; I will always make
-you a partaker at my table.</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Besides, in Cappadocia you would have killed five
-hundred men altogether at one blow, had not your saber been blunt.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> I let them live, because I was quite sick of
-fighting.</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Why should I tell you what all mortals know, that
-you, Pyrgopolinices, live upon the earth with your valor, beauty, and
-achievements unsurpassed? All the women are in love with you, and that
-not without reason, since you are so handsome. Witness those girls that
-pulled me by my mantle yesterday.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> What was it they said to you?</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> They questioned me about you. “Is Achilles here?”
-says one to me. “No,” says I, “his brother is.” Then says the other to
-me, “By my troth, but he is a handsome and a noble man. See how his
-long hair becomes him! Certainly the women are lucky who share his
-favors.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> And pray, did they really say so?</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> They both entreated me to bring you past today, so
-that they might see you.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> ’Tis really a very great plague to a man to be
-too handsome!</p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> They are quite a nuisance to me; they are praying,
-entreating, beseeching me to let them see you; sending for me for that
-purpose, so that I can’t give my attention to your business.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> It seems that it is time for us to go to the
-Forum, that I may count out their pay to those soldiers whom I lately
-enlisted; for King Seleucus entreated me with most earnest suit that
-I would raise and enlist recruits for him. To that business I have
-resolved to devote my attention this day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Artotrogus.</i> Come, let’s be going, then.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pyrgopolinices.</i> Guards, follow me.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>The Braggart Captain.</i></p>
-
-<h4><i>THE SUSPICIOUS MISER</i><br />
-<span class="subhed"><span class="allsmcap">MEGADORUS</span> <i>and</i> <span class="allsmcap">EUNOMIA</span></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Eunomia.</i> Tell me pray, who is she whom you would like to take
-for a wife?</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I’ll tell you. Do you know that Euclio, the poor old
-man close by?</p>
-
-<p><i>Eunomia.</i> I know him; not a bad sort of man.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I’d like his maiden daughter to be promised me in
-marriage. Don’t make any words about it, sister; I know what you are
-going to say&mdash;that she’s poor. This poor girl pleases me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Eunomia.</i> May the gods prosper it!</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I hope the same.</p>
-
-<p><i>Eunomia.</i> Do you wish me to stay for anything else?</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> No; farewell.</p>
-
-<p><i>Eunomia.</i> And to you the same, brother.</p>
-
-<p class="right">(<i>Goes into the house.</i>)</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I’ll go to see Euclio, if he’s at home. But, ah! here
-comes the very man toward his own house!</p>
-
-<p class="center p1 sm"><i>Enter</i> <span class="smcap">Euclio</span></p>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Euclio</i> (<i>to himself</i>). I had a presentiment that I was
-going out to no purpose when I left my house, and therefore I went
-unwillingly; for neither did any one of the wardsmen come, nor yet
-the master of the ward, who ought to have distributed the money. Now
-I’m making all haste to hasten home; for, though I myself am here, my
-mind’s at home.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> May you be well, and ever fortunate, Euclio!</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> May the gods bless you, Megadorus!</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> How are you? Are you quite well and contented?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio</i> (<i>aside</i>). It isn’t for nothing when a rich man
-accosts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span> a poor man courteously. Now, this fellow knows that I’ve got
-some gold; for that reason he salutes me more courteously.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> Do you say that you are well?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> Oh, I’m not very well in the money line.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> But if you’ve a contented mind, you have enough for
-passing a happy life with.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio</i> (<i>aside</i>). By my faith, the old woman has made a
-discovery to him about the gold; it is clear she has told him. I’ll cut
-off her tongue, and tear out her eyes, when I get home.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> Why are you talking to yourself?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> I’m lamenting my poverty. I’ve a grown-up girl without a
-portion, and one that can’t be disposed of in marriage; nor am I able
-to marry her to anybody.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> Hold your peace; be of good courage, Euclio; she
-shall have a husband; you shall be assisted by myself. If you have need
-of help, command me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio</i> (<i>aside</i>). Now he is aiming at my property, while
-he’s making promises. He’s gaping for my gold, that he may devour it;
-in the one hand he is carrying a stone, while he shows the bread in the
-other. I trust no person who, rich himself, is exceedingly courteous
-to a poor man; when he extends his hand with a kind air, then is he
-loading you with some damage. I know these polyps, who, when they’ve
-touched a thing, hold it fast.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> Give me your attention, Euclio, for a little while;
-I wish to speak a few words to you about a common concern of yours and
-mine.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio</i> (<i>aside</i>). Alas! wo is me! My gold has been carried
-off from my house. Now he’s wishing for this thing, I’m sure, to come
-to a compromise with me; but I’ll look in my house first.</p>
-
-<p class="right">(<i>He goes toward his door.</i>)</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> Where are you going?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> I’ll return to you directly, for there’s something I
-must go and see to at home.</p>
-
-<p class="right">(<i>Goes into his house.</i>)</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I verily believe that when I make mention of his
-daughter, for him to promise her to me, he’ll suppose that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span> I am
-laughing at him; for I do not know of any man poorer than he.</p>
-
-<p class="center p1 sm"><span class="smcap">Euclio</span> <i>returns from his house</i></p>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Euclio</i> (<i>aside</i>). The gods favor me; my property’s all
-safe. If nothing’s lost, it’s safe. I was dreadfully afraid before I
-went indoors. I was almost dead. (<i>Aloud.</i>) I’m come back to you,
-Megadorus, if you wish to say anything to me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I thank you. I beg that as to what I shall inquire of
-you, you’ll not hesitate to speak out boldly.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> So long, indeed, as you inquire nothing that I mayn’t
-choose to speak out upon.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> Tell me, of what sort of family do you consider me to
-be sprung?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> Of a good one.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> What do you think about my character?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> It’s a good one.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> What of my conduct?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> Neither bad nor dishonest.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> Do you know my age?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> I know that you are as rich in years as in pocket.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I surely did always take you to be a citizen without
-evil guile, and now I am convinced.</p>
-
-<p>Euclio (<i>aside</i>). He smells the gold. (<i>Aloud.</i>) What do you
-want with me now?</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> Since you know me, and I know you, what sort of
-person you are, may it bring a blessing on myself, and you and your
-daughter, if I now ask your daughter as my wife. Promise me that it
-shall be so.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> Heyday! Megadorus, you are doing a deed that’s not
-becoming to your usual actions, in laughing at me, a poor man, and
-guiltless toward yourself and toward your family. For neither in act,
-nor in words, have I ever deserved it of you that you should do what
-you are doing now.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I vow that I neither came to laugh at you nor am I
-laughing at you, nor do I think you deserving of it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> Why, then, do you ask my daughter for yourself?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> Because I believe that the match would be a good
-thing for all of us.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> It suggests itself to my mind, Megadorus, that you are a
-wealthy man, a man of rank, and that I am the poorest of the poor. Now,
-if I should give my daughter in marriage to you, it suggests itself to
-my mind that you are the ox, and that I am the ass; when I’m yoked to
-you, and when I’m not able to bear the burden equally with yourself,
-I, the ass, must lie down in the mire; you, the ox, would regard me no
-more than if I had never been born. I should then feel aggrieved, and
-my own class would laugh at me. In neither direction should I have a
-fixed stall, if there should be a divorce; the asses would tear me with
-their teeth, the oxen would butt at me with their horns. This is the
-great risk, in my passing over from the asses to the oxen.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> The nearer you can unite yourself in alliance with
-honorable people the better. Do you receive this proposal, listen to
-me, and promise her to me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> But there is no marriage portion, I tell you.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> You are to give none; so long as she comes with good
-principles, she is sufficiently portioned.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> I say so for this reason, that you mayn’t be supposing
-that I have found any treasures.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I know that; don’t enlarge upon it. Promise her to me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> So be it. (<i>Starts and looks about.</i>) But, oh,
-Jupiter, am I not utterly undone?</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> What’s the matter with you?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> What was it sounded just now as though it were iron?</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I ordered them to dig up the garden at my place.
-(<span class="smcap">Euclio</span> <i>runs off into his house.</i>) But where has this
-man gone? He’s off, and he hasn’t fully answered me; he treats me with
-contempt. Because he sees that I wish for his friendship, he acts
-after the usual manner of mankind. For if a wealthy person goes to ask
-a favor of a poorer one, the poor man is afraid to treat with him;
-through suspicion he hurts his own interest. The same person, when this
-opportunity is lost, afterward wishes for it too late.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio</i> (<i>coming out of the house, addressing servant
-within</i>). By the powers, if I don’t give you up to have your tongue
-cut out by the roots, I order and I authorize you to hand me over to
-any one you please, to be mutilated.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> By my troth, Euclio, I perceive that you consider me
-a fit man for you to make sport of in my old age, for no fault of my
-own.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> I’ faith, Megadorus, I am not doing so, nor should I
-desire it were I able to.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> Well, then, do you betroth your daughter to me?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> On those terms, and with that portion which I mentioned
-to you.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> Do you promise her, then?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> I do promise her.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> May the gods bestow their blessings on it!</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> May the gods do so! Observe and remember that we’ve
-agreed, that my daughter is not to bring you any portion.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I remember it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> But I understand in what fashion people are wont
-to equivocate; an agreement is no agreement, no agreement is an
-agreement&mdash;just as it pleases you.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I’ll have no misunderstanding with you. But what
-reason is there why we shouldn’t have the nuptials this day?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> Why, by my troth, there is very good reason why we
-should.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus.</i> I’ll go, then, and prepare matters. Do you want me
-for anything more?</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> All is settled. Farewell.</p>
-
-<p><i>Megadorus</i> (<i>going to the door of his house and calling
-out</i>). Hullo! Strobilus, follow me quickly to the meat-market.</p>
-
-<p class="right">(<i>Exit</i> <span class="smcap">Megadorus</span>.)</p>
-
-<p><i>Euclio.</i> He has gone. Immortal gods, I do beseech you! How
-powerful is gold! I do believe, now, that he has had some intimation
-that I’ve got a treasure at home. He’s gaping for that; for the sake of
-that has he persisted in this alliance!</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>The Pot of Gold.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Terence</span><br />
-<span class="subhed sm"><i>PARASITES AND GNATHONITES</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Gnathonites</i> (<i>soliloquizing</i>). Immortal gods! how far
-does one man excel another! What a difference there is between a wise
-person and a fool! This came strongly into my mind from the following
-circumstance. As I was walking along to-day I met a certain individual
-of this place, of my own rank and station&mdash;no mean fellow&mdash;one who,
-like myself, had guttled away his paternal estate. I saw him, shabby,
-dirty, sickly, beset with rags and years. “What’s the meaning of
-this garb?” said I. He answered, “Wretch that I am, I’ve lost what I
-possessed; see to what I am reduced; all my acquaintances and friends
-have forsaken me.” On this I felt contempt for him as in comparison
-with myself. “What!” said I, “you pitiful sluggard, have you so managed
-matters as to have no hope left? Have you lost your wits together with
-your estate? Don’t you see me, who have risen from the same condition?
-What a complexion I have, how spruce and well dressed, what portliness
-of person? I have everything, yet have nothing; and although I possess
-nothing, still I am in want of nothing.” “But I,” said he, “unhappily,
-can no longer find anybody who will feed me in exchange for making me
-the butt of his jokes.” “What!” said I, “do you suppose it is managed
-by those means? You are quite mistaken. Once upon a time, in the
-early ages, there was a calling of that sort; but I will tell you a
-new mode of coney-catching; I, in fact, have been the first to strike
-into this path. There is a class of men who strive to be the first
-in everything, but are not; to these I pay my court. I do not offer
-myself to them to be laughed at, but I am the first to laugh with
-them, and at the same time to admire their parts. Whatever they say,
-I commend; if they contradict that selfsame thing, I commend again.
-Does any one deny? I deny; does he affirm? I affirm. In fine, I have
-so trained myself as to humor them in everything. This calling is now
-by far the most productive.” While we were thus talking, we arrived
-at the market-place. Overjoyed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span> all the confectioners ran at once to
-meet me; fishmongers, butchers, cooks, sausage-makers, fishermen, whom,
-both when my fortunes were flourishing and when they were ruined, I
-had served, and often serve still; they complimented me, asked me to
-dinner, and gave me a hearty welcome. When this poor hungry wretch
-saw that I was in such great esteem, and that I obtained a living so
-easily, then the fellow began to entreat me that I would allow him
-to learn this method of me. So I bade him become my follower&mdash;if he
-could. As the disciples of the philosophers take their names from the
-philosophers themselves, so, too, the Parasites ought to be called
-Gnathonites.&mdash;<i>Eunuchus.</i></p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of the Christian Era, Roman Literature writers had
-begun to come into their own, and the first century <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> saw
-many of the greatest Romans of them all in the paths of Literature.</p>
-
-<p>Catullus, the blithe poet who left us some hundred or so of his poems,
-frequently wrote lines more lyrical than chaste. Yet he himself bids
-us remember that if a poet’s life be chaste, his lines need not
-necessarily be so, too.</p>
-
-<p>As Herrick later put it, “Jocund his muse was, but his life was chaste.”</p>
-
-<p>But the self-revelations of Catullus are probably no more improper to
-read than those of many later and lesser poets.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Catullus</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>THE ROMAN COCKNEY</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>Stipends</i> Anius even on opportunity <i>shtipends</i>,</div>
- <div><i>Ambush</i> as <i>hambush</i> still Anius used to declaim;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Then, hoped fondly the words were a marvel of articulation,</div>
- <div>While with an <i>h</i> immense <i>hambush</i> arose from his heart.</div>
- <div>So his mother of old, so e’en spoke Liber his uncle,</div>
- <div>Credibly; so grandsire, grandam, alike did agree.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Syria took him away; all ears had rest for a moment;</div>
- <div>Lightly the lips those words, slightly could utter again.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent">None was afraid any more of a sound so clumsy returning;</div>
- <div>Sudden a solemn fright seized us: a message arrives.</div>
- <div>“News from Sonia country; the sea, since Anius entered,</div>
- <div>Changed; ’twas <i>Ionian</i> once, now ’twas <i>Hionian</i> all.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A FIXED SMILE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Egnatius, spruce owner of superb white teeth,</div>
- <div>Smiles sweetly, smiles forever. Is the bench in view,</div>
- <div>Where stands the pleader just prepared to rouse our tears,</div>
- <div>Egnatius smiles sweetly. Near the pyre they mourn,</div>
- <div>Where weeps a mother o’er the lost, the kind, one son;</div>
- <div>Egnatius smiles sweetly&mdash;what the time, or place,</div>
- <div>Or thing soe’er, smiles sweetly. Such a rare complaint</div>
- <div>Is his, not handsome, scarce to please the town, say I.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So take a warning for the nonce my friend; town-bred</div>
- <div>Were you, a Sabine hale, a pearly Tiburtine,</div>
- <div>A frugal Umbrian body, Tuscan, huge of paunch,</div>
- <div>A grim Samnian, black of hue, prodigious-tooth’d,</div>
- <div class="i1">A Transpadane, my country not to pass untaxed&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">In short, whoever cleanly cares to rinse foul teeth;</div>
- <div>Yet sweetly smiling ever I would have you not:</div>
- <div>For silly laughter, it’s a silly thing indeed.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Of Horace it is difficult to say anything without saying too much.</p>
-
-<p>In this Outline there is no space for discussion, informative or
-discursive, of the writers, it is our province but to name them and to
-give examples of their humor.</p>
-
-<p>Horace was not a comedian but in his Satires, as well as in some of his
-other works, the comic muse is discernible.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Horace</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>OBTRUSIVE COMPANY ON THE SACRED WAY</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Along the Sacred Road I strolled one day,</div>
- <div>Deep in some bagatelle (you know my way),<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span></div>
- <div>When up comes one whose name I scarcely knew:</div>
- <div>“Ah, dearest of dear fellows, how d’ye do?”</div>
- <div>He grasped my hand: “Well, thanks; the same to you.”</div>
- <div>Then, as he still kept walking by my side,</div>
- <div>To cut things short, “You’ve no commands?” I cried.</div>
- <div>“Nay, you should know me; I’m a man of lore.”</div>
- <div>“Sir, I’m your humble servant all the more.”</div>
- <div>All in a fret to make him let me go,</div>
- <div>I now walk fast, now loiter and walk slow,</div>
- <div>Now whisper to my servant, while the sweat</div>
- <div>Ran down so fast my very feet were wet.</div>
- <div>“Oh, had I but a temper worth the name,</div>
- <div>Like yours, Bolanus!” inly I exclaim,</div>
- <div>While he keeps running on at a hand-trot</div>
- <div>About the town, the streets, I know not what.</div>
- <div>Finding I made no answer, “Ah, I see</div>
- <div>You’re at a strait to rid yourself of me;</div>
- <div>But ’tis no use; I’m a tenacious friend,</div>
- <div>And mean to hold you till your journey’s end.”</div>
- <div>“No need to take you such a round; I go</div>
- <div>To visit an acquaintance you don’t know.</div>
- <div>Poor man, he’s ailing at his lodging, far</div>
- <div>Beyond the bridge, where Cæsar’s gardens are.”</div>
- <div>“Oh, never mind; I’ve nothing else to do,</div>
- <div>And want a walk, so I’ll step on with you.”</div>
- <div class="i1">Down go my ears in donkey-fashion, straight;</div>
- <div>You’ve seen them do it, when their load’s too great.</div>
- <div>“If I mistake not,” he begins, “you’ll find</div>
- <div>Viscus not more, nor Varius, to your mind;</div>
- <div>There’s not a man can turn a verse so soon,</div>
- <div>Or dance so nimbly when he hears a tune;</div>
- <div>While, as for singing&mdash;ah, my forte is there;</div>
- <div>Tigellius’ self might envy me, I’ll swear.”</div>
- <div class="i1">He paused for breath. I falteringly strike in:</div>
- <div>“Have you a mother? Have you kith or kin</div>
- <div>To whom your life is precious?” “Not a soul;</div>
- <div>My line’s extinct; I have interred the whole.”</div>
- <div>Oh, happy they! (so into thought I fell)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span></div>
- <div>After life’s endless babble they sleep well.</div>
- <div>My turn is next: despatch me, for the weird</div>
- <div>Has come to pass which I so long have feared,</div>
- <div>The fatal weird a Sabine beldame sung</div>
- <div>All in my nursery days, when life was young:</div>
- <div>“No sword nor poison e’er shall take him off,</div>
- <div>Nor gout, nor pleurisy, nor racking cough;</div>
- <div>A babbling tongue shall kill him; let him fly</div>
- <div>All talkers, as he wishes not to die.”</div>
- <div class="i1">We got to Vesta’s temple, and the sun</div>
- <div>Told us a quarter of the day was done.</div>
- <div>It chanced he had a suit, and was bound fast</div>
- <div>Either to make appearance or be cast.</div>
- <div>“Step here a moment, if you love me.” “Nay,</div>
- <div>I know no law; ’twould hurt my health to stay.</div>
- <div>And then, my call.” “I’m doubting what to do,</div>
- <div>Whether to give my lawsuit up, or you.”</div>
- <div>“Me, pray!” “I will not.” On he strides again.</div>
- <div>I follow, unresisting, in his train.</div>
- <div class="i1">“How stand you with Mæcenas?” he began;</div>
- <div>“He picks his friends with care&mdash;a shrewd, wise man.</div>
- <div>In fact, I take it, one could hardly name</div>
- <div>A head so cool in life’s exciting game.</div>
- <div>’Twould be a good deed done, if you could throw</div>
- <div>Your servant in his way; I mean, you know.</div>
- <div>Just to play second. In a month, I’ll swear,</div>
- <div>You’d make an end of every rival there.”</div>
- <div>“Oh, you mistake; we don’t live there in league;</div>
- <div>I know no house more sacred from intrigue;</div>
- <div>I’m never distanced in my friend’s good grace</div>
- <div>By wealth or talent; each man finds his place.”</div>
- <div>“A miracle! If ’twere not told by you,</div>
- <div>I scarce should credit it.” “And yet ’tis true.”</div>
- <div>“Ah, well, you double my desire to rise</div>
- <div>To special favor with a man so wise.”</div>
- <div>“You’ve but to wish it; ’twill be your own fault,</div>
- <div>If, with your nerve, you win not by assault.</div>
- <div>He can be won; that puts him on his guard,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span></div>
- <div>And so the first approach is always hard.”</div>
- <div>“No fear of me, sir. A judicious bribe</div>
- <div>Will work a wonder with the menial tribe.</div>
- <div>Say I’m refused admittance for to-day,</div>
- <div>I’ll watch my time; I’ll meet him in the way,</div>
- <div>Escort him, dog him. In this world of ours</div>
- <div>The path to what we want ne’er runs on flowers.”</div>
- <div class="ileft">’Mid all this prating met me, as it fell,</div>
- <div>Aristius, my good friend, who knew him well.</div>
- <div>We stop. Inquiries and replies go round:</div>
- <div>“Where do you hail from?” “Whither are you bound?”</div>
- <div>There as he stood, impassive like a clod,</div>
- <div>I pull at his limp arms, frown, wink, and nod,</div>
- <div>To urge him to release me. With a smile</div>
- <div>He feigns stupidity. I burn with bile.</div>
- <div>“Something there was you said you wished to tell</div>
- <div>To me in private.” “Aye, I mind it well;</div>
- <div>But not just now. ’Tis a Jews’ fast to-day:</div>
- <div>Affront a sect so touchy? Nay, friend, nay!”</div>
- <div>“Faith, I’ve no scruples.” “Ah, but I’ve a few!</div>
- <div>I’m weak, you know, and do as others do.</div>
- <div>Some other time&mdash;excuse me.” Wretched me,</div>
- <div>That ever man so black a sun should see!</div>
- <div>Off goes the rogue, and leaves me in despair,</div>
- <div>Tied to the altar, with the knife in air,</div>
- <div>When, by rare chance, the plaintiff in the suit</div>
- <div>Knocks up against us: “Whither now, you brute?”</div>
- <div>He roars like thunder. Then to me: “You’ll stand</div>
- <div>My witness, sir?” “My ear’s at your command.”</div>
- <div>Off to the court he drags him; shouts succeed;</div>
- <div>A mob collects&mdash;thank Phœbus, I am freed!</div>
- <div class="right">&mdash;<i>Satires.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The humorist feels a sense of personal grievance against the Roman
-writers for that they wrote so wisely and so well, yet gave us so
-little that can be used as Humor for Humor’s sake.</p>
-
-<p>Petronius wrote engagingly, but with such indecency that he can scarce
-be quoted for polite society.</p>
-
-<p>His Trimalchio’s Dinner offers this:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>AN INGENIOUS COOK</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">We little thought, as the saying is, that after so many dainties we had
-another hill to climb; for the table being uncovered to a flourish of
-music, three muzzled white hogs were brought in, with bells hanging on
-their necks. The man leading them said one was two years old, the other
-three, and the last full grown. For my part, I took them for acrobats,
-and imagined the hogs were to perform some of the surprising feats
-practised at the circus. But Trimalchio broke in upon our expectation
-by asking us, “Which of these will you have dressed for supper? Cocks
-and pheasants are country fare, but my cooks have pans in which a
-calf can be roasted whole.” And immediately commanding a cook to be
-called, Trimalchio, without waiting for our choice, bade him kill the
-largest. He then inquired of the cook how he came by him saying, “Were
-you bought, or were you born in my house?” “Neither,” replied the
-cook, “but left you by Pansa’s testament.” “Then see to it,” answered
-Trimalchio, “that this beast is prepared quickly, or I shall make you
-serve my footmen.” ...</p>
-
-<p>While our host was talking on, an overgrown hog was brought to table.
-We all wondered at the expedition which had been used, swearing a
-capon could not have been dressed in that time; and what increased
-our surprise was that this hog seemed larger than the boar which
-had been set before us. Trimalchio, after gazing steadfastly upon
-him, exclaimed, “What! have his entrails not been taken out? No, by
-Hercules, they have not! Bring in that rogue of a cook!” The cook,
-being dragged in before us, hung his head, excusing himself that he
-had forgotten. “Forgotten!” roared his master. “Strip the rascal!
-Strip him!” The poor man was stripped forthwith, and placed between
-two tormentors. We all interceded for him, alleging that such an error
-might occasionally happen, and therefore desired his pardon, protesting
-we would never speak for him if he repeated the same offense.</p>
-
-<p>I thought he richly deserved his fate, and could not forbear whispering
-to Agamemnon, “This must certainly be a most careless rascal. How could
-any one forget to disembowel a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span> hog? I would not have forgiven him,
-by Hercules, had he thus served up a dish for me!” Our host, resuming
-a pleasant look, said, “Come, now, you with the short memory, let us
-see if you can disembowel the animal before us.” Upon which the cook,
-having put his garments on again, took his knife, and with a trembling
-hand slashed the hog on both sides of the belly, when out tumbled a
-load of hog’s-puddings and sausages....</p>
-
-<p>The dessert consisted of a blackbird pie, dried grapes, and candied
-nuts. There were also quinces, stuck so full of spices that they looked
-like so many hedgehogs. Yet all this might have been endured, had not
-the next dish been so monstrous and disgusting that we would rather
-have perished of hunger than touched it; for, it being placed upon
-the table, and, as we imagined, a good fat goose, with fish and all
-kinds of fowl round it, Trimalchio cried, “Whatever you see here is
-all made out of one body!” I, being a cunning spark, took a guess at
-what it might really be, and, turning to Agamemnon, “I wonder,” said
-I, “whether all this is not made of loam? I once remember seeing such
-an imaginary dish in the Saturnalia at Rome.” Scarce had I ended, when
-Trimalchio began to praise his cook:</p>
-
-<p>“There is no cleverer fellow in the world. Out of the belly he’ll make
-you a dish of fish; a plover out of a piece of fat bacon; a turtle out
-of leg of pork; and a hen out of the intestines. And therefore, in my
-opinion, he has a very suitable name, for we call him Dædalus. Because
-he is such an ingenious fellow, a friend of his brought him a present
-of knives from Rome, of German steel; and immediately he called for
-them, and, turning them over, gave us the liberty to try the edges on
-his cheeks.”</p>
-
-<p>Just then in rushed two servants in high dispute, as if they were
-quarreling about a yoke, from which hung two earthen jars. And when
-Trimalchio had judged between them, neither of them stood to the
-sentence, but each fell to club law, and broke the other’s jar. Amazed
-at the insolence of these drunken rascals, all our eyes were fixed on
-their conflict, when we perceived oysters and other shell-fish to fall
-from the broken<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span> jars, a boy collecting them in a charger and handing
-them about among the guests.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was the cook’s ingenuity in the least unworthy of this
-extraordinary magnificence; for he brought us snails upon a silver
-gridiron, and with a shrill, unpleasant voice sang us a song.... We
-were almost pushed off our couches by the crowd of servants who rushed
-into the hall; and who should be seated above me but the ingenious
-cook, that had made a goose from a piece of pork, all reeking of
-pickles and kitchen slops. Not content with being seated at table,
-he began to act Thespis the Tragedian; and soon after he challenged
-his master to contend with him for the laurel wreath at the next
-chariot-races.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Trimalchio’s Banquet.</i></p>
-
-<p>Persius, who died at twenty-eight, left us six satires. Though an
-imperfect imitator of Horace, his work is characterized by earnestness
-and a true sense of satire.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>POETIC FAME</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Immured within our studies, we compose;</div>
- <div>Some, shackled meter; some, freefooted prose;</div>
- <div>But all, bombast&mdash;stuff, which the breast may strain,</div>
- <div>And the huge lungs puff forth with awkward pain.</div>
- <div class="i1">’Tis done! And now the bard, elate and proud,</div>
- <div>Prepares a grand rehearsal for the crowd.</div>
- <div>Lo! he steps forth in birthday splendor bright,</div>
- <div>Combed and perfumed, and robed in dazzling white,</div>
- <div>And mounts the desk; his pliant throat he clears,</div>
- <div>And deals, insidious, round his wanton leers;</div>
- <div>While Rome’s first nobles, by the prelude wrought,</div>
- <div>Watch, with indecent glee, each prurient thought,</div>
- <div>And squeal with rapture, as the luscious line</div>
- <div>Thrills through the marrow and inflames the chine.</div>
- <div class="i1">Vile dotard! Canst thou thus consent to please,</div>
- <div>To pander for such itching fools as these?</div>
- <div>Fools, whose applause must shoot beyond thy aim,</div>
- <div>And tinge thy cheek, bronzed as it is, with shame!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span></div>
- <div>But wherefore have I learned, if, thus represt,</div>
- <div>The leaven still must swell within my breast;</div>
- <div>If the wild fig-tree, deeply rooted there,</div>
- <div>Must never burst its bounds and shoot in air?</div>
- <div class="i1">Are these the fruits of study, these of age?</div>
- <div>Oh, times, oh, manners! Thou misjudging sage,</div>
- <div>Is science only useful as ’tis shown,</div>
- <div>And is thy knowledge nothing if not known?</div>
- <div class="i1">But, sure, ’tis pleasant, as we walk, to see</div>
- <div>The pointed finger, hear the loud “That’s he!”</div>
- <div>On every side. And seems it, in your sight,</div>
- <div>So poor a trifle, that whate’er we write</div>
- <div>Is introduced to every school of note</div>
- <div>And taught the youth of quality by rote?</div>
- <div>Nay, more! Our nobles, gorged, and swilled with wine,</div>
- <div>Call, o’er the banquet, for a lay divine.</div>
- <div>Here one, on whom the princely purple glows.</div>
- <div>Snuffles some musty legend through his nose,</div>
- <div>Slowly distils Hypsipyle’s sad fate,</div>
- <div>And love-lorn Phyllis dying for her mate,</div>
- <div>With what of woful else is said or sung,</div>
- <div>And trips up every word with lisping tongue.</div>
- <div class="i1">The maudlin audience, from the couches round,</div>
- <div>Hum their assent, responsive to the sound.</div>
- <div>And are not now the poet’s ashes blest?</div>
- <div>Now lies the turf not lightly on his breast?</div>
- <div>They pause a moment, and again the room</div>
- <div>Rings with his praise. Now will not roses bloom,</div>
- <div>Now, from his relics, will not violets spring,</div>
- <div>And o’er his hallowed urn their fragrance fling?</div>
- <div class="i1">You laugh (’tis answered), and too freely here</div>
- <div>Indulge that vile propensity to sneer.</div>
- <div>Lives there, who would not at applause rejoice,</div>
- <div>And merit, if he could the public voice?</div>
- <div>Who would not leave posterity such rimes,</div>
- <div>As cedar oil might keep to latest times&mdash;</div>
- <div>Rimes which should fear no desperate grocer’s hand,</div>
- <div>Nor fly with fish and spices through the land?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span></div>
- <div class="i1">Thou, my kind monitor, whoe’er thou art,</div>
- <div>Whom I suppose to play the opponent’s part,</div>
- <div>Know, when I write, if chance some happier strain</div>
- <div>(And chance it needs must be) rewards my pain,</div>
- <div>Know, I can relish praise with genuine zest;</div>
- <div>Not mine the torpid, mine the unfeeling breast.</div>
- <div>But that I merely toil for this acclaim,</div>
- <div>And make these eulogies my end and aim,</div>
- <div>I must not, cannot grant. For&mdash;sift them all,</div>
- <div>Mark well their value, and on what they fall&mdash;</div>
- <div>Are they not showered (to pass these trifles o’er)</div>
- <div>On Labeo’s Iliad, drunk with hellebore,</div>
- <div>On princely love-lays driveled without thought,</div>
- <div>And the crude trash on citron couches wrought?</div>
- <div class="i1">You spread the table, ’tis a master-stroke,</div>
- <div>And give the shivering guest a threadbare cloak;</div>
- <div>Then, while his heart with gratitude dilates</div>
- <div>At the glad vest and the delicious cates,</div>
- <div>“Tell me,” you cry, “for truth is my delight,</div>
- <div>What says the town of me, and what I write?”</div>
- <div>He cannot; he has neither ears nor eyes.</div>
- <div>But shall I tell you who your bribes despise?</div>
- <div>Bald trifler! cease at once your thriftless trade;</div>
- <div>That mountain paunch for verse was never made.</div>
- <div class="right">&mdash;<i>Satires.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>In Martial we find a humorist after our own heart. As Homer was the
-father of poetry and Herodotus the father of prose, so to Martial must
-be ascribed the paternity of the epigram.</p>
-
-<p>Epigrams, so-called, had been made before, but in Martial’s work they
-rose to a new height, took on a new meaning.</p>
-
-<p>Before Martial, epigram meant merely inscription,&mdash;any short poem that
-might conveniently be cut on stone.</p>
-
-<p>Martial’s epigrams have keen wit and sharp point, such as appeal to the
-mind and appreciation of the reader.</p>
-
-<p>Fourteen hundred and fifty is his legacy of epigrams to us, and most of
-them properly short, as an epigram should be.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO SABIDIUS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I love thee not, Sabidius. But why?</div>
- <div>I love thee not&mdash;that’s all I can reply.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>PLAY’S THE THING</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Aper pierced his wife’s heart with an arrow:</div>
- <div class="i2">While playing, friends say.</div>
- <div class="i1">The wife was exceedingly wealthy:</div>
- <div class="i2">He knows how to play.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO CATULLUS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My name’s in your will as your heir,</div>
- <div class="i4h">So you’ve said.</div>
- <div>I’ll continue to doubt till the day&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i4h">When it’s read.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>BETWEEN THE LINES</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The man who sends you presents, Gaurus,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i4">You so rich and gray&mdash;</div>
- <div>Remarks, if you’ve got sense and insight,</div>
- <div class="i4">“Kindly pass away.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO AULUS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Though my readers sincerely admire me,</div>
- <div class="i1">A poet finds fault with my books.</div>
- <div>What’s the odds? When I’m giving a dinner</div>
- <div class="i1">I’d rather please guests than the cooks.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO POSTUMUS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When you kiss me you use only half of your mouth.</div>
- <div class="i1">I approve. Half that half, though, will do.</div>
- <div>Will you grant me a greater, ineffable boon?</div>
- <div class="i1">Keep the rest of that latter half, too.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ROUNDED WITH A SLEEP</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Though he bathed with us yesterday, dined with us, too,</div>
- <div class="i1">And was quite in the pink of condition,</div>
- <div>Ancus died this <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span>&mdash;of a dream that he’d asked</div>
- <div class="i1">Hermocrates to be his physician.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>VENDETTA</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Though it’s true, Theodorus, you frequently pray</div>
- <div class="i1">For my book in a flattering tone,</div>
- <div>No wonder I’m slow; I’ve good cause for delay</div>
- <div class="i1">In my fear you’d then send me your own.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A MERE SUGGESTION</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You read us your verse with your throat wrapped in wool.</div>
- <div class="i2">The reason we’re anxious to know,</div>
- <div class="i4">For to us it appears</div>
- <div class="i4">That some wool in our ears</div>
- <div class="i2">Would really be more apropos.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I hear that Lycoris has buried</div>
- <div class="i1">Every friend that she’s had in her life.</div>
- <div>I sincerely regret, Fabianus,</div>
- <div class="i1">She’s not introduced to my wife.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A TOTAL ABSTAINER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Though you serve richest wines,</div>
- <div>Paulus, Rumor opines</div>
- <div class="i1">That they poisoned your four wives, I think.</div>
- <div>It’s of course all a lie;</div>
- <div>None believes less than I&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No, I really don’t care for a drink.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MUTE MILLIONS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In the verse Cinna writes</div>
- <div class="i1">I am slandered, it’s said.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span></div>
- <div>But the man doesn’t write</div>
- <div class="i1">Whose verses aren’t read.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MAN AND SUPERMAN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Quintus loves Thais.” What Thais is that?</div>
- <div class="i1">“Why, Thais the one-eyed, who&mdash;” Who?</div>
- <div class="i2">Well, I was aware</div>
- <div class="i2">She’d lost one of her pair,</div>
- <div>But I didn’t know he had lost two.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO LINUS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You ask what I grow on my Sabine estate.</div>
- <div class="i1">A reliable answer is due.</div>
- <div class="i2">I grow on that soil&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i2">Far from urban turmoil&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Very happy at not seeing you.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>CREDE EXPERTO</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Diaulus left his doctoring</div>
- <div class="i1">To practise undertaking.</div>
- <div>His training as a medic, though,</div>
- <div class="i1">Has really been his making.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>NUMBERS SWEET</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Two of your teeth were blown out by a cough,</div>
- <div>And a subsequent cough blew out two.</div>
- <div>You can now cough away, Delia, all night and day&mdash;</div>
- <div>There’s nothing a third cough can do.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MILLIONS IN IT</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Just <i>give</i> Linus half what he asks as a loan;</div>
- <div>Then console</div>
- <div>Yourself with the thought that you’d rather lose half</div>
- <div>Than the whole.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO MAMERCUS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Though you never have read us a line of your verse,</div>
- <div class="i1">You insist on our thinking you write.</div>
- <div>Yes, yes, be a poet; be anything else&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">If you’ll only forbear to recite.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>About the last of the great Latin Satirists is Juvenal, a contemporary
-of Martial.</p>
-
-<p>His lines in translation, have a modern ring, but that may be merely
-because the fundamental sources and themes of wit are universal.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Juvenal</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>COSMETIC DISGUISE</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">A woman stops at nothing when she wears</div>
- <div>Rich emeralds round her neck, and in her ears</div>
- <div>Pearls of enormous size; these justify</div>
- <div>Her faults, and make all lawful in her eye.</div>
- <div>Sure, of all ills with which mankind are cursed,</div>
- <div>A wife who brings you money is the worst.</div>
- <div>Behold! her face a spectacle appears,</div>
- <div>Bloated, and foul, and plastered to the ears</div>
- <div>With viscous paste. The husband looks askew,</div>
- <div>And sticks his lips in this detested glue.</div>
- <div>She meets the adulterer bathed, perfumed, and dressed,</div>
- <div>But rots in filth at home, a very pest!</div>
- <div>For him she breathes of nard; for him alone</div>
- <div>She makes the sweets of Araby her own;</div>
- <div>For him, at length, she ventures to uncase,</div>
- <div>Scales the first layer of roughcast from her face,</div>
- <div>And, while the maids to know her now begin,</div>
- <div>Clears, with that precious milk, her muddy skin</div>
- <div>For which, though exiled to the frozen main,</div>
- <div>She’d lead a drove of asses in her train!</div>
- <div>But tell me now: this thing, thus daubed and oiled,</div>
- <div>Thus poulticed, plastered, baked by turns and boiled,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span></div>
- <div>Thus with pomatums, ointments, lacquered o’er&mdash;</div>
- <div>Is it a face, pray tell me, or a sore?</div>
- <div class="right">&mdash;<i>Satires.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON DOMINEERING WIVES</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">Now tell me, if thou canst not love a wife,</div>
- <div>Made thine by every tie, and thine for life,</div>
- <div>Why wed at all? Why waste the wine and cakes</div>
- <div>The queasy-stomached guest at parting takes,</div>
- <div>And the rich present, which the bridal right</div>
- <div>Claims for the favors of the happy night,</div>
- <div>The charger, where, triumphantly inscrolled,</div>
- <div>The Dacian Hero shines in current gold?</div>
- <div>If thou canst love, and thy besotted mind</div>
- <div>Is so uxoriously to <i>one</i> inclined,</div>
- <div>Then bow thy neck, and with submissive air</div>
- <div>Receive the yoke thou must forever wear.</div>
- <div class="i1">To a fond spouse a wife no mercy shows;</div>
- <div>Though warmed with equal fires, she mocks his wos,</div>
- <div>And triumphs in his spoils; her wayward will</div>
- <div>Defeats his bliss, and turns his good to ill.</div>
- <div>Naught must be given, if she opposes; naught,</div>
- <div>If she opposes, must be sold or bought;</div>
- <div>She tells him where to love, and where to hate;</div>
- <div>Shuts out the ancient friend, whose beard his gate</div>
- <div>Knew from its downy to its hoary state;</div>
- <div>And when pimps, parasites, of all degrees,</div>
- <div>Have power to will their fortunes as they please,</div>
- <div>She dictates his, and impudently dares</div>
- <div>To name his very rivals for his heirs.</div>
- <div class="i1">“Go, crucify that slave!” “For what offense?</div>
- <div>Who the accuser? Where the evidence?</div>
- <div>For when the life of man is in debate,</div>
- <div>No time can be too long, no care too great.</div>
- <div>Hear all, weigh all with caution, I advise&mdash;”</div>
- <div>“Thou sniveler! Is a slave a man?” she cries.</div>
- <div>“He’s innocent!” “Be’t so; ’tis my command,</div>
- <div>My will. Let that, sir, for a reason stand.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span></div>
- <div class="i1">Thus the virago triumphs, thus she reigns.</div>
- <div>Anon she sickens of her first domains,</div>
- <div>And seeks for new; husband on husband takes,</div>
- <div>Till of her bridal veil one rent she makes.</div>
- <div>Again she tires, again for change she burns,</div>
- <div>And to the bed she lately left returns,</div>
- <div>While the fresh garlands and unfaded boughs</div>
- <div>Yet deck the portal of her wondering spouse.</div>
- <div>“<span class="smcap">Eight Husbands to Herself She Gave</span>”&mdash;</div>
- <div>A rare inscription for her grave!</div>
- <div class="right">&mdash;<i>Satires.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Apuleius was the skilful teller of a long and fantastic tale called
-Metamorphoses, commonly known as the Golden Ass.</p>
-
-<p>But a small extract may be given.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Apuleius</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>METAMORPHOSES</i></span></h4>
-
-<p>Fotis came running to me one day in great excitement and trepidation,
-and informed me that her mistress, having hitherto made no proficiency
-by other means in her present amour, intended to assume feathers like
-a bird, and so take flight to the object of her love, and that I must
-prepare myself with all due care for the sight of such a wonderful
-proceeding. And now, about the first watch of the night, she escorted
-me, on tiptoe and with noiseless steps, to that same upper chamber, and
-bade me peep through a chink in the door, which I did accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, Pamphile divested herself of all her garments,
-and having unlocked a certain cabinet, took out of it several little
-boxes. Taking the lid off one of them, and pouring some ointment
-therefrom, she rubbed herself for a considerable time with her hands,
-smearing herself all over from the tips of her toes to the crown of
-her head. Then, after she had muttered a long while in a low voice
-over a lamp, she shook her limbs with tremulous jerks, then gently
-waved them to and fro, until soft feathers burst forth, strong wings
-displayed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span> themselves, the nose was hardened and curved into a beak,
-the nails were compressed and made crooked. Thus did Pamphile become an
-owl. Then, uttering a querulous scream, she made trial of her powers,
-leaping little by little from the ground; and presently, raising
-herself aloft, on full wing, she flew out-of-doors. And thus was she,
-of her own will, changed, by her own magic arts.</p>
-
-<p>But I, though not enchanted by any magic spell, still, riveted to
-the spot by astonishment at this performance, seemed to myself to be
-anything else rather than Lucius. Thus deprived of my senses, and
-astounded even to insanity, I was in a waking dream, and rubbed my eyes
-for some time to ascertain whether or not I was awake at all. At last,
-however, returning to consciousness of the reality of things, I took
-hold of the right hand of Fotis, and putting it to my eyes, “Suffer
-me,” said I, “I beg of you, to enjoy a great and singular proof of your
-affection, while the opportunity offers, and give me a little ointment
-from the same box. Grant this, my sweetest, I entreat you by these
-breasts of yours, and thus, by conferring on me an obligation that can
-never be repaid, bind me to you forever as your slave. Be you my Venus,
-and let me stand by you a winged Cupid.”</p>
-
-<p>“And are you, then, sweetheart, for playing me a fox’s trick, and for
-causing me, of my own accord, to let fall the ax upon my legs? Must
-I run such risk of having my Lucius torn from me by the wolves of
-Thessaly? Where am I to look for him when he is changed into a bird?
-When shall I see him again?”</p>
-
-<p>“May the celestial powers,” said I, “avert from me such a crime! Though
-borne aloft on the wings of the eagle itself, soaring through the
-midst of the heavens, as the trusty messenger, or joyous arm-bearer,
-of supreme Jove, would I not, after I had obtained this dignity of
-wing, still fly back every now and then to my nest? I swear to you,
-by that lovely little knot of hair with which you have enchanted my
-spirit, that I would prefer no other to my Fotis. And then, besides, I
-bethink me that as soon as I am rubbed with that ointment, and shall
-have been changed into a bird of this kind, I shall be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span> bound to keep
-at a distance from all human habitations; for what a beautiful and
-agreeable lover will the ladies gain in an owl! Why, do we not see that
-these birds of night, when they have got into any house, are eagerly
-seized and nailed to the doors, in order that they may atone, by
-their torments, for the evil destiny which they portend to the family
-by their inauspicious flight? But one thing I had almost forgot to
-inquire: what must I say, or do, in order to get rid of my wings and
-return to my own form as Lucius?”</p>
-
-<p>“Be in no anxiety,” she said, “about all that matter; for my mistress
-has made me acquainted with everything that can again change such forms
-into the human shape. But do not suppose that this was done through any
-kind feeling toward me, but in order that I might assist her with the
-requisite remedies when she returns home. Only think with what simple
-and trifling herbs such a mighty result is brought about: for instance,
-a little anise, with some leaves of laurel infused in spring water, and
-used as a lotion and a draft.”</p>
-
-<p>Having assured me of this over and over again, she stole into her
-mistress’s chamber with the greatest trepidation, and took a little
-box out of the casket. Having first hugged and kissed it, and offered
-up a prayer that it would favor me with a prosperous flight, I hastily
-divested myself of all my garments, then greedily dipping my fingers
-into the box, and taking thence a considerable quantity of the
-ointment, I rubbed it all over my body and limbs. And now, flapping my
-arms up and down, I anxiously awaited my change into a bird. But no
-down, no shooting wings appeared. Instead, my hairs became thickened
-into bristles, and my tender skin was hardened into a hide; my hands
-and feet, too, no longer furnished with distinct fingers and toes,
-formed into massive hoofs, and a long tail projected from the extremity
-of my spine. My face was now enormous, my mouth wide, my nostrils
-gaping, and my lips hanging down. In like manner my ears grew hairy
-and of immoderate length, and I found in every respect I had become
-enlarged. Thus, hopelessly surveying all parts of my body, I beheld
-myself changed&mdash;not into a bird, but an ass.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span></p>
-
-<p>I wished to upbraid Fotis for the deed she had done; but, now deprived
-both of the gesture and voice of man, I could only expostulate with her
-silently with my under-lip hanging down, and looking sidewise at her
-with tearful eyes. As for her, as soon as she beheld me thus changed
-she beat her face with her hands, and cried aloud, “Wretch that I am,
-I am undone! In my haste and flurry I mistook one box for the other,
-deceived by their similarity. It is fortunate, however, that a remedy
-for this transformation is easily to be obtained; for, by only chewing
-roses, you will put off the form of an ass, and in an instant will
-become my Lucius once again. I only wish that I had prepared as usual
-some garlands of roses for us last evening; for then you would not have
-had to suffer the delay even of a single night. But at the break of
-dawn the remedy shall be provided for you.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus did she lament; and as for me, though I was a perfect ass, and
-instead of Lucius, a beast of burden, I still retained human sense.
-Long and deeply, in fact, did I consider with myself whether I ought
-not to bite and kick that most wicked woman to death. However, better
-thoughts recalled me from such rash designs, lest, by inflicting on
-Fotis the punishment of death, I should at once put an end to all
-chances of efficient assistance. So, bending my head low, and shaking
-my ears, I silently swallowed my wrongs for a time, and submitting
-to my most dreadful misfortune, I betook myself to the stable to the
-good horse which had carried me so well, and there I found another
-ass also, which belonged to my former host, Milo. Now it occurred to
-me that, if there are in dumb animals any silent and natural ties of
-sympathy, this horse of mine, being influenced by a certain feeling
-of recognition and compassion, would afford me room for a lodging and
-the rights of hospitality. But, oh, Jupiter Hospitalis, and all you
-the guardian divinities of Faith! this very excellent nag of mine and
-the ass put their heads together and immediately plotted schemes for
-my destruction; and as soon as they beheld me approaching the manger,
-laying back their ears and quite frantic with rage, they furiously
-attacked me with their heels, fearing I had design upon their food.
-Consequently, I was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span> driven away into the farthest corner from that
-very barley which the evening before I had placed, with my own hands,
-before that most grateful servant of mine.</p>
-
-<p>Thus harshly treated and sent into banishment, I betook myself to a
-corner of the stable. And while I reflected on the insolence of my
-companions, and formed plans of vengeance against the perfidious steed,
-for the next day, when I should have become Lucius once more by the
-aid of the roses, I beheld against the central square pillar which
-supported the beams of the stable, a statue of the goddess Hippona,
-standing within a shrine, and nicely adorned with garlands of roses,
-and those, too, recently gathered. Inspired with hope, the moment I
-espied the salutary remedy I boldly mounted as far as ever my forelegs
-could stretch; and then, with neck at full length, and extending my
-lips as much as I possibly could, I endeavored to catch hold of the
-garlands. But by a most unlucky chance, just as I was endeavoring to
-accomplish this, my servant lad, who had the constant charge of my
-horse, suddenly espied me, sprang to his feet in a great rage, and
-exclaimed, “How long are we to put up with this vile hack, which but a
-few moments ago was for making an attack upon the food of the cattle,
-and is now doing the same even to the statues of the gods? But if I
-don’t this very instant cause this sacrilegious beast to be both sore
-and crippled”&mdash;and searching for something with which to strike me, he
-stumbled upon a bundle of sticks that lay there, and, picking out a
-knotted cudgel, the largest he could find among them all, he did not
-cease to belabor my poor sides, until a loud thumping and banging at
-the outer gates, and an uproar of the neighbors shouting “Thieves!”
-struck him with terror, and he took to his heels.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>The Golden Ass.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>VICISSITUDES OF A DONKEY</i></h4>
-
-<p>When the keeper of the horses had taken me to the country, I found
-there none of the pleasure or the liberty I expected; for his wife,
-an avaricious, bad woman, immediately yoked me<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span> to the mill, and
-frequently striking me with a green stick, prepared bread for herself
-and her family at the expense of my hide. And not content to make me
-drudge for her own food only, she also ground corn for her neighbors,
-and so made money by my toil. Nor, after all my weary labors, did she
-even afford me the food which had been ordered for me; for she sold my
-barley to the neighboring husbandmen, after it had been bruised and
-ground in that very mill by my own roundabout drudgery; but to me,
-who had worked during the whole of the day at that laborious machine,
-she only gave, toward evening, some dirty, unsifted, and very gritty
-bran. I was brought low enough by these miseries; but cruel fortune
-exposed me to fresh torments, in order, I suppose, that I might boast
-of my brave deeds, both in peace and war, as the saying is. For that
-excellent equerry, complying, rather late, indeed, with his master’s
-orders, for a short time permitted me to associate with the herds of
-horses.</p>
-
-<p>At length a free ass, I capered for joy, and softly ambling up to
-the mares, chose out such as I thought would be the fittest for my
-concubines. But here my joyful hopes gave place to extreme danger. For
-the stallions, who were terribly strong creatures, more than a match
-for any ass, regarding me with suspicion, furiously pursued me as
-their rival, without respect for the laws of hospitable Jupiter. One
-of them, with his head and neck and ample chest aloft, struck at me
-like a pugilist with his forefeet; another, turning his brawny back,
-let fly at me with his hind feet; and another, with a vicious neigh,
-his ears thrown back, and showing his white teeth, sharp as spears,
-bit me all over. It was like what I have read in history of the King
-of Thrace, who exposed his unhappy guests to be lacerated and devoured
-by wild horses; for so sparing was that powerful tyrant of his barley,
-that he appeased the hunger of his voracious horses by casting human
-bodies to them for food. In fact, I was so worried and distracted by
-the continual attacks of the horses, that I wished myself back again at
-the mill-round.</p>
-
-<p>Fortune, however, would not be satisfied with my torments, and soon
-after visited me with another calamity; for I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span> was employed to bring
-home wood from a mountain, and a boy, the most villainous of all boys,
-was appointed to drive me. It was not only that I was wearied by
-toiling up and down the steep and lofty mountain, nor that I wore away
-my hoofs by running on sharp stones, but I was cudgeled without end, so
-that all my bones ached to the very marrow. Moreover, by continually
-striking me on the off-haunch, and always in the same place, till
-the skin was broken, he occasioned a great ulcerous cavity, gaping
-like a trench or a window; yet he never ceased to hit me on the raw.
-He likewise laid such a load of wood on my back that you might have
-thought it was a burden prepared for an elephant, and not for a donkey.
-And whenever the ill-balanced load inclined to one side, instead of
-taking away some of the fagots from the heavier side, and thus easing
-me by somewhat lightening, or at least equalizing the pressure, he
-always remedied the inequality of the weight by the addition of stones.
-Nor yet, after so many miseries which I had endured, was he content
-with the immoderate weight of my burden; but when it happened that we
-had to pass over a river, he would leap on my back in order to keep his
-feet dry, as if his weight was but a trifling addition to the heavy
-mass. And if by any accident I happened to fall, through the weight of
-my burden and the slipperiness of the muddy bank, instead of giving
-me a helping hand, as he ought to have done, and pulling me up by the
-head-stall, or by my tail, or removing a part of my load, till at least
-I had got up again, this paragon of ass-drivers gave me no help at all,
-however weary I might be, but beginning from my head, or rather from my
-ears, he thrashed all the hair off my hide with a huge stick.</p>
-
-<p>Another piece of cruelty he practised on me was this: he twisted
-together a bundle of the sharpest and most venomous thorns, and tied
-them to my tail as a pendulous torment; so that, jerking against me
-when I walked, they pricked and stabbed me intolerably. Hence, I
-was in a sore dilemma; for when I ran away from him, to escape his
-unmerciful drubbings, I was hurt by the more vehement pricking of
-the thorns; and if I stood still for a short time, in order to avoid
-that pain, I was compelled by blows to go on. In fact, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span> rascally
-boy seemed to think of nothing else than how he might be the death
-of me by some means or other; and that he sometimes threatened with
-oaths to accomplish. And, indeed, there happened a thing by which his
-detestable malice was stimulated to more baneful efforts. On a certain
-day, when his excessive insolence had overcome my patience, I lifted
-up my powerful heels against him; and for this he retaliated by the
-following atrocity: he brought me into the road heavily laden with a
-bundle of coarse flax, securely bound together with cords, and placed
-in the middle of the burden a burning coal, which he had stolen from
-the neighboring village. Presently the fire spread through the slender
-fibers, flames burst forth, and I was ablaze all over. There appeared
-no refuge from immediate destruction, no hope of safety, and such a
-conflagration did not admit of delay or afford time for deliberation.
-Fortune, however, shone upon me in these cruel circumstances&mdash;perhaps
-for the purpose of reserving me for future dangers, but, at all events,
-liberating me from present and decreed death. By chance perceiving a
-neighboring pool muddy with the rain of the preceding day, I threw
-myself headlong into it; and the flame being immediately extinguished,
-I came out, lightened of my burden and liberated from destruction. But
-that audacious young rascal cast the blame of this most wicked deed of
-his on me, and affirmed to all the shepherds that as I was passing near
-the neighbors’ fires, I stumbled on purpose, and threw my load into the
-blaze. And he added, laughing at me, “How long shall we waste food on
-this fiery monster?”</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>The Golden Ass.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span></p>
-
-<h2>PART III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3>MEDIÆVAL AGES</h3>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Shakespeare’s</span> line,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“In the vast deep and middle of the night,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">gives no stronger or more absolute effect of darkness and blankness
-than the state of humorous literature during the vast deep and middle
-of the Mediæval Ages.</p>
-
-<p>It is not possible to catalogue it with reference to time or place, for
-the mass of it came from the mouths of Tale-tellers or Song-singers,
-supplemented by the pencils or chisels of the caricaturists.</p>
-
-<p>In the East, Folk Tales were abundant and they were brought to Europe
-as the wind scatters the seeds of vegetation.</p>
-
-<p>Fables, Fairy Tales, Mother Goose Jingles, Collections of Anecdotes,
-all hark back to these jesting stories of the ancient Orientals.</p>
-
-<p>Probably the oldest and most important link in the tracing of
-Indo-European Folk Lore is found in the Fables of Pilpay, or Bidpai.</p>
-
-<p>This is the Arabic translation of the Pahlavi translation of the
-Sanscrit original of the Panchatantra.</p>
-
-<p>The scope of the work is advice for the conduct of princes, offered in
-the guise of beast fables, and perhaps containing much of the material
-commonly attributed to Æsop.</p>
-
-<p>Little or nothing is known of Pilpay, and his era has been variously
-placed at different dates between 100 <span class="smcap">b.c.</span> and 300
-<span class="smcap">b.c</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Others, indeed, declare that Pilpay was not an individual<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span> but the name
-is that of a bidbah, the court scholar of an Indian prince.</p>
-
-<p>The fables, as may be seen from the following selections, inculcate
-the moral teachings by means of stories about animals, to whom are
-attributed the thoughts and impulses of men.</p>
-
-<p>Kalidasa, called the greatest poet and dramatist of India, is also
-of uncertain origin and birth date. He probably lived early in the
-Christian Era, and his writings, though not strictly humorous are
-instinct with the spirit of satire.</p>
-
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Kalidasa</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>HUNTING WITH A KING</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="center sm p1"><span class="smcap">Mathavya</span>, <i>a Jester</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Mathavya.</i> Heigh-ho, what an unfortunate fellow I am, worn to a
-shadow by my royal friend’s sporting propensities! “Here’s a deer!”
-“There goes a boar!” “Yonder’s a tiger!” This is the constant subject
-of his remarks, while we tramp about in the heat of the day from jungle
-to jungle on paths where the trees give us no shade. If we are thirsty,
-we can get nothing to drink but some dirty water from a mountain stream
-full of dry leaves, tasting vilely bitter. If we are hungry, we are
-obliged to eat tough, flavorless game, and have to gulp it down at
-odd times as best we can. Even at night I have no peace. Sleeping is
-out of the question, with my bones all aching from trotting after my
-sporting friend; or, if I do contrive to doze, I am awakened at early
-dawn by the horrible din of a lot of rascally beaters and huntsmen,
-who must needs begin their deafening operations before sunrise. But
-these are not my only troubles; for here’s a fresh grievance, like
-a new boil rising upon an old one: Yesterday, while some of us were
-lagging behind, my royal friend went into a hermit’s enclosure after a
-deer, and there&mdash;worse luck&mdash;he caught sight of a beautiful girl called
-Sakuntala, the hermit’s daughter. From that moment not a single thought
-did he have of returning to town; and all night long not a wink of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-sleep did he get for his thoughts of the girl. But see&mdash;here he comes!
-I will pretend to stand in the easiest attitude for resting my bruised
-and crippled limbs.</p>
-
-<p class="center sm p1"><i>Enter</i> <span class="smcap">King Dushyanta</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Mathavya.</i> Ah, my friend, my hands cannot move to greet you with
-the accustomed salutation! I can do no more than command my lips to
-wish your Majesty success.</p>
-
-<p><i>King.</i> Why, what has paralyzed your limbs?</p>
-
-<p><i>Mathavya.</i> You might as well ask me how it is my eye waters after
-you have poked your finger into it!</p>
-
-<p><i>King.</i> I don’t understand what you mean. Explain yourself.</p>
-
-<p><i>Mathavya.</i> My dear friend, is that straight reed you see yonder
-bent crooked by its own act, or by the force of the current?</p>
-
-<p><i>King.</i> The current of the river is the cause, I suppose.</p>
-
-<p><i>Mathavya.</i> Yes, just as you are the cause of my crippled limbs.</p>
-
-<p><i>King.</i> How so?</p>
-
-<p><i>Mathavya.</i> Here you are, living the life of a savage in a
-desolate, forlorn region, while the government of the country is taking
-care of itself. And poor I am no longer master of my own legs, but have
-to follow you about day after day in your hunting for wild beasts, till
-all my bones ache and get out of joint. Please, my dear friend, do let
-us have one day’s rest!&mdash;“<i>Sakuntala.</i>”</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Unknown Author</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>THE CREATION OF WOMAN</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">In the beginning, when Twashtri came to the creation of women, he found
-that he had exhausted his materials in the making of man, and that no
-solid elements were left. In this dilemma, after profound meditation,
-he did as follows:</p>
-
-<p>He took the rotundity of the moon, and the curves of creepers and the
-clinging of tendrils, and the trembling of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span> grass, and the slenderness
-of the reed, and the bloom of flowers, and the lightness of leaves,
-and the tapering of the elephant’s trunk, and the glances of deer,
-and the joyous gaiety of sunbeams, and the weeping of clouds, and
-the fickleness of the winds, and the timidity of the hare, and the
-vanity of the peacock, and the softness of the parrot’s bosom, and the
-hardness of adamant, and the cruelty of the tiger, and the hot glow of
-fire, and the coldness of snow, and the chattering of jays, and the
-cooing of the dove, and the hypocrisy of the crane, and the fidelity of
-the drake. Compounding all these together, he made woman, and gave her
-to man.</p>
-
-<p>But after a week man came to him, and said:</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, this creature that you have given me makes my life miserable.
-She chatters incessantly, and teases me beyond endurance, never leaving
-me alone. She requires attention every moment, takes up all my time,
-weeps about nothing, and is always idle. So I have come to give her
-back again, as I cannot live with her.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Twashtri said, “Very well,” and took her back.</p>
-
-<p>After another week man came to him again, saying:</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, I find that my life is lonely since I surrendered that creature.
-I remember how she used to dance and sing to me, and look at me out of
-the corner of her eye, and play with me, and cling to me. Her laughter
-was music; she was beautiful to look at, and soft to touch. Pray give
-her back to me again.”</p>
-
-<p>And Twashtri said, “Very well,” and returned woman to man.</p>
-
-<p>But after only three days had passed, man appeared once more before the
-Creator, to whom he said:</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, I know not how it is, but, after all, I have come to the
-conclusion that she is more trouble than pleasure to me. Therefore I
-beg that you take her back again.”</p>
-
-<p>Twashtri, however, replied:</p>
-
-<p>“Out upon you! Be off! I will have no more of this. You must manage how
-you can.”</p>
-
-<p>Then quoth man:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But I cannot live with her!”</p>
-
-<p>To which Twashtri answered:</p>
-
-<p>“Neither could you live without her.” And he turned his back on man,
-and went on with his work.</p>
-
-<p>Then said man:</p>
-
-<p>“Alas, what is to be done? For I cannot live either with
-or without her!”&mdash;<i>The Churning of the Ocean of Time</i>
-(<i>Sansara-sagara-manthanam</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The Talmud is far from a humorous work, but it embodies many bits of
-wise wit, and is the original source of many present day proverbs.</p>
-
-<p>In its twelve folio volumes it contains the work of the ancient
-Jews for nearly a thousand years, and among its fine parables and
-interesting legends gleams of rare wit frequently occur.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>EXTRACTS FROM THE TALMUD</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The forest trees once asked the fruit trees: “Why is the rustling of
-your leaves not heard in the distance?” The fruit trees replied: “We
-can dispense with the rustling to manifest our presence, our fruits
-testify for us.” The fruit trees then inquired of the forest trees:
-“Why do your leaves rustle almost continually?” “We are forced to call
-the attention of man to our existence.”</p>
-
-<p>Too many captains sink the ship.</p>
-
-<p>Birds of a feather flock together; and so with men&mdash;like to like.</p>
-
-<p>He laid his money on the horns of a deer.</p>
-
-<p>Keep partners with him whom the hour favors.</p>
-
-<p>Attend no auctions if thou hast no money.</p>
-
-<p>Poverty comes from God, but not dirt.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span></p>
-
-<p>Ignorance and conceit go hand in hand.</p>
-
-<p>Better eat onions all thy life than dine upon geese and chickens once
-and then long in vain for more ever after.</p>
-
-<p>Go to sleep without supper, but rise without debt.</p>
-
-<p>Do not live near a pious fool.</p>
-
-<p>If thy friends agree in calling thee an ass, go and get a halter around
-thee.</p>
-
-<p>Love your wife truly and faithfully, and do not compel her to hard work.</p>
-
-<p>When our conjugal love was strong, the width of the threshold offered
-sufficient accommodation for both of us; but now that it has cooled
-down, a couch sixty yards wide is too narrow.</p>
-
-<p>Man is generally led the way which he is inclined to go.</p>
-
-<p>If the thief has no opportunity, he thinks himself honorable.</p>
-
-<p>Were it not for the existence of passions, no one would build a house,
-marry a wife, beget children, or do any work.</p>
-
-<p>What should man do in order to live? Deaden his passions. What should
-man do in order to die? Give himself entirely to life.</p>
-
-<p>He who hardens his heart with pride softens his brain with the same.</p>
-
-<p>Do not reveal thy secret to the apes.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Keep shut the doors of thy mouth</div>
- <div>Even from the wife of thy bosom.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span></p>
-
-<p>Use thy best vase to-day, for to-morrow it may, perchance, be broken.</p>
-
-<p>The world is only saved by the breath of the school-children.</p>
-
-<p>“Repeat,” “repeat,” that is the best medicine for memory.</p>
-
-<p>A woman schemes while plying the spindle.</p>
-
-<p>Alas! for one thing that goes and never returns. What is it? Youth.</p>
-
-<p>Rab Safra had a jewel for which he asked the price of ten pieces of
-gold. Several dealers saw the jewel and offered five gold pieces.
-Rab Safra declined, and the merchants left him. After a second
-consideration, he, however, resolved upon selling the jewel for five
-pieces. The next day, just as Rab Safra was at prayers, the merchants
-unexpectedly returned: “Sir,” said they to him, “we come to you again
-to do business after all. Do you wish to part with the jewel for the
-price we offered you?” But Rab Safra made no reply. “Well, well; be
-not angered; we will add another two pieces.” Rab Safra still remained
-silent. “Well, then, be it as you say; we will give you ten pieces,
-the price you asked.” By this time Rab Safra had ended his prayer,
-and said: “Sirs, I was at prayers, and could not hear you. As for the
-jewel, I have already resolved upon selling it at the price you offered
-me yesterday. If you then pay me five pieces of gold, I shall be
-satisfied.”</p>
-
-<p>Chief of the Arabian collections of tales is, of course, The Arabian
-Nights’ Entertainment, or The Thousand And One Nights.</p>
-
-<p>Many of these tales are of very ancient origin, others have been added
-as the centuries went by.</p>
-
-<p>Though the stories show their Persian, Indian and Arabian origin, the
-collection as it stands at present was compiled in Egypt not more than
-five or six centuries ago.</p>
-
-<p>As is well known, the stories were told night after night,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span> by
-Scheherazade, to preserve her life so long as the king’s interest might
-be held. Most of the tales show little or no humor, many are long and
-wearisome, many more too broad to quote, but several are given that may
-be considered as representative of Oriental wit.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE SIMPLETON AND THE SHARPER</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A certain simple fellow was once going along, haling his ass after
-him by the halter, when a couple of sharpers saw him and one said to
-his fellow, “I will take that ass from yonder man.” “How wilt thou do
-that?” asked the other. “Follow me and I will show thee,” replied the
-first. So he went up to the ass and loosing it from the halter, gave
-the beast to his fellow; then clapped the halter on his own head and
-followed the simpleton, till he knew that the other had got clean off
-with the ass when he stood still. The man pulled at the halter, but the
-thief stirred not; so he turned and seeing the halter on a man’s neck,
-said to him, “Who art thou?” Quoth the sharper, “I am thine ass and my
-story is a strange one. Know that I have a pious old mother and came
-in to her one day, drunk; and she said to me, “O my son, repent to God
-the Most High of these thy transgressions.” But I took the cudgel and
-beat her, whereupon she cursed me and God the Most High changed me into
-an ass and caused me fall into thy hands, where I have remained till
-now. However, today, my mother called me to mind and her heart relented
-towards me; so she prayed for me, and God restored me to my former
-shape of a man.” “There is no power and no virtue but in God the Most
-High, the Supreme!” cried the simpleton. “O my brother, I conjure thee
-by Allah acquit me of what I have done with thee in the way of riding
-and so forth.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he let the sharper go and returned home, drunken with chagrin and
-concern. His wife asked him, “What ails thee and where is the ass?”
-And he answered, “Thou knowest not what was this ass; but I will tell
-thee.” So he told her the story, and she exclaimed, “Woe worth us
-for God the Most High! How could we have used a man as a beast of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-burden, all this while?” And she gave alms and asked pardon of God.
-Then the man abode awhile at home, idle, till she said to him, “How
-long wilt thou sit at home, idle? Go to the market and buy us an ass
-and do thy business with it.” Accordingly, he went to the market and
-stopping by the ass-stand, saw his own ass for sale. So he went up to
-it and clapping his mouth to its ear, said to it, “Out on thee, thou
-good-for-nought! Doubtless thou hast been getting drunk again and
-beating thy mother! But, by Allah, I will never buy thee more!” And he
-left it and went away.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE THIEF TURNED MERCHANT AND THE OTHER THIEF</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There was once a thief who repented to God the Most High and making
-good his repentance, opened himself a shop for the sale of stuffs,
-where he continued to trade awhile. One day, he locked his shop and
-went home; and in the night there came to the bazaar a cunning thief
-disguised in the habit of the merchant, and pulling out keys from his
-sleeve, said to the watchman of the market, “Light me this candle.”
-So the watchman took the candle and went to get a light, whilst the
-thief opened the shop and lit another candle he had with him. When
-the watchman came back, he found him seated in the shop, looking over
-the account books and reckoning with his fingers; nor did he leave
-to do thus till point of day, when he said to the man, “Fetch me a
-camel-driver and his camel, to carry some goods for me.” So the man
-fetched him a camel, and the thief took four bales of stuffs and gave
-them to the camel-driver, who loaded them on his beast. Then he gave
-the watchman two dirhems and went away after the camel-driver, the
-watchman the while believing him to be the owner of the shop.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning, the merchant came and the watchman greeted him with
-blessings, because of the two dirhems, much to the surprise of the
-former, who knew not what he meant. When he opened his shop, he saw
-the droppings of the wax and the account-book lying on the floor, and
-looking round, found four bales of stuffs missing. So he asked the
-watchman what<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span> had happened and he told him what had passed in the
-night, whereupon the merchant bade him fetch the camel-driver and
-said to the latter, “Whither didst thou carry the stuffs?” “To such
-a wharf,” answered the driver; “and I stowed them on board such a
-vessel.” “Come with me thither,” said the merchant. So the camel-driver
-carried him to the wharf and showed him the barque and her owner. Quoth
-the merchant to the latter, “Whither didst thou carry the merchant and
-the stuff?” “To such a place,” answered the master, “where he fetched
-a camel-driver and setting the bales on the camel, went I know not
-whither.” “Fetch me the camel-driver,” said the merchant; so he fetched
-him and the merchant said to him, “Whither didst thou carry the bales
-of stuffs from the ship?” “To such a khan,” answered he. “Come thither
-with me and show it to me,” said the merchant.</p>
-
-<p>So the camel-driver went with him to a khan at a distance from the
-shore, where he had set down the stuffs, and showed him the mock
-merchant’s magazine, which he opened and found therein his four bales
-untouched and unopened. The thief had laid his mantle over them; so
-the merchant took the bales and the cloak and delivered them to the
-camel-driver, who laid them on his camel; after which the merchant
-locked the magazine and went away with the camel-driver. On the way, he
-met the thief who followed him, till he had shipped the bales, when he
-said to him “O my brother (God have thee in His keeping!), thou hast
-recovered thy goods, and nought of them is lost; so give me back my
-cloak.” The merchant laughed and giving him back his cloak, let him go
-unhindered.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE IGNORANT MAN WHO SET UP FOR A SCHOOLMASTER</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There was once, among the hangers-on of the collegiate mosque, a man
-who knew not how to read and write and got his bread by gulling the
-folk. One day, he bethought him to open a school and teach children;
-so he got him tablets and written scrolls and hung them up in a
-conspicuous place. Then he enlarged his turban and sat down at the door
-of the school. The people, who passed by and saw his turban and the
-tablets<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span> and scrolls, thought he must be a very learned doctor; so they
-brought him their children; and he would say to this, “Write,” and to
-that, “Read”; and thus they taught one another.</p>
-
-<p>One day, as he sat, as of wont, at the door of the school, he saw a
-woman coming up, with a letter in her hand, and said to himself, “This
-woman doubtless seeks me, that I may read her the letter she has in her
-hand. How shall I do with her seeing I cannot read writing?” And he
-would fain have gone down and fled from her; but, before he could do
-this, she overtook him and said to him, “Whither away?” Quoth he, “I
-purpose to pray the noontide-prayer and return.” “Noon is yet distant,”
-said she; “so read me this letter.” He took the letter and turning
-it upside down, fell to looking at it, now shaking his head and anon
-knitting his eyebrows and showing concern. Now the letter came from
-the woman’s husband, who was absent; and when she saw the schoolmaster
-do thus, she said, “Doubtless my husband is dead, and this learned man
-is ashamed to tell me so.” So she said to him, “O my lord, if he be
-dead, tell me.” But he shook his head and held his peace. Then said
-she, “Shall I tear my clothes?” “Tear,” answered he. “Shall I buffet my
-face,” asked she; and he said, “Buffet.” So she took the letter from
-his hand and returning home, fell a-weeping, she and her children.</p>
-
-<p>One of her neighbours heard her weeping and asking what ailed her, was
-answered, “She hath gotten a letter, telling her that her husband is
-dead.” Quoth the man, “This is a lying saying; for I had a letter from
-him but yesterday, advising me that he is in good health and case and
-will be with her after ten days.” So he rose forthright and going in
-to her, said, “Where is the letter thou hast received?” She brought
-it to him, and he took it and read it; and it ran as follows, after
-the usual salutation, “I am well and in good health and case and will
-be with thee after ten days. Meanwhile, I send thee a quilt and an
-extinguisher.”<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> So she took the letter and returning with it to the
-schoolmaster, said to him, “What moved thee to deal thus with me?” And
-she repeated to him what her neighbour had told her of his having sent
-her a quilt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span> and an extinguisher. “Thou art in the right,” answered
-he. “But excuse me, good woman; for I was, at the time, troubled and
-absent-minded and seeing the extinguisher wrapped in the quilt, thought
-that he was dead and they had shrouded him.” The woman, not smoking the
-cheat, said, “Thou art excused,” and taking the letter, went away.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE HUSBAND AND THE PARROT</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There lived once a good man who had a beautiful wife, of whom he was
-so passionately fond that he could scarcely bear to have her out of
-his sight. One day, when some particular business obliged him to leave
-her, he went to a place where they sold all sorts of birds. Here he
-purchased a parrot, which was not only highly accomplished in the art
-of talking, but also possessed the rare gift of telling everything that
-was done in its presence. The husband took it home in a cage to his
-wife, and begged of her to keep it in her chamber, and take great care
-of it during his absence. After this he set out on his journey.</p>
-
-<p>On his return he did not fail to interrogate the parrot on what had
-passed while he was away; and the bird very expertly related a few
-circumstances which occasioned the husband to reprimand his wife.
-She supposed that some of her slaves had betrayed her, but they all
-assured her they were faithful, and agreed in charging the parrot with
-the crime. Desirous of being convinced of the truth of this matter,
-the wife devised a method of quieting the suspicions of her husband,
-and at the same time of revenging herself on the parrot, if he were
-the culprit. The next time the husband was absent she ordered one
-of her slaves during the night to turn a handmill under the bird’s
-cage, another to throw water over it like rain, and a third to wave a
-looking-glass before the parrot by the light of a candle. The slaves
-were employed the greater part of the night in doing what their
-mistress had ordered them, and succeeded to her satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>The following day, when the husband returned, he again applied to the
-parrot to be informed of what had taken<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span> place. The bird replied, “My
-dear master, the lightning, the thunder, and the rain have so disturbed
-me the whole night, that, I cannot tell you how much I have suffered.”</p>
-
-<p>The husband, who knew there had been no storm that night, became
-convinced that the parrot did not always relate facts, and that having
-told an untruth in this particular, he had also deceived him with
-respect to his wife. Being therefore extremely enraged with it, he took
-the bird out of the cage and, dashing it on the floor, killed it. He,
-however, afterward learned from his neighbors that the poor parrot had
-told no falsehood in reference to his wife’s conduct, which made him
-repent of having destroyed it.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>BAKBARAH’S VISIT TO THE HAREM</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Bakbarah the Toothless, my second brother, walking one day through the
-city, met an old woman in a retired street. She thus accosted him: “I
-have,” said she, “a word to say to you, if you will stay a moment.” He
-immediately stopped, and asked her what she wished. “If you have time
-to go with me,” she replied, “I will take you to a most magnificent
-palace, where you shall see a lady more beautiful than the day. She
-will receive you with a great deal of pleasure, and will treat you with
-a collation and excellent wine. I have no occasion, I believe, to say
-any more.” “But is what you tell me,” replied my brother, “true?” “I
-am not given to lying,” replied the old woman; “I propose nothing to
-you but what is the fact. You must, however, pay attention to what I
-require of you. You must be prudent, speak little, and must comply with
-everything.”</p>
-
-<p>Bakbarah having agreed to the conditions, she walked on before, and he
-followed her. They arrived at the gate of a large palace, where there
-were a great number of officers and servants. Some of them wished to
-stop my brother, but the old woman no sooner spoke to them, than they
-let him pass. She then turned to my brother, and said, “Remember that
-the young lady to whose house I have brought you is fond of mildness
-and modesty; nor does she like being contradicted.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span> If you satisfy her
-in this, there is no doubt you will obtain whatever you wish.” Bakbarah
-thanked her for this advice, and promised to profit by it.</p>
-
-<p>She then took him into a very beautiful apartment, which formed part of
-a square building. It corresponded with the magnificence of the palace;
-there was a gallery all round it, and in the midst of it a very fine
-garden. The old woman made him sit down on a sofa that was handsomely
-furnished, and desired him to wait there a moment, till she went to
-inform the young lady of his arrival.</p>
-
-<p>As my brother had never before been in so superb a place, he
-immediately began to observe all the beautiful things that were in
-sight; and judging of his good fortune by the magnificence he beheld,
-he could hardly contain his joy. He almost immediately heard a great
-noise, which came from a long troop of slaves who were enjoying
-themselves, and came toward him, bursting out at the same time into
-violent fits of laughter. In the midst of them he perceived a young
-lady of most extraordinary beauty, whom he easily discovered to be
-their mistress, by the attention they paid her. Bakbarah, who expected
-merely a private conversation with the lady, was very much surprised at
-the arrival of so large a company. In the meantime the slaves, putting
-on a serious air, approached him; and when the young lady was near the
-sofa, my brother, who had risen up, made a most profound reverence.
-She took the seat of honor, and then, having requested him to resume
-his, she said to him, in a smiling manner, “I am delighted to see you,
-and wish you everything you can yourself desire.” “Madam,” replied
-Bakbarah, “I cannot wish a greater honor than that of appearing before
-you.” “You seem to me,” she replied, “of so good-humored a disposition,
-that we shall pass our time very agreeably together.”</p>
-
-<p>She immediately ordered a collation to be served up, and they covered
-the table with baskets of various fruits and sweetmeats. She then sat
-down at the table along with my brother and the slaves. As it happened
-that he was placed directly opposite to her, she observed, as soon
-as he opened his mouth to eat, he had no teeth; she remarked this to
-her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span> slaves, and they all laughed immoderately at it. Bakbarah, who
-from time to time raised his head to look at the lady and saw that
-she was laughing, imagined it was from the pleasure she felt at being
-in his company, and flattered himself, therefore, that she would soon
-order the slaves to retire, and that he should enjoy her conversation
-in private. The lady easily guessed his thoughts, and took a pleasure
-in continuing a delusion which seemed so agreeable to him: she said a
-thousand soft, tender things, and presented the best of everything to
-him with her own hand.</p>
-
-<p>When the collation was finished, she arose from table; ten slaves
-instantly took some musical instruments and began to play and sing,
-the others to dance. In order to make himself the more agreeable, my
-brother also began dancing, and the young lady herself partook of the
-amusement. After they had danced for some time, they all sat down to
-take breath. The lady ordered him to bring her a glass of wine, then
-cast a smile at my brother, to intimate that she was going to drink to
-his health. He instantly rose up, and stood while she drank. As soon
-as she had finished, instead of returning the glass, she had it filled
-again, and presented it to my brother, that he might pledge her.</p>
-
-<p>Bakbarah took the glass, and in receiving it from the young lady he
-kissed her hand, then drank to her, standing the whole time, to show
-his gratitude for the favor she had done him. After this the young
-lady made him sit down by her side, and began to give him signs of
-affection. She put her arm round his neck, and frequently gave him
-gentle pats with her hand. Delighted with these favors, he thought
-himself the happiest man in the world; he also was tempted to begin
-to play in the same manner with this charming creature, but he durst
-not take this liberty before the slaves, who had their eyes upon him,
-and who continued to laugh at this trifling. The young lady still kept
-giving him such gentle taps, till at last she began to apply them so
-forcibly that he grew angry at it. He reddened, and got up to sit
-farther from so rude a playfellow. At this moment the old woman, who
-had brought my brother there, looked at him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span> in such a way as to make
-him understand that he was wrong, and had forgotten the advice she had
-before given him. He acknowledged his fault, and, to repair it, he
-again approached the young lady, pretending that he had not gone to a
-distance through anger. She then took hold of him by the arm, and drew
-him toward her, making him again sit down close by her, and continuing
-to bestow a thousand pretended caresses on him. Her slaves, whose only
-aim was to divert her, began to take a part in the sport. One of them
-gave poor Bakbarah a fillip on the nose with all her strength, another
-pulled his ears almost off, while the rest kept giving him slaps, which
-passed the limits of raillery and fun.</p>
-
-<p>My brother bore all this with the most exemplary patience; he even
-affected an air of gaiety, and looked at the old woman with a forced
-smile. “You were right,” said he, “when you said that I should find a
-very fine, agreeable, and charming young lady. How much am I obliged
-to you for it!” “Oh, this is nothing yet,” replied the old woman;
-“let her alone, and you will see very different things by and by.”
-The young lady then spoke. “You are a fine man,” said she to my
-brother, “and I am delighted at finding in you so much kindness and
-complaisance toward all my little fooleries, and that you possess
-a disposition so conformable to mine.” “Madam,” replied Bakbarah,
-ravished with this speech, “I am no longer myself, but am entirely at
-your disposal; you have full power to do with me as you please.” “You
-afford me the greatest delight,” added the lady, “by showing so much
-submission to my inclination. I am perfectly satisfied with you, and I
-wish that you should be equally so with me. Bring,” cried she to the
-attendants, “perfumes and rose-water!” At these words two slaves went
-out and instantly returned, one with a silver vase, in which there was
-exquisite aloe-wood, with which she perfumed him, and the other with
-rose-water, which she sprinkled over his face and hands. My brother
-could not contain himself for joy at seeing himself so handsomely and
-honorably treated.</p>
-
-<p>When this ceremony was finished, the young lady commanded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span> the slaves
-who had before sung and played to recommence their concert. They
-obeyed; and while this was going on, the lady called another slave,
-and ordered her to take my brother with her saying, “You know what to
-do; and when you have finished, return with him to me.” Bakbarah, who
-heard this order given, immediately got up, and going toward the old
-woman, who had also risen to accompany the slave, he requested her to
-tell him what they wished him to do. “Our mistress,” replied she, in
-a whisper, “is extremely curious, and she wishes to see how you would
-look disguised as a female; this slave, therefore, has orders to take
-you with her, to paint your eyebrows, shave your mustachios, and dress
-you like a woman.” “You may paint my eyebrows,” said my brother, “as
-much as you please; to that I readily agree, because I can wash them
-again; but as to shaving me, that, mind you, I will by no means suffer.
-How do you think I dare appear without my mustachios?” “Take care,”
-answered the woman, “how you oppose anything that is required of you.
-You will quite spoil your fortune, which is going on as prosperously as
-possible. She loves you, and wishes to make you happy. Will you, for
-the sake of a paltry mustachio, forego the most delicious favors any
-man can possibly enjoy?”</p>
-
-<p>Bakbarah at length yielded to the old woman’s arguments, and without
-saying another word, he suffered the slave to conduct him to an
-apartment, where they painted his eyebrows red. They shaved his
-mustachios, and were absolutely going to shave his beard. But the
-easiness of my brother’s tempter did not carry him quite so far as to
-suffer that. “Not a single stroke,” he exclaimed, “shall you take at
-my beard!” The slave represented to him that it was of no use to have
-cut off his mustachios if he would not also agree to lose his beard;
-that a hairy countenance did not at all coincide with the dress of a
-woman; and that she was astonished that a man, who was on the very
-point of possessing the most beautiful woman in Bagdad, should care for
-his beard. The old woman also joined with the slave, and added fresh
-reasons; she threatened my brother<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span> with being quite in disgrace with
-her mistress. In short, she said so much that he at last permitted them
-to do what they wished.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as they had dressed him like a woman, they brought him back
-to the young lady, who burst into so violent a fit of laughter at the
-sight of him, that she fell down on the sofa on which she was sitting.
-The slaves all began to clap their hands, so that my brother was put
-quite out of countenance. The young lady then got up, and continuing
-to laugh all the time, said, “After the complaisance you have shown to
-me, I should be guilty of a crime not to bestow my whole heart upon
-you; but it is necessary that you should do one thing more for love
-of me: it is only to dance before me as you are.” He obeyed; and the
-young lady and the slaves danced with him, laughing all the while as if
-they were crazy. After they had danced for some time, they all threw
-themselves upon the poor wretch, and gave him so many blows, both with
-their hands and feet, that he fell down almost fainting. The old woman
-came to his assistance, and without giving him time to be angry at such
-ill treatment, she whispered in his ear, “Console yourself, for you
-are now arrived at the conclusion of your sufferings, and are about
-to receive the reward for them. You have only one thing more to do,”
-added she, “and that is a mere trifle. You must know that my mistress
-makes it her custom, whenever she has drunk a little, as she has done
-to-day, not to suffer anyone she loves to come near her, unless they
-are stripped to their shirt. When they are in this situation, she takes
-advantage of a short distance, and begins running before them through
-the gallery, and from room to room, till they have caught her. This is
-one of her fancies. Now, at whatever distance from you she may start,
-you, who are so light and active, can easily overtake her. Undress
-yourself quickly, therefore, and remain in your shirt, and do not make
-any difficulty about it.”</p>
-
-<p>My brother had already carried his complying humor too far to stop
-at this. The young lady at the same time took off her outer robe, in
-order to run with greater ease. When they were both ready to begin the
-race, the lady took the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span> advantage of about twenty paces, and then
-started with wonderful celerity. My brother followed her with all
-his strength, but not without exciting the risibility of the slaves,
-who kept clapping their hands all the time. The young lady, instead
-of losing any of the advantage she had first taken, kept continually
-gaining ground of my brother. She ran round the gallery two or three
-times, then turned off down a long dark passage, where she saved
-herself by a turn of which my brother was ignorant. Bakbarah, who kept
-constantly following her, lost sight of her in this passage, and he was
-also obliged to run much slower, because it was so dark. He at last
-perceived a light, toward which he made all possible haste; he went out
-through a door which was instantly shut upon him.</p>
-
-<p>You may easily imagine what was his astonishment at finding himself
-in the middle of a street inhabited by curriers. Nor were they less
-surprised at seeing him in his shirt, his eyebrows painted red, and
-without either beard or mustachios. They began to clap their hands, to
-hoot at him; and some even ran after him, and kept lashing him with
-strips of their leather. They then stopped him, and set him on an ass,
-which they accidentally met with, and led him through the city, exposed
-to the laughter and shouts of the mob.</p>
-
-<p>To complete his misfortune, they led him through the street where the
-judge of the police court lived, and this magistrate immediately sent
-to inquire the cause of the uproar. The curriers informed him that they
-saw my brother, exactly in the state he then was, come out of the gate
-leading to the apartments of the women belonging to the grand vizier,
-which opened into their street. The judge then ordered the unfortunate
-Bakbarah, upon the spot, to receive a hundred strokes on the soles of
-his feet, to be conducted without the city, and forbade him ever to
-enter it again.&mdash;<i>History of the Barber’s Second Brother.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Persian Wit and humor is best known to us through the <i>Rubaiyat of
-Omar Khayyam</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span></p>
-
-<p>While their interest lies partly in the adept translation, the wit of
-the original is clearly self evident.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>XXVII</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Myself when young did eagerly frequent</div>
- <div>Doctor and Saint, and heard great argument</div>
- <div class="i1">About it and about: but evermore</div>
- <div>Came out by the same door where in I went.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>XXVIII</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>With them the seed of Wisdom did I sow,</div>
- <div>And with mine own hand wrought to make it grow;</div>
- <div class="i1">And this was all the Harvest that I reap’d&mdash;</div>
- <div>“I came like Water, and like Wind I go.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>XXIX</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Into this Universe, and <i>Why</i> not knowing</div>
- <div>Nor <i>Whence</i>, like Water willy-nilly flowing;</div>
- <div class="i1">And out of it, as Wind along the Waste,</div>
- <div>I know not <i>Whither</i>, willy-nilly blowing.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>XXX</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What, without asking, hither hurried <i>Whence</i>?</div>
- <div>And, without asking, <i>Whither</i> hurried hence!</div>
- <div class="i1">Oh, many a Cup of this forbidden Wine</div>
- <div>Must drown the memory of that insolence!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>XXXI</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Up from Earth’s Centre through the Seventh Gate</div>
- <div>I rose, and on the Throne of Saturn sate,</div>
- <div class="i1">And many a Knot unravel’d by the Road;</div>
- <div>But not the Master-knot of Human Fate.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>XXXII</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There was the Door to which I found no Key;</div>
- <div>There was the Veil through which I might not see:</div>
- <div class="i1">Some little talk awhile of <span class="smcap">Me</span> and <span class="smcap">Thee</span></div>
- <div>There was&mdash;and then no more of <span class="smcap">Thee</span> and <span class="smcap">Me</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>LIV</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Waste not your Hour, nor in the vain pursuit</div>
- <div>Of This and That endeavour and dispute;</div>
- <div class="i1">Better be jocund with the fruitful Grape</div>
- <div>Than sadden after none, or bitter, Fruit.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>LV</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You know, my Friends, with what a brave Carouse</div>
- <div>I made a Second Marriage in my house;</div>
- <div class="i1">Divorced old barren Reason from my Bed,</div>
- <div>And took the Daughter of the Vine to Spouse.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>LIX</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Grape that can with Logic absolute</div>
- <div>The Two-and-Seventy jarring Sects confute:</div>
- <div class="i1">The sovereign Alchemist that in a trice</div>
- <div>Life’s leaden metal into Gold transmute:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>LXI</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Why, be this Juice the growth of God, who dare</div>
- <div>Blaspheme the twisted tendril as a Snare?</div>
- <div class="i1">A Blessing, we should use it, should we not?</div>
- <div>And if a Curse&mdash;why, then, Who set it there?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>LXVIII</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>We are no other than a moving row</div>
- <div>Of Magic Shadow-shapes that come and go</div>
- <div class="i1">Round with the Sun-illumin’d Lantern held</div>
- <div>In Midnight by the Master of the Show;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>LXIX</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But helpless Pieces of the Game He plays</div>
- <div>Upon this Chequer-board of Nights and Days:</div>
- <div class="i1">Hither and thither moves, and checks, and slays,</div>
- <div>And one by one back in the Closet lays.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>LXX</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Ball no question makes of Ayes and Noes,</div>
- <div>But Here or There as strikes the Player goes;</div>
- <div class="i1">And He that toss’d you down into the Field,</div>
- <div><i>He</i> knows about it all&mdash;<span class="allsmcap">HE</span> knows&mdash;HE knows!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>LXXII</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And that inverted Bowl they call the Sky,</div>
- <div>Whereunder crawling coop’d we live and die,</div>
- <div class="i1">Lift not your hands to <i>It</i> for help&mdash;for it</div>
- <div>As impotently moves as you or I.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>XCIII</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Indeed the Idols I have loved so long</div>
- <div>Have done my credit in this World much wrong:</div>
- <div class="i1">Have drown’d my Glory in a shallow Cup,</div>
- <div>And sold my Reputation for a Song.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>XCIV</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Indeed, indeed, Repentance oft before</div>
- <div>I swore&mdash;but was I sober when I swore?</div>
- <div class="i1">And then and then came Spring, and Rose-in-hand</div>
- <div>My thread-bare Penitence apieces tore.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>XCV</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And much as Wine has play’d the Infidel,</div>
- <div>And robb’d me of my Robe of Honour&mdash;Well,</div>
- <div class="i1">I wonder often what the Vintners buy</div>
- <div>One half so precious as the stuff they sell.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span></p>
-
-<p>Firdausi, the greatest Epic poet of Persia, gives us this witty epigram.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON SULTAN MAHMOUD</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Tis said our monarch’s liberal mind</div>
- <div>Is like the ocean, unconfined.</div>
- <div>Happy are they who prove it so;</div>
- <div>’Tis not for me that fact to know:</div>
- <div>I’ve plunged within its waves, ’tis true,</div>
- <div>But not a single pearl could view.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Sadi, one of the greatest of Persian poets, was also a great scholar,
-and wrote in both Persian and Arabian, beside being, it is said, the
-first poet to write in Hindustani.</p>
-
-<p>His works are numerous and beautiful, both in verse and prose, and show
-a graceful wit.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>DISCOMFORT BETTER THAN DROWNING</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A king was embarked along with a Persian boy slave on board a ship. The
-boy had never been at sea nor experienced the inconvenience of a ship.
-He set up a weeping and wailing, and all his limbs were in a state
-of trepidation; and however much they soothed him, he was not to be
-pacified. The king’s pleasure-party was disconcerted by him; but there
-was no help for it. On board that ship there was a physician. He said
-to the king, “If you will order it, I can manage to silence him.” The
-king replied, “It will be an act of great favor.”</p>
-
-<p>The physician so directed that they threw the boy into the sea, and
-after he had plunged repeatedly, they seized him by the hair of the
-head and drew him close to the ship, when he clung with both hands to
-the rudder, and, scrambling upon the deck, slunk into a corner and sat
-down quiet. The king, pleased with what he saw, said, “What art is
-there in this?” The boy replied that originally he had not experienced
-the danger of being drowned, and undervalued the safety of being in a
-ship. In like manner, a person is aware<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span> of the preciousness of health
-when he is overtaken with the calamity of sickness.</p>
-
-<p><i>A barley loaf of bread has, oh, epicure, no relish for thee.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>To the houris, or nymphs of paradise, purgatory would be a hell. Ask
-the inmates of hell whether purgatory is not paradise.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>There is a distinction between the man that folds his mistress
-in his arms and him whose two eyes are fixed on the door expecting
-her.</i>&mdash;<i>The Rose Garden (Gulistan).</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE STRICT SCHOOLMASTER AND THE MILD</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">In the west of Africa I saw a schoolmaster of a sour aspect and bitter
-speech, crabbed, misanthropic, and intemperate, insomuch that the sight
-of him would derange the ecstasies of the orthodox, and his manner of
-reading the Koran cast a gloom over the minds of the pious. A number
-of handsome boys and lovely virgins were subject to his despotic sway;
-they had neither the permission of a smile nor the option of a word,
-for this moment he would smite the silver cheek of one of them with his
-hand, and the next put the crystalline legs of another in the stocks.
-In short, their parents, I heard, were made aware of a part of his
-angry violence, and beat and drove him from his charge.</p>
-
-<p>They made over his school to a peaceable creature, so pious, meek,
-simple, and good-natured that he never spoke till forced to do so, nor
-would he utter a word that could offend anybody. The children forgot
-that awe in which they had held their first master, and remarking the
-angelic disposition of their second master, they became one after
-another as wicked as devils. Relying on his clemency, they would so
-neglect their studies as to pass most part of their time at play, and
-break the tablets of their unfinished tasks over each other’s heads.</p>
-
-<p><i>When the schoolmaster relaxes in his discipline, the children will
-stop to play at marbles in the market-place.</i></p>
-
-<p>A fortnight after I passed by the gate of that mosque, and saw the
-first schoolmaster, with whom they had been obliged to make friends and
-to restore him to his place. I was in truth offended, and calling on
-God to witness, asked,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span> saying, “Why have they again made a devil the
-preceptor of angels?”</p>
-
-<p>A facetious old gentleman, who had seen much of life, listened to me,
-and replied, “A king sent his son to school, and hung a tablet of
-silver round his neck. On the face of that tablet he had written in
-golden letters, ‘The severity of the master is more useful than the
-indulgence of the father.’”&mdash;<i>The Rose Garden (Gulistan).</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>HATEFULNESS OF OLD HUSBANDS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">An old man married a young virgin. He adorned the bridal chamber with
-flowers, seated himself with her in private, and riveted his heart and
-eyes upon her. Many a long night he would lie awake and indulge in
-pleasantries and jests, in order to remove any coyness on her part, and
-encourage familiarity. One of those nights he addressed her thus:</p>
-
-<p>“Lofty fortune was your friend, and the eye of your prosperity broad
-awake, when you fell into the society of such an old gentleman as I
-am, being of mature judgment, well-bred, worldly experienced, inured
-to the vicissitudes of heat and cold, and practised in the goods and
-evils of life, who can appreciate the rights of good-fellowship,
-and fulfil the duties of loving attachment and is kind and affable,
-sweet-spoken, and cheerful. I will treat you with affection, as far
-as I can, and if you deal with me unkindly, I will not be unkind in
-return. <i>If, like a parrot, thy food be sugar, I will devote my sweet
-life for thy nourishment.</i> And you did not become the victim of a
-rude, conceited, rash, and headstrong youth, who one moment gratifies
-his lust, and the next has a fresh object; who every night shifts his
-abode, and every day changes his mistress. Young men are lively and
-handsome, but they keep good faith with nobody. <i>Expect not constancy
-from nightingales, who will every moment serenade a fresh rose.</i>
-Whereas my class of seniors regulate their lives by good breeding and
-sense, and are not deluded by youthful ignorance.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Court the society of a superior, and make much of the opportunity!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
-for in the company of an equal thy good fortune must decline.</i></p>
-
-<p>The old man spoke a great deal in this style, and thought that he had
-caught her heart in his snare, and made sure of her as his prey, when
-she suddenly drew a cold sigh from the bottom of a much-afflicted
-bosom, and answered:</p>
-
-<p>“All this speech which you have delivered has not, in the scale of my
-judgment, the weight of that one sentence which I have heard of my
-nurse, that it were better to plant a spear in a young maiden’s side
-than to lay her by an old man in bed. Much contention and strife will
-arise in that house where the wife shall get dissatisfied with her
-husband.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Unable to rise without the help of a staff, how can an old man stir
-the staff of life?</i></p>
-
-<p>In short, there being no prospect of concord, they agreed to separate.
-After lapse of the period prescribed by the law, she united in wedlock
-with a young man of an ill-tempered and sullen disposition, and in very
-narrow circumstances, so that she endured much tyranny and violence,
-penury and hardship. Yet she was thus offering up thanksgivings for the
-Almighty’s goodness, and saying:</p>
-
-<p>“Praised be God that I have escaped from such hell-torment, and secured
-a blessing so permanent. With all this violence and impetuosity of
-temper, I bear with his caprice, because he is handsome. It were better
-for me to burn with him in hellfire than to dwell in paradise with the
-other.”</p>
-
-<p><i>The smell of an onion from the mouth of the lovely is sweeter than
-that of a rose in the hand of the ugly.</i></p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>The Rose Garden (Gulistan).</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>1. <span class="smcap">Locman</span> the wise being asked, “Whence did you learn wisdom?”
-answered, <i>From the blind, who try the path with a stick before they
-tread on it</i>....</p>
-
-<p>4. <span class="smcap">Hormus</span> the tyrant, being asked, why he had put his father’s
-courtiers in prison, answered, <i>Because they feared me; and the
-wise say, Fear him who fears thee, though he be a fly, and thou an
-elephant</i>.</p>
-
-<p>5. A religious was famous at Bagdad for his powerful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span> prayers. Hoschas
-Joseph, king of Persia, begged him to pray for him. The religious said,
-<i>O God, take away this man’s life! for no better prayer can I make
-either for him or his subjects</i>.</p>
-
-<p>6. An infamous king asked a Dervise, “Of all pious offices, which is
-the chief?” The Dervise answered, <i>For thee, the chief is a long
-sleep at noon, that thou mayest, for a short time, cease to injure
-mankind</i>.</p>
-
-<p>7. A courtier being deprived of his place, became a religious. After
-some time, the king wished to restore him to his station; but he said,
-<i>Experience has now taught me to prefer ease to dignity</i>.</p>
-
-<p>7. A slave of Omer, the viceroy, fled from his service, but was
-retaken, and brought before the king; who, at Omer’s instigation,
-condemned him to death. The slave upon this said, <i>O king, I am an
-innocent man; and, if I die by thy command, my blood will be required.
-Permit me then to incur guilt before I meet my sentence. Let me kill
-this Omer, my master, and I shall die contented. It is for thy sake
-only I desire this</i>. The king, laughing at this new mode of clearing
-his own justice, acquitted the wretch.</p>
-
-<p>9. A master had taught a youth to wrestle; who, proud of his acquired
-skill, and possest of more strength than his master, wished to acquire
-fame at his expence, and challenged him to wrestle before the court.
-The master, by one trick, which he had not taught the youth, threw him
-at once: and, the youth complaining that he had not taught him all his
-art, the master said, <i>No. I always provide against ingratitude</i>.</p>
-
-<p>10. A religious sitting by the highway, the king passed by; but the
-religious took no notice of him. A courtier saying “Do not you see
-the king?” was answered, <i>I want nothing of him. Kings are made for
-subjects, not subjects for kings. Why then should I respect him who
-is the publick servant?</i> This anecdote from Sadi differs much from
-present Eastern despotism.</p>
-
-<p>11. A courtier went to his master, <span class="smcap">Suelnun</span>, king of Egypt,
-and begged permission to retire; saying, “Though I am night and day
-anxious in thy service; yet the fear of once displeasing thee makes me
-wretched.” Suelnun, in tears, exclaimed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span> <i>Ah, did I serve God, as
-thou thy king, I should be one of the just</i>.</p>
-
-<p>12. A king condemned an innocent man to death, who said, <i>O king, thy
-anger rages against me, but will injure thyself</i>. “How?” rejoined
-the king. <i>Because my pain lasts but for a moment; but thine for
-ever.</i> Pardon followed.</p>
-
-<p>13. The courtiers of king Nourshivan consulting with him on important
-business, when the king had spoken, one of them assented to his
-opinion, against the rest. Being asked the cause, he said, <i>Human
-affairs depend on chance, not on wisdom: and, if we err with the king,
-who shall condemn us?</i> ...</p>
-
-<p>17. A king saying to a Dervise, “Do you never think on me?” was
-answered, <i>Yes: but it is when I forget God</i>.</p>
-
-<p>18. A Dervise, in a dream, saw a king in paradise, but a religious in
-hell, and thought that, upon enquiring the cause, he was told, <i>The
-king used to keep company with Dervises; and the Dervise with kings</i>.</p>
-
-<p>19. <span class="smcap">Locman</span>, the sage, being asked, where he learned virtue, he
-answered, <i>Of the vicious, for they taught me what to shun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>20. Abu Hurura used often to visit <span class="smcap">Mustapha</span>, who one day said
-to him, <i>O Abu Hurura, visiting seldom feeds love and friendship</i>.</p>
-
-<p>21. <span class="smcap">Sadi</span>, being taken prisoner by the Franks, or Christians,
-was redeemed for ten pieces of gold, by one, who also gave him his
-daughter in marriage, with one hundred pieces of gold as a dower.
-The lady, being a termagant, once reproached him with this; and he
-said, <i>Yes, I was redeemed for ten pieces, and made a slave for a
-hundred</i>.</p>
-
-<p>22. Some wicked men using a religious very ill, he went to an old
-dervise, and complained much. The elder told him, <i>Son, our habit is
-that of patience. Why do you wear it, if it does not fit you?</i></p>
-
-<p>23. A sage seeing a strong man in a passion, asked the cause, and being
-told that it was on account of an affronting word, he exclaimed, <i>O
-strong man, with a weak mind! who could bear an elephant’s load, yet
-cannot bear a word</i>.</p>
-
-<p>24. A lawyer gave his daughter, who was very deformed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span> in marriage
-to a blind man. A celebrated oculist coming to the place, the lawyer
-was asked why he did not employ him for his son-in-law? To which he
-answered, <i>Why should I endeavour to procure the divorce of my
-daughter?</i></p>
-
-<p>25. Ardeschir enquiring of a physician, how much food was necessary for
-a day? was answered, eight ounces. Ardeschir said, “How can so little
-support a man?” The physician replied, <i>That will support him; if he
-takes more, he must support it</i>....</p>
-
-<p>27. A robber said to a beggar, “Art thou not ashamed to stretch out
-thy hand to all for a piece of copper?” The beggar answered, <i>It is
-better to stretch it out for a piece of copper, than have it cut off
-for a piece of gold</i>.</p>
-
-<p>29. <span class="smcap">Sadi</span> being about to purchase a house, a Jew came up
-and said, “I am an old neighbour, and know the house to be good and
-sufficient. Buy it by all means.” Sadi answered, <i>The house must be
-bad if thou art a neighbour</i>....</p>
-
-<p>31. An old man being asked, why he did not take a wife, answered, <i>I
-do not like old women: and a young woman, I judge from that, can never
-like me</i>.</p>
-
-<p>32. A courtier sent a foolish son to be educated by a sage. He made
-no progress, and some time after the sage brought him back, saying,
-<i>This boy will never be wiser; and he has even made me foolish in
-teaching him</i>.</p>
-
-<p>33. A king sent his son to an instructor, desiring him to educate the
-boy, as he did his own sons. The preceptor laboured in vain to teach
-the young prince, though his own sons made great progress. The king
-sending for him and reproaching him for this; he answered, <i>O king,
-the education was the same, but the capacity differed. We find gold in
-the soil! yet gold is not found in every soil</i>.</p>
-
-<p>34. A man having sore eyes went to a mule-doctor, who gave him an
-ointment that struck him blind. The man brought his doctor before the
-cadi, who acquitted him; saying to the patient, <i>If you had not been
-an ass, you would not have applied to a mule-doctor</i>.</p>
-
-<p>35. Sadi saw two boys, one the son of a rich man, the other of a poor,
-sitting in a cemetery. The former said “My father’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span> tomb is marble,
-marked with letters of gold: but what is your father’s? two turfs and a
-handful of dust spread over them.” The poor boy answered, <i>Be silent.
-Before your father shall have moved his marble! mine shall be already
-in paradise</i>.</p>
-
-<p>36. <span class="smcap">Muhammed</span>, the learned priest of Gasala, being asked, how
-he had acquired so much science? answered, <i>I never was ashamed to
-ask and learn what I did not know</i>....</p>
-
-<p>Jalal uddin Rumi was another Persian who wrote a series of stories
-conveying moral maxims.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE SICK SCHOOLMASTER</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The boys of a certain school were tired of their teacher, as he was
-very strict in the exaction of diligence; so they consulted together
-for the best means of getting rid of him for a time. Said they, “Why
-does he not fall ill, so that he may be obliged to be away from school,
-and we be released from confinement and work? Alas! he stands as firm
-as a rock.” One of them, who was wiser than the rest, suggested this
-plan: “I shall go to the teacher, and ask him why he looks so pale,
-saying, ‘May it turn out well! But your face has not its usual color.
-Is it due to the weather, or to fever?’ This will create some alarm
-in his mind. Then you, brother,” he continued, turning to another
-boy, “must assist me by using similar words. When you come into the
-schoolroom you must say to the teacher, ‘I hope, sir, you are well.’
-This will tend to increase his apprehension, even though in a slight
-degree; and you know that even slight doubts are often enough to drive
-a man mad. Then a third, a fourth, and a fifth boy must one after
-another express his sympathy in similar words, till at last, when
-thirty boys successively have given expression to words of like nature,
-the teacher’s apprehension will be confirmed.”</p>
-
-<p>The boys praised his ingenuity, and wished each other success; and
-they bound themselves by solemn promises not to shirk doing what was
-expected of them. Then the first boy bade them take oaths of secrecy,
-lest some telltale should let the matter out.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span></p>
-
-<p>Next morning the boys came to school in a cheerful mood, having
-resolved on adopting the foregoing plan. They all stood outside the
-schoolhouse, waiting for the arrival of the friend who had helped them
-in the time of need&mdash;since it was he who had originated the plan: it
-is the head that is the governor of the legs. The first boy arrived,
-entered the schoolroom, and greeted the teacher with “I hope you are
-well, sir, but the color of your face is very pale.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense!” said the teacher; “there is nothing the matter with me. Go
-and take your seat.” But inwardly he was somewhat apprehensive. Another
-boy came in, and in similar words greeted the teacher, whose misgivings
-were thereby somewhat increased. And so on, one boy after another
-greeted him, till his worst apprehensions seemed to be confirmed, and
-he was in great anxiety regarding the state of his health.</p>
-
-<p>He got enraged at his wife. “Her love for me is waning,” he thought. “I
-am in this bad state of health, and she did not even ask what was the
-matter with me. She did not draw my attention to the color of my face.
-Perhaps she is not unwilling that I should die.”</p>
-
-<p>Full of such thoughts, he came to his home, followed by the boys, and
-flung open the door. His wife exclaimed, “I hope nothing is the matter
-with you! Why have you returned so soon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you blind?” he answered. “Look at the color of my face, and at my
-condition! Even strangers show sympathetic alarm about my health.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I see nothing wrong,” said the wife. “You must be laboring under
-some senseless delusion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Woman,” he rejoined impatiently, “you are most obstinate! Can you not
-perceive the altered hue of my face and the shivering of my body? Go
-and get my bed made, that I may lie down, for my head is dizzy.”</p>
-
-<p>The bed was prepared, and the teacher lay down on it, giving vent
-to sighs and groans. The boys he ordered to sit there and read the
-lessons, which they did with much vexation. They said to themselves,
-“We did so much to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span> free, and still we are in confinement. The
-foundation was not well laid; we are bad architects. Some other plan
-must now be adopted, so that we may be rid of this annoyance.”</p>
-
-<p>The clever boy who had instigated the first plot advised the others
-to read their lessons very loudly; and when they did so, he said, in
-a tone to be overheard by the teacher, “Boys, your voices disturb our
-teacher. Loud voices will only increase his headache. Is it proper that
-he should be made to suffer pain for the sake of the trifling fees he
-gets from us?”</p>
-
-<p>The teacher said, “He is right. Boys, you may go. My headache has
-increased. Be off with you!” And the boys scampered away home as
-eagerly as birds fly toward a spot where they see grain.</p>
-
-<p>The mothers of the boys, on seeing them return, got angry, and thus
-challenged them, “This is the time for you to learn writing, and you
-are engaged in play. This is the time for acquiring knowledge, and you
-fly from your books and your teacher.”</p>
-
-<p>The boys urged that it was no fault of theirs, and that they were in no
-way to blame, for, by the decree of fate, their teacher had become very
-ill.</p>
-
-<p>The mothers, disbelieving, said, “This is all deceit and falsehood. You
-would not scruple to tell a hundred lies to get a little quantity of
-buttermilk. To-morrow morning we shall go to the teacher’s house, and
-shall ascertain what truth there is in your assertions.”</p>
-
-<p>So the next morning the mothers went to visit the teacher, whom they
-found lying in bed like a very sick person. He had perspired freely,
-owing to his having covered himself with blankets. His head was
-bandaged, and his face was covered with a kerchief. He was groaning in
-a feeble voice.</p>
-
-<p>The ladies expressed their sympathy, hoped his headache was getting
-less, and swore by his soul that they had been unaware until quite
-lately that he was so ill.</p>
-
-<p>“I, too,” said the teacher, “was unaware of my illness. It was through
-those little bastards that I learned of it.”</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Stories in Rime (Masnavi).</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE INVALID AND HIS DEAF VISITOR</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A deaf man was informed that an neighbor of his was ill, so he resolved
-upon going to see him. “But,” said he to himself, “owing to my deafness
-I shall not be able to catch the words of the sick man, whose voice
-must be very feeble at this time. However, go I must. When I see his
-lips moving I shall be able to make a reasonably good conjecture of
-what he is saying. When I ask him, ‘How are you, oh, my afflicted
-friend?’ he will probably reply, ‘I am well,’ or ‘I am better.’ I shall
-then say, ‘Thanks be to God! Tell me, what have you taken for food?’
-He will probably mention some liquid food or gruel. I shall then wish
-that the food may agree with him, and shall ask him the name of the
-physician under whose treatment he is. On his naming the man, I shall
-say, ‘He is a skilful leech. Since it is he who is attending upon you,
-you will soon be well. I have had experience of him. Wherever he goes,
-his patients very soon recover.”</p>
-
-<p>So the deaf man, having prepared himself for the visit, went to the
-invalid’s bedside, and sat down near the pillow. Then, rubbing his
-hands together with assumed cheerfulness, he inquired, “How are you?”
-“I am dying,” replied the patient. “Thanks be to God!” rejoined the
-deaf man.</p>
-
-<p>The sick man was troubled in his heart, and said to himself, “What kind
-of thanksgiving is this? Surely he must be an enemy of mine!”&mdash;little
-thinking that his visitor’s remark was but the result of wrong
-conjecture.</p>
-
-<p>“What have you been eating?” was the next question; to which the reply
-was, “Poison!” “May it agree with you,” was the wish expressed by the
-deaf man which only increased the other’s vexation.</p>
-
-<p>“And pray, who is your physician?” again asked the visitor, “Azrael,
-the Angel of Death. And now, be-gone with you!” growled the invalid.
-“Oh, is he?” pursued the deaf man. “Then you ought to rejoice, for he
-is a man of auspicious footsteps. I saw him only just<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span> now, and asked
-him to devote to you his best possible attention.”</p>
-
-<p>With these words he bade the sick man good-by, and withdrew, rejoicing
-that he had satisfactorily performed a neighborly duty. Meanwhile,
-the other man was angrily muttering to himself, “This fellow is an
-implacable foe of mine. I did not know his heart was so full of
-malignity.”</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Stories in Rime (Masnavi).</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OLD AGE&mdash;DIALOGUE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Old Man.</i> I am in sore trouble owing to my brain.</p>
-
-<p><i>Physician.</i> The weakness of the brain is due to old age.</p>
-
-<p><i>Old Man.</i> Dark spots are floating before my eyes.</p>
-
-<p><i>Physician.</i> That, too, comes from old age, oh, venerable sheikh!</p>
-
-<p><i>Old Man.</i> My back aches very much.</p>
-
-<p><i>Physician.</i> The result of old age, oh, lean sheikh!</p>
-
-<p><i>Old Man.</i> No food that I take agrees with me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Physician.</i> The failure of the digestive organs is also due to
-old age.</p>
-
-<p><i>Old Man.</i> I am afflicted with hard breathing.</p>
-
-<p><i>Physician.</i> Yes, the breathing ought to be affected in that
-manner. When old age comes, it brings a hundred complaints in its train.</p>
-
-<p><i>Old Man.</i> My legs are getting feeble, and I am unable to walk
-much.</p>
-
-<p><i>Physician.</i> It is nothing but old age which obliges you to sit in
-a corner.</p>
-
-<p><i>Old Man.</i> My back has become bent like a bow.</p>
-
-<p><i>Physician.</i> This trouble is merely the consequence of old age.</p>
-
-<p><i>Old Man.</i> My eyesight is quite dim, oh, sage physician!</p>
-
-<p><i>Physician.</i> Nothing but old age, oh, wise man!</p>
-
-<p><i>Old Man.</i> Oh, you idiot, always harping on the same theme! Is
-this all you know of the science of medicine? Fool, does not your
-reason tell you that God has assigned a remedy to every ailment? You
-are a stupid ass, and with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span> your paltry stock of learning are still
-fumbling in the mire!</p>
-
-<p><i>Physician.</i> Oh, you dotard past sixty, know, then, that even this
-rage and fury is due to old age!</p>
-
-<p>From Abu Ishak we glean this delightful bit of parody on Hafiz.</p>
-
-<table summary="parody" class="smaller" style="max-width: 40em">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="ctr"><i>PARODY ON HAFIZ</i></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="ctr">Hafiz</td>
- <td class="ctr">Abu-Ishak</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht3">Will those who can transmute dust into gold by looking
- at it ever give a sidelong glance at us?</td>
- <td class="cht3">Will those who sell cooked sheep’s-head give us a sidelong
- glance, when they open their pots in the morning?</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht3">The beauteous Turk, who is the cause of death to her
- lovers, has to-day gone forth intoxicated. Let us see from
- whose eyes the heart’s blood shall begin to flow.</td>
- <td class="cht3">The cook has to-day bought onions for giving a
- relish to minced meat. Let us see, now, from whose
- eyes tears shall begin to flow.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht3">I have a yearning for seclusion and peace. But, oh!
- those narcissus-like eyes! The commotion they cause
- me is inexpressible!</td>
- <td class="cht3">I have an inclination for abstinent living and observing
- fasts. But, oh! in what a tempting way doth the
- roasted lamb wink at me!</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht3">No one should give up his heart and his religion in the
- expectation of faithfulness from his sweetheart. My
- having done so has resulted to me in lifelong repentance.<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em">And from</span></td>
- <td class="cht3">No one should partake of sauce to accompany sweetened
- rice colored with saffron. My having done so
- has given me cause for infinite regret.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Do-Pyazah</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>THESE DEFINITIONS</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Angel.</i> A hidden telltale.</p>
-
-<p><i>King.</i> The idlest man in the country.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Minister of State.</i> The target for the arrows of the sighs of the
-oppressed.</p>
-
-<p><i>Flatterer.</i> One who drives a profitable trade.</p>
-
-<p><i>Lawyer.</i> One ready to tell any lie.</p>
-
-<p><i>Fool.</i> An official, for instance, who is honest.</p>
-
-<p><i>Physician.</i> The herald of death.</p>
-
-<p><i>Widow.</i> A woman in the habit of praising her husband when he is
-gone.</p>
-
-<p><i>Poet.</i> A proud beggar.</p>
-
-<p><i>Mirror.</i> One that laughs at you to your face.</p>
-
-<p><i>Bribe.</i> The resource of him who knows he has a bad cause.</p>
-
-<p><i>National Calamity.</i> A ruler who cares for nothing but the
-pleasures of the harem.</p>
-
-<p><i>Salutation.</i> A polite hint to others to get up and greet you with
-respect.</p>
-
-<p><i>Priest Calling to Prayers.</i> A disturber of the indolent.</p>
-
-<p><i>Faithful Friend.</i> Money.</p>
-
-<p><i>Truthful Man.</i> One who is regarded as an enemy by every one.</p>
-
-<p><i>Silence.</i> Half consent.</p>
-
-<p><i>Service.</i> Selling one’s independence.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hunting.</i> The occupation of those who have no work to do.</p>
-
-<p><i>Mother-in-Law.</i> A spy domiciled in your house.</p>
-
-<p><i>Debtor.</i> An ass in a quagmire.</p>
-
-<p><i>Liar.</i> A person making frequent use of the expression, “I swear
-to God it is true!”</p>
-
-<p><i>Guest.</i> One in your house who is impatient to hear the dishes
-clatter.</p>
-
-<p><i>Poverty.</i> The consequence of marriage.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hunger.</i> Something which falls to the lot of those out of
-employment.</p>
-
-<p><i>Soporific.</i> Reading the verses of a dull poet.</p>
-
-<p><i>Druggist.</i> One who wishes everybody to be ill.</p>
-
-<p><i>Learned Man.</i> One who does not know how to earn his livelihood.</p>
-
-<p><i>Miser’s Eye.</i> A vessel which is never full.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>DIVING FOR AN EGG&mdash;ANECDOTE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The Emperor Akbar was one day sitting with his attendants in the
-garden of the palace, close to a large cistern full of water. At the
-suggestion of a courtier, the emperor commanded some of the men present
-to procure an egg each, and to place it in the cistern in such a manner
-that it could easily be found when searched for.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after the order had been obeyed, the Mollah Do-pyazah came to this
-spot. Akbar then turned to his attendants, saying he had dreamed the
-night before that there were eggs in the cistern, and that all who were
-his faithful servants had dived in, and brought out an egg. Whereupon
-the attendants one by one dived into the water, each one issuing forth
-with an egg in his hand. Do-pyazah, not disposed himself to enter the
-water, the emperor asked why he alone held aloof. The mollah, thus
-pressed, divested himself of his outer garments and plunged in.</p>
-
-<p>He searched for a long time, but could not find a single egg. At length
-he emerged from the cistern, and, moving his arms in the manner of a
-cock flapping his wings, he cried aloud, “Cock-a-doodle-doo!”</p>
-
-<p>“What,” asked Akbar, “is the meaning of this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Your Majesty,” came the reply, “those who brought you the eggs were
-hens, but I am a cock, and you must not expect an egg from me.”</p>
-
-<p>At which Akbar laughed heartily, and had Do-pyazah well rewarded.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Chinese are more noted for their wit that is wisdom, than for their
-humor.</p>
-
-<p>Confucius, doubtless the greatest of their philosophers, born 551
-<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, left many sayings which became proverbs, yet which
-embodied only the elementary morality of all ages and races.</p>
-
-<p>These are some of the sayings from <i>The Analects of Confucius</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“While a man’s father is alive, look at the bent of his will; when his
-father is dead, look at his conduct.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span></p>
-
-<p>“An accomplished scholar is not a cooking-pot.”</p>
-
-<p>“When good order prevailed in his country, Ning Wu acted the part of
-a wise man; when his country was in disorder, he acted the part of a
-fool. Others may equal his wisdom, but they cannot equal his folly.”</p>
-
-<p>“How can one know about death, when one does not understand life?”</p>
-
-<p>“Four horses cannot overtake the tongue.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you were not covetous, you could not even bribe a man to steal from
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“When their betters love the <i>Rules</i> [<i>of Propriety</i>], then
-the folk are easy tools.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why use an ox-knife to kill a hen?”</p>
-
-<p>“There are two classes that never change: the supremely wise and the
-profoundly stupid.”</p>
-
-<p>“If a man is disliked at forty, he always will be.”</p>
-
-<p>“When driving with a woman, hold the reins in one hand and keep the
-other behind your back.”</p>
-
-<p>Chwang Tze, another ancient, wrote much of life, death and immortality,
-but showed little sense of humor therein.</p>
-
-<p>One of his anecdotes, in lighter vein, follows.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE PLEASURE OF FISHES&mdash;ANECDOTE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Chwang Tze and a friend had strolled on to a bridge over the Hao, when
-the former observed, “Look how the minnows are darting about! That is
-the pleasure of fishes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not being a fish yourself,” objected the friend, “how can you possibly
-know in what the pleasure of fishes consists?”</p>
-
-<p>“And you not being I,” retorted Chwang Tze, “how can you know that I do
-not know?”</p>
-
-<p>To which the friend replied, “If I, not being you, cannot know what you
-know, it follows that you, not being a fish, cannot know in what the
-pleasure of fishes consists.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let us go back,” rejoined Chwang Tze, “to your original question. You
-ask me how I know in what the pleasure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span> of fishes consists. Well, I
-know that I am enjoying myself over the Hao, and from this I infer that
-the fishes are enjoying themselves in it.”&mdash;<i>Autumn Floods.</i></p>
-
-<p>Sung Yu gives us this satirical outburst about</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>POPULARITY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The eagle is king of the birds; among fishes</div>
- <div class="i1">Leviathan holds the first place.</div>
- <div>Cleaving the far, crimson clouds,</div>
- <div class="i1">The eagle soars upward apace,</div>
- <div>With only the blue sky above,</div>
- <div class="i1">Into remote realms of space;</div>
- <div>But the grandeur of heaven and earth</div>
- <div class="i1">Is naught to the hedge-sparrow race.</div>
- <div>The whale through one oceans swims,</div>
- <div class="i1">To take its course through a second;</div>
- <div>While the minnow measures a puddle</div>
- <div class="i1">As the width of the sea might be reckoned.</div>
- <div>And just as with birds and fishes,</div>
- <div class="i1">Is the case, to be sure, with man.</div>
- <div>Here soars a resplendent eagle,</div>
- <div class="i1">There swims one huge leviathan:</div>
- <div>Behold the philosopher sapient,</div>
- <div class="i1">Whose fame will never grow dim;</div>
- <div>Alone in the might of his wisdom&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Can the rabble understand him?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Yuan Mei, however, possessed a satiric humor so keen as to place him
-among the true wits.</p>
-
-<p>His letter to a friend might have been written today and his Cookery
-Notes are such as are found in our current comics.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>A STANZA FOR A TOBACCO-POUCH</i></h4>
-
-<p class="smcap p1 p-left">Dear Friend:</p>
-
-<p>I have received your letter of congratulation, and am much obliged.
-At the end of the letter, however, you mention that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span> you have a
-tobacco-pouch for me, which will be forwarded upon the receipt of
-a stanza. But such an exchange would seem to establish a curious
-precedent. If for a tobacco pouch you expect in return a stanza, for
-a hat or a pair of boots you would demand a whole poem; while your
-brother might bestow a cloak or coat upon me, and believe himself
-entitled to an epic. At this rate, dear friend, your congratulations
-would become rather costly to me.</p>
-
-<p>Let me instruct you, on the other hand, that a man once gave a thousand
-yards of silk for a phrase, and another man a beautiful girl for a
-stanza&mdash;which makes your tobacco-pouch look like a slight inducement,
-does it not?</p>
-
-<p>Mencius forbids the taking advantage of people on the ground of one’s
-rank or merits. How much worse, therefore, to do so by virtue of a mere
-tobacco-pouch! Elegant as a tobacco-pouch may be, it is only the work
-of a sempstress; but my poetry, poor as it may be, is the work of my
-brain. The exchange would evidently be complimentary to the sempstress,
-and the reverse to me.</p>
-
-<p>Now, if you had taken needle and thread and made the pouch
-yourself&mdash;ah, then what a difference! Then, indeed, a dozen stanzas
-would not have been too great a return. But it would hardly be proper
-to ask a famous warrior like yourself to lay down sword and shield for
-needle and thread. Nor, dear friend, am I likely to get the pouch at
-all, if you take offense at these little jokes of mine. What I advise
-you to do is, to bear with me patiently, send the tobacco-pouch, and
-wait for the stanza until it comes.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Letters.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>RECIPES</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Birds’ nests and water-slugs have no particular flavor of their own,
-and are therefore not worth eating.</p>
-
-<p>The best cook cannot prepare artistically more than five or six
-different dishes in one day. A host of mine once had forty courses
-served at a meal, and as soon as I got home I called for a bowl of rice
-to still my hunger.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span></p>
-
-<p>In order to enjoy the pleasures of the palate to the fullest degree,
-you must be sober. If you are drunk, you cannot tell one flavor from
-another.</p>
-
-<p>The ingredients of a dish should always harmonize with one
-another&mdash;like two people in marriage.</p>
-
-<p>Some cooks use the flesh of chickens and pigs for one soup, and as
-chickens and pigs have souls, they will hold those cooks to account, in
-the next world, for their treatment of them in this.</p>
-
-<p>Bamboo-shoots ought never to be cut with a knife which has just been
-used on onions.</p>
-
-<p>While cooking, do not allow ashes from your pipe, perspiration from
-your face, soot from the fuel, or beetles from the ceiling to drop
-into the saucepan: the guests would be likely to pass the dish
-by.&mdash;<i>Cookery Book</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The following proverbs are generally attributed to the Chinese, some of
-them being the wisdom of Confucius.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>PROVERBS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">An avaricious man, who can never get enough, is like a snake trying to
-swallow an elephant.</p>
-
-<p>To draw the picture of a tiger, and make a dog out of it, is to imitate
-a masterpiece and spoil it.</p>
-
-<p>Human pleasures are like the flittings of sparrows.</p>
-
-<p>A narrow-minded man resembles a frog in a well.</p>
-
-<p>Do not pull up your stockings in a melon-patch, or straighten your hat
-in a peach orchard; any one seeing you may think you are stealing.</p>
-
-<p>To talk much and arrive nowhere is the same as climbing a tree to catch
-a fish.</p>
-
-<p>One thread does not make a rope.</p>
-
-<p>The tiger does not walk with the hind.</p>
-
-<p>You can neither buy wood in the forest nor fish by the lake.</p>
-
-<p>If a blind man leads another blind man, they will both fall into a
-hole.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span></p>
-
-<p>No maker of idols worships the gods; he knows their composition too
-well.</p>
-
-<p>A man with a purple nose may be very temperate in drink, only no one
-will believe it.</p>
-
-<p>Money makes the blind man see.</p>
-
-<p>We admire our own writings, but other men’s wives.</p>
-
-<p>If you are afraid of being found out, leave it alone.</p>
-
-<p>Bend your neck if the eaves are low.</p>
-
-<p>It’s not the wine that makes a man drunk; it’s the man himself.</p>
-
-<p>A whisper on earth sounds like thunder in heaven.</p>
-
-<p>To get a favor granted is harder than to kill a tiger.</p>
-
-<p>Sweep the snow from your own door.</p>
-
-<p>If there were no error there could be no truth.</p>
-
-<p>A needle never pricks with both ends.</p>
-
-<p>Don’t put two saddles on one horse.</p>
-
-<p>Trust nature rather than a bad doctor.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Japanese offer little that can be quoted. Their comedies are long
-and not very funny, their wit is heavy and bitterly satirical.</p>
-
-<p>One specimen is given from <i>The Land of Dreams</i> by Kiokutei Bakin.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>ON CLOTHES AND COMFORTS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">However much money you have, you will not keep it long; it will leave
-you, just like a traveler who has stayed overnight at an inn. The only
-substantial things in life are food and drink. Any little house you
-can just crawl into is large enough. The only difference between an
-emperor’s palace and a straw hut is in their size and their situation,
-one being in town and the other in the country. A single room, with
-a mat long enough for you to stretch out your whole body, is quite
-sufficient lodging. As for the clothes which you dress your carcass in,
-the richest brocades and the commonest sackcloth differ only in being
-clean or dirty. After you are dead, no one can tell, from looking at
-your naked body,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span> what sort of clothes you wore while alive. If these
-facts were to become recognized, our clothes would be patched with any
-sort of material or color. Now, however, a man will buy new, expensive
-garments which he does not really want, owe the money for them, strut
-about in these borrowed plumes, and finally pawn them.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>The Land of Dreams.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>COLLECTIONS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Apologues and stories, now common to all the world, had their origin
-in remote antiquity. Eastern narratives were for the most part brought
-to Europe orally, but some were later translated from the Oriental
-writings.</p>
-
-<p>Since at first, Religion and Learning went hand in hand, these stories
-were of a moral and instructive nature. Their wit was the wit of
-wisdom, the pithiness of graphic representation of truth.</p>
-
-<p>But with the development of the wit of amusement, the rise of ribald
-laughter and the supremacy of priests and monks, the stories took on a
-mirthful character which may or may not have added to their efficacy as
-cautionary teachings.</p>
-
-<p>Humor, then, as now, was founded on the feeling of superiority which
-comes from knowledge. The stories were invariably of the discomfiture
-of some foolish person, and thereby, either definitely or tacitly
-advised against that particular foolishness.</p>
-
-<p>Narrative fiction was entirely in parables or apologues, the latter
-term having come to be used exclusively for the tales in which animals
-are invested with human traits.</p>
-
-<p>Fables, also, is a term usually restricted to moral lessons taught by
-anecdotes of beasts in human conditions.</p>
-
-<p>As usual in the matter of legendary literature various countries
-contend for the honor of producing the first fables.</p>
-
-<p>The bestowal of the palm rests between the Hindus and the Hebrews, but
-the decision may never be made.</p>
-
-<p>A plausible assumption for the necessity of fables lies in the fact
-that it was not the part of wisdom openly to administer reproof or
-advice to the Asiatic potentates, wherefore it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span> done by the device
-of speaking through the mouths of the fictitious characters.</p>
-
-<p>And, through the ages, this plan has been found to work with
-intractables of less celebrity.</p>
-
-<p>But the question of the origin of these stories is outside our
-Outline,&mdash;we may merely state that before, during and after the
-Crusades, the flood of stories and tales from the Orient into Europe
-was continuous.</p>
-
-<p>Which accounts for the fact that among the oldest stories of the
-various countries, duplicates are always found, and the ancient jests
-of the Far East have raised and will raise appreciative laughter
-as they are translated into all European tongues, including the
-Scandinavian.</p>
-
-<p>As religion gave rise to laughter, so religion was the medium for
-disseminating mirth.</p>
-
-<p>The preachers of the mediæval ages used many amusing stories in their
-sermons and the monks often preserved these, with additions of their
-own, in enduring literature.</p>
-
-<p>But literature then was not in the form of circulating libraries, so
-the tales traveled from mouth to mouth, gaining sometimes in interest
-and sometimes losing charm or worth.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps about the tenth century translations began to be grouped into
-collections, in Europe, and among the first was the Greek version of
-the Fables of Pilpay. Soon after came the <i>Book of Sindibad</i>,
-which would seem to be the original form of the story of Scheherazade.</p>
-
-<p>But in most cases the monks were the go-between.</p>
-
-<p>Their zeal and indefatigability produced masses of material, primarily
-designed for the use of preachers, but easily adopted by the laymen.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sermones</i> of Jacques de Vitry, Crusader and prelate, and
-the <i>Liber de Donis</i> of Etienne de Bourbon are both remarkable
-collections that predated and later gave material to the Gesta
-Romanorum.</p>
-
-<p>As an instance of the ubiquity of stories, it may be mentioned here
-that in both the books above noticed, occurs the old tale of the
-husband who had two wives, the younger one of whom plucked out all
-his gray-white hairs, the older one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span> plucked out all his black hairs,
-leaving the poor chap entirely bald. This story is also in the Talmud,
-in Chinese Jestbooks and in innumerable others.</p>
-
-<p>So with many of the ancient tales. They come down through the Fabliaux,
-Gesta Romanorum, the Heptameron, the Decameron and on to our own dinner
-tables, where many of the “latest” are merely rehashed witticisms of
-the ancient monks and priests.</p>
-
-<p>Nor are the stories fastened on to celebrities often authentic. Many of
-Sydney Smith’s witticisms hark back to the Eastern Tales, most of Joe
-Miller’s jests have similar paternity.</p>
-
-<p>Hierocles made a famous collection of old stories translated into
-Greek. Others followed rapidly even before the invention of printing.</p>
-
-<p>After that achievement, collections of stories flooded the book mart
-even as they do today.</p>
-
-<p>Selections from various collections follow.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the oldest collection of tales in the world is that known
-as the <i>Fables of Bidpai or Pilpay</i>. Both author and date of
-production are unknown, but tradition tells us that they were written
-in Sanscrit and were the work of one Vishnu Sarma, who wrote them for
-the advice and edification of certain princes. The book is enormously
-long and though not of humorous intent shows much of the native wit of
-the country.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Fables</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>THE GREEDY AND AMBITIOUS CAT</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There was formerly an old Woman in a village, extremely thin,
-half-starved, and meager. She lived in a little cottage as dark and
-gloomy as a fool’s heart, and withal as close shut up as a miser’s
-hand. This miserable creature had for the companion of her wretched
-retirements a Cat meager and lean as herself; the poor creature never
-saw bread, nor beheld the face of a stranger, and was forced to be
-contented with only smelling the mice in their holes, or seeing the
-prints of their feet in the dust. If by some extraordinary lucky chance
-this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span> miserable animal happened to catch a mouse, she was like a beggar
-that discovers a treasure; her visage and her eyes were inflamed
-with joy, and that booty served her for a whole week; and out of the
-excess of her admiration, and distrust of her own happiness, she would
-cry out to herself, “Heavens! Is this a dream, or is it real?” One
-day, however, ready to die for hunger, she got upon the ridge of her
-enchanted castle, which had long been the mansion of famine for cats,
-and spied from thence another Cat, that was stalking upon a neighbour’s
-wall like a Lion, walking along as if she had been counting her steps,
-and so fat that she could hardly go. The old Woman’s Cat, astonished to
-see a creature of her own species so plump and so large, with a loud
-voice, cries out to her pursy neighbour, “In the name of pity, speak to
-me, thou happiest of the Cat kind! why, you look as if you came from
-one of the Khan of Kathai’s feasts; I conjure ye, to tell me how, or
-in what region it is that you get your skin so well stuffed?” “Where?”
-replied the fat one; “why, where should one feed well but at a King’s
-table? I go to the house,” continued she, “every day about dinner-time,
-and there I lay my paws upon some delicious morsel or other, which
-serves me till the next, and then leave enough for an army of mice,
-which under me live in peace and tranquillity; for why should I commit
-murder for a piece of tough and skinny mouse flesh, when I can live on
-venison at a much easier rate?” The lean Cat, on this, eagerly inquired
-the way to this house of plenty, and entreated her plump neighbour to
-carry her one day along with her. “Most willingly,” said the fat Puss;
-“for thou seest I am naturally charitable, and thou art so lean that
-I heartily pity thy condition.” On this promise they parted; and the
-lean Cat returned to the old Woman’s chamber, where she told her dame
-the story of what had befallen her. The old Woman prudently endeavoured
-to dissuade her Cat from prosecuting her design, admonishing her
-withal to have a care of being deceived. “For, believe me,” said she,
-“the desires of the ambitious are never to be satiated, but when
-their mouths are stuffed with the dirt of their graves. Sobriety and
-temperance are the only things that truly enrich people. I must tell<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-thee, poor silly Cat, that they who travel to satisfy their ambition,
-have no knowledge of the good things they possess, nor are they truly
-thankful to Heaven for what they enjoy, who are not contented with
-their fortune.”</p>
-
-<p>The poor starved Cat, however, had conceived so fair an idea of
-the King’s table, that the old Woman’s good morals and judicious
-remonstrances entered in at one ear and went out at the other; in
-short, she departed the next day with the fat Puss to go to the King’s
-house; but alas! before she got thither, her destiny had laid a snare
-for her. For being a house of good cheer, it was so haunted with cats,
-that the servants had, just at this time, orders to kill all the cats
-that came near it, by reason of a great robbery committed the night
-before in the King’s larder by several grimalkins. The old Woman’s Cat,
-however, pushed on by hunger, entered the house, and no sooner saw a
-dish of meat unobserved by the cooks, but she made a seizure of it,
-and was doing what for many years she had not done before, that is,
-heartily filling her belly; but as she was enjoying herself under the
-dresser-board, and feeding heartily upon her stolen morsels, one of the
-testy officers of the kitchen, missing his breakfast, and seeing where
-the poor Cat was solacing herself with it, threw his knife at her with
-such an unlucky hand, that he stuck her full in the breast. However, as
-it has been the providence of Nature to give his creature nine lives
-instead of one, poor Puss made a shift to crawl away, after she had for
-some time shammed dead: but, in her flight, observing the blood come
-streaming from her wound; “Well,” said she, “let me but escape this
-accident, and if ever I quit my old hold and my own mice for all the
-rarities in the King’s kitchen, may I lose all my nine lives at once.”</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>A RAVEN, A FOX, AND A SERPENT</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A Raven had once built her nest for many seasons together in a
-convenient cleft of a mountain, but however pleasing the place was to
-her, she had always reason enough to resolve to lay there no more; for
-every time she hatched, a Serpent came<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span> and devoured her young ones.
-The Raven complaining to a Fox that was one of her friends, said to
-him, “Pray tell me, what would you advise me to do to be rid of this
-Serpent?” “What do you think to do?” answered the Fox. “Why, my present
-intent is,” replied the Raven, “to go and peck out his eyes when he
-is asleep, that so he may no longer find the way to my nest.” The Fox
-disapproved this design, and told the Raven, that it became a prudent
-person to manage his revenge in such a manner, that no mischief might
-befall himself in taking it: “Never run yourself,” says he, “into the
-misfortune that once befell the Crane, of which I will tell you the
-Fable.”</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE CRANE AND THE CRAY-FISH</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A Crane had once settled her habitation by the side of a broad and deep
-lake, and lived upon such fish as she could catch in it; these she got
-in plenty enough for many years; but at length being become old and
-feeble, she could fish no longer. In this afflicting circumstance she
-began to reflect, with sorrow, on the carelessness of her past years;
-“I did ill,” said she to herself, “in not making in my youth necessary
-provision to support me in my old age; but, as it is, I must now make
-the best of a bad market, and use cunning to get a livelihood as I
-can”: with this resolution she placed herself by the waterside, and
-began to sigh and look mighty melancholy. A Cray-fish, perceiving her
-at a distance, accosted her, and asked her why she appeared so sad?
-“Alas,” said she, “how can I otherwise choose but grieve, seeing my
-daily nourishment is like to be taken from me? for I just now heard
-this talk between two fishermen passing this way: said the one to the
-other, Here is great store of fish, what think you of clearing this
-pond? to whom his companion answered, no; there is more in such a lake:
-let us go thither first, and then come hither the day afterwards. This
-they will certainly perform; and then,” added the Crane, “I must soon
-prepare for death.”</p>
-
-<p>The Cray-fish, on this, went to the fish, and told them what she had
-heard: upon which the poor fish, in great perplexity,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span> swam immediately
-to the Crane, and addressing themselves to her, told her what they had
-heard, and added, “We are now in so great a consternation, that we are
-come to desire your protection. Though you are our enemy, yet the wise
-tell us, that they who make their enemy their sanctuary, may be assured
-of being well received: you know full well that we are your daily food;
-and if we are destroyed, you, who are now too old to travel in search
-of food, must also perish; we pray you, therefore, for your own sake,
-as well as ours, to consider, and tell us what you think is the best
-course for us to take.” To which the Crane replied, “That which you
-acquaint me with, I heard myself from the mouths of the fishermen; we
-have no power sufficient to withstand them; nor do I know any other way
-to secure you, but this: it will be many months before they can clear
-the other pond they are to go about first: and, in the mean time, I
-can at times, and as my strength will permit me, remove you one after
-another into a little pond here hard by, where there is very good
-water, and where the fishermen can never catch you, by reason of the
-extraordinary depth.” The fish approved this counsel, and desired the
-Crane to carry them one by one into this pond. Nor did she fail to fish
-up three or four every morning, but she carried them no farther than
-to the top of a small hill, where she eat them: and thus she feasted
-herself for a while.</p>
-
-<p>But one day, the Cray-fish, having a desire to see this delicate pond,
-made known her curiosity to the Crane, who, bethinking herself that
-the Cray-fish was her most mortal enemy, resolved to get rid of her at
-once, and murder her as she had done the rest; with this design she
-flung the Cray-fish upon her neck, and flew towards the hill. But when
-they came near the place, the Cray-fish, spying at a distance the small
-bones of her slaughtered companions, mistrusted the Crane’s intention,
-and laying hold of a fair opportunity, got her neck in her claw, and
-grasped it so hard, that she fairly saved herself, and strangled the
-Crane.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“This example,” says the Fox, “shows you, that crafty tricking people
-often become victims to their own cunning.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span> The Raven, returning
-thanks to the Fox for his good advice, said, “I shall not by any means
-neglect your wholesome instructions; but what shall I do?” “Why,”
-replied the Fox, “you must snatch up something that belongs to some
-stout man or other, and let him see what you do, to the end he may
-follow you. Which that he may easily do, do you fly slowly; and when
-you are just over the Serpent’s hole, let fall the thing that you hold
-in your beak or talons whatever it be, for then the person that follows
-you, seeing the Serpent come forth, will not fail to knock him on the
-head.” The Raven did as the Fox advised him, and by that means was
-delivered from the Serpent.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE MERCHANT AND HIS FRIEND</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A Certain Merchant, said Kalila, pursuing her discourse, had once a
-great desire to make a long journey. Now in regard that he was not
-very wealthy, it is requisite, said he to himself, that before my
-departure I should leave some part of my estate in the city, to the
-end that if I meet with ill luck in my travels, I may have wherewithal
-to keep me at my return. To this purpose he delivered a great number
-of bars of iron, which were a principal part of his wealth, in trust
-to one of his friends, desiring him to keep them during his absence;
-and then taking his leave, away he went. Some time after, having had
-but ill luck in his travels, he returned home; and the first thing he
-did was to go to his Friend, and demand his iron: but his Friend, who
-owed several sums of money, having sold the iron to pay his own debts,
-made him this answer: “Truly friend,” said he, “I put your iron into
-a room that was close locked, imagining it would have been there as
-secure as my own gold; but an accident has happened which nobody could
-have suspected, for there was a rat in the room eat it all up.” The
-Merchant, pretending ignorance, replied, “It is a terrible misfortune
-to me indeed; but I know of old that rats love iron extremely; I have
-suffered by them many times before in the same manner, and therefore
-can the better bear my present affliction.” This answer extremely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-pleased the Friend, who was glad to hear the Merchant so well inclined
-to believe that the rats had eaten his iron; and to remove all
-suspicions, desired him to dine with him the next day. The Merchant
-promised he would, but in the mean time he met in the middle of the
-city one of his Friend’s children; the child he carried home, and
-locked up in a room. The next day he went to his Friend, who seemed to
-be in great affliction, which he asked him the cause of, as if he had
-been perfectly ignorant of what had happened. “Oh, my dear friend,”
-answered the other, “I beg you to excuse me, if you do not see me so
-cheerful as otherwise I would be; I have lost one of my children; I
-have had him cried by sound of trumpet, but I know not what is become
-of him.” “Oh!” replied the Merchant, “I am grieved to hear this; for
-yesterday in the evening, as I parted from hence, I saw an owl in the
-air with a child in his claws; but whether it were yours I cannot
-tell.” “Why, you most foolish and absurd creature!” replied the Friend,
-“are you not ashamed to tell such an egregious lie? An owl, that weighs
-at most not above two or three pounds, can he carry a boy that weighs
-above fifty?” “Why,” replied the merchant, “do you make such a wonder
-at that? as if in a country where one rat can eat an hundred ton weight
-of iron, it were such a wonder for an owl to carry a child that weighs
-not above fifty pounds in all.” The Friend, upon this, found that the
-Merchant was no such fool as he took him to be, begged his pardon for
-the cheat which he designed to have put upon him, restored him the
-value of his iron, and so had his son again.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Other and very ancient Hindoo stories follow.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE MAID, THE MONKEY, AND THE MENDICANT</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">On the banks of the Ganges there was once a city named Makandi. And in
-a temple, not far from the river, there lived a religious mendicant
-with a large number of disciples. He was a great rogue, but to impress
-the minds of the credulous people of the neighbourhood, he affected
-to be perfectly indifferent to all worldly affairs, and even went so
-far as to have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span> taken a vow of perpetual silence. Now, in this city
-there resided a wealthy merchant, who believed in the mendicant,
-and was one of his devoted followers. The merchant had a beautiful
-daughter, who had just come of age, and who, entertaining a tender
-feeling for a handsome prince who lived in the neighbourhood, had
-begun to communicate with him by means of a confidential servant.
-One day the mendicant came on a begging excursion to the house of
-the merchant, and his daughter, beautifully dressed, came out with a
-silver cup in her hand to give him alms. The beggar as soon as he saw
-her forgot his vow of perpetual silence, and exclaimed, “Oh! what a
-sight!” but immediately afterwards he was ashamed of the words which
-he had uttered, and hastened home to the temple. The merchant, who
-had heard these words, thought that there was something unusual in
-them, and followed the mendicant to his abode. The latter, on seeing
-him, said with tears in his eyes, “Friend, I know that you are greatly
-devoted to me, and I grieve to say that a great misfortune will come
-upon you. The marks upon the body of your beautiful daughter foretell
-the ruin of your family, and the loss of your wealth as soon as she
-is married.” These words frightened the merchant almost out of his
-wits, and he implored the hypocritical mendicant to tell him if there
-were any means of averting the catastrophe. “There is one remedy,” he
-replied, “but you will find it hard to practise. You must make a box
-with holes in the lid, in the form of a boat, and having administered
-a narcotic to your daughter, place her in it, and closing the box, put
-it into the Ganges with a lamp burning on it. The waters of the river
-will carry her to some distant country, where doubtless she will be
-married, but her marriage there will not affect your fortune here.”
-Pleased with this apparently disinterested advice, the silly merchant
-returned home, and did as he was told. Fortunately, however, for
-the girl, her confidential servant heard what was going to be done,
-and immediately informed the young prince, the girl’s lover, of the
-intentions of her father. At night he accordingly watched by the river,
-and as soon as the box was left there he got hold of it, and brought
-it home, and taking the sleeping girl out, put into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span> her place a large
-and ferocious monkey, and, having closed the lid, sent it back to the
-river upon whose broad stream it was floated once more. In the meantime
-the mendicant was enjoying golden dreams about the future. Thinking to
-secure the girl for himself, he sent some of his disciples to the river
-side, and told them to get hold of the box as it came floating down the
-stream. He further enjoined them not to pay any attention to anything
-they might hear inside the box, but to bring it directly to him as
-soon as they found it. On the box being brought, he had it carried to
-his cell, and then told his disciples to remain at a distance, and
-not to disturb him, as he had to perform some religious ceremonies in
-connection with it. The disciples then retired, and the mendicant began
-to open the box with the most pleasing anticipations. But alas, the
-retribution of sin is often too near. The ferocious monkey, exasperated
-by his confinement, jumped out at once, and began to bite, scratch, and
-tear the poor mendicant in every way. The latter bawled out as loud as
-he could, but his disciples thinking that he was performing religious
-ceremonies, or fighting with the devil, did not come to his assistance.
-At last he succeeded in opening the door of his room, and got away with
-the loss of his nose and an ear. The monkey also bolted through the
-door, and disappeared into the jungle. The good people of Nakandi were
-much amused with the incident, and drove the mendicant out of the town.
-The merchant’s daughter was delighted to find herself with her lover,
-while her father, covered with shame, consoled himself with the idea
-that she had got a good husband.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>ABOUT A WOMAN’S PROMISE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">In the city of Madanpur there reigned a king, named Birbar. In the
-same city there lived a trader, called Hermyadutt, who had a daughter,
-by name Madansena. One day, in the season of spring, she went with
-her female friends to a garden, and when there met a young man, named
-Somdatt, the son of the merchant Dharmdatt. This young man fell
-violently in love with her at first sight, and involuntarily went up
-to her, and,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span> taking hold of her hand, began to say, “If thou wilt not
-love me, I shall abandon my life on thy account.” The girl said, “You
-must not do so, for in doing this you will commit a great sin.” Somdatt
-replied, “Excessive love has pierced my heart. The fear of separation
-has burnt up my body. From the pain all my memory and intellect are
-lost, and at present, through my excess of love, I have no regard
-for virtue or sin. If you will give me a promise, I shall hope to
-live.” Madansena said, “On the fifth day from this I am going to be
-married, then I shall first meet you, and after that I shall go with my
-husband.” Having given this promise, and affirming it by oath, she went
-home.</p>
-
-<p>On the fifth day after this she was married, and her husband took her
-to his house. After several days her sisters-in-law forcibly took her
-to her husband at night, but she would have nothing to do with him;
-and, when he wished to embrace her, she jerked him with her hand, and
-told the story of her promise to the merchant’s son. Hearing this, her
-husband said, “If thou truly wishest to go with him, then go.”</p>
-
-<p>Having thus obtained her husband’s consent, she put on her best clothes
-and jewels, and started for the merchant’s house. On her way she met
-a thief, who asked her where she was going alone at that midnight
-hour so adorned. She replied, “That she was going to meet her lover.”
-On hearing this, the thief said, “Who is your protector here?” She
-replied, “Kama, the god of love, with his weapons is my protector.”
-She then told the whole story to the thief, and said, “Do not spoil my
-attire. I promise you that, on my return, I will give you up all my
-jewels.”</p>
-
-<p>The thief let her go, and she proceeded to the place where Somdatt was
-lying asleep. Awaking him suddenly, he arose bewildered, and asked her
-who she was, and why she had come. She replied, “I am the daughter of
-the merchant Hermyadutt. Do you not remember that you forcibly took my
-hand in the garden, and insisted on my giving you my oath, and I swore,
-at your bidding, that I would leave the man I was married to, and come
-to you. I have come accordingly; do to me whatever thou pleasest.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span></p>
-
-<p>Somdatt asked her if she had told the story to her husband, and she
-said that she had told him all, and that he had allowed her to come.
-The youth said: “This affair is like jewels without apparel; or food
-without clarified butter; or singing out of tune; all these things
-are alike. In the same way, dirty garments take away beauty, bad food
-saps the strength, a wicked wife takes away life, a bad son ruins the
-family. What a woman does not do is of little moment, for she does not
-give utterance to the thoughts of her mind; and what is at the tip of
-her tongue she does not reveal, and what she does, she does not tell
-of. God has created a woman in the world as a wonder.”</p>
-
-<p>After uttering these words, the merchant’s son said: “I will have
-nothing to do with the wife of a stranger.” Hearing this, she returned
-homeward. On her way she met the thief, and told him the whole story.
-He applauded her highly, and let her go, and she went to her husband
-and related to him the whole circumstance. Her husband, however,
-evinced no affection for her, but said, “The beauty of the cuckoo
-consists in its note alone; the beauty of a woman consists in her
-fidelity to her husband; the beauty of an ugly man is his knowledge;
-the beauty of a devotee is his patient suffering.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Having related so much, the sprite said, “O king! whose is the highest
-merit of these three?” Vickram replied: “The thief’s merit is the
-greatest.” “How,” asked the sprite? The king answered: “Seeing that her
-heart was set on another man, the husband let her go; through fear of
-the king, Somdatt let her alone; whereas there was no reason for the
-thief leaving her unmolested; therefore the thief is superior.”</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF A QUEER RELATIONSHIP</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There is a city in the south named Dhurumpoor, the king of which was
-named Mahabal. Once upon a time another king of the same region led
-an army against him, and invested his capital. After much fighting
-Mahabal was defeated, and, taking his wife and daughter with him, he
-fled by night into the jungle. After travelling several miles the day
-broke,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span> and a village came in view. Leaving the queen and princess
-seated beneath a tree, he himself went to the village to get something
-to eat, and in the meantime a band of Bhils, or hill robbers, came and
-surrounded him, and told him to throw down his arms.</p>
-
-<p>The king, on hearing this, commenced discharging arrows at them, and
-the Bhils did the same from their side. After fighting for some time,
-an arrow struck the king’s forehead with such force that he reeled and
-fell, and one of the Bhils came up and cut off his head. When the queen
-and the princess saw that the king was dead, they went back into the
-jungle weeping and beating their breasts. After going some distance
-they became tired and sat down, and began to be troubled with anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>Now, it happened that a king named Chandrasen, together with his
-son, while pursuing game, came into that very jungle, and the king,
-noticing the footprints of the two women, said to his son, “How have
-the footprints of human feet come into this vast forest?” The prince
-replied, “These are women’s footprints, a man’s foot is not so small.”
-The king said, “Come let us look for them, and if we find them I
-will give her whose foot is the largest to thee, and I will take the
-other for myself.” Having entered into this mutual compact, they went
-forward, and soon perceived the two women seated on the ground. They
-were delighted at finding them, and seating them on their horses in the
-manner agreed upon, they brought them home. The prince took possession
-of the queen, as her feet were the largest, and the king took the
-princess, and they were married accordingly.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Having related so much the sprite said, “Your majesty, what
-relationship will there be between the children of these two?” On
-hearing this, the king held his tongue through ignorance, being unable
-to describe the relationship.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Hierocles’ collection of jests is mostly short anecdotes of pedants who
-are shown up as simpletons or noodles.</p>
-
-<p>This principle of humor which is, of course, the rock bottom<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span> theory
-of the feeling of superiority induced by the discomfiture of the other
-man, often pins the jest on the pedant or scholar by way of emphasizing
-the point.</p>
-
-<p>Hierocles was an Alexandrian Neoplatonic philosopher who lived in the
-Fifth Century <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span></p>
-
-<p>With authorship of the usual legendary haziness the collection may not
-have been made by him at all, but it passes for his work.</p>
-
-<p>The stories themselves came into popular knowledge among the churchmen
-of the Middle Ages, and in their existing form probably date about the
-ninth century.</p>
-
-<p>As will be seen from the following examples, many of the jests are
-still being used as the basis of Twentieth century after dinner stories
-and Comic Weekly jokes.</p>
-
-
-<h4 class="smcap">Jests of Hierocles</h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A scholar meeting a physician, said, <i>I beg your pardon for never
-being sick, though you are one of my best friends</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar wishing to catch a mouse that eats his books, baited and set
-a trap, and sat by it to watch.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar wishing to teach his horse to eat little, gave him no food at
-all; and the horse dying, <i>How unlucky</i>, said he; <i>as soon as I
-had taught him to live without food he died</i>!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar meaning to sell a house, carried about a stone of it as a
-specimen.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar desiring to see if sleep became him, shut both his eyes, and
-went to the mirror.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar having bought a house, looked out of the window, and asked
-the passengers, <i>If the house became him</i>?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar dreaming he hit his foot on a nail, felt it pain him when he
-waked, and bound it up. Another scholar coming to see him, asked him,
-<i>Why he went to bed without shoes</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span></p>
-
-<p>A scholar being told the river had carried off a great part of his
-ground, answered, <i>What shall I say?</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar sealed a wine vessel he had, but his man bored the bottom and
-stole the liquor. He was astonished at the liquor’s diminishing, though
-the seal was entire; and another saying, “Perhaps it is taken out at
-the bottom.” The scholar answered, <i>Most foolish of men, it is not
-the under part, but the upper that is deficient</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar meeting a person, said to him, “I heard you were dead.” To
-which the other answered, “You see I am alive.” The scholar replied,
-<i>Perhaps so, but he who told me the contrary was a man of much more
-credit than you</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar hearing that crows lived two hundred years, bought one,
-saying, <i>I wish to make the experiment</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar being on board a ship in a tempest, when the rest seized upon
-different articles to swim ashore on, he laid hold of the anchor.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar hearing one of two twins was dead, when he met the other,
-asked, <i>Which of you was it that died? You or your brother?</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar coming to a ferry, went into the boat on horseback. Being
-asked the reason, he said, <i>I am in great haste</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar wanting money sold his books, and wrote to his father,
-<i>Rejoice with me, for now my books maintain me</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar sending his son to war, the youth said, “I shall bring
-you back an enemy’s head.” To which the scholar replied, <i>If you
-even lose your own head, I shall be happy to see you return in good
-health</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar in Greece receiving a letter from a friend, desiring him to
-buy some books there, neglected the business. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span> the friend arriving
-some time after, the scholar said, <i>I am sorry I did not receive your
-letter about the books</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A scholar, a bald man, and a barber, travelling together, agreed each
-to watch four hours at night, in turn, for the sake of security. The
-barber’s lot came first, who shaved the scholar’s head when asleep,
-then waked him when his turn came. The scholar scratching his head, and
-feeling it bald, exclaimed, <i>You wretch of a barber, you have waked
-the bald man instead of me</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Pope Alexander VII. asking the celebrated Greek, Leo Allatius, why he
-did not enter into orders? he answered, <i>Because I desire to have it
-in my power to marry if I chuse</i>. The pope adding, And why do you
-not marry? Leo replied, <i>Because I desire to have it in my power to
-enter into orders if I chuse</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Erasmus, himself a Satirist, collected thousands of the jests of the
-Greeks and Romans. These more often noted the wit than the witlessness
-of the speakers and include all degrees of wit from mere whimsicality
-to sharpest satire.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the best ones follow.</p>
-
-
-<h3>GREEK</h3>
-
-<p>A friend asking him how great glory was procured, Agesilaus answered,
-<i>By contempt of death</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Being asked the boundaries of the Spartan state, he answered, <i>The
-points of our spears</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One asking him why Sparta had no walls, he shewed him armed citizens,
-saying, <i>These are the walls of Sparta</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Being very fond of his children, he would sometimes ride about on a
-cane among them. A friend catching him at this sport, Agesilaus said,
-<i>Tell nobody till you are yourself a father</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span></p>
-
-<p>King Demaratus being asked in company whether he was silent through
-folly, or wisdom, answered, <i>A fool cannot be silent</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Cleomenes the son of Cleombrotus, when presented with some game-cocks,
-by a person who, enhancing the gift, said they were of a breed who
-would die before they yielded; answered, <i>Give me rather some of the
-breed that kill them</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Pausanias, when a physician told him “You look well,” answered, <i>Yes,
-you are not my physician</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the same was blamed by a friend, for speaking ill of a physician,
-whom he had never tried, he replied, <i>If I had tried him, I should
-not have lived to speak ill of him</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Charillus, being angry with his slave, said to him, <i>Were I not in a
-passion, I would kill thee</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A dancer saying to a Spartan, “You cannot stand so long on one leg as I
-can.” <i>True</i>, answered the Spartan, <i>but any goose can</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another Spartan mother giving her son his shield, when going to battle,
-said <i>Son, either this, or upon this</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another to her son who complained that his sword was short, said <i>Do
-you add a step to it</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One objecting to him his luxurious feeding, he showed him some
-dear-bought dish, and said, “Would not you buy this, if it were sold
-for a penny?” “Surely,” said the other. <i>Then</i>, said Aristippus,
-<i>I only give to luxury what you give to avarice</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Diogenes the Cynic, being in the house of Plato, strode over the
-carpets with his dirty feet, saying <i>I trample the pride of
-Plato</i>. <i>True</i>, said Plato, <i>but with a greater pride</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span></p>
-
-<p>Seeing a very unskilful archer shoot, he seated himself by the mark.
-The reason was <i>That he may not hit me</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Going to the town of Myndus, and seeing the gates very large, and the
-town small, he called out <i>Men of Myndus! shut your gates least the
-town should escape</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Being asked of what beast the bite is most dangerous, he answered <i>Of
-wild beasts, that of a slanderer: of tame, that of a flatterer</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Entering a dirty bath he said <i>Where are those washed who wash
-here?</i></p>
-
-<p>Being asked what wine he liked best, he said <i>Another’s</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Crates the Cynic of Thebes, being asked a remedy for love, said
-<i>Hunger is one remedy. Time is a better. The best is a rope</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Theophrastus to one who was silent in company said <i>If you are a fool
-you do wisely! if you are wise you do foolishly</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Empedocles saying to Xenophanes the philosopher “That a wise man could
-not be found.” <i>True</i>, answered Xenophanes, <i>for it must be a
-wise man who knows him</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Archelaus, to a prating barber, who asked how he would please to be
-shaved? answered, <i>In silence</i>.</p>
-
-<p>One asking Demosthenes what is the first point in eloquence, he
-answered, <i>Acting</i>. And the second? <i>Acting.</i> And the third?
-<i>Acting still.</i></p>
-
-<p>An Athenian who wanted eloquence, but was very brave, when another had,
-in a long and brilliant speech, promised great affairs, got up and
-said, <i>Men of Athens, all that he has said, I will do</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span></p>
-
-<p>Zeuxis entered into a contest of art with Parrhasius. The former
-painted grapes so truly that birds came and pecked at them. The latter
-delineated a cloth so exactly, that Zeuxis coming in, said, “Take away
-the cloth that we may see this piece.” And finding his error, said,
-<i>Parrhasius, thou hast conquered. I deceived but birds, thou an
-artist</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Zeuxis painted a boy carrying grapes: the birds came again and pecked.
-Some applauding, Zeuxis flew to the picture in a passion, saying, <i>My
-boy must be very ill painted</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Gnathena the courtesan, when a very small bottle of wine was brought
-in, with the praise that it was very old, answered, <i>It is very
-little for its age</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Philip of Macedon, sitting in judgment after dinner, an old woman
-receiving an unjust sentence, exclaimed, “I appeal.” “To whom!” said
-Philip. <i>To Philip, when sober</i>, answered the matron. The king
-took the lesson.</p>
-
-
-<h3>ROMAN</h3>
-
-<p>A soldier boasting of a scar in his face, from a wound in battle,
-Augustus said, <i>Yes, you will look back when you run away</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Fabia Dollabella saying, she was thirty years of age; Cicero answered,
-<i>It must be true, for I have heard it these twenty years</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing Lentulus, his son-in-law, a man of very small stature, walking
-up, with a long sword at his side, he called out, <i>Who has tied my
-son-in-law to that sword?</i></p>
-
-<p>One finding his shoes eaten with mice, in the morning when he rose,
-asked Cato, in great agitation, the meaning of the portent; who
-answered, <i>It is no prodigy that mice should eat shoes! had the shoes
-eaten the mice, it would have been indeed a prodigy</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span></p>
-
-<p>When Brutus was dissuaded from his last battle, as the jeopardy was
-great, he only said, <i>To-day all will be well, or I shall not
-care</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A large bull being produced in the amphitheatre, the hunter struck
-ten times, and missed. Gallienus, the emperor, who was present, sent
-the hunter a wreath: and all wondering, he said, <i>It is extremely
-difficult to miss such a mark so often</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One saying, that in Sicily he had bought a lamprey five feet long, for
-a trifle; Galba, the orator, to reprove the lye, said, <i>No wonder.
-They are found there so long, that the fishers constantly use them for
-cables.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Scipio Nasica going to visit Ennius the poet, was told by his
-maid-servant, that he was not at home, though he knew he was. A few
-days after Ennius came to see Nasica, who hearing his voice, called
-out, that he was not within. Then said Ennius, “What! Do not I hear
-your voice?” To which Nasica replied, <i>You are an impudent fellow. I
-believed your maid! and you will not believe myself</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Sulpitius Galba the orator, pretended to sleep once, while Mecenas made
-love to his wife, but seeing, at the same time, a slave stealing wine
-from the side-board, he cried, <i>Friend, I do not sleep for all</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>From the collection of Poggio we get other Italian stories.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Some clowns going to Arezzo, to buy a crucifix for their church, the
-carver seeing them very stupid, said, Do you want a living or a dead
-crucifix? They requiring time to consider: after much deliberation,
-returned, saying, <i>Make us a living one! for if our neighbours be not
-pleased with that, we can easily kill it</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>An inhabitant of a maritime town, looking out at a window, and seeing
-the ocean in a violent storm, and many vessels<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span> tossing about, said to
-a friend who was with him, “I wonder so many people go to sea, when so
-many die there.” <i>Do not you wonder</i>, answered the friend, <i>why
-so many people go to bed, when so many die there?</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Bardella da Mantoua, being led to execution, a priest, who was with
-him, said, “Be of good cheer, for to-night you will sup with the Virgin
-Mary, and with the apostles.” Bardella answered, <i>It will be a favour
-if you will go for me, for this is a fast-day with me</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Marcello da Scopeto, consulting Coccheto da Trievi, the physician, he
-wrote a receipt, and said, “Here, take this at three times; one every
-morning.” Marcello cut the paper in three; and made a shift to swallow
-it in three mornings.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Tosetto one day putting the physician Zerboico in a violent passion; he
-said, “Peace, rogue. Do not I know that your father was a bricklayer?”
-Tosetto answered, <i>Nobody knew this, save your father, who used to
-carry him lime</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The following are from <i>Il Cortegiano</i>, by Castiglione.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>An Italian Doctor of Law, seeing a criminal, who was whipped, walking
-very slowly during the operation, asked him why he did not hasten,
-that he might have fewer stripes; adding many arguments to shew that
-the slower he went, the more he must suffer. To which, the criminal,
-standing still, and looking him full in the face, replied with great
-gravity, <i>When you are whipped through the streets, walk as you
-please, and pray allow me to enjoy the same liberty</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Duke Frederic of Modena, having built a palace, was at a loss what to
-do with the rubbish. An abbot, standing by, told him to cause a pit
-to be digged large enough to contain it. “And what,” said Frederic,
-laughing, “shall I do with the earth which is dug out of the pit?” To
-which the abbot, with great wisdom, replied, <i>Make the pit so large
-as to hold all</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span></p>
-
-<p>Ponzio of Sila seeing a rustic who had two capons to sell, and agreeing
-on the price, begged him also to carry them to his lodging, where he
-was going, and he would pay him for his pains. Ponzio led him to a
-round bell-tower, separate from the church, near which was an alley:
-when standing still, Ponzio said, “I have wagered a couple of capons
-with a friend, that this bell-tower is not forty feet round, and have
-got a packthread here that we may try it.” So drawing the thread
-from his pocket, he gave one end to the rustic; bidding him hold it,
-while he went round. But when Ponzio came to the other side of the
-bell-tower, where the alley was, he fixed the thread with a nail, and
-ran down the alley with the capons. The peasant after long standing and
-bawling, went round, and had the nail and packthread for his capons and
-labour.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Not every tongue offers us collections to be translated, nor are all
-those that are available yet translated, but we may give a few of
-Spanish origin, taken from the collection of Melchior de Santa Cruz
-which are the flowers of Spanish Apothegms and wise or witty sayings.</p>
-
-<p>Like jesters of all other nations the Spaniards saw fit to heap
-sarcasms on the medical profession.</p>
-
-<p>We can only assume that in those days doctors had not reached the
-heights of sapience they have since attained.</p>
-
-<p>And also, we must remember that it was the custom for the unlearned to
-poke fun at the scholars, hence all professions felt the satiric lash.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At the table of Pope Alexander the sixth, the company debated one
-day, if it were advantageous to a state to have physicians in it? The
-greater part held not; and alleged, as a reason, that Rome had passed
-her first, and best, six hundred years without them. But the pope
-said, he was not of that opinion, <i>for were there no physicians,
-the multitude of mankind would be so great, that the world could not
-contain them</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A Biscayan clergyman, a follower of the cardinal Don Pedro Gonzales de
-Mendoza, pulled one day a pistol out of his pocket.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span> The cardinal saw
-him, and reproved him, saying, “That it was indecent for a clergyman
-to carry arms.” The Biscayan answered, “Most reverend lord, I do not
-carry arms to hurt any man, but to defend myself against the dogs of
-this country, which are remarkable for fierceness.” The cardinal said,
-“I can tell you a charm against dogs. You need only repeat any verse
-of the gospel of St. John.” The Biscayan replied, <i>Yes, my lord,
-but that does not apply in every case, for many of our dogs do not
-understand Latin</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The same cardinal said of the monks, who, by shaving the top and under
-part of the head, form a crown of hair around, that they had crowns
-which the most ambitious would not envy.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A bishop sent a present of six capons to brother Bernaldino Palomo, but
-the servant who carried them stole one. <i>Tell his lordship</i>, said
-Palomo, <i>that I kiss his hands for the five capons.&mdash;Do you kiss his
-hands for the other</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Juan de Ayala, lord of the town of Cabolla, slew a crane. His cook,
-when he dressed it, gave a leg to his mistress. When it was served up,
-Juan said, Where is the other leg? The cook answered, Cranes have but
-one leg. The day following, Juan took his cook to the chace with him,
-and perceiving a flock of cranes, which, as usual with that bird, all
-stood upon one leg, the cook said, Your worship sees the truth of what
-I said. Juan riding up to the birds called, <i>Ox, Ox, Ox</i>. The
-cranes being startled, put down the other leg: and Juan said, See, you
-knave, have they two legs or one? The cook answered, <i>Body of me,
-sir, had you called Ox, Ox, to the one you dined on yesterday it would
-have produced its other leg too</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Perico de Ayala, the buffoon of the Marquis de Villena, came to see
-Don Frances, the buffoon of Charles V. when he lay on his death bed.
-Perico seeing him in so bad a way, said, Brother Don Frances, I request
-you, by the great friendship which always was between us, that when you
-go to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span> heaven (which I believe must be very soon, since you lived so
-pious a life), you will beseech God to have mercy on my soul. Frances
-answered, <i>Tie a thread on this finger, that I may not forget it</i>.
-These were his last words; and he instantly expired.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The servants of a Spanish lord said, in his presence, that Don Diego
-Deza, archbishop of Seville, was very liberal to his domestics. The
-lord answered, So he may, for he has his wealth but for his life. A
-page replied, <i>And for how many lives has your lordship yours?</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Some thieves trying one night to break into a shop, in which two
-servant men lay; one of them called to the robbers. <i>Come back when
-we are asleep.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A rich man sent to call a physician for a slight disorder he had
-suffered the preceding night. The physician felt his pulse, and said,
-Sir, do you eat well? Yes, said the patient. Do you sleep well? I do.
-<i>Then</i>, said the physician, <i>I shall give you something to take
-away all that</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A labourer intending to bind his son apprentice to a butcher, asked a
-gentleman of the village, his friend, to whom he should put him. The
-answer was, <i>You had best bind him to the physician, for he is the
-best butcher I know</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A physician went to visit a young lady, daughter of a nobleman.
-Desiring her arm, to feel her pulse, the damsel, from pride, covered
-the place with the sleeve of her shift. The physician also drew down
-his coat sleeve, and applying it, said, <i>A linen pulse must have a
-woollen physician</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A bad painter, who had never produced any thing worth, went to another
-place, and commenced physician. A person who knew him, meeting him
-there, asked the reason of this change. <i>Because</i> said he, <i>if I
-now commit faults, the earth covers them</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span></p>
-
-<p>To a student of a college was brought a large dish of soup, and only
-one pea in it. He rose, and began to strip. His companion asking what
-was the matter, he answered, <i>I am going to swim after that pea</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The effects of a merchant, who was greatly in debt, being on sale, one
-bought a pillow, saying, <i>That it must be good to sleep on, since he
-could sleep on it, who owed so much</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The same merchant being asked, how he could sleep with such debts upon
-him? said, <i>The wonder is, how my creditors could sleep</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A Gallician, being at the war of Granada, received a wound in the head
-with an arrow. The surgeon arriving, said, upon examination, You are a
-dead man, the arrow has pierced your brain. The Gallician said, Look
-again, for that is impossible. The surgeon replied, It is so; I see it
-plain. <i>It cannot be</i>, said the Gallician: <i>for if I had any
-brain, I should not have been here</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A man went to borrow an ass of a neighbour, who said the ass was from
-home. Meanwhile the animal chanced to bray: upon which the borrower
-exclaimed, How! did you not tell me the ass was abroad? The other
-replied, in a passion, <i>Will you prefer the ass’s word to mine?</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A passenger going to Peru, a great storm arose; and the master of the
-vessel ordered, that the most burdensome articles that every one had
-should be thrown into the sea, to lighten the vessel. Upon which this
-passenger ran and brought up his wife, saying, <i>That she was the most
-burdensome article he had</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A squire being asked, why he had married a deaf wife? said, <i>In hopes
-she was also dumb</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The German nation made small pretence to wit or humor. What we have of
-their early efforts is either gross or stupid.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span></p>
-
-<p>A few specimens taken from their mediæval Jest collections will quickly
-prove this.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A malicious woman often beat her husband; being reproved for it, and
-told that her husband was her head, she answered, <i>May not I beat my
-own head as I please?</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Some Dutchmen conversing in a bookseller’s shop at Leyden, an unknown
-German came in, upon which one of them exclaimed, “Why is Saul among
-the prophets?” The German retorted: <i>He is seeking his father’s
-asses</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A very ignorant priest saying mass, saw on the margin of his book,
-<i>Salta per tria</i> (skip three); meaning that he should find the
-rest of the office three leaves further on; upon which he leaped three
-steps forwards from the altar. The clowns about him, thinking he had
-suddenly gone mad, took and bound him, and carried him home.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One being asked, what made him bald? said, <i>My hair</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A lady asking that celebrated general, prince Maurice, who was the
-first captain of the age? he answered, <i>The marquis of Spinola is the
-second</i>. He thereby gave to understand, that he knew himself to be
-the first; but did not chuse either to say so, or tell a falsehood.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Two ladies of high rank, disputing the precedence in a procession, the
-Emperor, Charles V. desired they would make him their arbiter. Having
-heard the reasons on both sides, he found no other way to end the
-difference, than by ordering that the most foolish should go first.
-After which there were as many disputes who should go last; till they
-agreed, that each should be foolish in her turn.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Charles V. going to see the new cloister of the Dominicans at Vienna,
-overtook a peasant, who was carrying a sucking pig, and whose cries
-were so disagreeable to the emperor, that,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span> after many expressions of
-impatience, he said to the peasant, “My friend, do not you know how
-to silence a sucking pig?” The poor man said modestly, that he really
-did not, and should be happy to learn. “Take it by the tail,” said
-the Emperor. The peasant finding this succeed upon trial, turned to
-the Emperor, and said, <i>Faith, friend, you must have been longer at
-the trade than me, for you understand it better</i>. An answer which
-furnished repeated laughter to Charles and his court.</p>
-
-
-<h3>EPIGRAMS</h3>
-
-<p>Collections of Mediæval Epigrams are both numerous and lengthy and
-not infrequently their comparative value depends largely on the
-translator’s learning or talent.</p>
-
-<p>For instance a distich of Plato’s is thus translated by Coleridge,</p>
-
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE THIEF AND THE SUICIDE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Jack, finding gold, left a rope on the ground;</div>
- <div>Bill, missing his gold, used the rope which he found.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">and is thus rendered by Shelley,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A man was about to hang himself,</div>
- <div>Finding a purse, then threw away his rope;</div>
- <div>The owner, coming to reclaim his pelf,</div>
- <div>The halter found and used it. So is Hope</div>
- <div>Changed for Despair&mdash;one laid upon the shelf,</div>
- <div>We take the other. Under heaven’s high cope</div>
- <div>Fortune is God&mdash;all you endure and do</div>
- <div>Depends on circumstance as much as you.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>But the modernization is not just now our pursuit, so the epigrams
-will be given in something approaching chronological order and the
-translator’s name mentioned when known.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Plato</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>THE MISER AND THE MOUSE</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Thou little rogue, what brings thee to my house?”</div>
- <div>Said a starv’d miser to a straggling mouse.</div>
- <div>“Friend,” quoth the mouse, “thou hast no cause to fear;</div>
- <div>I only <i>lodge</i> with thee, I <i>eat</i> elsewhere.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Lucillius</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>A MISER’S DREAM</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Flint dream’d he gave a feast, ’twas regal fare,</div>
- <div>And hang’d himself in ’s sleep in sheer despair.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Nicarchus</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>THE GREAT CONTENTION</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Three dwarfs contended by a state decree,</div>
- <div>Which was the least and lightest of the three.</div>
- <div>First, Hermon came, and his vast skill to try,</div>
- <div>With thread in hand leap’d through a needle’s eye.</div>
- <div>Forth from a crevice Demas then advanc’d</div>
- <div>And on a spider’s web securely danc’d.</div>
- <div>What feat show’d Sospiter in this high quarrel?&mdash;</div>
- <div>No eyes could see him, and he won the laurel.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Unknown Author</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>ON LATE-ACQUIRED WEALTH</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Poor in my youth, and in life’s later scenes</div>
- <div class="i1">Rich to no end, I curse my natal hour,</div>
- <div>Who nought enjoy’d while young, denied the means;</div>
- <div class="i1">And nought when old enjoy’d, denied the power.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A VOICE FROM THE GRAVE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Phido nor hand nor touch to me applied;</div>
- <div>Fever’d, I thought but of his name&mdash;and died.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON THE INCONSTANCY OF WOMAN’S LOVE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My Fair says, she no spouse but me</div>
- <div>Would wed, though Jove himself were he.</div>
- <div class="i1">She says it: but I deem</div>
- <div>That what the fair to lovers swear</div>
- <div>Should be inscribed upon the air,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or in the running stream.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Catullus</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>ON HIS OWN LOVE</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>That I love thee, and yet that I hate thee, I feel;</div>
- <div class="i1">Impatient, thou bid’st me my reasons explain:</div>
- <div>I tell thee, nor more for my life can reveal,</div>
- <div class="i1">That I love thee, and hate thee&mdash;and tell it with pain.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Aly Ben Ahmed Ben Mansour</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>TO THE VIZIR CASSIM OBID ALLAH, ON THE DEATH OF ONE OF HIS SONS</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Poor Cassim! thou art doom’d to mourn</div>
- <div class="i1">By destiny’s decree;</div>
- <div>Whatever happen it must turn</div>
- <div class="i1">To misery for thee.</div>
- <div>Two sons hadst thou, the one thy pride,</div>
- <div class="i1">The other was thy pest;</div>
- <div>Ah, why did cruel death decide</div>
- <div class="i1">To snatch away the best?</div>
- <div>No wonder thou should’st droop with woe,</div>
- <div class="i1">Of such a child bereft;</div>
- <div>But now thy tears must doubly flow,</div>
- <div class="i1">For ah!&mdash;the other’s left.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">The Khaliph Radhi Billah</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>TO A LADY UPON SEEING HER BLUSH</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Leila! whene’er I gaze on thee</div>
- <div>My alter’d cheek turns pale,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span></div>
- <div>While upon thine, sweet maid, I see</div>
- <div class="i1">A deep’ning blush prevail.</div>
- <div>Leila, shall I the cause impart</div>
- <div class="i1">Why such a change takes place?</div>
- <div>The crimson stream deserts my heart,</div>
- <div class="i1">To mantle on thy face.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Janus Pannonius</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>ON AURISPA</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Aurispa nothing writes though learn’d, for he</div>
- <div>By a wise silence seems more learn’d to be.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Actius Sannazarius</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>ON AUFIDIUS</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A hum’rous fellow in a tavern late,</div>
- <div>Being drunk and valiant, gets a broken pate;</div>
- <div>The surgeon with his instruments and skill,</div>
- <div>Searches his skull, deeper and deeper still,</div>
- <div>To feel his brains, and try if they were sound;</div>
- <div>And, as he keeps ado about the wound,</div>
- <div>The fellow cries&mdash;Good surgeon, spare your pains,</div>
- <div>When I began this brawl I had no brains.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Euricius Cordus</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>TO PHILOMUSUS</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If only when they’re dead, you poets praise,</div>
- <div>I own I’d rather have your blame always.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE DOCTOR’S APPEARANCE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Three faces wears the doctor; when first sought</div>
- <div>An angel’s&mdash;and a god’s the cure half wrought:</div>
- <div>But when, that cure complete, he seeks his fee,</div>
- <div>The devil looks then less terrible than he.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Georgius Buchananus</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>TO ZOILUS</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>With industry I spread your praise,</div>
- <div>With equal, you my censure blaze;</div>
- <div>But, Zoilus, all in vain we do&mdash;</div>
- <div>The world nor credits me nor you.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON LEONORA</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i3">There’s a lie on thy cheek in its roses,</div>
- <div class="i4">A lie echoed back by thy glass.</div>
- <div class="i3">Thy necklace on greenhorns imposes,</div>
- <div class="i4">And the ring on thy finger is brass.</div>
- <div>Yet thy tongue, I affirm, without giving an inch back,</div>
- <div>Outdoes the sham jewels, rouge, mirror, and pinchbeck.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Johannes Secundus</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>ON CHARINUS, THE HUSBAND OF AN UGLY WIFE</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Your wife’s possest of such a face and mind,</div>
- <div>So charming that, and this so soft and kind,</div>
- <div>So smooth her forehead, and her voice so sweet,</div>
- <div>Her words so tender and her dress so neat;</div>
- <div>That would kind Jove, whence man all good derives,</div>
- <div>In wondrous bounty send me three such wives,</div>
- <div>Dear happy husband, take it on my word,</div>
- <div>To Pluto I’d give two, to take the third.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><span class="smcap">Theodorus Beza</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In age, youth, and manhood, three wives have I tried,</div>
- <div>Whose qualities rare all my wants have supplied.</div>
- <div>The first, goaded on by the ardour of youth,</div>
- <div>I woo’d for the sake of her person, forsooth:</div>
- <div>The second I took for the sake of her purse;</div>
- <div>And the third&mdash;for what reason? I wanted a nurse.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Paulus Thomas</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>ON CELSUS</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>With self love Celsus burns: is he not blest?</div>
- <div>For thus without a rival he may rest.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Stephanus Paschasius</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>MARRIED LIFE</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>No day, no hour, no moment, is my house</div>
- <div>Free from the clamour of my scolding spouse!</div>
- <div>My servants all are rogues; and so am I,</div>
- <div>Unless, for quiet’s sake, I join the cry.</div>
- <div>I aim, in all her freaks, my wife to please;</div>
- <div>I wage domestic war, in hopes of ease.</div>
- <div>I vain the hopes! and my fond bosom bleeds,</div>
- <div>To feel how soon to peace mad strife succeeds:</div>
- <div>To find, with servants jarring, or my wife,</div>
- <div>The worst of lawsuits is a married life.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Johannes Audœmus</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>TO A FRIEND IN DISTRESS</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I wish thy lot, now bad, still worse, my friend;</div>
- <div>For when at worst, they say, things always mend.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ADVICE TO PONTICUS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thou nothing giv’st, but dying wilt: then die:</div>
- <div>He giveth twice, who giveth speedily.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Balthasar Bonifacius</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>DANGEROUS LOVE</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>All whom I love die young; Zoilus, I’ll try,</div>
- <div>Tho’ loath’d, to love thee&mdash;that thou too may’st die.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span></p>
-
-<p>From Bhartrihari, an Indian philosopher who flourished about the ninth
-century, we select the following cynical paragraphs.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I believed that one woman was devoted to me, but she is now attracted
-by another man, and another man takes pleasure in her, while a second
-woman interests herself in me. Curses on them both, and on the god of
-love, and on the other woman, and on myself.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The fundamentally ignorant man is easily led, and the wise man still
-more easily; but not even the Almighty Himself can exercise any
-influence on the smatterer.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A man may tear the pearl from between the teeth of the crocodile; he
-may steer his ship over the roughest seas; he may twine a serpent round
-his brow like a laurel; but he cannot convince a foolish and stubborn
-opponent.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A man may squeeze oil from sand; he may slake his thirst from the well
-in a mirage; he may even obtain possession of a hare’s horn; but he
-cannot convince a foolish and stubborn opponent.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A dog will eat with delight the most noisome and decaying bones, and
-will pay no attention even if the ruler of the gods stands before
-him&mdash;and in like manner a mean man takes no heed of the worthlessness
-of his belongings.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Our nobility of birth may pass away; our virtues may fall into decay:
-our moral character may perish as if thrown over a precipice: our
-family may be burnt to ashes, and a thunderbolt may dash away our power
-like an enemy: let us keep a firm grip on our money, for without this
-the whole assembly of virtues are but as blades of glass.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Let a man be wealthy, and he shall be quite wise, learned in the sacred
-writings and of good birth; virtuous, handsome and eloquent. Gold
-attracts all the virtues to itself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span></p>
-
-<p>The same portion of the sky that forms a circle round the moon by night
-also forms a circle round the sun by day How great is the labour of
-both!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A sour heart; a face hardened with inward pride and a nature as
-difficult to penetrate as the narrowest of mountain passes&mdash;these
-things are known to be characteristic of women: their mind is known
-by the wise to be as changeable as the drop of dew on the lotus leaf.
-Faults develop in a woman as she grows up, exactly as poisonous
-branches sprout from the creeper.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The beautiful features of a woman are praised by the poets&mdash;her breasts
-are compared to pots of gold: her face to the shining moon, and her
-hips to the forehead of an elephant: nevertheless the beauty of a woman
-merits no praise.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>From <i>The Baharistan</i>, the work of Jami, a Persian poet and
-philosopher.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Bahlúl being asked to count the fools of Basrah, replied: “They are
-without the confines of computation. If you ask me, I will count the
-wise men, for they are no more than a limited few.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A learned man being annoyed while writing a letter to one of his
-confidential friends, at the conduct of a person who, seated at his
-side, glanced out of the corner of his eye at his writing, wrote: “Had
-not a hireling thief been seated at my side and engaged in reading my
-letter I should have written to thee all my secrets.” The man said:
-“By God, my lord, I have neither read nor even looked at thy letter.”
-“Fool!” exclaimed the other; “how then canst thou say what thou now
-sayest?”</p>
-
-<p>A mendicant once coming to beg something at the door of a house, the
-master of it called out to him from the interior:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span> “Pray excuse me: the
-women of the house are not here.” The beggar retorted: “I wish for a
-morsel of bread, not to embrace the women of the house.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A certain person made a claim of ten dirams on Júhí. The judge
-enquired: “Hast thou any testimony to offer?” On the answer being in
-the negative he continued: “Shall I put him on his oath?” “Of what
-value is <i>his</i> oath?” said the man in reply. “O judge of the
-Faithful,” then proposed Júhí in his turn, “there lives in my quarter
-of the town an Imám, temperate, truthful and beneficent, send for him
-and put him on his oath instead of me, that this man’s mind may be
-easy.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A poet read me once a wretched ode&mdash;</div>
- <div>Verse of the kind where “alif” finds no place.</div>
- <div>I said the kind of verse that <i>thou</i> should’st make,</div>
- <div>Is that in which <i>no</i> letter we could trace.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Jáhiz relates: “I never experienced so much shame as this event
-occasioned me. One day a woman took my hand and led me to the shop of
-a master metal founder, saying to him: ‘Be it thus formed.’ I being
-puzzled to know what this conduct signified, questioned the master, who
-in reply said: ‘She had ordered me to make her a figure in the form
-of Satan. When I told her that I did not know in what semblance to
-make it, she brought thee, as thou knowest, and said: ‘Make it in this
-semblance.’”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The same learned man, too, gives us this relation: “As I was once
-standing in the street, in conversation with a friend, a woman came and
-standing opposite me, gazed in my face. When her staring had exceeded
-all bounds, I said to my slave: ‘Go to that woman and ask her what she
-seeks.’ The slave returning to me thus reported her answer: ‘I wished
-to inflict some punishment on my eyes which had committed a great
-fault, and could find none more severe for them than the sight of thy
-ugly face.’”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span></p>
-
-<p>A person who perceived an ugly man asking pardon for his sins, and
-praying for deliverance from the fire of hell, said to him: “Wherefore,
-O friend, with such a countenance as thou hast, would’st thou cheat
-hell, and give such a face reluctantly to the fire?”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>An assembly of people being seated together, and engaged in discussing
-the merits and defects of men, one of them observed: “Whoever has not
-two seeing eyes is but half a man; and whoever has not in his house a
-beautiful bride is but half a man; finally he who cannot swim in the
-sea is but half a man.” A blind man in the company who had no wife, and
-could not swim, called out to him: “O my dear friend, thou hast laid
-down an extraordinary principle, and cast me so far out of the circle
-of manhood, that still half a man is required before I can take the
-name of one who is no man.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A Beduin having lost a camel, made an oath that when he found it he
-would sell it for one diram. When however he found it, repenting of
-his oath, he tied a cat to its neck, and called out: “Who will buy
-the camel for one diram and the cat for a hundred dirams; but both
-together, as I will not part them.” “How cheap,” said a person who had
-arrived there, “would be this camel, had it not this collar attached to
-its neck!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A Beduin who had lost a camel, proclaimed: “Whoever brings me my camel
-shall have two camels as a reward.” “Out, man!” said they to him; “what
-kind of business is this? Is the whole ass load of less value than
-a small additional bundle laid upon it?” “You have this excuse for
-your words,” replied he, “that you have never tasted the pleasure of
-finding, and the sweetness of recovering what has been lost.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A Khalíf was partaking of food with an Arab from the desert. During
-the repast as his glance fell upon the Arab’s portion he saw in it a
-hair, and said: “O Arab, take that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span> hair out of thy food.” The Arab
-exclaimed: “It is impossible to eat at the table of one who looks so at
-his guest’s portion as to perceive a hair in it.” Then withdrawing his
-hand he swore never again to partake of food at his table.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A weaver left a deposit in the house of a learned man. After a few
-days had elapsed, finding some necessity for it, he paid him a visit
-and found him seated at the door of his house giving instruction to a
-number of pupils who were standing in a row before him. “O Professor,”
-said the man, “I am in want of the deposit which I left.” “Be seated
-a moment,” replied the other, “until I have finished the lesson.” The
-weaver sat down, but the lesson lasted a long time and he was pressed
-for time. Now that learned man had a habit when giving lessons, of
-wagging his head, and the weaver seeing this, and fancying that to
-give a lesson was merely to wag the head, said: “Rise up, O Professor,
-and make me thy deputy till thy return: let me wag my head in place
-of thee, and do thou bring out my deposit, for I am in a hurry.” The
-learned man, hearing this, laughed and said:</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In public halls the city jurist boasts</div>
- <div class="i1">That all, obscure or clear, to him is known;</div>
- <div>But if thou ask him aught, his answer mark:&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">A gesture with the hand or head alone.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>From a collection called <i>The Pleasantries of Cogia Nasr Eddin
-Effendi</i>, the typical noodle of the Turks.</p>
-
-<p>Cogia Effendi one day went into a garden, pulled up some carrots and
-turnips and other kinds of vegetables, which he found, putting some
-into a sack and some into his bosom; suddenly the gardener coming up,
-laid hold of him, and said, “What are you seeking here?” The Cogia,
-being in great consternation, not finding any other reply, answered,
-“For some days past a great wind has been blowing, and that wind blew
-me hither.” “But who pulled up these vegetables,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span> said the gardener?
-“As the wind blew very violently,” replied the Cogia, “it cast me here
-and there, and whatever I laid hold of in the hope of saving myself
-remained in my hands.” “Ah,” said the gardener, “but who filled the
-sack with them?” “Well,” said the Cogia, “that is the very question I
-was about to ask myself when you came up.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day Cogia Nasr Eddin Effendi said, “O Mussulmen, give thanks to God
-Most High that He did not give the camel wings; for, had He given them,
-they would have perched upon your houses and chimneys, and have caused
-them to tumble upon your heads.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day the, Cogia saw a great many ducks playing on the top of a
-fountain. The Cogia, running towards them, said, “I’ll catch you”;
-whereupon they all rose up and took to flight. The Cogia, taking a
-little bread in his hand, sat down on the side of the fountain, and
-crumbling the bread in the fountain, fell to eating. A person coming
-up, said, “What are you eating?” “Duck broth,” replied the Cogia.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day the Cogia went with Cheragh Ahmed to the den of a wolf, in
-order to see the cubs. Said the Cogia to Ahmed: “Do you go in.” Ahmed
-did so. The old wolf was abroad, but presently returning, tried to get
-into the cave to its young. When it was about half way in the Cogia
-seized hard hold of it by the tail. The wolf in its struggles cast a
-quantity of dust into the eyes of Ahmed. “Hallo, Cogia,” he cried,
-“What does this dust mean.” “If the wolf’s tail breaks,” said the
-Cogia, “You’ll soon see what the dust means.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day a thief got into the Cogia’s house. Cries his wife, “O Cogia,
-there is a thief in the house.” “Don’t make any disturbance,” says the
-Cogia. “I wish to God that he may find something, so that I may take it
-from him.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Cogia Effendi, every time he returned to his house, was in the habit
-of bringing a piece of liver, which his wife always<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span> gave to a common
-woman, placing before the Cogia leavened patties to eat when he came
-home in the evening. One day the Cogia said, “O wife, every day I bring
-home a liver: where do they all go to?” “The cat runs away with all
-of them,” replied the wife. Therefore the Cogia getting up, put his
-hatchet in the trunk and locked it up. Says his wife to the Cogia,
-“For fear of whom do you lock up the hatchet?” “For fear of the cat,”
-replied the Cogia. “What should the cat do with the hatchet?” said the
-wife. “Why,” replied the Cogia, “as he takes a fancy to the liver,
-which costs two aspres, is it not likely that he will take a fancy to
-the hatchet, which costs four?”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day the Cogia, being out on a journey, encamped along with a
-caravan, and tied up his horse along with the others. When it was
-morning the Cogia could not find his horse amongst the rest, not
-knowing how to distinguish it; forthwith taking a bow and arrow in his
-hand, he said, “Men, men, I have lost my horse.” Every one laughing,
-took his own horse; and the Cogia looking, saw a horse which he
-instantly knew to be his own. Forthwith placing his right foot in the
-stirrup, he mounted the horse, so that his face looked to the horse’s
-tail. “O Cogia,” said they, “why do you mount the horse the wrong way?”
-“It is not my fault,” said he, “but the horse’s, for the horse is
-left-handed.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day as the Cogia was travelling in the Derbend he met a shepherd.
-Said the shepherd to the Cogia. “Art thou a faquir?” “Yes,” said the
-Cogia. Said the shepherd, “See these seven men who are lying here, they
-were men like you whom I killed because they could not answer questions
-which I asked. Now, in the first place let us come to an understanding;
-if you can answer my questions let us hold discourse, if not, let us
-say nothing.” Says the Cogia, “What may your questions be?” Said the
-shepherd, “The moon, when it is new, is small, afterwards it increases,
-until it looks like a wheel; after the fifteenth, it diminishes, and
-does not remain; then again, there is a little one, of the size of
-Hilal,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span> which does remain. Now what becomes of the old moons?” Says
-the Cogia. “How is it that you don’t know a thing like that? They take
-those old moons and make lightning of them, have you not seen them when
-the heaven thunders, glittering like so many swords?” “Bravo, Fakeer,”
-said the shepherd. “Well art thou acquainted with the matter, I had
-come to the same conclusion myself.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day the Cogia’s wife, in order to plague the Cogia, boiled some
-broth exceedingly hot, brought it into the room and placed it on the
-table. The wife then, forgetting that it was hot, took a spoon and
-put some into her mouth, and, scalding herself, began to shed tears.
-“O, wife,” said the Cogia, “what is the matter with you; is the broth
-hot?” “Dear Efendy,” said the wife, “my mother, who is now dead loved
-broth very much; I thought of that, and wept on her account.” The Cogia
-thinking that what she said was truth, took a spoonful of the broth and
-burning his mouth began to cry and bellow. “What is the matter with
-you,” said his wife; “why do you cry?” Said the Cogia, “You cry because
-your mother is gone, but I cry because her daughter is here.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day a man came to the house of the Cogia and asked him to lend him
-his ass. “He is not at home,” replied the Cogia. But it so happened
-that the ass began to bray within. “O Cogia Efendy,” said the man, “you
-say that the ass is not at home, and there he is braying within.” “What
-a strange fellow you are!” said the Cogia. “You believe the ass, but
-will not believe a grey bearded man like me.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day the Cogia roasted a goose, and set out in order to carry it to
-the Emperor. On the way, feeling very hungry, he cut off one leg and
-ate it. Coming into the presence of the Emperor, he placed the goose
-before him. On seeing it, Tamerlank said to himself, “The Cogia is
-making game of me,” and was very angry, and demanded, “How happens it
-that this goose has but one foot?” Said the Cogia, “In our country all
-the geese have only one foot. If you disbelieve<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span> me, look at the geese
-by the side of that fountain.” Now at that time there was a flock of
-geese by the rim of the fountain, all of whom were standing on one leg.
-Timour instantly ordered that all the drummers should at once play up;
-the drummers began to strike with their sticks, and forthwith all the
-geese stood on both legs. On Timour saying, “Don’t you see that they
-have two legs?” the Cogia replied, “If you keep up that drumming you
-yourself will presently have four.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day the Cogia’s wife, having washed the Cogia’s kaftan, hung it
-upon a tree to dry; the Cogia going out saw, as he supposed, a man
-standing in the tree with his arms stretched out. Says the Cogia to his
-wife, “O wife, go and fetch me my bow and arrow.” His wife fetched and
-brought them to him; the Cogia taking an arrow, shot it and pierced the
-kaftan and stretched it on the ground; then returning, he made fast
-his door and lay down to sleep. Going out in the morning he saw that
-what he had shot was his own kaftan; thereupon, sitting down, he cried
-aloud, “O God, be thanked; if I had been in it I should have certainly
-been killed.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day as the Cogia was going to his house, he met a number of
-students, and said to them, “Gentlemen, pray this night come to our
-house and taste a sup of the old father’s broth.” “Very good,” said the
-students, and following the Cogia, came to the house. “Pray enter,”
-said he, and brought them into the house, then going up to where his
-wife was, “O wife,” said he, “I have brought some travellers that we
-may give them a cup of broth.” “O master,” said his wife, “is there
-oil in the house or rice, or have you brought any that you wish to
-have broth?” “Bless me,” said the Cogia, “give me the broth pan,” and
-snatching it up, he forthwith ran to where the students were, and
-exclaimed, “Pray, pardon me gentlemen, but had there been oil or rice
-in our house, this is the pan in which I would have served the broth up
-to you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span></p>
-
-<p>One day the Cogia going into a person’s garden climbed up into an
-apricot tree and began to eat the apricots. The master coming said,
-“Cogia, what are you doing here?” “Dear me,” said the Cogia, “don’t
-you see that I am a nightingale sitting in the apricot tree?” Said the
-gardener, “Let me hear you sing.” The Cogia began to warble. Whereupon
-the other fell to laughing, and said: “Do you call that singing?” “I am
-a Persian nightingale,” said the Cogia, “and Persian nightingales sing
-in this manner.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>From <i>The Book of Laughable Stories</i>, collected by Gregory Bar
-Hebræus in the thirteenth century. The collection includes some seven
-hundred stories taken from the literary products of all the Oriental
-countries available at that time.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Bazarjamhir said, “When thou dost not know which of two things is the
-better for thee [to do], take counsel with thy wife and do the opposite
-of that which she saith, for she will only counsel [thee to do] the
-things which are injurious to thee.”</p>
-
-<p>A certain woman saw Socrates as they were carrying him along to crucify
-him, and she wept and said, “Woe is me, for they are about to slay thee
-without having committed any offence.” And Socrates made answer unto
-her, saying, “O foolish woman, wouldst thou have me also commit some
-crime that I might be punished like a criminal?”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Alexander [the Great] saw among the soldiers of his army a man called
-Alexander who continually took to flight in the time of war, and he
-said to him, “It is said that upon the ring of Pythagoras there was
-written, ‘The evil which is not perpetual is better than the good which
-is not perpetual.’”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is said that upon the ring of Pythagoras there was written, “The
-evil which is not perpetual is better than the good which is not
-perpetual.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was said to Socrates, “Which of the irrational animals is not
-beautiful?” And he replied, “Woman,” referring to her folly.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another of the sages said, “The members of a man’s household are the
-moth of his money.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A certain man who had once been a painter left off painting and became
-a physician. And when it was said to him, “Why hast thou done this?” he
-replied, “The errors [made] in painting [all] eyes see and scrutinize;
-but the mistakes of the healing art the ground covereth.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another king was asked by his sages, “To what limit hath thine
-understanding reached?” And he replied, “To the extent that I believe
-no man, neither do I put any confidence in any man whatsoever.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another king said, “If men only knew how pleasant to me it is to
-forgive faults there is not one of them who would not commit them.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A poet said unto a certain avaricious man, “Why dost thou never bid me
-to a feast with thee?” He replied to him, “Because thou eatest very
-heartily indeed, besides thou swallowest so hurriedly; and whilst thou
-art still eating one morsel thou art getting ready for the next.” The
-poet said to him, “What wouldst thou have then? Wouldst thou have me
-whilst I am eating one morsel to stand up and bow the knee, and then
-take another?”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another sage said, “I hold every man who saith that he hateth riches to
-be a liar until he establisheth a sure proof thereof from what he hath
-gathered together, and having established his belief it is, at the same
-time, quite certain that he is a fool!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another miser whilst quarreling violently with his neighbour was asked
-by a certain man, “Why art thou fighting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span> with him?” He replied to him,
-“I had eaten a roasted head, and I threw the bones outside my door, so
-that my friends might rejoice and mine enemies be sorry when they saw
-in what a luxurious manner I was living; and this fellow rose up and
-took the bones and threw them before his own door.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another poet was questioned by a man concerning a certain miser,
-saying, “Who eateth with him at his table?” and the poet replied,
-“Flies.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To a certain comedian it was said, “When a cock riseth up in the early
-morning hours, why doth he hold one foot in the air?” He replied, “If
-he should lift up both feet together he would fall down.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another actor went into his house and found a sieve laid upon his
-couch, and he went and hung himself up on the peg in the wall. His wife
-said to him, “What is this? Art thou possessed of a devil?” And he
-said to her, “Nay, but when I saw the sieve in my place, I went to its
-place.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another fool had two hunting dogs, one black and the other white. And
-the governor said to him, “Give me one of them.” The man said to him,
-“Which of them dost thou want?” and the governor said, “The black one.”
-The man said, “The black one I love more than the white,” and the
-governor replied, “Then give me the white one.” And the foolish man
-said to him, “The white one I love more than both put together.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another fool said, “My father went twice to Jerusalem, and there did he
-die and was buried, but I do not know which time he died, whether it
-was during the first visit or the last.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When another fool was told, “Thy ass is stolen,” he said, “Blessed be
-God that I was not upon him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span></p>
-
-<p>Another silly man buried some zûzê coins in the plain, and made a
-fragment of a cloud a mark of the place where it was. And some days
-after he came to carry away the money, but could not find the place to
-do so, and he said, “Consider now; the zûzê were in the ground, and
-they must have been carried away by some people. For who can steal the
-cloud which is in the sky? And what arm could reach there unto? This
-matter is one worthy to be wondered at.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another simpleton was asked, “How many days’ journey is it between
-Aleppo and Damascus?” and he replied, “Twelve; six to go and six to
-come back.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another silly man having gone on a journey to carry on his trade wrote
-to his father, saying, “I have been ill with a very grievous sickness,
-and if any one else had been in my place he would not have been able to
-live.” And his father made him answer, saying, “Believe me, my son, if
-thou hadst died thou wouldst have grieved me sadly, and I would never
-have spoken to thee again in the whole course of my life.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A certain lunatic put on a skin cloak with the hairy side outwards,
-and when people asked him why he did so, he replied, “If God had known
-that it was better to have the hairy side of the skin cloak inwards, He
-would not have created the wool on the outside of the sheep.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another fool owned a house together with some other folk, and he said
-one day, “I want to sell the half of it which is my share and buy the
-other half, so that the whole building may be mine.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>From earliest times the stupid or blundering fellow has been the butt
-of his comrades’ shafts of wit or sarcasm.</p>
-
-<p>The feeling of superiority, so delightful to the human mind, found easy
-expression in jeering at the discomfiture of the noodle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span></p>
-
-<p>More often than not, noodle stories are told of residents of some
-particular locality or district, whose people are looked upon as
-simpletons. Doubtless this originally meant merely country people, who
-were provincial or outlandish compared to the city bred.</p>
-
-<p>But as the Greeks chose Bœotia for their noodle colony and the Persians
-guyed the people of Emessa, so each country has had a location or a
-community for its laughing stock down to the Gothamites of the English.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule the same noodle stories are found in many languages, and only
-an exhaustive study of comparative folk lore can adequately consider
-the various tales.</p>
-
-<p>As an instance, there is the story, of Eastern origin, that may be
-found in the booby tales of all nations. It has come down in late years
-in the form of a play, called in a German version, “Der Tisch Ist
-Gedeckt” and in an English form, “The Obstinate Family.”</p>
-
-<p>In the Arabian tale,</p>
-
-<p>A blockhead, having married his pretty cousin, gave the customary feast
-to their relations and friends. When the festivities were over, he
-conducted his guests to the door, and from absence of mind neglected
-to shut it before returning to his wife. “Dear cousin,” said his wife
-to him when they were alone, “go and shut the street door.” “It would
-be strange indeed,” he replied, “if I did such a thing. Am I just made
-a bridegroom, clothed in silk, wearing a shawl and a dagger set with
-diamonds, and am I to go and shut the door? Why, my dear, you are
-crazy. Go and shut it yourself.” “Oh, indeed!” exclaimed the wife.
-“Am I, young, robed in a dress, with lace and precious stones&mdash;am I
-to go and shut the street door? No, indeed! It is you who are become
-crazy, and not I. Come, let us make a bargain,” she continued; “and
-let the first who speaks go and fasten the door.” “Agreed,” said the
-husband, and immediately he became mute, and the wife too was silent,
-while they both sat down, dressed as they were in their nuptial
-attire, looking at each other and seated on opposite sofas. Thus they
-remained<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span> for two hours. Some thieves happened to pass by, and seeing
-the door open, entered and laid hold of whatever came to their hands.
-The silent couple heard footsteps in the house, but opened not their
-mouths. The thieves came into the room and saw them seated motionless
-and apparently indifferent to all that might take place. They continued
-their pillage, therefore, collecting together everything valuable, and
-even dragging away the carpets from beneath them; they laid hands on
-the noodle and his wife, taking from their persons every article of
-jewellery, while they, in fear of losing the wager, said not a word.
-Having thus cleared the house, the thieves departed quietly, but the
-pair continued to sit, uttering not a syllable. Towards morning a
-police officer came past on his tour of inspection, and seeing the door
-open, walked in. After searching all the rooms and finding no person,
-he entered their apartment, and inquired the meaning of what he saw.
-Neither of them would condescend to reply. The officer became angry,
-and ordered their heads to be cut off. The executioner’s sword was
-about to perform its office, when the wife cried out, “Sir, he is my
-husband. Do not kill him!” “Oh, oh,” exclaimed the husband, overjoyed
-and clapping his hands, “you have lost the wager; go and shut the
-door.” He then explained the whole affair to the police officer, who
-shrugged his shoulders and went away.</p>
-
-<p>Another story, known in a score of variants is found in a collection of
-tales of the Kabaïl, Algeria, to this effect:</p>
-
-<p>The mother of a youth of the Beni Jennad clan gave him a hundred reals
-to buy a mule; so he went to market, and on his way met a man carrying
-a water melon for sale. “How much for the melon?” he asks. “What will
-you give?” says the man. “I have only got a hundred reals,” answered
-the booby; “had I more, you should have it.” “Well,” rejoined the man,
-“I’ll take them.” Then the youth took the melon and handed over the
-money. “But tell me,” says he, “will its young one be as green as it
-is?” “Doubtless,” answered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span> the man, “it will be green.” As the booby
-was going home, he allowed the melon to roll down a slope before him.
-It burst on its way, when up started a frightened hare. “Go to my
-house, young one,” he shouted. “Surely a green animal has come out of
-it.” And when he got home, he inquired of his mother if the young one
-had arrived.</p>
-
-<p>Other stories of boobies or simpletons follow, taken here and there
-from the enormous mass of humorous literature on this theme.</p>
-
-<p>Yet noodles are not always witless fools.</p>
-
-<p>The principle of the humor in such tales is merely and only the
-superiority complex, that loves to laugh good naturedly or with a
-contemptuous tolerance at the speech or actions of those less clever
-than itself. It is the attitude of the cognoscenti toward,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“The lady from the provinces, who dresses like a guy,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Who doesn’t think she waltzes,&mdash;but would rather like to try,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">as W. S. Gilbert puts it.</p>
-
-<p>One day some men were walking by the riverside, and came to a place
-where the contrary currents caused the water to boil as in a whirlpool.
-“See how the water boils!” says one. “If we had plenty of oatmeal,”
-says another, “we might make enough porridge to serve all the village
-for a month.” So it was resolved that part of them should go to the
-village and fetch their oatmeal, which was soon brought and thrown into
-the river. But there presently arose the question of how they were to
-know when the porridge was ready. This difficulty was overcome by the
-offer of one of the company to jump in, and it was agreed that if he
-found it ready for use, he should signify the same to his companions.
-The man jumped in, and found the water deeper than he expected. Thrice
-he rose to the surface, but said nothing. The others, impatient at his
-remaining so long silent, and seeing him smack his lips, took this for
-an avowal that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span> porridge was good, and so they all jumped in after
-him and were drowned.</p>
-
-<p>A poor old woman used to beg her food by day and cook it at night.
-Half of the food she would eat in the morning, and the other half in
-the evening. After a while a cat got to know of this arrangement, and
-came and ate the meal for her. The old woman was very patient, but at
-last could no longer endure the cat’s impudence, and so she laid hold
-of it. She argued with herself as to whether she should kill it or
-not. “If I slay it,” she thought, “it will be a sin; but if I keep it
-alive, it will be to my heavy loss.” So she determined only to punish
-it. She procured some cotton wool and some oil, and soaking the one in
-the other, tied it on to the cat’s tail and then set it on fire. Away
-rushed the cat across the yard, up the side of the window, and on to
-the roof, where its flaming tail ignited the thatch and set the whole
-house on fire. The flames soon spread to other houses, and the whole
-village was destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>Not a few of the <i>Bizarrures</i> of the Sieur Gaulard are the
-prototypes of bulls and foolish sayings of the typical Irishman,
-which go their ceaseless rounds in popular periodicals, and are even
-audaciously reproduced as original in our “comic” journals. To cite
-some examples:</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A friend one day told M. Gaulard that the Dean of Besançon was dead.
-“Believe it not,” said he, “for had it been so he would have told me
-himself, since he writes to me about everything.”</p>
-
-<p>M. Gaulard asked his secretary one evening what hour it was. “Sir,”
-replied the secretary, “I cannot tell you by the dial, because the sun
-is set.” “Well,” quoth M. Gaulard, “and can you not see by the candle?”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On another occasion the Sieur called from his bed to a servant desiring
-him to see if it was daylight yet. “There is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span> no sign of daylight,”
-said the servant. “I do not wonder,” rejoined the Sieur, “that thou
-canst not see day, great fool as thou art. Take a candle and look with
-it out at the window, and thou shalt see whether it be day or not.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In a strange house, the Sieur found the walls of his bed chamber full
-of great holes. “This,” exclaimed he in a rage, “is the cursedest
-chamber in all the world. One may see day all the night through.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Travelling in the country, his man, to gain the fairest way, rode
-through a field sowed with pease, upon which M. Gaulard cried to him,
-“Thou knave, wilt thou burn my horse’s feet? Dost thou not know that
-about six weeks ago I burned my mouth with eating pease, they were so
-hot?”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A poor man complained to him that he had had a horse stolen from him.
-“Why did you not mark his visage,” asked M. Gaulard, “and the clothes
-he wore?” “Sir,” said the man, “I was not there when he was stolen.”
-Quoth the Sieur, “You should have left somebody to ask him his name,
-and in what place he resided.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>M. Gaulard felt the sun so hot in the midst of a field at noontide in
-August that he asked of those about him, “What means the sun to be
-so hot? How should it not keep its heat till winter, when it is cold
-weather?”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A proctor, discoursing with M. Gaulard, told him that a dumb, deaf, or
-blind man could not make a will but with certain additional forms. “I
-pray you,” said the Sieur, “give me that in writing, that I may send it
-to a cousin of mine who is lame.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One day a friend visited the Sieur and found him asleep in his chair.
-“I slept,” said he, “only to avoid idleness; for I must always be doing
-something.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Abbé of Poupet complained to him that the moles had spoiled a fine
-meadow, and he could find no remedy for them. “Why, cousin,” said M.
-Gaulard, “it is but paving your meadow, and the moles will no more
-trouble you.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>M. Gaulard had a lackey belonging to Auvergne, who robbed him of twelve
-crowns and ran away, at which he was very angry, and said he would have
-nothing that came from that country. So he ordered all that was from
-Auvergne to be cast out of the house, even his mule; and to make the
-animal more ashamed, he caused his servants to take off its shoes and
-its saddle and bridle.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Among the cases decided by a Turkish Kází, two men came before him
-one of whom complained that the other had almost bit his ear off. The
-accused denied this, and declared that the fellow had bit his own
-ear. After pondering the matter for some time, the judge told them to
-come again two hours later. Then he went into his private room, and
-attempted to bring his ear and his mouth together; but all he did was
-to fall backwards and break his head. Wrapping a cloth round his head,
-he returned to court, and the two men coming in again presently, he
-thus decided the question: “No man can bite his own ear, but in trying
-to do so he may fall down and break his head.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The typical noodle of the Turks, the Khoja Nasru ’d-Dín, quoted above
-as Cogia Nasr Eddin Effendi, is said to have been a subject of the
-independent prince of Karaman, at whose capital, Konya, he resided, and
-he is represented as a contemporary of Timúr (Tamerlane), in the middle
-of the fourteenth century. The pleasantries which are ascribed to him
-are for the most part common to all countries, but some are probably of
-genuine Turkish origin. To cite a few specimens: The Khoja’s wife said
-to him one day, “Make me a present of a kerchief of red Yemen silk, to
-put on my head.” The Khoja stretched out his arms and said, “Like that?
-Is that large enough?” On her replying in the affirmative he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span> ran off
-to the bazaar, with his arms still stretched out, and meeting a man on
-the road, he bawled to him, “Look where you are going, O man, or you
-will cause me to lose my measure!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One evening the Khoja went to the well to draw water, and seeing the
-moon reflected in the water, he exclaimed, “The moon has fallen into
-the well; I must pull it out.” So he let down the rope and hook, and
-the hook became fastened to a stone, whereupon he exerted all his
-strength, and the rope broke, and he fell upon his back. Looking into
-the sky, he saw the moon, and cried out joyfully, “Praise be to Allah!
-I am sorely bruised, but the moon has got into its place again.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Chinese have a story of a lady who had been recently married, and
-on the third day saw her husband returning home, so she slipped quietly
-behind him and gave him a hearty kiss. The husband was annoyed, and
-said she offended all propriety. “Pardon! pardon!” said she. “I did not
-know it was you.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Indian fiction abounds in stories of simpletons, and probably the
-oldest extant drolleries of the Gothamite type are found in the
-<i>J[.a]takas</i>, or Buddhist Birth stories. Assuredly they were own
-brothers to our mad men of Gotham, the Indian villagers who, being
-pestered by mosquitoes when at work in the forest, bravely resolved,
-according to <i>J[.a]taka</i> 44, to take their bows and arrows and
-other weapons and make war upon the troublesome insects until they
-had shot dead or cut in pieces every one; but in trying to shoot the
-mosquitoes they only shot, struck, and injured one another. And nothing
-more foolish is recorded of the Schildburgers than Somadeva relates,
-in his <i>Kathá Sarit Ságara</i>, of the simpletons who cut down the
-palm-trees: Being required to furnish the king with a certain quantity
-of dates, and perceiving that it was very easy to gather the dates of
-a palm which had fallen down of itself, they set to work and cut down
-all the date-palms in their village, and having gathered from them
-their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span> whole crop of dates, they raised them up and planted them again,
-thinking they would grow.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In Málava there were two Bráham brothers, and the wealth inherited
-from their father was left jointly between them. And while they were
-dividing that wealth they quarrelled about one having too little and
-the other having too much, and they made a teacher learned in the
-Vedas arbitrator, and he said to them, “You must divide everything
-your father left into two halves, so that you may not quarrel about
-the inequality of the division.” When the two fools heard this, they
-divided every single thing into two equal parts&mdash;house, beds, in fact,
-all their property, including their cattle.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Henry Stephens (Henri Estienne), in the Introduction to his <i>Apology
-for Herodotus</i>, relates some very amusing noodle-stories, such as of
-him who, burning his shins before the fire, and not having wit enough
-to go back from it, sent for masons to remove the chimney; of the fool
-who ate the doctor’s prescription, because he was told to “take it”; of
-another wittol who, having seen one spit upon iron to try whether it
-was hot, did likewise with his porridge; and, best of all, he tells of
-a fellow who was hit on the back with a stone as he rode upon his mule,
-and cursed the animal for kicking him. This last exquisite jest has its
-analogue in that of the Irishman who was riding on an ass one fine day,
-when the beast, by kicking at the flies that annoyed him, got one of
-its hind feet entangled in the stirrup, whereupon the rider dismounted,
-saying, “Faith, if you’re going to get up, it’s time I was getting
-down.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The poet Ovid alludes to the story of Ino persuading the women of the
-country to roast the wheat before it was sown, which may have come
-to India through the Greeks, since we are told in the <i>Kathá Sarit
-S[.a]gara</i> of a foolish villager who one day roasted some sesame
-seeds, and finding them nice to eat, he sowed a large quantity of
-roasted seeds, hoping that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span> similar ones would come up. The story
-also occurs in Coelho’s <i>Contes Portuguezes</i>, and is probably of
-Buddhistic origin. An analogous story is told of an Irishman who gave
-his hens hot water, in order that they should lay boiled eggs!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Few folk-tales are more widely diffused than that of the man who set
-out in quest of as great noodles as those of his own household. The
-details may be varied more or less, but the fundamental outline is
-identical, wherever the story is found; and, whether it be an instance
-of the transmission of popular tales from one country to another, or
-one of those “primitive fictions” which are said to be the common
-heritage of the Aryans, its independent development by different
-nations and in different ages cannot be reasonably maintained.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, in one Gaelic version of this diverting story&mdash;in which our old
-friends the Gothamites reappear on the scene to enact their unconscious
-drolleries&mdash;a lad marries a farmer’s daughter, and one day while they
-are all busily engaged in peat cutting, she is sent to the house to
-fetch the dinner. On entering the house, she perceives the speckled
-pony’s packsaddle hanging from the roof, and says to herself, “Oh, if
-that packsaddle were to fall and kill me, what should I do?” and here
-she began to cry, until her mother, wondering what could be detaining
-her, comes, when she tells the old woman the cause of her grief,
-whereupon the mother, in her turn, begins to cry, and when the old man
-next comes to see what is the matter with his wife and daughter, and
-is informed about the speckled pony’s packsaddle, he too, “mingles his
-tears” with theirs. At last the young husband arrives, and finding the
-trio of noodles thus grieving at an imaginary misfortune, he there
-and then leaves them, declaring his purpose not to return until he
-has found three as great fools as themselves. In the course of his
-travels he meets with some strange folks: men whose wives make them
-believe whatever they please&mdash;one, that he is dead; another, that he is
-clothed, when he is stark naked; a third, that he is not himself. He
-meets with the twelve fishers who always miscounted their number; the
-noodles who went to drown an eel in the sea; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span> a man trying to get
-his cow on the roof of his house, in order that she might eat the grass
-growing there.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In Russian variants the old parents of a youth named Lutonya weep over
-the supposititious death of a potential grandchild, thinking how sad
-it would have been if a log which the old woman had dropped had killed
-that hypothetical infant. The parents’ grief appears to Lutonya so
-uncalled for that he leaves the house, declaring he will not return
-until he has met with people more foolish than they. He travels long
-and far, and sees several foolish doings. In one place a horse is
-being inserted into its collar by sheer force; in another, a woman is
-fetching milk from the cellar a spoonful at a time; and in a third
-place some carpenters are attempting to stretch a beam which is not
-long enough, and Lutonya earns their gratitude by showing them how to
-join a piece to it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A well known English version is to this effect: There was a young man
-who courted a farmer’s daughter, and one evening when he came to the
-house she was sent to the cellar for beer. Seeing an axe stuck in a
-beam above her head, she thought to herself, “Suppose I were married
-and had a son, and he were to grow up, and be sent to this cellar for
-beer, and this axe were to fall and kill him&mdash;oh, dear! oh dear!” and
-there she sat crying and crying, while the beer flowed all over the
-cellar floor, until her old father and mother come in succession and
-blubber along with her about the hypothetical death of her imaginary
-grown up son. The young man goes off in quest of three bigger fools,
-and sees a woman hoisting a cow on to the roof of her cottage to
-eat the grass that grew among the thatch, and to keep the animal
-from falling off, she ties a rope round its neck, then goes into the
-kitchen, secures at her waist the rope, which she had dropped down the
-chimney, and presently the cow stumbles over the roof, and the woman
-is pulled up the flue till she sticks half way. In an inn he sees a
-man attempting to jump into his trousers&mdash;a favourite incident in this
-class of stories; and farther along he meets with a party raking the
-moon out of a pond.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span></p>
-
-<p>Another English variant relates that a young girl having been left
-alone in the house, her mother finds her in tears when she comes home,
-and asks the cause of her distress. “Oh,” says the girl, “while you
-were away, a brick fell down the chimney, and I thought, if it had
-fallen on me I might have been killed!” The only novel adventure which
-the girl’s betrothed meets with, in his quest of three bigger fools, is
-an old woman trying to drag an oven with a rope to the table where the
-dough lay.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a Sicilian version in Pitrá’s collection, called <i>The
-Peasant of Larcarà</i>, in which the bride’s mother imagines that her
-daughter has a son who falls into the cistern. The groom&mdash;they are
-not yet married&mdash;is disgusted, and sets out on his travels with no
-fixed purpose of returning if he finds some fools greater than his
-mother-in-law, as in the Venetian tale. The first fool he meets is a
-mother, whose child, in playing the game called <i>nocciole</i>, tries
-to get his hand out of the hole whilst his fist is full of stones. He
-cannot, of course, and the mother thinks they will have to cut off
-his hand. The traveller tells the child to drop the stones, and then
-he draws out his hand easily enough. Next he finds a bride who cannot
-enter the church because she is very tall and wears a high comb. The
-difficulty is settled as in the former story. After a while he comes
-to a woman who is spinning and drops her spindle. She calls out to the
-pig, whose name is Tony, to pick it up for her. The pig does nothing
-but grunt, and the woman in anger cries, “Well, you won’t pick it up?
-May your mother die!” The traveller, who had overheard all this, takes
-a piece of paper, which he folds up like a letter, and then knocks at
-the door. “Who is there?” “Open the door, for I have a letter for you
-from Tony’s mother, who is ill and wishes to see her son before she
-dies.” The woman wonders that her imprecation has taken effect so soon,
-and readily consents to Tony’s visit. Not only this, but she loads a
-mule with everything necessary for the comfort of the body and soul of
-the dying pig. The traveller leads away the mule with Tony, and returns
-home so pleased with having found that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span> the outside world contains so
-many fools that he marries as he had first intended.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In other Italian versions, a man is trying to jump into his stockings;
-another endeavours to put walnuts into a sack with a fork; and a woman
-dips a knotted rope into a deep well, and then having drawn it up,
-squeezes the water out of the knots into a pail.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Mediæval writers most frequently gave voice to short proverbs, maxims
-or epigrams, but a longer story is this delightful one from the old
-Folk tales of India.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">San Shroe Bu</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>ENFORCED GREATNESS</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Once upon a time there lived a very poor middle aged couple on the
-outskirts of a great and magnificent city. Early in the morning the man
-used to set out to the city and return home in the evening with a few
-odd annas earned by picking up small jobs in the warehouses of wealthy
-merchants. One fine morning, being lazier than usual, he remained in
-bed with his eyes closed though fully awake, and furtively watched the
-proceedings of his wife during her toilette. When she was completely
-satisfied with her performance the man pretended to wake up as though
-from a deep sleep and addressed his wife, “you know, my dear, of late I
-have been feeling that some strange power has been granted to me by the
-gracious nats who preside over our destinies. To illustrate my point,
-you saw just now that I was fast asleep, and yet, would you believe it,
-I know exactly what you were doing a little while ago from the time you
-rose from your bed up till the present moment,” and proceeded to tell
-her all she did at her toilette. As may be imagined, his wife was quite
-astonished at this feat, and womanlike, she began to see in this power
-the means to a profitable living.</p>
-
-<p>Just about this time the kingdom became greatly distracted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span> by a
-series of daring thefts which took place both by day and night.
-All efforts made by the authorities to capture the culprits proved
-useless. At length the king became seriously alarmed for the safety of
-his treasures, and in order to afford better protection he redoubled
-the guards round the palace. But in spite of all this precaution the
-thieves entered the palace one night and succeeded in carrying away a
-large quantity of gold, silver and precious stones.</p>
-
-<p>On the following morning the king issued a proclamation to the effect
-that a thousand gold mohurs would be given as a reward to the person
-who could either capture the thieves or restore the stolen property. So
-without consulting her husband in whom she had absolute faith, she went
-off to the palace and informed the king that her husband was a great
-astrologer and that it would be quite easy for him to find the lost
-treasures. The king’s heart was filled with gladness on receiving this
-information. He told the good woman that if her husband could do all
-that she promised, further honours and rewards would be heaped upon him.</p>
-
-<p>When the woman returned home she joyfully related to her husband the
-details of her interview with the king. “What have you done, you silly
-fool?” shouted the man with mingled astonishment and alarm. “The other
-day when I spoke to you about my powers I was merely imposing upon you.
-I am neither an astrologer nor a diviner. It will be impossible for me
-to find the lost property. By your silly act you have not only brought
-disgrace upon us but you have also imperilled our lives. I don’t care
-what happens to you; I only know that I am going to commit suicide this
-very day.”</p>
-
-<p>So saying he left the house and entered a dense forest with the
-intention of cutting a stout creeper with which to hang himself. After
-he got what he wanted he climbed up a big tree to tie one end of the
-creeper to a branch. But while he was engaged in this act the notorious
-thieves came to the foot of the very tree on which he was perched and
-proceeded to divide the treasures which they stole from the palace. The
-man on the top remained absolutely still and eagerly listened to all
-that was going on down below. Apparently<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span> the division was not quite
-satisfactory to every one, and as a result a terrible dispute arose
-among them. For long hours they argued and abused each other without
-being able to come to a settlement. At length seeing that the sun was
-already declining they agreed to bury the treasure at the foot of the
-tree and to return on the morrow for a further discussion relative to
-their respective shares.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as they left the place the poor man came down from the tree and
-ran home as fast as he could. “My dear wife, I know exactly where the
-treasures are to be found. If you make haste and come along with me I
-shall be able to remove the whole lot to our house.” So they hastened
-together with baskets on their heads and reached the spot when darkness
-had properly set in. They then dug up the treasures as quickly as they
-could and conveyed them home.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day they went to the palace and restored the lost
-treasures to the king. Greatly overjoyed at his good fortune the king
-praised the man and marvelled at his rare knowledge. In addition to the
-reward which he received, the man was forthwith appointed the chief
-astrologer to the King with a handsome salary which placed him beyond
-the dreams of avarice.</p>
-
-<p>While in the enjoyment of such honours and rewards the astrologer one
-day thought to himself, “So far I have been very fortunate. My luck has
-been phenomenally good. Everybody takes me to be a great man, though
-actually I am not. I wonder for how long my luck will befriend me?”
-From that time forward his mind became uneasy. He often sat up in bed
-at nights dreading the future which should bring about his exposure
-and disgrace. Every day he spoke to his wife about his false position
-and the peril that threatened him. He saw that it would be utter folly
-and madness to make a clean breast of everything as he had already
-committed himself too far. So he decided to say nothing for the present
-but to await a favourable opportunity of extricating himself from the
-awkward situation.</p>
-
-<p>It so happened that one day the king received a letter from the ruler
-of a distant country which stated that he had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span> heard about the famous
-astrologer. But that somehow he did not quite believe all that was
-said concerning the wisdom and knowledge of the man. By way of testing
-his real powers would he, the king, enter into a bet? If acceptable,
-he said he would send him a gourd fruit by his Envoys, and if his
-astrologer could say how many seeds it contained, he was willing to
-forfeit his kingdom provided he (the former) did the same in the
-event of his protégé going wrong in his calculations. Having absolute
-faith in his astrologer the king forthwith sent a reply to the letter
-accepting the bet.</p>
-
-<p>For many days after this the poor astrologer thought very hard how
-he should act in the matter. He knew that the gourd fruit usually
-contained thousands of seeds and that to attempt a guess would be worse
-than useless. Being fully convinced that the day of reckoning had
-at last arrived, he determined to run away and hide himself in some
-obscure corner rather than face the disgrace of a public exposure. So
-the next thing he did was to procure a boat. He then loaded it with
-food for many days and quietly left the shores of the city.</p>
-
-<p>The following day as he was nearing the mouth of the river, a foreign
-vessel came sailing up under a full spread of canvas. He saw from a
-distance that the sailors, having nothing particular to do, sat in a
-group and were engaged in pleasant conversation. As he came alongside
-the vessel he heard a man remark to the others, “Somehow I feel quite
-certain that our king will lose the bet. Don’t you fellows know
-that this country possesses an astrologer who is infallible in his
-calculations? He is reputed to possess the combined sight of a thousand
-<i>devas</i>. To such a one the single seed, lying hidden within this
-gourd we now convey with us, will not prove an obstacle of any serious
-difficulty. You may therefore rest assured that he will find it out in
-a very short time.”</p>
-
-<p>When the man heard these words he felt very glad and blessed his good
-luck for having freed him once again from a dangerous situation.
-Instead, therefore, of continuing his journey, he swung his boat round
-and made for home, happy in the possession of his freshly acquired
-knowledge. On his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span> arrival he related everything to his wife who shed
-tears of joy on hearing the good news.</p>
-
-<p>Early next day, hearing that the king was about to grant an audience
-to the foreign Envoys, the royal astrologer went to the palace. The
-courtiers were very glad to see him turn up, for so great was their
-confidence in him that they felt that their country was quite safe and
-that the chances were in favour of their acquiring a new kingdom. When
-the king entered the Hall of Audience he invited the astrologer to sit
-on his right while the others sat in front of him with their faces
-almost touching the floor. Then the real proceedings began.</p>
-
-<p>First of all presents were exchanged and complimentary speeches were
-delivered on both sides. When these ceremonies were over the Chief
-Envoy addressed the king in the following terms, “Oh Mighty Monarch!
-The real object of our journey to your most beautiful country has
-already formed the subject of correspondence between your Majesty and
-my king. I will not therefore tire you by its recital all over again.
-My master commands me to show you this gourd and to ask you to say how
-many seeds exactly it contains. If what you say be correct his kingdom
-passes into your possession, but on the other hand should you be wrong
-your kingdom becomes the property of my master.”</p>
-
-<p>Hearing these words the king smiled and turning to the astrologer near
-him, said, “My dear <i>saya</i>, it is unnecessary for me to tell
-you what you have got to do. Consult your stars and tell us how many
-seeds the fruit contains. You already know how generous I have been
-to you in the past. And now at this crisis, if you are able to assist
-me in winning a kingdom, my reward to you shall be such as to make
-you rejoice for all the remaining days of your life.” “Your Majesty,”
-replied the astrologer, “everything I have, including my life, belongs
-to you. By your will I am able to live, and by your will I must also
-die. In the present case my calculations point to one answer only, and
-therefore I have no hesitation in saying that this gourd contains one
-seed only.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span></p>
-
-<p>Accustomed to seeing gourds with thousands of seeds, the king
-turned pale when he heard the astrologer’s answer. But still having
-complete faith in him, with effort he restrained himself from further
-questioning him. The gourd was then placed upon a gold plate and was
-cut open in the presence of all those present. To the astonishment of
-everybody there was but a single seed as was said by the astrologer.
-The foreign Envoy congratulated the king on having won his bet and on
-the possession of so valuable a servant. He then returned home with a
-heavy heart bearing the news of his sovereign’s ruin and his country’s
-misfortune.</p>
-
-<p>As to the astrologer his fame spread far and wide. All sorts of
-honours and rewards were heaped upon him. He was even granted the
-unique privilege of entering or leaving any part of the palace at all
-hours, just as his own inclinations directed him. Yet in spite of all
-these things he was not happy. He knew he was an imposter who stood in
-imminent danger of being found out. He was more than satisfied with
-the reputation he had made and the riches he had acquired. He did not
-desire any more of these things. His greatest ambition now was to find
-a graceful way of escape from his false position.</p>
-
-<p>So he thus spoke to his wife one day, “My dear wife, so far I have had
-most wonderful luck. It has enabled me to escape two great dangers with
-honour to myself. But how long will this luck stand by me? Something
-tells me that I shall be found out on the third occasion. What I
-propose to do next is this. Listen carefully so that you may carry out
-my instructions without a hitch. Tomorrow while I am at the palace with
-the king you must set fire to our house. Being of thatch and bamboo
-it will not take long to be consumed. You must then come running to
-the palace to inform me about it and at the same time you must keep on
-repeating these words, ‘the Astrological Tables are gone.’ I will then
-do the rest.”</p>
-
-<p>On the following day while the king was holding a grand Durbar in the
-Hall of Audience, a great commotion was heard outside the gates. On
-enquiry the king was informed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span> that the astrologer’s wife had come to
-inform her husband that their house was burnt down and that everything
-of value, including the most precious astrological tables by which her
-husband made his wonderful predictions, had been consumed by the fire.
-Hearing these words the astrologer pretended to be terribly affected.
-He struck his forehead with the palm of his hand and for a long time he
-remained silent and motionless with grief. Then turning to the king he
-said, “May it please your Majesty I am now utterly ruined. For had it
-been my riches alone that perished in the fire I should not have minded
-so much. They could have been easily replaced. But now since these
-precious tables are gone it is impossible to procure a similar set from
-anywhere else. I hope I have served your Majesty faithfully and to your
-satisfaction in the past; but I grieve to say that I shall not be in
-a position to give you the same service in the future. I beseech you
-therefore to release me from the present responsible position, for I
-shall no longer be useful to you. But in recognition of my past humble
-services if your Majesty, in your great goodness of heart, can see fit
-to grant me a small pension for the rest of my life I shall have cause
-to consider myself exceptionally favoured.”</p>
-
-<p>The king was very sad to hear of his favourite’s misfortune. And as
-there was nothing else to be said or done in the matter he ordered a
-beautiful building to be erected on the site of the house that was
-burnt down. Next he filled it with a large retinue of servants and
-other equipments such as horses, carriages and so forth. Then the whole
-thing was made over to the astrologer with the command that for the
-rest of his life he was to draw from the Royal Treasury no less a sum
-than ten thousand gold mohurs a month.</p>
-
-<p>As may be imagined the lucky astrologer was more than satisfied
-with the arrangements and inwardly congratulated himself upon his
-good fortune which once more enabled him to escape from a dangerous
-situation. Thus some men are born great, some achieve greatness; but
-there are also others who have greatness forced upon them, and it is
-to this third and last class that our hero the pretentious astrologer
-belongs.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the Middle Ages, popular sculpture and painting were but the
-translation of popular literature, and nothing was more common to
-represent, in pictures and carvings, than individual men under the
-forms of the animals who displayed similar characters or similar
-propensities. Cunning, treachery, and intrigue were the prevailing
-vices of the middle ages, and they were those also of the fox, who
-hence became a favourite character in satire. The victory of craft
-over force always provoked mirth. The fabulists, or, we should perhaps
-rather say, the satirists, soon began to extend their canvas and
-enlarge their picture, and, instead of single examples of fraud or
-injustice, they introduced a variety of characters, not only foxes, but
-wolves, and sheep, and bears, with birds also, as the eagle, the cock,
-and the crow, and mixed them up together in long narratives, which
-thus formed general satires on the vices of contemporary society. In
-this manner originated the celebrated romance of “Reynard the Fox,”
-which in various forms, from the twelfth century to the eighteenth,
-has enjoyed a popularity which was granted probably to no other book.
-The plot of this remarkable satire turns chiefly on the long struggle
-between the brute force of Isengrin the Wolf, possessed only with a
-small amount of intelligence, which is easily deceived&mdash;under which
-character is presented the powerful feudal baron&mdash;and the craftiness
-of Reynard the Fox, who represents the intelligent portion of society,
-which had to hold its ground by its wits, and these were continually
-abused to evil purposes. Reynard is swayed by a constant impulse to
-deceive and victimise everybody, whether friends or enemies, but
-especially his uncle Isengrin. It was somewhat the relationship between
-the ecclesiastical and baronial aristocracy. Reynard was educated in
-the schools, and intended for the clerical order; and at different
-times he is represented as acting under the disguise of a priest,
-of a monk, of a pilgrim, or even of a prelate of the church. Though
-frequently reduced to the greatest straits by the power of Isengrin,
-Reynard has generally the better of it in the end: he robs and defrauds
-Isengrin continually, outrages his wife, who is half in alliance
-with him, and draws him into all sorts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span> of dangers and sufferings,
-for which the latter never succeeds in obtaining justice. The old
-sculptors and artists appear to have preferred exhibiting Reynard in
-his ecclesiastical disguises, and in these he appears often in the
-ornamentation of mediæval architectural sculpture, in wood-carvings,
-in the illuminations of manuscripts, and in other objects of art. The
-popular feeling against the clergy was strong in the middle ages, and
-no caricature was received with more favour than those which exposed
-the immorality or dishonesty of a monk or a priest. A sculpture in
-the church of Christchurch, in Hampshire, represents Reynard in the
-pulpit preaching; behind, or rather perhaps beside him, a diminutive
-cock stands upon a stool&mdash;in modern times we should be inclined to
-say he was acting as clerk. Reynard’s costume consists merely of the
-ecclesiastical hood or cowl. Such subjects are frequently found on the
-carved seats, or misereres, in the stalls of the old cathedrals and
-collegiate churches. The painted glass of the great window of the north
-cross-aisle of St. Martin’s church in Leicester, which was destroyed
-in the last century, represented the fox, in the character of an
-ecclesiastic, preaching to a congregation of geese.</p>
-
-<p>Reynard’s mediæval celebrity dates certainly from a rather early
-period. Montfaucon has given an alphabet of ornamental initial letters,
-formed chiefly of figures of men and animals, from a manuscript which
-he ascribes to the ninth century, among which is one representing
-a fox walking upon his hind legs, and carrying two small cocks,
-suspended at the ends of a cross staff. It is hardly necessary to say
-that this group forms the letter T. Long before this, the Frankish
-historian Fredegarius, who wrote about the middle of the seventh
-century, introduces a fable in which the fox figures at the court of
-the lion. The same fable is repeated by a monkish writer of Bavaria,
-named Fromond who flourished in the tenth century, and by another named
-Aimoinus, who lived about the year 1,000. At length, in the twelfth
-century, Guibert de Nogent, who died about the year 1124, and who has
-left us his autobiography (<i>de Vita Sua</i>), relates an anecdote
-in that work, in explanation of which he tells us that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span> the wolf was
-then popularly designated by the name of Isengrin; and in the fables
-of Odo, as we have already seen, this name is commonly given to the
-wolf, Reynard to the fox, Teburg to the cat, and so on with the others.
-This only shows that in the fables of the twelfth century the various
-animals were known by these names, but it does not prove that what we
-know as the romance of Reynard existed. Jacob Grimm argued from the
-derivation and forms of these names, that the fables themselves, and
-the romance, originated with the Teutonic peoples, and were indigenous
-to them; but his reasons seem more specious than conclusive, and
-Paulin Paris holds that the romance of Reynard was native of France,
-and that it was partly founded upon old Latin legends perhaps poems.
-Its character is altogether feudal, and it is strictly a picture of
-society, in France primarily, and secondly in England and the other
-nations of feudalism, in the twelfth century. The earliest form in
-which this romance is known is in the French poem&mdash;or rather poems, for
-it consists of several branches or continuations&mdash;and is supposed to
-date from about the middle of the twelfth century. It soon became so
-popular, that it appeared in different forms in all the languages of
-Western Europe, except in England, where there appears to have existed
-no edition of the romance of Reynard the Fox until Caxton printed
-his prose English version of the story. From that time it became, if
-possible, more popular in England than elsewhere, and that popularity
-had hardly diminished down to the commencement of the present century.</p>
-
-<p>The popularity of the story of Reynard caused it to be imitated in a
-variety of shapes, and this form of satire, in which animals acted the
-part of men, became altogether popular.</p>
-
-<p>A direct imitation of “Reynard the Fox” is found in the early French
-romance of “Fauvel,” the hero of which is neither a fox nor an ass,
-but a horse. People of all ranks and classes repair to the court of
-Fauvel, the horse, and furnish abundant matter for satire on the moral,
-political, and religious hypocrisy which pervaded the whole frame
-of society. At length the hero resolves to marry, and, in a finely
-illuminated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span> manuscript of this romance, preserved in the Imperial
-Library in Paris, this marriage furnishes the subject of a picture,
-which gives the only representation to be met with of one of the
-popular burlesque ceremonies which were so common in the middle ages.</p>
-
-<p>Among other such ceremonies, it was customary with the populace, on the
-occasion of a man’s or woman’s second marriage, or an ill-sorted match,
-or on the espousals of people who were obnoxious to their neighbours,
-to assemble outside the house, and greet them with discordant music.
-This custom is said to have been practiced especially in France, and
-it was called a <i>charivari</i>. There is still a last remnant of it
-in our country in the music of marrow-bones and cleavers, with which
-the marriages of butchers are popularly celebrated; but the derivation
-of the French name appears not to be known. It occurs in old Latin
-documents, for it gave rise to such scandalous scenes of riot and
-licentiousness, that the Church did all it could, though in vain, to
-suppress it. The earliest mention of this custom, furnished in the
-<i>Glossarium</i> of Ducange, is contained in the synodal statutes of
-the church of Avignon, passed in the year 1337, from which we learn
-that when such marriages occurred, people forced their way into the
-houses of the married couple, and carried away their goods, which they
-were obliged to pay a ransom for before they were returned, and the
-money thus raised was spent in getting up what is called in the statute
-relating to it a <i>Chalvaricum</i>. It appears from this statute, that
-the individuals who performed the <i>charivari</i> accompanied the
-happy couple to the church, and returned with them to their residence,
-with coarse and indecent gestures and discordant music, and uttering
-scurrilous and indecent abuse, and that they ended with feasting.
-In the statutes of Meaux, in 1365, and in those of Hugh, bishop of
-Beziers, in 1368, the same practice is forbidden, under the name of
-<i>Charavallium</i>; and it is mentioned in a document of the year
-1372, also quoted by Ducange, under that of <i>Carivarium</i>, as then
-existing at Nîmes. Again, in 1445, the Council of Tours made a decree,
-forbidding, under pain of excommunication, “the insolences, clamours,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-sounds, and other tumults practiced at second and third nuptials,
-called by the vulgar a <i>Charivarium</i>, on account of the many and
-grave evils arising out of them.” It will be observed that these early
-allusions to the charivari are found almost solely in documents coming
-from the Roman towns in the south of France, so that this practice
-was probably one of the many popular customs derived directly from
-the Romans. When Cotgrave’s “Dictionary” was published (that is, in
-1632) the practice of the <i>charivari</i> appears to have become more
-general in its existence, as well as its application; for he describes
-it as “a public defamation, or traducing of; a foule noise made, blacke
-santus rung, to the shame and disgrace of another; hence an infamous
-(or infaming) ballad sung, by an armed troupe, under the window of an
-old dotard, married the day before unto a young wanton, in mockerie of
-them both.” And, again, a <i>charivaris de poelles</i> is explained
-as “the carting of an infamous person, graced with the harmonie of
-stinging kettles and frying-pan musicke.” The word is now generally
-used in the sense of a great tumult of discordant music, produced often
-by a number of persons playing different tunes on different instruments
-at the same time.</p>
-
-<p>The sermons and satires against extravagance in costume began at
-an early period. The Anglo-Norman ladies, in the earlier part of
-the twelfth century, first brought in vogue in our island this
-extravagance in fashion, which quickly fell under the lash of satirist
-and caricaturist. It was first exhibited in the robes rather than
-in the head-dress. These Anglo-Norman ladies are understood to have
-first introduced stays, in order to give an artificial appearance of
-slenderness to their waists; but the greatest extravagance appeared in
-the forms of their sleeves. The robe, or gown, instead of being loose,
-as among the Anglo-Saxons, was laced close around the body, and the
-sleeves, which fitted the arm tightly till they reached the elbows,
-or sometimes nearly to the wrist, then suddenly became larger, and
-hung down to an extravagant length, often trailing on the ground, and
-sometimes shortened by means of a knot. The gown, also, was itself
-worn very long. The clergy preached against these extravagances in
-fashion, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span> at times, it is said, with effect; and they fell under
-the vigorous lash of the satirist. In a class of satires which became
-extremely popular in the twelfth century, and which produced in the
-thirteenth the immortal poem of Dante&mdash;the visions of purgatory and of
-hell&mdash;these contemporary extravagances in fashion are held up to public
-detestation, and are made the subject of severe punishment. They were
-looked upon as among the outward forms of pride. It arose, no doubt,
-from this taste&mdash;from the darker shade which spread over men’s minds in
-the twelfth century&mdash;that demons, instead of animals, were introduced
-to personify the evil-doers of the time. Such is the figure, seen in a
-very interesting manuscript in the British Museum (MS. Cotton. Nero, C
-iv.). The demon is here dressed in the fashionable gown with its long
-sleeves, of which one appears to have been usually much longer than
-the other. Both the gown and sleeve are shortened by means of knots,
-while the former is brought close round the waist by tight lacing.
-It is a picture of the use of stays made at the time of their first
-introduction.</p>
-
-<p>This superfluity of length in the different parts of the dress was a
-subject of complaint and satire at various and very distant periods,
-and contemporary illuminations of a perfectly serious character show
-that these complaints were not without foundation.</p>
-
-<p>The professional entertainers of the Middle Ages performed in the
-streets and public places, or in the theatres, and especially at
-festivals, and they were often employed at private parties, to
-entertain the guests at a supper.</p>
-
-<p>We trace the existence of this class of performers during the earlier
-period of the middle ages by the expressions of hostility towards
-them used from time to time by the ecclesiastical writers, and the
-denunciations of synods and councils. Nevertheless, it is evident from
-many allusions to them, that they found their way into the monastic
-houses, and were in great favour not only among the monks, but among
-the nuns also; that they were introduced into the religious festivals;
-and that they were tolerated even in the churches. It is probable
-that they long continued to be known in Italy and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span> the countries
-near the centre of Roman influence, and where the Latin language
-was continued, by their old name of <i>mimus</i>. The Anglo-Saxon
-vocabularies interpret the Latin <i>mimus</i> by <i>glig-mon</i>,
-a gleeman. In Anglo-Saxon, <i>glig</i> or <i>gliu</i> meant mirth
-and game of every description, and as the Anglo-Saxon teachers who
-compiled the vocabularies give, as synonyms of <i>mimus</i>, the words
-<i>scurra</i>, <i>jocifta</i>, and <i>pantomimus</i>, it is evident
-that all these were included in the character of the gleeman, and that
-the latter was quite identical with his Roman type. It was the Roman
-<i>mimus</i> introduced into Saxon England. We have no traces of the
-existence of such a class of performers among the Teutonic race before
-they became acquainted with the civilisation of imperial Rome. We
-know from drawings in contemporary illuminated manuscripts that the
-performances of the gleeman did include music, singing, and dancing,
-and also the tricks of mountebanks and jugglers, such as throwing up
-and catching knives and balls, and performing with tamed bears, etc.</p>
-
-<p>But even among the peoples who preserved the Latin language, the
-word <i>mimus</i> was gradually exchanged for others employed to
-signify the same thing. The word <i>jocus</i> had been used in the
-signification of a jest, playfulness, <i>jocari</i> signified to jest,
-and <i>joculator</i> was a word for a jester; but, in the debasement of
-the language, <i>jocus</i> was taken in the signification of everything
-which created mirth. It became, in the course of time the French verb
-<i>jeu</i>, and the Italian <i>gioco</i>, or <i>giuoco</i>. People
-introduced a form of the verb <i>jocare</i>, which became the French
-<i>juer</i>, to play or perform. <i>Joculator</i> was then used in the
-sense of <i>mimus</i>. In French the word became <i>jogléor</i>, or
-<i>jougléor</i>, and in its later form <i>jougleur</i>. I may remark
-that, in mediæval manuscripts, it is almost impossible to distinguish
-between the <i>u</i> and the <i>n</i>, and that modern writers have
-misread this last word as <i>jongleur</i>, and thus introduced into
-the language a word which never existed, and which ought to be
-abandoned. In old English, as we see in Chaucer, the usual form was
-<i>jogelere</i>. The mediæval joculator, or jougleur, embraced all the
-attributes of the Roman <i>mimus</i>, and perhaps more. In the first
-place he was very often a poet himself,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span> and composed the pieces which
-it was one of his duties to sing or recite. These were chiefly songs,
-or stories, the latter usually told in verse, and so many of them are
-preserved in manuscripts that they form a very numerous and important
-class of mediæval literature. The songs were commonly satirical and
-abusive, and they were made use of for purposes of general or personal
-vituperation. Out of them, indeed, grew the political songs of a
-later period. They carried about with them for exhibition tame bears,
-monkeys, and other animals, taught to perform the actions of men. As
-early as the thirteenth century, we find them including among their
-other accomplishments that of dancing upon the tight-rope. Finally, the
-jougleurs performed tricks of sleight of hand, and were often conjurers
-and magicians. As, in modern times, the jougleurs of the middle ages
-gradually passed away, sleight of hand appears to have become their
-principal accomplishment, and the name only was left in the modern word
-<i>juggler</i>. The jougleurs of the middle ages, like the mimi of
-antiquity, wandered about from place to place, and often from country
-to country, sometimes singly and at others in companies, exhibited
-their performances in the roads and streets, repaired to all great
-festivals, and were employed especially in the baronial hall, where, by
-their songs, stories, and other performances, they created mirth after
-dinner.</p>
-
-<p>This class of society had become known by another name, the origin of
-which is not so easily explained. The primary meaning of the Latin
-word <i>minister</i> was a servant, one who ministers to another,
-either in his wants or in his pleasures and amusements. It was applied
-particularly to the cupbearer. In low Latinity, a diminutive of this
-word was formed, <i>minestellus</i>, or <i>ministrellus</i>, a petty
-servant, or minister. When we first meet with this word, which is
-not at a very early date, it is used as perfectly synonymous with
-<i>joculator</i>, and, as the word is certainly of Latin derivation,
-it is clear that it was from it the middle ages derived the French
-word <i>menestrel</i> (the modern <i>menetrier</i>), and the English
-<i>minstrel</i>. The mimi or jougleurs were perhaps considered as
-the petty ministers to the amusements of their lord, or of him who
-for the time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span> employed them. Until the close of the middle ages, the
-minstrel and the jougleur were absolutely identical. Possibly the
-former may have been considered the more courtly of the two names. But
-in England, as the middle ages disappeared, and lost their influence
-on society sooner than in France, the word minstrel remained attached
-only to the musical part of the functions of the old mimus, while, as
-just observed, the juggler took the sleight of hand and the mountebank
-tricks. In modern French, except where employed technically by the
-antiquity, the word <i>menetrier</i> means a fiddler.</p>
-
-<p>The jougleurs, or minstrels, formed a very numerous and important,
-though a low and despised, class of mediæval society. The dulness of
-every-day life in a feudal castle or mansion required something more
-than ordinary excitement in the way of amusement, and the old family
-bard, who continually repeated to the Teutonic chief the praises of
-himself and his ancestors, was soon felt to be a wearisome companion.
-The mediæval knights and their ladies wanted to laugh, and to make
-them laugh sufficiently it required that the jokes, or tales, or comic
-performances, should be broad, coarse, and racy, with a good spicing of
-violence and of the wonderful. Hence the jougleur was always welcome
-to the feudal mansion, and he seldom went away dissatisfied. But the
-subject of the present chapter is rather the literature of the jougleur
-than his personal history, and, having traced his origin to the Roman
-mimus, we will now proceed to one class of his performances.</p>
-
-<p>It has been stated that the mimus and the jougleurs told stories.
-Of those of the former, unfortunately, none are preserved, except,
-perhaps, in a few anecdotes scattered in the pages of such writers as
-Apuleius and Lucian, and we are obliged to guess at their character,
-but of the stories of the jougleurs a considerable number has been
-preserved. It becomes an interesting question how far these stories
-have been derived from the mimi, handed down traditionally from mimus
-to jougleur, how far they are native in our race, or how far they were
-derived at a later date from other sources. And in considering this
-question, we must not forget that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span> mediæval jougleurs were not the
-only representatives of the mimi, for among the Arabs of the East also
-there had originated from them, modified under different circumstances,
-a very important class of minstrels and story-tellers, and with these
-the jougleurs of the west were brought into communication at the
-commencement of the crusades. There can be no doubt that a very large
-number of the stories of the jougleurs were borrowed from the East, for
-the evidence is furnished by the stories themselves; and there can be
-little doubt also that the jougleurs improved themselves, and underwent
-some modification, by their intercourse with Eastern performers of the
-same class.</p>
-
-<p>The people of the middle ages, who took their word <i>fable</i> from
-the Latin <i>fabula</i>, which they appear to have understood as a
-mere term for any short narration, included under it the stories told
-by the mimi and jougleurs; but, in the fondness of the middle ages
-for diminutives, by which they intended to express familiarity and
-attachment, applied to them more particularly the Latin <i>fabella</i>,
-which in the old French became <i>fablel</i>, or, more usually,
-<i>fabliau</i>. The fabliaux of the jougleurs form a most important
-class of the comic literature of the middle ages. They must have been
-wonderfully numerous, for a very large quantity of them still remain,
-and these are only the small portion of what once existed, which have
-escaped perishing like the others by the accident of being written in
-manuscripts which have had the fortune to survive; while manuscripts
-containing others have no doubt perished, and it is probable that many
-were only preserved orally, and never written down at all. The recital
-of these fabliaux appears to have been the favourite employment of
-the jougleurs, and they became so popular that the mediæval preachers
-turned them into short stories in Latin prose, and made use of them as
-illustrations in their sermons. Many collections of these short Latin
-stories are found in manuscripts which had served as note-books to the
-preachers, and out of them was originally compiled that celebrated
-mediæval book called the “Gesta Romanorum.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Trouvères</i>, or poets, who wrote the Fabliaux flourished<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-chiefly from the close of the twelfth century to the earlier part of
-the fourteenth. They all composed in French, which was a language then
-common to England and France, but some of their compositions bear
-internal evidence of having been composed in England. No objection
-appears to have been entertained to the recital of these licentious
-stories before the ladies of the castle or of the domestic circle,
-and their general popularity was so great, that the more pious clergy
-seem to have thought necessary to find something to take their place
-in the post-prandial society of the monastery, and especially of the
-nunnery; and religious stories were written in the same form and metre
-as the fabliaux. Some of these have been published under the title
-of <i>Contes Devots</i>, and, from their general dulness, it may be
-doubted if they answered their purpose of furnishing amusement so well
-as the others.</p>
-
-<p>Troubadour was the Provençal name for the <i>Trouvères</i>, and in
-the twelfth century these poets flourished so luxuriantly that their
-influence is still felt in the poetic sentiment of today.</p>
-
-<p>Yet they were in no sense humorous writers, unless their satire on the
-foibles and follies of the times may be so construed. They were Boudoir
-poets and their airs and graces were romantic rather than mirthful.</p>
-
-<p>Much of their production was of the languishing, sighing order, but the
-Fabliaux, of a ruder narrative type were also popular.</p>
-
-<p>These Fabliaux, now usually given out in expurgated editions, were
-extremely plain spoken, and, as so often occurred, were adopted and
-adapted by the monks for the real or pretended furtherance of their
-religious teachings.</p>
-
-<p>The Troubadours did much for lyric art by their conscientious attention
-to form, but the humor of their productions is almost a negligible
-quantity. Their songs were invariably sung, and usually to the
-accompaniment of the blue-ribboned guitar, but oftenest the burden was
-of sorrowful intent.</p>
-
-<p>And it was, perhaps, owing to the want of a humorous sense, that the
-Troubadours could carry on their lackadaisical and lovesick careers.</p>
-
-<p>Yet there were some of the Troubadours’ songs which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span> showed a departure
-from the usual romantic wailings and a few are here given.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless the very free translation adds to their humor, but the motive
-is clear.</p>
-
-<p>Rambaud d’Orange thus declares his policy in treatment to the fair sex.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>I.</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My boy, if you’d wish to make constant your Venus,</div>
- <div class="i1">Attend to the plan I disclose.</div>
- <div>Her first naughty word you must meet with a menace,</div>
- <div class="i1">Her next&mdash;drop your fist on her nose.</div>
- <div class="i2">When she’s bad, be you worse,</div>
- <div class="i2">When she scolds, do you curse,</div>
- <div class="i1">When she scratches, just treat her to blows.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>II.</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Defame and lampoon her, be rude and uncivil,</div>
- <div class="i1">Then you’ll vanquish the haughtiest dame.</div>
- <div>Be proud and presumptuous, deceive like the &mdash;&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">And aught that you wish you may claim.</div>
- <div class="i2">All the beautiful slight,</div>
- <div class="i2">To the plain be polite,</div>
- <div class="i1">That’s the way the proud hussies to tame.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Bernard de Ventadour is thus unromantic.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You say the moon is all aglow,</div>
- <div class="i1">The nightingale a-singing.</div>
- <div>I’d rather watch the red wine flow</div>
- <div class="i1">And hear the goblets ringing.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You say ’tis sweet to hear the gale</div>
- <div class="i1">Creep sighing through the willows.</div>
- <div>I’d rather hear a merry tale</div>
- <div class="i1">’Mid a group of jolly fellows.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You say ’tis sweet the stars to view</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon the waters gleaming.</div>
- <div>I’d rather see (’twixt me and you</div>
- <div class="i1">And the post) my supper steaming.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>While the Monk of Montaudon, an incorrigible satirist, thus descants on
-the ladies.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I am a saint of good repute, by mortals called St. Julian;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Being wanted much on earth I go not oft to realms cerulean.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Yet once of late I made a call, which you may term a high call&mdash;</div>
- <div>I went aloft to have a chat along with good St. Michael.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But soon the saint was called away, which closed our conversation,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">To judge between some dames and monks engaged in disputation.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Paint</i> was the subject of their strife, the rock on which they split;</div>
- <div>Each party wanted to monopolise the use of it.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The monks declared, with many tears, that they were ruined quite,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">For not an ounce of it was left to keep their pictures bright.</div>
- <div>The ladies laid it on so thick, as you can understand,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">That the compounders could not quite keep pace with their demand.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And so, unless the former were restrained by stringent law,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Each shrine they swore would quickly cease its worshippers to draw.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Then stepped an ancient beauty forth, and thus to Mike descanted:</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“Our sex was painted long before paint was for pictures wanted;</div>
- <div>As for myself, how can it hurt a clergyman or saint,</div>
- <div>If the crows’-feet beneath my eyes I cover up with paint?</div>
- <div>In keeping up my beauteous looks I cannot see a crime;</div>
- <div>In spite of them I’ll still repair the ravages of time.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">St. Michael scratched his pate awhile, then, looking very wise,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Said: “Dames and monks, let me suggest, I pray, a compromise.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The soul as well as body, dames, requires both paint and padding.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">You should not wholly spend your years in love-making and gadding.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And you, my monks, be less severe, nor bend the bow to breaking;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">All dames should have a moderate time allowed to them for raking.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Then let them paint till forty-five”&mdash;at this the dames looked glum&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“Or fifty,” cried the saint in haste. “Agree, my monks, now come.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">“No,” said the monks, “that cannot be, the time is far too long;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But, though we feel within our souls the compromise is wrong,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Yet, in our deep respect for you, our scruples we will drop,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And let the dames, till thirty-five, frequent the painter’s shop;</div>
- <div>But only on condition that thereafter they shall cease</div>
- <div>To daub, and let us monks enjoy our privilege in peace.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Before the ladies could rejoin, two other saints appeared&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Peter and Lawrence&mdash;by the dames no less than monks revered.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">They reasoned with the parties, and so well employed their wit,</div>
- <div>That they persuaded them at length the difference to split.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The monks agreed to yield five years; the ladies condescended</div>
- <div>Up to their fortieth year to paint, and there the trial ended.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>And the same merry Monk of Montaudon voices his sentiments thus:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I like those sports the world calls folly,</div>
- <div>Banquets that know no melancholy;</div>
- <div>I love a girl whose talk is jolly,</div>
- <div>Not silent like a painted dolly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A rich man of my love is winner,</div>
- <div>His foe I feel must be a sinner;</div>
- <div>And I adore, or I’d be thinner,</div>
- <div>A fine fat salmon-trout for dinner.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I hold among my chief of blisses,</div>
- <div>Basking beside a stream with misses;</div>
- <div>Love sunshine, flowers; but O than this is</div>
- <div>A joy more deep&mdash;I <i>do</i> like kisses.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I hate a husband who’s uxorious;</div>
- <div>A grocer’s son, whose dress is glorious;</div>
- <div>Hate men in drink who get uproarious</div>
- <div>And maids whose conduct is censorious.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I hate young folks who are precocious,</div>
- <div>Hate parsons with a beard ferocious;</div>
- <div>Of wine too much can no one broach us;</div>
- <div>But too much water is atrocious!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The Court of Love, a gay and whimsical institution, doubtless
-originated in the contests of the Troubadours, when the poets recited
-for a prize the particular style of an ode called the <i>Tenson</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Though a fascinating subject, we may not dwell on it further than to
-quote the thirty-one articles of the Code of Love, this being the most
-available bit of humor.</p>
-
-<ul class="smaller">
- <li>&ensp;1. Marriage is no legitimate excuse against love.</li>
- <li>&ensp;2. Whoever cannot conceal cannot love.</li>
- <li>&ensp;3. No one must have two lovers at the same time.</li>
- <li>&ensp;4. Love must always be increasing or diminishing.</li>
- <li>&ensp;5. Favours unwillingly granted have no charm.</li>
- <li>&ensp;6. No male must love until of full age.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">&ensp;7. Whoever of two lovers survives the other must observe a widowhood of two years.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">&ensp;8. None should be deprived of love except they lose their reason.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span></li>
- <li class="hangingindent">&ensp;9. None can love except when compelled by the stress of love.</li>
- <li>10. Love is an exile from the homes of avarice.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">11. She who is scrupulous of the marriage tie should not love.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">12. A true lover desires no embraces save those of his lady-love.</li>
- <li>13. Love divulged rarely lasts.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">14. Easy winning makes love contemptible; difficulty renders it dear.</li>
- <li>15. Every lover grows pale at the sight of his lady-love.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">16. The heart of a lover trembles at the sudden sight of his lady-love.</li>
- <li>17. A new love makes an old one depart.</li>
- <li>18. Probity alone makes a man worthy to be loved.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">19. If love diminishes it soon fails, and rarely recovers its strength.</li>
- <li>20. The lover is always timid.</li>
- <li>21. From true jealousy love always increases.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">22. When suspicion is aroused about a lover, jealousy and love increase.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">23. Filled with thoughts of love, the lover eats and drinks less [than usual].</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">24. Every act of a lover is determined by thoughts of the beloved.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">25. A true lover thinks naught happy save what would please his beloved.</li>
- <li>26. Love can deny nothing to love.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">27. A lover cannot be satiated with the charms of the beloved.</li>
- <li>28. A slight prejudice makes a lover think ill of the beloved.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">29. He is not wont to love who is oppressed by too great abundance of pleasure.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">30. A true lover is always without intermission filled with the image of his lady-love.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">31. Nothing hinders one woman being loved by two men, or one man by two women.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span></p>
-
-<p>On these rules&mdash;some nonsensical, many contradictory, and all
-abominable&mdash;the following decisions, among many others, were based.</p>
-
-<p>The first is that of the Countess of Champagne already quoted, with its
-approval by Queen Eleanor. In its original verbiage it runs thus:</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Question.</i> Can true love exist between married persons?</p>
-
-<p><i>Judgment</i>, by the Countess of Champagne: “We say and establish,
-by the tenor of these presents, that love cannot extend its rights
-to married persons. In fact, lovers accord everything to each other
-mutually and gratuitously, without being constrained by motives of
-necessity; while married people are bound by the duty of mutually
-sacrificing their wills and refusing nothing the one to the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Let this judgment, which we have given with extreme care, and after
-taking counsel of a large number of ladies, be to you a constant and
-irrefragable truth. Thus determined in the year 1174, the third day
-before the kalends of May.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Question.</i> Do the greater affection and livelier attachment exist
-between lovers or married people? [It having been already decided, let
-us remember, that married people could not love one another.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Judgment</i>, by Ermengarde, Viscountess of Narbonne: “The
-attachment of married people and the tender affection of lovers are
-sentiments of a nature and custom altogether different. There can
-consequently be no just comparison established between objects which
-have no resemblance or connection the one with the other.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Question.</i> A lady attached to a gentleman in an honorable love
-marries another. Has she the right to repel her former lover and refuse
-him his accustomed favours?</p>
-
-<p><i>Judgment</i>, by Ermengarde, Viscountess of Narbonne: “The
-supervenience of the marriage bond does not bar the right of the prior
-attachment, unless the lady utterly renounces love, and declares that
-she does so for ever.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span></p>
-
-<p>The <i>Gesta Romanorum</i>, one of the most important collections
-of moral tales, was put together during the thirteenth century by a
-learned Frenchman named Pierre Bercheure, who was a Benedictine Prior.
-He chose to lay the scenes of the stories in Rome, though this was not
-historically true. Gesta means merely acts or exploits, and many of the
-tales are descended from Oriental Folk Lore.</p>
-
-<p>Not all students of ancient literature agree as to the authorship of
-the Gesta as it appears in its present form, but the consensus of
-opinion seems to point to the aforesaid Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p>However, the collector’s name matters little; the work itself, while it
-harks back to the Fables of Æsop and Pilpay and to the <i>Talmud</i>,
-is of interest as a veritable storehouse of Mediæval stories.</p>
-
-<p>Each of these has its religious application, but it is easy to think
-that the readers were oftener intrigued by the story than by the
-appended moral.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF SLOTH</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The emperor Pliny had three sons, to whom he was extremely indulgent.
-He wished to dispose of his kingdom, and calling the three into his
-presence, spoke thus&mdash;“The most slothful of you shall reign after my
-decease.” “Then,” answered the elder, “the kingdom must be mine; for
-I am so lazy, that sitting once by the fire, I burnt my legs, because
-I was too indolent to withdraw them.” The second son observed, “The
-kingdom should properly be mine, for if I had a rope round my neck, and
-held a sword in my hand, my idleness is such, that I should not put
-forth my hand to cut the rope.” “But I,” said the third son, “ought to
-be preferred to you both; for I outdo both in indolence. While I lay
-upon my bed, water dropped from above upon my eyes; and though, from
-the nature of the water, I was in danger of becoming blind, I neither
-could nor would turn my head ever so little to the right hand or to
-the left.” The emperor, hearing this, bequeathed the kingdom to him,
-thinking him the laziest of the three.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span></p>
-
-
-<h5><i>Application</i></h5>
-
-<p>My beloved, the king is the devil; and the three sons, different
-classes of corrupt men.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF THE GOOD, WHO ALONE WILL ENTER THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There was a wise and rich king who possessed a beloved, but not a
-loving wife. She had three illegitimate sons who proved ungrateful
-and rebellious to their reputed parent. In due time she brought forth
-another son, whose legitimacy was undisputed; and after arriving
-at a good old age, he died, and was buried in the royal sepulchre
-of his fathers. But the death of the old king caused great strife
-amongst his surviving sons, about the right of succession. All of
-them advanced a claim, and none would relinquish it to the other; the
-three first, presuming upon their priority in birth, and the last upon
-his legitimacy. In this strait, they agreed to refer the absolute
-decision of their cause to a certain honourable soldier of the late
-king. When this person, therefore, heard their difference, he said,
-“Follow my advice, and it will greatly benefit you. Draw from its
-sepulchre the body of the deceased monarch; prepare, each of you,
-a bow and single shaft, and whosoever transfixes the heart of his
-father, shall obtain the kingdom.” The counsel was approved, the body
-was taken from its repository and bound naked to a tree. The arrow
-of the first son wounded the king’s right hand&mdash;on which, as if the
-contest were determined, they proclaimed him heir to the throne. But
-the second arrow went nearer, and entered the mouth; so that he too
-considered himself the undoubted lord of the kingdom. However, the
-third perforated the heart itself, and consequently imagined that his
-claim was fully decided, and his succession sure. It now came to the
-turn of the fourth and last son to shoot; but instead of fixing his
-shaft to the bow-string, and preparing for the trial, he broke forth
-into a lamentable cry, and with eyes swimming in tears, said, “Oh! my
-poor father; have I then lived to see you the victim of an impious
-contest? Thine own offspring lacerate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span> thy unconscious clay?&mdash;Far,
-oh! far be it from me to strike thy venerated form, whether living or
-dead.” No sooner had he uttered these words, than the nobles of the
-realm, together with the whole people, unanimously elected him to the
-throne; and depriving the three barbarous wretches of their rank and
-wealth, expelled them for ever from the kingdom.</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>Application</i></h5>
-
-<p>My beloved, that wise and rich king is the King of kings, and Lord
-of lords, who joined himself to our flesh, as to a beloved wife. But
-going after other gods, it forgot the love due to him in return, and
-brought forth by an illicit connection, three sons, viz., Pagans,
-Jews, and Heretics. The first wounded the right hand&mdash;that is, the
-doctrine of Christ by persecutions. The second, the mouth&mdash;when they
-gave Christ vinegar and gall to drink; and the third, wounded, and
-continue to wound the <i>heart</i>,&mdash;while they strive, by every
-sophistical objection, to deceive the faithful. The fourth son is any
-good Christian.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF THE INCARNATION OF OUR LORD</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A certain king was remarkable for three qualities. Firstly, he
-was braver than all men; secondly, he was wiser; and lastly, more
-beautiful. He lived a long time unmarried; and his counsellors would
-persuade him to take a wife. “My friends,” said he, “it is clear to
-you that I am rich and powerful enough; and therefore want not wealth.
-Go, then, through town and country, and seek me out a beautiful and
-wise virgin; and if ye can find such a one, however poor she may be,
-I will marry her.” The command was obeyed; they proceeded on their
-search, until at last they discovered a lady of royal extraction with
-the qualifications desired. But the king was not so easily satisfied,
-and determined to put her wisdom to the test. He sent to the lady by
-a herald a piece of linen cloth, three inches square; and bade her
-contrive to make for him a shirt exactly fitted to his body. “Then,”
-added he, “she shall be my wife.” The messenger, thus commissioned,
-departed on his errand, and respectfully presented the cloth,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span> with the
-request of the king. “How can I comply with it,” exclaimed the lady,
-“when the cloth is but three inches square? It is impossible to make a
-shirt of that; but bring me a vessel in which I may work, and I promise
-to make the shirt long enough for the body.” The messenger returned
-with the reply of the virgin, and the king immediately sent a sumptuous
-vessel, by means of which she extended the cloth to the required size,
-and completed the shirt. Whereupon the wise king married her.</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>Application</i></h5>
-
-<p>My beloved, the king is God; the virgin, the mother of Christ; who
-was also the chosen vessel. By the messenger, is meant Gabriel. The
-cloth, is the Grace of God, which, by proper care and labour, is made
-sufficient for man’s salvation.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF THE DECEITS OF THE DEVIL</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There were once three friends, who agreed to make a pilgrimage
-together. It happened that their provisions fell short, and having
-but one loaf between them, they were nearly famished. “Should this
-loaf,” they said to each other, “be divided amongst us, there will
-not be enough for any one. Let us then take counsel together, and
-consider how the bread is to be disposed of.” “Suppose we sleep upon
-the way,” replied one of them; “and whosoever hath the most wonderful
-dream, shall possess the loaf.” The other two acquiesced, and settled
-themselves to sleep. But he who gave the advice, arose while they
-were sleeping, and eat up the bread, not leaving a single crumb for
-his companions. When he had finished he awoke them. “Get up quickly,”
-said he, “and tell us your dreams.” “My friends,” answered the first,
-“I have had a very marvellous vision. A golden ladder reached up to
-heaven, by which angels ascended and descended. They took my soul from
-my body, and conveyed it to that blessed place where I beheld the Holy
-Trinity; and where I experienced such an overflow of joy, as eye hath
-not seen, nor ear heard. This is my dream.” “And I,” said the second,
-“beheld the devils with iron instruments, by which they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span> dragged my
-soul from the body, and plunging it into hell flames, most grievously
-tormented me; saying, ‘As long as God reigns in heaven this will be
-your portion.’” “Now then,” said the third, who had eaten the bread,
-“hear my dream. It appeared as if an angel came and addressed me in
-the following manner, ‘My friend, would you see what is become of your
-companions?’ I answered, ‘Yes, Lord. We have but one loaf between us,
-and I fear that they have run off with it.’ ‘You are mistaken,’ he
-rejoined, ‘it lies beside us: follow me.’ He immediately led me to the
-gate of heaven, and by his command I put in my head and saw you; and I
-thought that you were snatched up into heaven and sat upon a throne of
-gold, while rich wines and delicate meats stood around you. Then said
-the angel, ‘Your companion, you see, has an abundance of good things,
-and dwells in all pleasures. There he will remain for ever; for he has
-entered a celestial kingdom and cannot return. Come now where your
-other associate is placed.’ I followed, and he led me to hell-gates,
-where I beheld you in torment, as you just now said. Yet they furnished
-you, even there, with bread and wine in abundance. I expressed my
-sorrow at seeing you in misery, and you replied, ‘As long as God reigns
-in heaven here I must remain, for I have merited it. Do you then rise
-up quickly, and eat all the bread, since you will see neither me nor
-my companion again.’ I complied with your wishes; arose, and eat the
-bread.”</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>Application</i></h5>
-
-<p>My beloved, the Saracens and Jews; the rich and powerful; and finally,
-the perfect among men, are typified by the three companions. The bread,
-represents the kingdom of heaven.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF VIGILANCE IN OUR CALLING</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A thief went one night to the house of a rich man, and scaling the
-roof, peeped through a hole to examine if any part of the family were
-yet stirring. The master of the house, suspecting something, said
-secretly to his wife, “Ask me in a loud voice how I acquired the
-property I possess; and do<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span> not desist until I bid you.” The woman
-complied, and began to vociferate, “My dear husband, pray tell me,
-since you never were a merchant, how you obtained all the wealth which
-you have now collected.” “My love,” answered her husband, “do not ask
-such foolish questions.” But she persisted in her enquiries; and at
-length, as if overcome by her urgency, he said, “Keep what I am going
-to tell you a secret, and your curiosity shall be gratified.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, trust me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, you must know that I was a thief, and obtained what I now
-enjoy by nightly depredations.” “It is strange,” said the wife, “that
-you were never taken.” “Why,” replied he, “my master, who was a skilful
-clerk, taught me a particular word, which, when I ascended the tops of
-people’s houses, I pronounced, and thus escaped detection.” “Tell me, I
-conjure you,” returned the lady, “what that powerful word was.” “Hear,
-then; but never mention it again, or we shall lose all our property.”
-“Be sure of that;” said the lady, “it shall never be repeated.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was&mdash;is there no one within hearing?&mdash;the mighty word was
-‘<span class="smcap">False</span>.’”</p>
-
-<p>The lady, apparently quite satisfied, fell asleep; and her husband
-feigned it. He snored lustily, and the thief above, who had heard
-their conversation with much pleasure, aided by the light of the moon,
-descended, repeating seven times the cabalistic sound. But being too
-much occupied with the charm to mind his footing, he stepped through
-the window into the house; and in the fall dislocated his leg and arm,
-and lay half dead upon the floor. The owner of the mansion, hearing
-the noise, and well knowing the reason, though he pretended ignorance,
-asked, “What was the matter?” “Oh!” groaned the suffering thief,
-“<i>False</i> words have deceived me.” In the morning he was taken
-before the judge, and afterwards suspended on a cross.</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>Application</i></h5>
-
-<p>My beloved, the thief is the devil; the house is the human heart. The
-man is a good prelate, and his wife is the church.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span></p>
-
-<p>To sum up, then, it would appear that the humorous muse in the Middle
-Ages concerned herself chiefly with scattering and disseminating moral
-lessons, which, because of the superiority of the teachers to the
-taught, showed up an ignorance that was laughable.</p>
-
-<p>The fables and maxims that had been passed from mouth to mouth were put
-into writing and translated into various tongues.</p>
-
-<p>The Sanscrit or Hindoo stories were undoubtedly the oldest and from
-them were taken the Arabic and Persian tales. These drifted into Europe
-and took a proper place among the literatures of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Coleridge says that humor took its rise in the Middle Ages, while a
-present day writer contradictingly asserts that nobody smiled from the
-second century until the fifteenth.</p>
-
-<p>It is true, that as the advent of Christianity put a full stop to all
-progress in the arts and sciences so it impeded the advance of learning
-and delayed the development of humor.</p>
-
-<p>And yet, though men may not have smiled during the dark ages, they now
-and then laughed, at a humor that was far from subtle, but which was
-the foundation of the world’s merriment.</p>
-
-<p>The monks and ecclesiastics who formulated the moral precepts for the
-people found that the lessons were better conveyed by funny stories
-than by serious ones, and the preachers came to use the hammer of
-amusement to drive home their good advices.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span></p>
-
-<h2>MODERN HUMOR</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>With the readiness of the essayists to ascribe literary paternity,
-Chaucer is called the Father of English Poetry.</p>
-
-<p>Coleridge observes that he is the best representative in English of the
-Norman-French Trouvères, but even more than by the French, Chaucer was
-influenced by the great Italians, Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio, as
-well as by Ovid and Virgil.</p>
-
-<p>Father of Modern Poetry more correctly describes Chaucer, and as he was
-the first notable English poet who was a layman, so also, was he the
-first connected with the court.</p>
-
-<p>Though his time, the Fourteenth Century, is practically in the Middle
-Ages, Chaucer is distinctly modern in viewpoint and philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>Born in London, he lived his life in the company of the men and women
-of the circles he knew and loved. Mankind was his study and his theme.</p>
-
-<p>The average reader is hampered by the difficulties of the early English
-diction, and the modern mind is shocked by the freedom of speech then
-in vogue.</p>
-
-<p>But we append such bits of Chaucer’s verse as space allows.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The story of the Cock and the Fox, in the Nun’s Priest’s Tale, is
-allowed by judges to be the most admirable fable (in the narration)
-that ever was written. The description of the birds, the delightful
-gravity with which they are invested with intellectual endowments, are
-conceived in the highest taste of true poetry and natural humour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE COCK AND THE FOX</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now every wise man, let him hearken me:</div>
- <div>This story is all so true, I undertake,</div>
- <div>As is the book of Lancelot du Lake,</div>
- <div>That women hold in full great reverence.</div>
- <div>Now will I turn again to my sentence.</div>
- <div class="i1">A col fox, full of sly iniquity,</div>
- <div>That in the grove had wonned yearés three,</div>
- <div>By high imagination forecast.</div>
- <div>The samé night throughout the hedges brast</div>
- <div>Into the yard where Chanticleer the fair</div>
- <div>Was wont, and eke his wivés to repair,</div>
- <div>And in a bed of wortés still he lay</div>
- <div>Till it was passed undern of the day,</div>
- <div>Waiting his time on Chanticleer to fall,</div>
- <div>As gladly do these homicidés all</div>
- <div>That in await liggen to murder men.</div>
- <div class="i1">O falsé murderer! rucking in thy den,</div>
- <div>O newé Scariot, newé Ganelon!</div>
- <div>O false dissimuler, O Greek Simon!</div>
- <div>That broughtest Troy all utterly to sorrow.</div>
- <div>O Chanticleer, accursed be the morrow</div>
- <div>That thou into thy yard flew from thy beams</div>
- <div>Thou were full well ywarnéd by thy dreams</div>
- <div>That thilké day was perilous to thee:</div>
- <div>But what that God forewot must needés be,</div>
- <div>After the opinion of certain clerkés,</div>
- <div>Witness on him that any perfect clerk is,</div>
- <div>That in schoolé is great altercation</div>
- <div>In this matteré, and great disputision,</div>
- <div>And hath been of a hundred thousand men:</div>
- <div>But I ne cannot boult it to the bren,</div>
- <div>As can the holy Doctor Augustin,</div>
- <div>Or Boece, or the Bishop Bradwardin,</div>
- <div>Whether that Godde’s worthy foreweeting</div>
- <div>Straineth me needly for to do a thing</div>
- <div>(Needely clepe I simple necessity)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span></div>
- <div>Or elles if free choice be granted me</div>
- <div>To do the samé thing or do it naught</div>
- <div>Though God forewot it ere that it was wrought,</div>
- <div>Or if his weeting straineth never a deal</div>
- <div>But by necessity conditional.</div>
- <div>I will not have to do of such mattere;</div>
- <div>My Tale is of a Cock, as ye may hear,</div>
- <div>That took his counsel of his wife with sorrow,</div>
- <div>To walken in the yard upon the morrow</div>
- <div>That he had met the dream, as I you told.</div>
- <div>Womenne’s counsels be full often cold;</div>
- <div>Womenne’s counsels brought us first to woe,</div>
- <div>And made Adam from Paradise to go,</div>
- <div>There as he was full merry and well at ease:</div>
- <div>But for I n’ot to whom I might displease</div>
- <div>If I counsel of women wouldé blame&mdash;</div>
- <div>Pass over, for I said it in my game.</div>
- <div>Read authors where they treat of such mattere,</div>
- <div>And what they say of women ye may hear,</div>
- <div>These be the cocke’s wordés and not mine:</div>
- <div>I can none harm of no womán devine.</div>
- <div class="i1">Fair in the sand to bathe her merrily</div>
- <div>Li’th Partelote, and all her sisters by,</div>
- <div>Against the sun, and Chanticleer so free</div>
- <div>Sang merrier than the mermaid in the sea,</div>
- <div>(For Phisiologus sayeth sikerly</div>
- <div>How that they singeth well and merrily).</div>
- <div class="i1">And so befell that as he cast his eye</div>
- <div>Among the wortés on a butterfly,</div>
- <div>He was ware of this fox that lay full low,</div>
- <div>Nothing he list him thenné for to crow,</div>
- <div>But cried anon, “Cok! cok!” and up he start</div>
- <div>As man that was affrayed in his heart,</div>
- <div>For naturally a beast desireth flee</div>
- <div>From his contráry if he may it see,</div>
- <div>Though he ne’er erst had seen it with his eye.</div>
- <div class="i1">This Chanticleer, when he ’gan him espy,</div>
- <div>He would have fled, but that the fox anon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span></div>
- <div>Said: “Gentle sir, alas! what will be done?</div>
- <div>Be ye afraid of me that am your friend?</div>
- <div>Now, certes, I were worse than any fiend</div>
- <div>If I to you would harm or villany.</div>
- <div>I am not come your counsel to espy;</div>
- <div>But truély the cause of my coming</div>
- <div>Was only for to hearken how ye sing,</div>
- <div>For truély ye have as merry a steven</div>
- <div>As any angel hath that is in heaven;</div>
- <div>Therwith ye have of music more feeling</div>
- <div>Than had Boece, or any that can sing.</div>
- <div>My Lord, your father (God his soulé bless!)</div>
- <div>And eke your mother of her gentleness,</div>
- <div>Have in my house ybeen to my great ease,</div>
- <div>And certés, Sir, full fain would I you please.</div>
- <div>But for men speak of singing, I will say,</div>
- <div>(So may I brouken well my eyen tway,)</div>
- <div>Save you, ne heard I never man so sing</div>
- <div>As did your father in the morrowning:</div>
- <div>Certés it was of heart all that he sung:</div>
- <div>And for to make his voice the moré strong</div>
- <div>He would so pain him, that with both his eyen</div>
- <div>He musté wink, so loud he wouldé crien,</div>
- <div>And standen on his tiptoes therewithal,</div>
- <div>And stretchen forth his necké long and small.</div>
- <div>And eke he was of such discretion,</div>
- <div>That there n’as no man in no región</div>
- <div>That him in song or wisdom mighté pass.</div>
- <div>I have well read in Dan Burnel the ass</div>
- <div>Among his Vers, how that there was a cock,</div>
- <div>That for a Priestés son gave him a knock</div>
- <div>Upon his leg when he was young and nice</div>
- <div>He made him for to lose his benefice;</div>
- <div>But certain there is no comparison</div>
- <div>Betwixt the wisdom and discretion</div>
- <div>Of youré father and his subtilty.</div>
- <div>Now singeth, Sir, for Sainté Charity:</div>
- <div>Let see, can ye your father counterfeit?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span></div>
- <div class="i1">This Chanticleer his wingés ’gan to beat,</div>
- <div>As man that could not his treason espy,</div>
- <div>So was he ravished with his flattery.</div>
- <div class="i1">Alas! ye lordés, many a false flatour</div>
- <div>Is in your court, and many a losengeour,</div>
- <div>That pleaseth you well moré, by my faith,</div>
- <div>Than he that sothfastness unto you saith.</div>
- <div>Readeth Ecclesiast of flattery:</div>
- <div>Beware ye lordés of their treachery.</div>
- <div class="i1">This Chanticleer stood high upon his toes</div>
- <div>Stretching his neck, and held his eyen close,</div>
- <div>And ’gan to crowen loude for the nones;</div>
- <div>And Dan Russell the fox start up at once,</div>
- <div>And by the gargat henté Chanticleer</div>
- <div>And on his back toward the wood him bear,</div>
- <div>For yet ne was there no man that him sued.</div>
- <div class="i1">O destiny! that mayst not be eschew’d,</div>
- <div>Alas that Chanticleer flew from the beams,</div>
- <div>Alas his wife ne raughté not of dreams!</div>
- <div>And on a Friday fell all this mischance.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO MY EMPTY PURSE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>To you, my purse, and to none other wight,</div>
- <div class="i1">Complain I, for ye be my lady dear;</div>
- <div>I am sorry now that ye be so light,</div>
- <div class="i1">For certés ye now make me heavy cheer;</div>
- <div class="i1">Me were as lief be laid upon a bier,</div>
- <div>For which unto your mercy thus I cry,</div>
- <div>Be heavy again, or ellés must I die.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now vouchsafen this day, ere it be night,</div>
- <div class="i1">That I of you the blissful sound may hear,</div>
- <div>Or see your colour like the sunné bright,</div>
- <div class="i1">That of yellowness ne had never peer;</div>
- <div class="i1">Ye be my life, ye be my heartés steer;</div>
- <div>Queen of comfórt and of good company,</div>
- <div class="i1">Be heavy again, or ellés must I die.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now, purse, that art to me my livés light,</div>
- <div class="i1">And saviour, as down in this world here,</div>
- <div>Out of this towné help me by your might,</div>
- <div class="i1">Sithen that you will not be my tresór,</div>
- <div>For I am shave as nigh as any frere,</div>
- <div>But I prayen unto your courtesy,</div>
- <div class="i1">Be heavy again, or ellés must I die.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>BALLAD OF WOMEN’S DOUBLENESS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>This world is full of variance</div>
- <div class="i1">In everything; who taketh heed,</div>
- <div>That faith and trust, and all Constance,</div>
- <div class="i1">Exiléd be, this is no drede,</div>
- <div>And save only in womanhead,</div>
- <div class="i1">I can ysee no sikerness;</div>
- <div>But, for all that, yet as I read,</div>
- <div class="i1">Beware alway of doubleness.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Also that the fresh summer flowers,</div>
- <div class="i1">The white and red, the blue and green,</div>
- <div>Be suddenly with winter showers,</div>
- <div class="i1">Made faint and fade, withouten ween;</div>
- <div>That trust is none, as ye may seen,</div>
- <div class="i1">In no thing, nor no steadfastness,</div>
- <div>Except in women, thus I mean;</div>
- <div class="i1">Yet aye beware of doubleness.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The crooked moon (this is no tale),</div>
- <div class="i1">Some while isheen and bright of hue,</div>
- <div>And after that full dark and pale,</div>
- <div class="i1">And every moneth changeth new,</div>
- <div>That who the very sothé knew</div>
- <div class="i1">All thing is built on brittleness,</div>
- <div>Save that women always be true;</div>
- <div class="i1">Yet aye beware of doubleness.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The lusty freshé summer’s day,</div>
- <div class="i1">And Phœbus with his beamés clear,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span></div>
- <div>Towardés night they draw away,</div>
- <div class="i1">And no longer list t’ appear,</div>
- <div>That in this present life now here</div>
- <div class="i1">Nothing abideth in his fairness,</div>
- <div>Save women aye be found entere,</div>
- <div class="i1">And devoid of all doubleness.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The sea eke with his sterné wawés</div>
- <div class="i1">Each day yfloweth new again,</div>
- <div>And by the concourse of his lawés</div>
- <div class="i1">The ebbe floweth in certain;</div>
- <div>After great drought there cometh rain;</div>
- <div class="i1">That farewell here all stableness,</div>
- <div>Save that women be whole and plein;</div>
- <div class="i1">Yet aye beware of doubleness.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Fortunés wheel go’th round about</div>
- <div class="i1">A thousand timés day and night,</div>
- <div>Whose course standeth ever in doubt</div>
- <div class="i1">For to transmue she is so light,</div>
- <div>For which adverteth in your sight</div>
- <div class="i1">Th’ untrust of worldly fickleness,</div>
- <div>Save women, which of kindly right</div>
- <div class="i1">Ne hath no touch of doubleness.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What man ymay the wind restrain,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or holden a snake by the tail?</div>
- <div>Who may a slipper eel constrain</div>
- <div class="i1">That it will void withouten fail?</div>
- <div>Or who can driven so a nail</div>
- <div class="i1">To maké sure newfangleness,</div>
- <div>Save women, that can gie their sail</div>
- <div class="i1">To row their boat with doubleness?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At every haven they can arrive</div>
- <div class="i1">Whereat they wot is good passáge;</div>
- <div>Of innocence they cannot strive</div>
- <div class="i1">With wawés, nor no rockés rage;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span></div>
- <div>So happy is their lodemanage</div>
- <div class="i1">With needle and stone their course to dress,</div>
- <div>That Solomon was not so sage</div>
- <div class="i1">To find in them no doubleness.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Therefore whoso doth them accuse</div>
- <div class="i1">Of any double intentión,</div>
- <div>To speaké rown, other to muse,</div>
- <div class="i1">To pinch at their conditión,</div>
- <div>All is but false collusión,</div>
- <div class="i1">I dare right well the soth express;</div>
- <div>They have no better protectión,</div>
- <div class="i1">But shroud them under doubleness.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So well fortunéd is their chance,</div>
- <div class="i1">The dice to-turnen up so down,</div>
- <div>With sice and cinque they can advance,</div>
- <div class="i1">And then by revolutión</div>
- <div>They set a fell conclusión</div>
- <div class="i1">Of lombés, as in sothfastness,</div>
- <div>Though clerkés maken mentión</div>
- <div class="i1">Their kind is fret with doubleness.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Sampson yhad experience</div>
- <div class="i1">That women were full true yfound</div>
- <div>When Dalila of innocence</div>
- <div class="i1">With shearés ’gan his hair to round;</div>
- <div>To speak also of Rosamond,</div>
- <div class="i1">And Cleopatra’s faithfulness,</div>
- <div>The stories plainly will confound</div>
- <div class="i1">Men that apeach their doubleness.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Single thing is not ypraiséd,</div>
- <div class="i1">Nor of old is of no renown,</div>
- <div>In balance when they be ypesed,</div>
- <div class="i1">For lack of weight they be borne down,</div>
- <div>And for this cause of just reason</div>
- <div class="i1">These women all of rightwisness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span></div>
- <div>Of choice and free electión</div>
- <div class="i1">Most love exchange and doubleness.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>L’ENVOI</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>O ye women! which be inclinéd</div>
- <div>By influence of your natúre</div>
- <div>To be as pure as gold yfinéd,</div>
- <div>And in your truth for to endure,</div>
- <div>Armeth yourself in strong armúre,</div>
- <div>(Lest men assail your sikerness,)</div>
- <div>Set on your breast, yourself t’assure,</div>
- <div>A mighty shield of doubleness.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Chaucer was called the Morning Star of Song, and his immediate
-followers proved to be satellites of far less magnitude.</p>
-
-<p>John Skelton, an early Poet Laureate, was of a buffoon type of humor,
-yet thus speaks of his own verse.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Though my rhyme be ragged,</div>
- <div>Tattered and gagged,</div>
- <div>Rudely rainbeaten,</div>
- <div>Rusty, moth-eaten,</div>
- <div>If ye take well therewith,</div>
- <div>It hath in it some pith.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">One, at least, of his whimsical poems is not without charm.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO MAISTRES MARGARET HUSSEY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mirry Margaret</div>
- <div>As midsomer flowre,</div>
- <div>Gentyll as faucon</div>
- <div>Or hauke of the towre,</div>
- <div>With solace and gladnes</div>
- <div>Moch mirth, and no madnes,</div>
- <div>All good and no badnes,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span></div>
- <div>So joyously</div>
- <div>So maydenly</div>
- <div>So womanly</div>
- <div>Her demeynynge</div>
- <div>In every thynge</div>
- <div>Far, far passynge</div>
- <div>That I can endite</div>
- <div>Or suffice to write</div>
- <div>Of mirry Margaret</div>
- <div>As mydsomer flowre</div>
- <div>Gentill as faucon</div>
- <div>Or hawke of the towre.</div>
- <div class="i1">As pacient and as styll</div>
- <div>And as ful of good wil</div>
- <div>As faire Isiphyll</div>
- <div>Coliander</div>
- <div>Sweete pomaunder</div>
- <div>Good Cassander;</div>
- <div>Stedfast of thought</div>
- <div>Wel made, wel wroght,</div>
- <div>Far may be sought</div>
- <div>Erst that ye can fynde</div>
- <div>So curteise so kynde</div>
- <div>As mirry Margaret</div>
- <div>This midsomer flowre,</div>
- <div>Gentyll as faucon</div>
- <div>Or hauke of the towre.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The Troubadours and Minstrels were followed by a type of entertainer
-known as the Fool or the Court Fool, who took the place of the satirist
-in the great households.</p>
-
-<p>Soon various jests were collected, and attributed to these domestic
-fools, whose garb began to take the form of the cap and bells,
-accompanied by the jester’s bauble.</p>
-
-<p>As printing became more widespread, the jestbooks multiplied, and many
-collections were published in England.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton seems to have been quite as much Court Jester as Poet Laureate
-under Henry VII and Henry VIII, and a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span> volume of <i>Merie Tayles of
-Skelton</i> is one of the earliest of the Jest Books.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, since this was published some forty years after Skelton’s death
-it is assumed that but few of the tales are really of the poet’s
-origination.</p>
-
-<p>Likewise, Scogin’s Jests and the stories attributed to Tarlton and
-Peele are considered unauthentic as to authorship and merely the work
-of the hack writers of the period.</p>
-
-<p>These Jestbooks as well as the <i>C. Mery Talys</i>, or <i>Hundred
-Merry Tales</i>, which, with its companion volume, <i>Mery Tales and
-Quicke Answeres</i>, was, we are told, used by Shakespeare, are now
-found in many reprints, and only a few bits of their witty or humorous
-lore may be given here.</p>
-
-<p>As an example of the sharp satire of Skelton, the following shows how
-he regarded the prevalent practice of obtaining letters patent of
-monopoly from the crown, and also is a hit at the fondness for drinking
-among the Welsh.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>HOW THE WELSHMAN DYD DESYRE SKELTON TO AYDE HIM IN HYS SUTE TO THE
-KYNGE FOR A PATENT TO SELL DRYNKE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Skelton, when he was in London went to the kynge’s courte, where there
-dyd come to him a Welshman saying, “Syr, it is so that many dooth come
-upp of my country to the kynge’s court, and some doth get of the kynge
-by a patent a castell, and some a parke, and some a forest, and some
-one fee and some another, and they doe lyve lyke honest men, and I
-should lyve as honestly as the best, if I might have a patent for good
-drynke, wherefore I dooe praye you to write a fewe woords for me in a
-lytle byll to geve the same to the kynge’s handes, and I will geve you
-well for your laboure. I am contented sayde Skelton. Syte downe, then,
-sayd the Welshman and write. What shall I wryte? sayde Skelton. The
-Welshman said wryte “<i>dryncke</i>.” Nowe sayde the Welshman wryte
-“<i>more dryncke</i>.” What nowe? said Skelton. Wryte now “<i>A great
-deale of dryncke</i>.” Nowe sayd the Welshman putte to all thys dryncke
-“<i>A littell crome of breade</i>, and <i>a great déale of dryncke to
-it</i>,” and reade once again. Skelton dyd reade<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span> “<i>Dryncke, more
-dryncke, and a great deale of dryncke and a lytle crome of breade and a
-great deale of dryncke to it</i>.” Then the Welshman sayde Put oute the
-litle crome of breade, and sette in <i>all dryncke and no breade</i>.
-And if I myght have thys sygned of the kynge, sayde the Welshman, I
-care for no more as long as I lyve. Well, then, sayde Skelton, when you
-have thys sygned of the kynge then will I labour for a patent to have
-bread, that you wyth your dryncke and I with the bread may fare well,
-and seeke our livinge with bagge and staffe.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Here Begynneth Certayne Merye Tales of Skelton, Poet Lauriat</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>HOW SKELTON CAME LATE HOME TO OXFORD FROM ABINGTON</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Skelton was an Englysheman borne as Skogyn was, and hee was educated
-&amp; broughte up in Oxfoorde: and there was he made a poete lauriat. And
-on a tyme he had ben at Abbington to make mery, wher that he had eate
-salte meates, and hee did com late home to Oxforde, and he did lye in
-an ine named y<sup>e</sup> Tabere whyche is now the Angell, and hee dyd drynke,
-&amp; went to bed. About midnight he was so thyrstie or drye that hee was
-constrained to call to the tapster for drynke, &amp; the tapster harde
-him not. Then hee cryed to hys oste &amp; hys ostes, and to the ostler,
-for drinke; and no man wold here hym. Alacke, sayd Skelton, I shall
-peryshe for lacke of drynke! what reamedye? At the last he dyd crie
-out and sayd: Fyer, fyer, fyer! when Skelton hard euery man bustle
-hymselfe upward, &amp; some of them were naked, &amp; some were halfe asleepe
-and amased, and Skelton dyd crye: Fier, fier! styll, that everye man
-knewe not whether to resorte. Skelton did go to bed, and the oste and
-ostis, &amp; the tapster with the ostler, dyd runne to Skeltons chamber
-with candles lyghted in theyr handes, saying: where, where, where is
-the fyer? Here, here, here, said Skelton, &amp; poynted hys fynger to hys
-moouth, saying: fetch me some drynke to quenche the fyer and the heate
-and the drinesse in my mouthe: &amp; so they dyd. Wherfore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span> it is good for
-everye man to helpe hys owne selfe in tyme of neede wythe some policie
-or crafte, so bee it there bee no deceit nor falshed used.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">The Jests of Scogin</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>HOW JACKE BY SOPHISTRY WOULD MAKE OF TWO EGGS THREE</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Scogin on a tyme had two egs to his breakfast, and Jack his scholler
-should rost them; and as they were rosting, Scogin went to the fire
-to warme him. And as the egs were rosting, Jacke said: sir, I can by
-sophistry prove that here be three egs. Let me se that, said Scogin.
-I shall tel you, sir, said Jack. Is not here one? Yes, said Scogin.
-And is not here two? Yes, said Scogin; of that I am sure. Then Jack
-did tell the first egge againe, saying: is not this the third? O, said
-Scogin, Jack, thou art a good sophister; wel, said Scogin, these two
-eggs shall serve me for my breakfast, and take thou the third for thy
-labour and for the herring that thou didst give mee the last day. So
-one good turne doth aske another, and to deceive him that goeth about
-to deceive is no deceit.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This is a very common story. It is, in a slightly varied form, No. 67
-of <i>A C Mery Tales</i>, and Johnson has introduced it into <i>The
-Pleasant Conceits of Old Hobson, the Merry Londoner</i>, 1607.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>HOW SCOGIN SOLD POWDER TO KILL FLEAS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Scogin divers times did lacke money, and could not tell what shift
-to make. At last, he thought to play the physician, and did fill a
-box full of the powder of a rotten post; and on a Sunday he went to
-a Parish Church, and told the wives that hee had a powder to kil up
-all the fleas in the country, and every wife bought a pennyworth; and
-Scogin went his way, ere Masse was done. The wives went home, and
-cast the powder into their beds and in their chambers, and the fleas
-continued still. On a time, Scogin came to the same Church<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span> on a
-sunday, and when the wives had espied him, the one said to the other:
-this is he that deceived us with the powder to kill fleas; see, said
-the one to the other, this is the selfe-same person. When Masse was
-done, the wives gathered about Scogin, and said: you be an honest man
-to deceive us with the powder to kill fleas. Why, said Scogin, are not
-your fleas all dead? We have more now (said they) than ever we had. I
-marvell of that, said Scogin, I am sure you did not use the medicine as
-you should have done. They said: wee did cast it in our beds and in our
-chambers. I, said he, there be a sort of fooles that will buy a thing,
-and will not aske what they should doe with it. I tell you all, that
-you should have taken every flea by the neck, and then they would gape;
-and then you should have cast a little of the powder into every flea’s
-mouth, and so you should have killed them all. Then said the wives: we
-have not onely lost our money, but we are mocked for our labour.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">From Mery Tales of the Mad Men of Gottam</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>THE SECOND TALE</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There was a man of Gottam did ride to the market with two bushells of
-wheate, and because his horse should not beare heavy, he caried his
-corne upon his owne necke, &amp; did ride upon his horse, because his horse
-should not cary to heavy a burthen. Judge you which was the wisest, his
-horse or himselfe.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE THIRD TALE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">On a tyme, the men of Gottam would have pinned in the Cuckoo, whereby
-shee should sing all the yeere, and in the midst of ye town they made
-a hedge round in compasse, and they had got a Cuckoo, and had put
-her into it, and said: Sing here all the yeere, and thou shalt lacke
-neither meate nor drinke. The Cuckoo, as soone as she perceived her
-selfe incompassed within the hedge, flew away. A vengeance on her! said
-they; we made not our hedge high enough.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">From Mother Bunches Merriments</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>HOW MADDE COOMES, WHEN HIS WIFE WAS DROWNED, SOUGHT HER AGAINST THE
-STREAME</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Coomes of Stapforth, hearing that his wife was drowned comming from
-market, went with certayne of his friends to see if they could find her
-in the river. He, contrary to all the rest, sought his wife against
-the streame; which they perceyving, sayd he lookt the wrong way. And
-why so? (quoth he.) Because (quoth they) you should looke downe the
-streame, and not against it. Nay, zounds (quoth hee), I shall never
-find her that way: for shee did all things so contrary in her life
-time, that now she is dead, I am sure she will goe against the streame.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">The Pleasant Conceits of Old Hobson</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>HOW MAISTER HOBSON SAID HE WAS NOT AT HOME</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">On a time Master Hobson upon some ocation came to Master Fleetewoods
-house to speake with him, being then new chosen the recorder of London,
-and asked one of his men if he were within, and he said he was not at
-home. But Maister Hobson, perceving that his maister bad him say so,
-and that he was within (not being willing at that time to be spoken
-withall), for that time desembling the matter, he went his way. Within
-a few dayes after, it was Maister Fleetwoods chaunse to come to Maister
-Hobson’s, and knocking at the dore, asked if he were within. Maister
-Hobson, hearing and knowing how he was denyed Maister Fleetwoods speach
-before time, spake himselfe aloud, and said hee was not at home. Then
-sayd Maister Fleetwood: what, Master Hobson, thinke you that I knowe
-not your voyce? Whereunto Maister Hobson answered and said: now,
-Maister Fleetewood, am I quit with you: for when I came to speake with
-you, I beleeved your man that said you were not at home, and now you
-will not beleeve mine owne selfe; and this was the mery conference
-betwixt these two merry gentlemen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent sm"><i>FROM CERTAINE CONCEYTS &amp; JEASTS; AS WELL TO LAUGH DOWNE OUR
-HARDER UNDIGESTED MORSELLS, AS BREAKE UP WITH MYRTH OUR BOOKE
-AND BANQUET. COLLECTED OUT OF SCOTUS POGGIUS, AND OTHERS</i></p>
-
-<p>A certayne Poore-man met king Phillip, &amp; besought him for something,
-because he was his kinsman. The king demanded frō whence descended.
-Who answered: from Adam. Then the K. commaunded an Almes to be given.
-Hee replyed, an Almes was not the gift of a king; to whome the king
-answered: if I should so reward all my kindred in that kinde, I should
-leave but little for myselfe.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A certaine conceyted Traveller being at a Banquet, where chanced a
-flye to fall into his cuppe, which hee (being to drinke) tooke out for
-himselfe, and afterwards put in againe for his fellow: being demanded
-his reason, answered, that for his owne part he affected them not, but
-it might be some other did.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A certaine player, seeing Thieves in his house in the night, thus
-laughingly sayde: I knowe not what you will finde here in the dark,
-when I can find nothing my selfe in the light.</p>
-
-<p class="hangingindent sm"><i>WIT AND MIRTH. CHARGEABLY COLLECTED OUT OF TAVERNS,
-ORDINARIES, INNES, BOWLING-GREENES AND ALLYES, ALEHOUSES,
-TOBACCO-SHOPS, HIGHWAYES, AND WATER-PASSAGES. MADE UP, AND
-FASHIONED INTO CLINCHES, BULLS, QUIRKES, YERKES, QUIPS, AND
-JERKES. APOTHEGMATICALLY BUNDLED UP AND GARBLED AT THE REQUEST
-OF JOHN GARRET’S GHOST</i></p>
-
-<p>Taylor the Water-Poet was one of the favourite authors of Robert
-Southey, who has given an account of his life and writings in
-his <i>Uneducated Poets</i>, and has quoted him largely in his
-<i>Common-Place Book</i>.</p>
-
-<p>John Garret, at the request of whose ghost the Water-Poet professes
-to have formed the present collection, was a jester of the period,
-mentioned by Bishop Corbet and others. Heylin, author of the
-Cosmography, speaks of “Archy’s bobs, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span> Garrets sawcy jests.” In his
-dedication of the <i>Wit and Mirth</i>, Taylor alludes to Garret as
-“that old honest mirrour of mirth deceased.”</p>
-
-<p>Taylor, to forestall possible cavils at his plagiarisms from others, or
-adoption of good sayings already published and well-known, expressly
-says in the dedication: “Because I had many of them [the jests] by
-relation and heare-say, I am in doubt that some of them may be in print
-in some other Authors, which I doe assure you is more than I doe know.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One said, that hee could never have his health in <i>Cambridge</i>,
-and that if hee had lived there till this time, hee thought in his
-conscience that hee had dyed seven yeeres agoe.</p>
-
-<p>A Judge upon the Bench did aske an old man how old he was. My Lord,
-said he, I am eight and fourscore. And why not fourscore and eight?
-said the Judge. The other repli’d: because I was eight, before I was
-fourescore.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A rich man told his nephew that hee had read a booke called <i>Lucius
-Apuleius of the Golden Asse</i>, and that he found there how Apuleius,
-after he had beene an asse many yeeres, by eating of Roses he did
-recover his manly shape againe, and was no more an asse: the young man
-replied to his uncle: Sir, if I were worthy to advise you, I would give
-you counsell to eate a salled of Roses once a weeke yourselfe.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A country man being demanded how such a River was called, that ranne
-through their Country, hee answered that they never had need to call
-the River, for it alwayes came without calling.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One borrowed a cloake of a Gentleman, and met one that knew him, who
-said: I thinke I know that cloake. It may be so, said the other, I
-borrowed it of such a Gentleman. The other told him that it was too
-short. Yea, but, quoth he that had the cloake, I will have it long
-enough, before I bring it home againe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span></p>
-
-<h4><i>OF THE WOMAN THAT FOLLOWED HER FOURTH HUSBANDS BERE AND WEPT</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A woman there was which had had iiii husbandys. It fourtuned also that
-this fourth husbande dyed and was brought to chyrche upon the bere;
-whom this woman folowed and made great mone, and waxed very sory,
-in so moche that her neyghbours thought she wolde swown and dye for
-sorow. Wherfore one of her gosseps cam to her, and spake to her in
-her ere, and bad her, for Godds sake, comfort her self and refrayne
-that lamentacion, or ellys it wold hurt her and peraventure put her in
-jeopardy of her life. To whom this woman answeryd and sayd: I wys, good
-gosyp, I have grete cause to morne, if ye knew all. For I have beryed
-iii husbandes besyde this man; but I was never in the case that I am
-now. For there was not one of them but when that I folowed the corse to
-chyrch, yet I was sure of an nother husband, before the corse cam out
-of my house, and now I am sure of no nother husband; and therfore ye
-may be sure I have great cause to be sad and hevy.</p>
-
-<p>By thys tale ye may se that the olde proverbe ys trew, that it is as
-great pyte to se a woman wepe as a gose to go barefote.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">A C. Mery Talys</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>OF THE MERCHAUNTE OF LONDON THAT DYD PUT NOBLES IN HIS MOUTHE IN HYS
-DETHE BEDDE</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A ryche covetous marchant there was that dwellid in London, which
-ever gaderyd mony and could never fynd in hys hert to spend ought
-<i>upon</i> hym selfe nor upon no man els. Whiche fell sore syke, and
-as he laye on hys deth bed had his purs lyenge at his beddys hede, and
-[he] had suche a love to his money that he put his hande in his purs,
-and toke out thereof x or xii li. in nobles and put them in his mouth.
-And because his wyfe and other perceyved hym very syke and lyke to dye,
-they exortyd hym to be confessyd, and brought the curate unto hym.
-Which when they had caused him to say<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span> Benedicite, the curate bad hym
-crye God mercy and shewe to hym his synnes. Than this seyck man began
-to sey: I crey God mercy I have offendyd in the vii dedly synnes and
-broken the x commaundementes; but because of the gold in his mouth he
-muffled so in his speche, that the curate could not well understande
-hym: wherfore the curat askyd hym, what he had in his mouthe that
-letted his spech. I wys, mayster parsone, quod the syke man,
-muffelynge, I have nothyng in my mouthe but a lyttle money; bycause I
-wot not whither I shal go, I thought I wold take some spendynge money
-with me: for I wot not what nede I shall have therof; and incontynent
-after that sayeng dyed, before he was confessyd or repentant that any
-man coulde perceyve, and so by lyklyhod went to the devyll.</p>
-
-<p>By this tale ye may se, that they that all theyr lyves wyll never do
-charyte to theyr neghbours, that God in tyme of theyr dethe wyll not
-suffre them to have grace of repentaunce.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF THE SCOLER OF OXFORDE THAT PROVED BY SOVESTRY II CHYKENS III</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A ryche Frankelyn in the contrey havynge by his wyfe but one chylde and
-no mo, for the great affeccyon that he had to his sayd chylde founde
-hym at Oxforde to schole by the space of ii or iii yere. Thys yonge
-scoler, in a vacacyon tyme, for his disporte came home to his father.
-It fortuned afterwarde on a nyght, the father, the mother and the sayd
-yonge scoler</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>5 lines wanting.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>I</i> have studyed sovestry, and by that scyence I can prove, that
-these ii chekyns in the dysshe be thre chekyns. Mary, sayde the father,
-that wolde I fayne se. The scoller toke one of the chekyns in his hande
-and said: lo! here is one chekyn, and incontynente he toke bothe the
-chekyns in his hande jointely and sayd: here is ii chekyns; and one and
-ii maketh iii: ergo here is iii chekyns. Than the father toke one of
-the chekyns to him selfe, and gave another to his wyfe, and sayd thus:
-lo! I wyll have one of the chekyns to my parte, and thy mother shal
-have a nother, and because of thy good argumente<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span> thou shalte have the
-thyrde to thy supper: for thou gettyst no more meate here at this tyme;
-whyche promyse the father kepte, and so the scoller wente without his
-supper.</p>
-
-<p>By this tale men may se, that it is great foly to put one to scole to
-lerne any subtyll scyence, whiche hathe no naturall wytte.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF THE COURTEAR THAT ETE THE HOT CUSTARDE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A certayne merchaunt and a courtear, <i>being upon a time together</i>
-at dyner having a hote custerd, <i>the courtear being</i> somwhat
-homely of maner toke <i>parte of it and put it</i> in hys mouth, whych
-was so hote that made him <i>shed teares.</i> The merchaunt, lookyng
-on him, thought that he had <i>ben weeping, and asked hym why</i> he
-wept. This curtear, not wyllynge it to be <i>known that he had brent
-his</i> mouth with the hote custerd, answered and said, sir: <i>quod
-he, I had</i> a brother whych dyd a certayn offence wherfore he was
-hanged; <i>and, chauncing</i> to think now uppon his deth, it maketh
-me to wepe. This merchaunt thought the courtear had said trew, and
-anon after the merchaunt was disposid to ete <i>of the custerd</i>,
-and put a sponefull of it in his mouth, and brent his mouth also, that
-his <i>eyes watered</i>. This courtear, that percevyng, spake to the
-merchaunt and seyd: sir, quod <i>he, pray</i> why do ye wepe now? The
-merchaunt perseyved how he had <i>bene deceived</i> and said: mary,
-quod he, I wepe, because thou wast not hangid, <i>when that</i> they
-brother was hangyd.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF HYM THAT SOUGHT HIS WYFE AGAYNST THE STREME</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A man there was whose wyfe, as she came over a bridg, fell in to the
-ryver and was drowned; wherfore he wente and sought for her upward
-against the stream, wherat his neighboures, that wente with hym,
-marvayled, and sayde he dyd nought, he shulde go seke her downeward
-with the streme. Naye, quod he, I am sure I shall never fynde her that
-waye: for she was so waywarde and so contrary to every thynge, while
-she lyvedde, that I knowe very well nowe she is deed, she wyll go a
-gaynste the stream.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF THE FOOLE THAT THOUGHT HYM SELFE DEED</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There was a felowe dwellynge at Florence, called Nigniaca, whiche was
-nat verye wyse, nor all a foole, but merye and jocunde. A sorte of
-yonge men, for to laughe and pastyme, appoynted to gether to make hym
-beleve that he was sycke. So, whan they were agreed howe they wolde do,
-one of them mette hym in the mornynge, as he came out of his house, and
-bad him good morowe, and than asked him, if he were nat yl at ease? No,
-quod the foole, I ayle nothynge, I thanke God. By my faith, ye have a
-sickely pale colour, quod the other, and wente his waye.</p>
-
-<p>Anone after, an other of them mette hym, and asked hym if he had nat an
-ague: for your face and colour (quod he) sheweth that ye be very sycke.
-Than the foole beganne a lyttel to doubt, whether he were sycke or no:
-for he halfe beleved that they sayd trouth. Whan he had gone a lytel
-farther, the thyrde man mette hym, and sayde: Jesu! manne, what do you
-out of your bed? ye loke as ye wolde nat lyve an houre to an ende. Nowe
-he doubted greatly, and thought verily in his mynde, that he had hadde
-some sharpe ague; wherfore he stode styll and wolde go no further; and,
-as he stode, the fourth man came and sayde: Jesu! man, what dost thou
-here, and arte so sycke? Gette the home to thy bedde: for I parceyve
-thou canste nat lyve an houre to an ende. Than the foles harte beganne
-to feynte, and [he] prayde this laste man that came to hym to helpe
-hym home. Yes, quod he, I wyll do as moche for the as for myn owne
-brother. So home he brought hym, and layde hym in his bed, and than he
-fared with hym selfe, as thoughe he wolde gyve up the gooste. Forth
-with came the other felowes, and saide he hadde well done to lay hym in
-his bedde. Anone after, came one whiche toke on hym to be a phisitian;
-whiche, touchynge the pulse, sayde the malady was so vehement, that he
-coulde nat lyve an houre. So they, standynge aboute the bedde, sayde
-one to an other: nowe he gothe his waye: for his speche and syght fayle
-him; by and by he wyll yelde up the goste. Therfore lette us close his
-eyes, and laye his hands a crosse, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span> cary hym forth to be buryed.
-And than they sayde lamentynge one to an other: O! what a losse have we
-of this good felowe, our frende?</p>
-
-<p>The foole laye stylle, as one [that] were deade; yea, and thought in
-his mynde, that he was deade in dede. So they layde hym on a bere, and
-caryed hym through the cite. And whan any body asked them what they
-caryed, they sayd the corps of Nigniaca to his grave. And ever as they
-went, people drew about them. Among the prece ther was a taverners boy,
-the whiche, whan he herde that it was the cors of Nigniaca, he said to
-them: O! what a vile bestly knave, and what a stronge thefe is deed! by
-the masse, he was well worthy to have ben hanged longe ago. Whan the
-fole harde those wordes, he put out his heed and sayd: I wys, horeson,
-if I were alyve nowe, as I am deed, I wolde prove the a false lyer to
-thy face. They, that caryed him, began to laugh so hartilye, that they
-sette downe the bere, and wente theyr waye.</p>
-
-<p>By this tale ye maye se, what the perswasion of many doth. Certaynly he
-is very wyse, that is nat inclined to foly, if he be stered thereunto
-by a multitude. Yet sapience is founde in fewe persones: and they be
-lyghtly olde sobre men.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A few further bits are added, being witty sayings from Camden, Bacon
-and the Jest Books and manuscripts of the period.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Queen Elizabeth seeing a gentleman in her garden, who had not felt
-the effect of her favours so soon as he expected, looking out of her
-window, said to him, in Italian, “What does a man think of, Sir Edward,
-when he thinks of nothing?” After a little pause, he answered, “He
-thinks, Madam, of a woman’s promise.” The queen shrunk in her head, but
-was heard to say, <i>Well, Sir Edward, I must not confute you: Anger
-makes dull men witty, but it keeps them poor</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A certain nobleman sold a gentleman a horse for a good round sum, which
-he took upon his lordship’s word, that he had no fault. About three
-weeks after, he met my lord; “Why,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span> your lordship told me,” says he,
-“that your horse had no fault, and he is blind of an eye.” <i>Well,
-Sir</i>, says my lord, <i>it is no fault, it is only a misfortune</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A doctor of little learning, and less modesty, having talked much at
-table; one, much admiring him, asked another, when the doctor was gone,
-if he did not think him a great scholar? The answer was, <i>He may be
-learned, for aught I know, or can discover; but I never heard learning
-make such a noise</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Sir Drue Drury called for tobacco-pipes at a tavern. The waiter brought
-some, and, in laying them down on the table, broke most of them. Sir
-Drue swore a great oath, that they were made of the same metal with
-the Commandments. “Why so?” says one. <i>Because they are so soon
-broken.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A rich usurer was very lame of one of his legs, and yet nothing of hurt
-outwardly to be seen, whereupon he sent for a surgeon for his advice;
-who, being more honest than ordinary, told him, “It was in vain to
-meddle with it, for it was only old age that was the cause.” <i>But why
-then</i> (said the usurer) <i>should not my other leg be as lame as
-this, seeing that the one is no older than the other?</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A gentleman disputing about religion in Button’s Coffeehouse, some of
-the company said, “You talk of religion! I will hold you five guineas,
-you cannot repeat the Lord’s prayer; Sir Richard Steele here shall hold
-stakes.” The money being deposited, the gentleman began, <i>I believe
-in God</i>; and so went through his Creed. <i>Well</i>, said the other,
-<i>I own I have lost, but I did not think that you could have done
-it</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A gentleman calling for small-beer at another gentleman’s table,
-finding it very hard, gave it the servant again without drinking.
-“What,” said the master of the house, “do you not like the beer?” <i>It
-is not to be found fault with</i>, answered the other, <i>for one
-should never speak ill of the dead</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span></p>
-
-<p>Some gentlemen being at a tavern together, for want of better
-diversion, some proposed play; but, said another of the company, “I
-have fourteen good reasons against gaming.” “What are those,” said
-another? “In the first place,” answered he, <i>I have no Money</i>.
-<i>Oh!</i> said the first, <i>if you had four hundred reasons, you need
-not name another</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Quin used to apply a story to the then ministry. A master of a brig
-calls out, <i>Who is there?</i> A boy answered, <i>Will, Sir.&mdash;What are
-you doing?&mdash;Nothing, Sir.&mdash;Is Tom there?&mdash;Yes</i>, says Tom.&mdash;<i>What
-are you doing, Tom?&mdash;Helping Will, Sir.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A gentleman, passing a woman who was skinning eels, and observing the
-torture of the poor animals, asked her, how she could have the heart to
-put them to such pain. <i>Ah</i>, said she, <i>poor creatures! they be
-used to it</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A silly priest at Trumpington being to read that place, <i>Eli, Eli,
-Lamasabachthani</i>, began to consider with himself, that it might
-be ridiculous and absurd for him to read it as it stood, because he
-was vicar of Trumpington, and not of Ely: and therefore he read it,
-<i>Trumpington, Trumpington, Lamasabachthani</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It seems impossible, right here, not to digress, chronologically, for a
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>Every one will have noticed that these old time jests are the
-foundations on which many modern stories are built, but the last one
-quoted above is so palpably the prototype of a current Boston story
-that it must be told.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A small child named Halliwell, spending the night with a neighbor, Mrs.
-Cabot, knelt at the knee of her hostess to say her evening prayer.</p>
-
-<p>“Our Father who art in Heaven,” the little visitor began devoutly,
-“Cabot be thy name&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“What? What do you mean?” asked the startled lady.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said the child, “of course, at home, I say ‘Halliwell be thy
-name,’ but here, I thought it more polite to say Cabot.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is held by most writers on the subject that the great influx of
-humor into literature took place in the latter half of the sixteenth
-century.</p>
-
-<p>This is partly because the progressing art of printing brought about
-the influx of many elements into literature at that time, and also
-because then appeared the work of three of the greatest of the world’s
-humorists.</p>
-
-<p>Shakespeare in England, Rabelais in France and Cervantes in Spain, gave
-us their immortal works.</p>
-
-<p>Earlier in the century Thomas More in his <i>Utopia</i> and Nicholas
-Udall in his <i>Ralph Royster Doyster</i> wrote in humorously satiric
-vein, but these works are difficult to quote from satisfactorily.</p>
-
-<p>Having reached the period when Humor began to be produced in various
-countries independently of one another, it becomes necessary to modify
-our strict chronological arrangement and consider the nations and their
-humorists separately.</p>
-
-<p>Before this, broadly speaking, literature should be considered as a
-whole, but as great names began to appear in certain widely separated
-localities, a national division must be made.</p>
-
-<p>And so, continuing in England, we come to William Shakespeare.</p>
-
-<p>With Shakespeare’s greatness as a poet and dramatist we are not here
-concerned, but there are some critics who dispute his preeminence as a
-humorist.</p>
-
-<p>While Hazlitt declared that in his opinion Molière was as great or
-greater than Shakespeare as a comic genius; Doctor Johnson, on the
-other hand, held that Shakespeare’s comedies are better than his
-tragedies.</p>
-
-<p>However, few are found to support Johnson’s opinion, and Hazlitt
-qualifies his by saying that as Shakespeare’s imagination and poetry
-were the master qualities of his mind, the ludicrous was forced to take
-second place.</p>
-
-<p>Both these worthies, however, agree on the question of Falstaff’s
-greatness, and Hazlitt takes this attitude.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I would not be understood to say that there are not scenes or whole
-characters in Shakespeare equal in wit and drollery to anything upon
-record. Falstaff alone is an instance, which, if I would, I could not
-get over. He is the leviathan of all the creatures of the author’s
-comic genius, and tumbles about his unwieldy bulk in an ocean of wit
-and humour. But in general it will be found (if I am not mistaken),
-that even in the very best of these the spirit of humanity and the
-fancy of the poet greatly prevail over the mere wit and satire, and
-that we sympathize with his characters oftener than we laugh at them.
-His ridicule wants the sting of ill-nature. He had hardly such a thing
-as spleen in his composition. Falstaff himself is so great a joke,
-rather from his being so huge a mass of enjoyment than of absurdity.”</p>
-
-<p>While with equal perceptive judgment “Falstaff,” says Dr. Johnson,
-“unimitated, unimitable Falstaff, how shall I describe thee? Thou
-compound of sense and vice; of sense which may be admired but not
-esteemed; of vice which may be despised, but hardly detested! Falstaff
-... is a thief and a glutton, a coward and a boaster, always ready to
-cheat the weak and prey upon the poor; to terrify the timorous and
-insult the defenceless. At once obsequious and malignant, he satirizes
-in their absence those whom he lives by flattering.... Yet the man thus
-corrupt, thus despicable, makes himself necessary to the Prince that
-despises him, by the most pleasing of all qualities, perpetual gaiety,
-by an unfailing power of exciting laughter, which is the more freely
-indulged, as his wit is not of the splendid or ambitious kind, but
-consists in easy scapes and sallies of levity, which make sport, but
-raise no envy.”</p>
-
-<p>One of the most difficult of all poets to quote from, we can only offer
-detached and fugitive fragments of Shakespeare’s plays; beginning with
-a bit quoted by Hazlitt and accompanied by his delightful observations
-thereon.</p>
-
-<p>“Shakespeare takes up the meanest subjects with the same tenderness
-that we do an insect’s wing, and would not kill<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span> a fly. To give a more
-particular instance of what I mean, I will take the inimitable and
-affecting, though most absurd and ludicrous dialogue, between Shallow
-and Silence, on the death of old Double.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Shallow.</i> Come on, come on, come on; give me your hand, sir; give
-me your hand, sir; an early stirrer, by the rood. And how doth my good
-cousin Silence?</p>
-
-<p><i>Silence.</i> Good morrow, good cousin Shallow.</p>
-
-<p><i>Shallow.</i> And how doth my cousin, your bedfellow? and your
-fairest daughter, and mine, my god-daughter Ellen?</p>
-
-<p><i>Silence.</i> Alas, a black ouzel, cousin Shallow.</p>
-
-<p><i>Shallow.</i> By yea and nay, sir; I dare say, my cousin William is
-become a good scholar: he is at Oxford still, is he not?</p>
-
-<p><i>Silence.</i> Indeed, sir, to my cost.</p>
-
-<p><i>Shallow.</i> He must then to the inns of court shortly. I was once
-of Clement’s inn; where, I think, they will talk of mad Shallow yet.</p>
-
-<p><i>Silence.</i> You were called lusty Shallow then, cousin.</p>
-
-<p><i>Shallow.</i> I was called anything, and I would have done anything
-indeed, and roundly too. There was I, and little John Doit of
-Staffordshire, and black George Bare, and Francis Pickbone, and Will
-Squele, a Cotswold man, you had not four such swinge-bucklers in all
-the inns of court again; and, I may say to you, we knew where the
-bonarobas were, and had the best of them all at commandment. Then was
-Jack Falstaff, now Sir John, a boy, and page to Thomas Mowbray, Duke of
-Norfolk.</p>
-
-<p><i>Silence.</i> This Sir John, cousin, that comes hither anon about
-soldiers?</p>
-
-<p><i>Shallow.</i> The same Sir John, the very same: I saw him break
-Schoggan’s head at the court-gate, when he was a crack, not thus
-high; and the very same day did I fight with one Sampson Stockfish, a
-fruiterer, behind Gray’s-inn. O, the mad days that I have spent! and to
-see how many of mine old acquaintances are dead!</p>
-
-<p><i>Silence.</i> We shall all follow, cousin.</p>
-
-<p><i>Shallow.</i> Certain, ’tis certain, very sure, very sure: death<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span> (as
-the Psalmist saith) is certain to all, all shall die.&mdash;How a good yoke
-of bullocks at Stamford fair?</p>
-
-<p><i>Silence.</i> Truly cousin, I was not there.</p>
-
-<p><i>Shallow.</i> Death is certain. Is old Double of your town living yet?</p>
-
-<p><i>Silence.</i> Dead, sir.</p>
-
-<p><i>Shallow.</i> Dead! see, see! he drew a good bow; and dead? he shot
-a fine shoot. John of Gaunt loved him well, and betted much money on
-his head. Dead! he would have clapped i’ th’ clout at twelve score; and
-carried you a forehand shaft a fourteen and a half, that it would have
-done a man’s heart good to see.&mdash;How a score of ewes now?</p>
-
-<p><i>Silence.</i> Thereafter as they be: a score of good ewes may be
-worth ten pounds.</p>
-
-<p><i>Shallow.</i> And is old Double dead?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is not anything more characteristic than this in all Shakespeare.
-A finer sermon on mortality was never preached. We see the frail
-condition of human life, and the weakness of the human understanding
-in Shallow’s reflections on it; who, while the past is sliding
-from beneath his feet, still clings to the present. The meanest
-circumstances are shown through an atmosphere of abstraction that
-dignifies them: their very insignificance makes them more affecting,
-for they instantly put a check on our aspiring thoughts, and remind us
-that, seen through that dim perspective, the difference between the
-great and little, the wise and foolish, is not much. ‘One touch of
-nature makes the whole world kin’: and old Double, though his exploits
-had been greater, could but have had his day. There is a pathetic
-<i>naïveté</i> mixed up with Shallow’s commonplace reflections and
-impertinent digressions. The reader laughs (as well he may) in reading
-the passage, but he lays down the book to think. The wit, however
-diverting, is social and humane. But this is not the distinguishing
-characteristic of wit, which is generally provoked by folly, and spends
-its venom upon vice.</p>
-
-<p>The fault, then, of Shakespeare’s comic Muse is, in my opinion, that it
-is too good-natured and magnanimous. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span> mounts above its quarry. It is
-‘apprehensive, quick, forgetive, full of nimble, fiery, and delectable
-shapes’: but it does not take the highest pleasure in making human
-nature look as mean, as ridiculous, and contemptible as possible. It is
-in this respect, chiefly, that it differs from the comedy of a later,
-and (what is called) a more refined period.”</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FROM HENRY IV, PART I</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1 p-left"><i>Enter</i> <span class="smcap">Henry</span> <i>Prince of Wales and</i> <span class="smcap">Sir John
-Falstaff</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Falstaff.</i> Now, Hal, what time of day is it, lad?</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> Thou art so fat-witted with drinking of old
-sack, and unbuttoning thee after supper, and sleeping upon benches
-after noon, that thou hast forgotten to demand that truly which thou
-wouldst truly know. What a devil hast thou to do with the time of the
-day? Unless hours were cups of sack, and minutes capons, and clocks
-the tongues of bawds, and dials the signs of leaping-houses, and the
-blessed sun himself a fair hot wench in flame-colored taffata, I see no
-reason why thou should’st be so superfluous to demand the time of the
-day.</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> Indeed, you come near me now, Hal; for we that take
-purses, go by the moon and seven stars; and not by Phœbus&mdash;he, “that
-wand’ring knight so fair.” And, I pray thee, sweet wag, when thou art
-king, as God save thy grace (majesty I should say; for grace thou wilt
-have none)&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> What! none?</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> No, by my troth; not so much as will serve to be
-prologue to an egg and butter.</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> Well, how then? come, roundly, roundly.</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> Marry, then, sweet wag, when thou art king, let not us
-that are squires of the night’s body, be called thieves of the day’s
-beauty; let us be&mdash;Diana’s foresters, gentlemen of the shade, minions
-of the moon: and let men say, we be men of good government; being
-governed, as the sea is, by our noble and chaste mistress the moon,
-under whose countenance we&mdash;steal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> Thou say’st well, and it holds well, too; for the
-fortune of us, that are the moon’s men, doth ebb and flow like the sea;
-being governed as the sea is, by the moon. As, for proof, now, a purse
-of gold most resolutely snatched on Monday night, and most dissolutely
-spent on Tuesday morning; got with swearing&mdash;<i>lay by</i>; and spent
-with crying&mdash;<i>bring in</i>; now, in as low an ebb as the foot of the
-ladder; and, by and by, in as high a flow as the ridge of the gallows.</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> By the Lord, thou say’st true, lad. And is not my
-hostess of the tavern a most sweet wench?</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> As the honey of Hybla, my old lad of the castle.
-And is not a buff jerkin a most sweet robe of durance?</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> How now, how now, mad wag? what, in thy quips and thy
-quiddities? what a plague have I to do with a buff jerkin?</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> Why, what a pox have I to do with my hostess of
-the tavern?</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> Well, thou hast called her to a reckoning many a time
-and oft.</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> Did I ever call for thee to pay thy part?</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> No, I’ll give thee thy due, thou hast paid all there.</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> Yea, and elsewhere, so far as my coin would
-stretch; and where it would not I have used my credit.</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> Yea, and so used it, that, were it not here apparent
-that thou art heir apparent,&mdash;But, I pr’ythee, sweet wag, shall there
-be gallows standing in England when thou art king? and resolution thus
-fobbed as it is, with the rusty curb of old father antic the law? Do
-not thou, when thou art king, hang a thief.</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> No; thou shalt.</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> Shall I? Oh, rare! By the Lord, I’ll be a brave judge.</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> Thou judgest false already; I mean thou shalt have
-the hanging of the thieves, and so become a rare hangman.</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> Well, Hal, well; and in some sort it jumps with my
-humor, as well as waiting in the court, I can tell you.</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> For obtaining of suits?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> Yea, for obtaining of suits; whereof the hangman hath
-no lean wardrobe. ’Sblood, I am as melancholy as a gib-cat or a lugged
-bear.</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> Or an old lion; or a lover’s lute.</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> Yea, or the drone of a Lincolnshire bagpipe.</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> What say’st thou to a hare, or the melancholy of
-Moor-ditch.</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> Thou hast the most unsavory similes; and art, indeed,
-the most comparative, rascalliest,&mdash;sweet young prince,&mdash;But Hal, I
-pr’ythee trouble me no more with vanity. I would to God thou and I
-knew where a commodity of good names were to be bought: an old lord of
-the council rated me the other day in the street about you, sir; but I
-marked him not; and yet he talked very wisely; but I regarded him not:
-and yet he talked wisely, and in the street too.</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> Thou didst well; for wisdom cries out in the
-streets and no man regards it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> Oh, thou hast damnable iteration; and art, indeed,
-able to corrupt a saint. Thou hast done much harm upon me, Hal,&mdash;God
-forgive thee for it! Before I knew thee, Hal, I knew nothing; and
-now am I, if a man should speak truly, little better than one of the
-wicked. I must give over this life, and I will give it over; by the
-Lord, and I do not, I am a villain; I’ll be damned for never a king’s
-son in Christendom.</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> Where shall we take a purse tomorrow, Jack?</p>
-
-<p><i>Falstaff.</i> Zounds, where thou wilt, lad; I’ll make one; an I do
-not, call me villain, and baffle me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Prince Henry.</i> I see a good amendment of life in thee; from
-praying to purse-taking.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FROM MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING</i></h4>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Conrade, Borachio, Dogberry, Verges, Sexton,</span> <i>and the</i>
-<span class="smcap">Watch</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Dogberry.</i> Is our whole dissembly appeared?</p>
-
-<p><i>Verges.</i> Oh, a stool and a cushion for the sexton!</p>
-
-<p><i>Sexton.</i> Which be the malefactors?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Marry, that am I and my partner.</p>
-
-<p><i>Verges.</i> Nay, that’s certain. We have the exhibition to examine.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sexton.</i> But which are the offenders that are to be examined? Let
-them come before master constable.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Yea, marry, let them come before me. What is your
-name, friend?</p>
-
-<p><i>Borachio.</i> Borachio.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Pray, write down&mdash;Borachio.&mdash;Yours, sirrah?</p>
-
-<p><i>Conrade.</i> I am a gentleman, sir, and my name is Conrade.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Write down&mdash;master gentleman Conrade.&mdash;Masters, do you
-serve God?</p>
-
-<p><i>Conrade, Borachio.</i> Yea, sir, we hope.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Write down&mdash;that they hope they serve God. And
-write God first; for God defend but God should go before such
-villains!&mdash;Masters, it is proved already that you are little better
-than false knaves; and it will go near to be thought so shortly. How
-answer you for yourselves?</p>
-
-<p><i>Conrade.</i> Marry, sir, we are none.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> A marvellous witty fellow, I assure you; but I will go
-about with him.&mdash;Come you hither, sirrah; a word in your ear, sir; I
-say to you, it is thought you are false knaves.</p>
-
-<p><i>Borachio.</i> Sir, I say to you, we are none.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Well, stand aside.&mdash;’Fore God, they are both in a
-tale. Have you writ down, that they are none?</p>
-
-<p><i>Sexton.</i> Master constable, you go not the way to examine: you
-must call forth the watch that are their accusers.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Yea, marry, that’s the eftest way.&mdash;Let the watch come
-forth.&mdash;Masters, I charge you, in the prince’s name, accuse these men.</p>
-
-<p><i>1st Watch.</i> This man said, sir, that Don John, the prince’s
-brother, was a villain.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Write down&mdash;Prince John a villain. Why, this is flat
-perjury, to call a prince’s brother villain.</p>
-
-<p><i>Borachio.</i> Master constable&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Pray thee, fellow, peace: I do not like thy look, I
-promise thee.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Sexton.</i> What heard you him say else?</p>
-
-<p><i>2d Watch.</i> Marry, that he had received a thousand ducats of Don
-John, for accusing the Lady Hero wrongfully.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Flat burglary as ever was committed!</p>
-
-<p><i>Verges.</i> Yea, by the mass, that it is.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sexton.</i> What else, fellow?</p>
-
-<p><i>1st Watch.</i> And that Count Claudio did mean, upon his words, to
-disgrace Hero before the whole assembly, and not marry her.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> O villain! thou wilt be condemned into everlasting
-redemption for this.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sexton.</i> What else?</p>
-
-<p><i>2d Watch.</i> This is all.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sexton.</i> And this is more, masters, than you can deny. Prince
-John is this morning secretly stolen away; Hero was in this manner
-accused, in this very manner refused, and, upon the grief of this,
-suddenly died.&mdash;Master constable, let these men be bound, and brought
-to Leonato’s: I will go before, and show him their examination.</p>
-
-<p class="right">(<i>Exit.</i>)</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Come, let them be opinioned.</p>
-
-<p><i>Verges.</i> Let them be in the hands&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>Conrade.</i> Off, coxcomb!</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> God’s my life! Where’s the sexton? Let him write
-down&mdash;the prince’s officer, coxcomb.&mdash;Come, bind them.&mdash;Thou naughty
-varlet!</p>
-
-<p><i>Conrade.</i> Away! You are an ass! you are an ass!</p>
-
-<p><i>Dogberry.</i> Dost thou not suspect my place? Dost thou not suspect
-my years?&mdash;Oh, that he were here to write me down an ass!&mdash;But,
-masters, remember that I am an ass; though it be not written down, yet
-forget not than I am an ass.&mdash;No, thou villain, thou art full of piety,
-as shall be proved upon thee by good witness. I am a wise fellow;
-and, which is more, an officer; and, which is more, a householder;
-and, which is more, as pretty a piece of flesh as any in Messina;
-and one that knows the law, go to; and a rich fellow enough, go to;
-and a fellow that hath had losses; and one that hath two gowns, and
-everything handsome about him.&mdash;Bring him away.&mdash;Oh, that I had been
-writ down an ass!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FROM THE MERCHANT OF VENICE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Launcelot.</i> Certainly, my conscience will serve me to run this
-Jew my master. The fiend is at mine elbow, and tempts me, saying to
-me, “Gobbo, Launcelot Gobbo, good Launcelot,” or “good Gobbo,” or
-“good Launcelot Gobbo, use your legs, take the start, run away.” My
-conscience says, “No; take heed, honest Launcelot; take heed, honest
-Gobbo”; or, as aforesaid, “honest Launcelot Gobbo; do not run; scorn
-running with thy heels.” Well, the most courageous fiend bids me pack:
-“Via!” says the fiend; “away!” says the fiend; “for the heavens, rouse
-up a brave mind,” says the fiend, “and run.” Well, my conscience,
-hanging about the neck of my heart, says very wisely to me, “My honest
-friend Launcelot, being an honest man’s son,” or rather an honest
-woman’s son; for, indeed, my father did something smack&mdash;something
-grow to&mdash;he had a kind of taste&mdash;well, my conscience says, “Launcelot,
-budge not.” “Budge,” says the fiend. “Budge not,” says my conscience.
-“Conscience,” say I, “you counsel well.” “Fiend,” say I, “you counsel
-well.” To be ruled by my conscience, I should stay with the Jew my
-master, who&mdash;God bless the mark!&mdash;is a kind of devil; and to run
-away from the Jew, I should be ruled by the fiend, who, saving your
-reverence, is the devil himself. Certainly, the Jew is the very devil
-incarnation; and, in my conscience, my conscience is a kind of hard
-conscience to offer to counsel me to stay with the Jew. The fiend gives
-the more friendly counsel: I will run, fiend; my heels are at your
-commandment; I will run.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FROM HAMLET</i></h4>
-
-<p class="center p1"><span class="smcap">Polonius</span> <i>and</i> <span class="smcap">Hamlet</span>, <i>reading</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Polonius.</i> How does my good Lord Hamlet?</p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> Well, God-’a’-mercy.</p>
-
-<p><i>Polonius.</i> Do you know me, my lord?</p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> Excellent well; you are a fishmonger</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Polonius.</i> Not I, my lord.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> Then I would you were so honest a man.</p>
-
-<p><i>Polonius.</i> Honest, my lord?</p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> Ay, sir: to be honest, as this world goes, is to be one
-man picked out of ten thousand.</p>
-
-<p><i>Polonius.</i> That’s very true, my lord.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> For if the sun breed maggots in a dead dog, being a good
-kissing carrion&mdash;Have you a daughter?</p>
-
-<p><i>Polonius.</i> I have, my lord.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> Let her not walk i’ the sun: conception is a blessing;
-but not as your daughter may conceive. Friend, look to’t.</p>
-
-<p><i>Polonius.</i> How say you by that? (<i>Aside.</i>) Still harping on
-my daughter. Yet he knew me not at first; he said I was a fishmonger.
-He is far gone, far gone: and truly in my youth I suffered much
-extremity for love; very near this. I’ll speak to him again.&mdash;What do
-you read, my lord?</p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> Words, words, words.</p>
-
-<p><i>Polonius.</i> What is the matter, my lord?</p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> Between who?</p>
-
-<p><i>Polonius.</i> I mean the matter that you read, my lord.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> Slanders, sir. For the satirical slave says here, that
-old men have gray beards; that their faces are wrinkled; their eyes
-purging thick amber or plum-tree gum; and that they have a plentiful
-lack of wit, together with weak hams. All of which, sir, though I most
-powerfully and potently believe, yet I hold it not honesty to have it
-thus set down; for you yourself, sir, shall grow old as I am: if, like
-a crab, you could go backward.</p>
-
-<p><i>Polonius.</i> (<i>Aside.</i>) Though this be madness, yet there is
-method in’t.&mdash;Will you walk out o’ the air, my lord?</p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> Into my grave?</p>
-
-<p><i>Polonius.</i> Indeed, that is out o’ the air. (<i>Aside.</i>) How
-pregnant sometimes his replies are! A happiness that often madness hits
-on, which reason and sanity could not so prosperously be delivered of.
-I will leave him, and suddenly contrive the means of meeting between
-him and my daughter.&mdash;My honourable lord, I will most humbly take my
-leave of you.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> You cannot, sir, take from me anything that I will more
-willingly part withal: except my life, except my life, except my life.</p>
-
-<p><i>Polonius.</i> Fare you well, my lord.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hamlet.</i> These tedious old fools!</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FROM AS YOU LIKE IT</i></h4>
-
-<p class="center p1"><span class="smcap">Rosalind</span> <i>and</i> <span class="smcap">Orlando</span></p>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Rosalind.</i> (<i>Aside.</i>) I will speak to him like a saucy
-lackey, and under that habit play the knave with him.&mdash;Do you hear,
-forester?</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Very well: what would you?</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> I pray you, what is’t o’clock?</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> You should ask me, what time o’ day: there’s no clock
-in the forest.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> Then there is no true lover in the forest; else
-sighing every minute, and groaning every hour, would detect the lazy
-foot of Time as well as a clock.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> And why not the swift foot of Time? Had not that been
-as proper?</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> By no means, sir. Time travels in divers paces with
-divers persons. I’ll tell you, who Time ambles withal, who Time trots
-withal, who Time gallops withal, and who he stands still withal.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> I prithee, who doth he trot withal?</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> Marry, he trots hard with a young maid, between the
-contract of her marriage and the day it is solemnised: if the interim
-be but a se’nnight, Time’s pace is so hard that it seems the length of
-seven years.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Who ambles Time withal?</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> With a priest that lacks Latin, and a rich man that
-hath not the gout; for the one sleeps easily, because he cannot study;
-and the other lives merrily, because he feels no pain: the one lacking
-the burden of lean and wasteful learning; the other knowing no burden
-of heavy, tedious penury. These Time ambles withal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Who doth he gallop withal?</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> With a thief to the gallows; for though he go as
-softly as foot can fall, he thinks himself too soon there.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Who stays it still withal?</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> With lawyers in the vacation; for they sleep between
-term and term, and then they perceive not how Time moves.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Where dwell you, pretty youth?</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> Here in the skirts of the forest, like fringe upon a
-petticoat.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Are you native of this place?</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> As the cony, that you see dwell where she is kindled.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Your accent is something finer than you could purchase
-in so removed a dwelling.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> I have been told of so many: but, indeed, an old
-religious uncle of mine taught me to speak, who was in his youth an
-inland man; one that knew courtship too well, for there he fell in
-love. I have heard him read many lectures against it; and I thank God
-I am not a woman, to be touched with so many giddy offences as he hath
-generally taxed their whole sex withal.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Can you remember any of the principal evils that he
-laid to the charge of women?</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> There were none principal: they were all like one
-another, as half-pence are; every one fault seeming monstrous, till its
-fellow fault came to match it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> I prithee, recount some of them.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> No; I will not cast away my physic but on those that
-are sick. There is a man haunts the forest, that abuses our young
-plants with carving Rosalind on their barks; hangs odes upon hawthorns,
-and elegies on brambles; all, forsooth, deifying the name of Rosalind:
-if I could meet that fancy-monger I would give him some good counsel,
-for he seems to have the quotidian of love upon him.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> I am he that is so love-shaked. I pray you, tell me
-your remedy.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> There is none of my uncle’s marks upon you: he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span> taught
-me how to know a man in love; in which cage of rushes, I am sure, you
-are not prisoner.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> What were his marks?</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> A lean cheek, which you have not; a blue eye, and
-sunken, which you have not; an unquestionable spirit, which you have
-not; a beard neglected, which you have not (but I pardon you for that,
-for, simply, your having in beard is a younger brother’s revenue.
-Then, your hose shall be ungartered, your bonnet unbanded, your sleeve
-unbuttoned, your shoe untied, and everything about you demonstrating
-a careless desolation. But you are no such man; you are rather
-point-device in your accoutrements, as loving yourself, than seeming
-the lover of any other.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Fair youth, I would I could make thee believe I love.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> Me believe it? You may as soon make her that you love
-believe it; which, I warrant, she is apter to do than to confess she
-does. That is one of the points in the which women still give the lie
-to their consciences. But, in good sooth, are you he that hangs the
-verses on the trees, wherein Rosalind is so admired?</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> I swear to thee, youth, by the white hand of Rosalind,
-I am that he, that unfortunate he.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> But are you so much in love as your rhymes speak?</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Neither rhyme nor reason can express how much.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> Love is merely a madness; and, I tell you, deserves as
-well a dark house and a whip as madmen do. And the reason why they are
-not so punished and cured is, that the lunacy is so ordinary that the
-whippers are in love too. Yet I profess curing it by counsel.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Did you ever cure any so?</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> Yes, one; and in this manner. He was to imagine me his
-love, his mistress, and I set him every day to woo me: at which time
-would I, being but a moonish youth, grieve, be effeminate, changeable,
-longing, and liking; proud, fantastical, apish, shallow, inconstant,
-full of tears, full of smiles; for every passion something, and for
-no passion truly anything,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span> as boys and women are, for the most part,
-cattle of this colour: would now like him, now loathe him; then
-entertain him, then forswear him; now weep for him, then spit at him;
-that I drave my suitor from his mad humour of love, to a living humour
-of madness, which was, to forswear the full stream of the world, and
-to live in a nook merely monastic. And thus I cured him; and in this
-way will I take upon me to wash your liver as clean as a sound sheep’s
-heart, that there shall not be one spot of love in’t.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> I would not be cured, youth.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> I would cure you, if you would but call me Rosalind,
-and come every day to my cote, and woo me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> Now, by the faith of my love, I will. Tell me where it
-is.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rosalind.</i> Go with me to it, and I’ll show it you; and, by the
-way, you shall tell me where in the forest you live. Will you go?</p>
-
-<p><i>Orlando.</i> With all my heart, good youth.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Francis, Lord Bacon, gave us much wise writing, and, incidentally much
-of the wit of wisdom, but we look to him in vain for laughable humor.</p>
-
-<p>A few epigrammatic selections from his essays are given.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>All colours will agree in the dark.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This is certain, that a man that studieth revenge keepeth his own
-wounds green, which otherwise would heal and do well.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Whosoever esteemeth too much of an amourous affection, quitteth both
-riches and wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>Money is like muck: not good except it be spread.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Princes are like to heavenly bodies, which cause good or evil times,
-and which have much veneration, and no rest.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Old men object too much, consult too long, adventure too little, repent
-too soon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To take advice of some few friends is ever honourable; for lookers-on
-many times see more than gamesters.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Suspicions that the mind of itself gathers are but buzzes; but
-suspicions that are artificially nourished and put into men’s heads by
-the tales and whisperings of others, have stings.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man, and writing an exact
-man. And therefore, if man write little, he had need have a great
-memory; if he confer little, he had need have a present wit; and if he
-read little, he had need have much cunning to seem to know that which
-he doth not.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Sir John Harington, chiefly remembered for his translation of
-<i>Orlando Furioso</i>, wrote clever humorous verse.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>OF A PRECISE TAILOR</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A tailor, thought a man of upright dealing&mdash;</div>
- <div>True, but for lying, honest, but for stealing&mdash;</div>
- <div>Did fall one day extremely sick by chance,</div>
- <div>And on the sudden was in wondrous trance.</div>
- <div>The fiends of hell, mustering in fearful manner,</div>
- <div>Of sundry coloured silks displayed a banner</div>
- <div>Which he had stolen, and wished, as they did tell,</div>
- <div>That he might find it all one day in hell.</div>
- <div>The man, affrighted with this apparition,</div>
- <div>Upon recovery grew a great precisian.</div>
- <div>He bought a Bible of the best translation,</div>
- <div>And in his life he showed great reformation;</div>
- <div>He walked mannerly, he talked meekly,</div>
- <div>He heard three lectures and two sermons weekly;</div>
- <div>He vowed to shun all company unruly,</div>
- <div>And in his speech he used no oath but “truly”;</div>
- <div>And, zealously to keep the Sabbath’s rest,</div>
- <div>His meat for that day on the eve was drest;</div>
- <div>And, lest the custom which he had to steal</div>
- <div>Might cause him sometimes to forget his zeal,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span></div>
- <div>He gives his journeyman a special charge,</div>
- <div>That if the stuff, allowance being large,</div>
- <div>He found his fingers were to filch inclined,</div>
- <div>Bid him to have the banner in his mind.</div>
- <div>This done&mdash;I scant can tell the rest for laughter&mdash;</div>
- <div>A captain of a ship came three days after,</div>
- <div>And brought three yards of velvet and three-quarters,</div>
- <div>To make Venetians down below the garters.</div>
- <div>He, that precisely knew what was enough,</div>
- <div>Soon slipt aside three-quarters of the stuff.</div>
- <div>His man, espying it, said, in derision,</div>
- <div>“Master, remember how you saw the vision!”</div>
- <div>“Peace, knave!” quoth he; “I did not see one rag</div>
- <div>Of such a coloured silk in all the flag.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>OF A CERTAIN MAN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There was (not certain when) a certain preacher</div>
- <div>That never learned, and yet became a teacher,</div>
- <div>Who, having read in Latin thus a text</div>
- <div>Of <i>erat quidam homo</i>, much perplext,</div>
- <div>He seemed the same with studie great to scan,</div>
- <div>In English thus: <i>There was a certain man.</i></div>
- <div>But now (quoth he), good people, note you this:</div>
- <div>He saith there <i>was</i>&mdash;he doth not say there <i>is</i>;</div>
- <div>For in these days of ours it is most plain</div>
- <div>Of promise, oath, word, deed, no man’s certain;</div>
- <div>Yet by my text you see it comes to pass</div>
- <div>That surely once a certain man there was;</div>
- <div class="i1">But yet, I think, in all your Bible no man</div>
- <div class="i1">Can find this text, <i>There was a certain woman</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Ben Jonson, next to Shakespeare as a dramatist, is a master of satiric
-wit. His strong, somewhat psychological comedies are difficult to quote
-from except in long extracts.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FROM “EVERY MAN IN HIS HUMOR”</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Bobadil.</i> I will tell you, sir, by the way of private, and under
-seal, I am a gentleman, and live here obscure, and to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span> myself; but were
-I known to her majesty and the lords (observe me), I would undertake,
-upon this poor head and life, for the public benefit of the state, not
-only to spare the entire lives of her subjects in general, but to save
-the one-half, nay, three parts of her yearly charge in holding war, and
-against what enemy soever. And how would I do it, think you?</p>
-
-<p><i>E. Knowell.</i> Nay, I know not, nor can I conceive.</p>
-
-<p><i>Bobadil.</i> Why, thus, sir. I would select nineteen more, to
-myself, throughout the land; gentlemen they should be of good spirit,
-strong and able constitution; I would choose them by an instinct, a
-character that I have: and I would teach these nineteen the special
-rules&mdash;as your punto, your reverso, your stoccata, your imbroccato,
-your passado, your montanto&mdash;till they could all play very near, or
-altogether as well as myself. This done, say the enemy were forty
-thousand strong, we twenty would come into the field the tenth of
-March, or thereabouts; and we would challenge twenty of the enemy; they
-could not in their honor refuse us; well, we would kill them: challenge
-twenty more, kill them; twenty more, kill them; twenty more, kill them
-too; and thus would we kill every man his twenty a day, that’s twenty
-score; twenty score, that’s two hundred; two hundred a day, five days
-a thousand; forty thousand; forty times five, five times forty, two
-hundred days kills them all up by computation. And this will I venture
-my poor gentleman-like carcass to perform, provided there be no treason
-practised upon us, by fair and discreet manhood; that is, civilly by
-the sword.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FROM “VOLPONE”</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Volpone.</i> Lady, I kiss your bounty, and for this timely grace
-you have done your poor Scoto, of Mantua, I will return you, over and
-above my oil, a secret of that high and inestimable nature which shall
-make you for ever enamoured on that minute, wherein your eye first
-descended on so mean, yet not altogether to be despised, an object.
-Here is a powder concealed in this paper, of which, if I should speak
-to the worth, nine thousand volumes were but as one page, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span> page as
-a line, that line as a word; so short is this pilgrimage of man, which
-some call life, to the expression of it. Would I reflect on the price?
-Why, the whole world is but as an empire, that empire as a province,
-that province as a bank, that bank as a private purse to the purchase
-of it. I will only tell you it is the powder that made Venus a goddess,
-given her by Apollo, that kept her perpetually young, cleared her
-wrinkles, firmed her gums, filled her skin, coloured her hair, from her
-derived to Helen, and at the sack of Troy unfortunately lost: till now,
-in this our age, it was as happily recovered, by a studious antiquary,
-out of some ruins of Asia, who sent a moiety of it to the Court of
-France, but much sophisticated, wherewith the ladies there now colour
-their hair. The rest, at this present, remains with me, extracted to a
-quintessence; so that, wherever it but touches in youth it perpetually
-preserves, in age restores the complexion; seats your teeth, did they
-dance like virginal jacks, firm as a wall; makes them white as ivory,
-that were black as coal.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>A VINTNER</i>,</h4>
-
-<p class="p1">To whom Jonson was in debt, told him that he would excuse the payment,
-if he could give an immediate answer to the following questions: What
-God is best pleased with; what the devil is best pleased with: what the
-world is best pleased with; and what he was best pleased with. Jonson,
-without hesitation, replied thus:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>God is best pleas’d, when men forsake their sin;</div>
- <div>The devil’s best pleas’d, when they persist therein:</div>
- <div>The world’s best pleas’d, when thou dost sell good wine;</div>
- <div>And you’re best pleas’d, when I do pay for mine.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>It was the fashion to flatter in those days, and King James had
-abundance of such incense offered to him, though according to Ben
-Jonson it was impossible to <i>flatter</i> so perfect a monarch.
-The dramatist addressed the following epigram <i>To the Ghost of
-Martial</i> (Ep. 36):</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Martial, thou gav’st far nobler epigrams</div>
- <div>To thy Domitian, than I can my James:</div>
- <div>But in my royal subject I pass thee,</div>
- <div>Thou flattered’st thine, mine cannot flatter’d be.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>A thought which has been humorously expanded by Ben Jonson (Ep. 42):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Who says that Giles and Joan at discord be?</div>
- <div>Th’ observing neighbours no such mood can see.</div>
- <div>Indeed, poor Giles repents he married ever;</div>
- <div>But that his Joan doth too. And Giles would never</div>
- <div>By his free will be in Joan’s company;</div>
- <div>No more would Joan he should. Giles riseth early,</div>
- <div>And having got him out of doors is glad;</div>
- <div>The like is Joan. But turning home is sad;</div>
- <div>And so is Joan. Oft-times when Giles doth find</div>
- <div>Harsh sights at home, Giles wisheth he were blind;</div>
- <div>All this doth Joan. Or that his long-yearn’d life</div>
- <div>Were quite outspun; the like wish hath his wife.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If now, with man and wife, to will and nill</div>
- <div>The self-same things, a note of concord be,</div>
- <div>I know no couple better can agree.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>John Donne, one of the greatest preachers of the English church, was
-also a noted wit, poet and courtier. Like his contemporaries his wit
-was satirical, but in more playful vein than most.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE WILL</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">Before I sigh my last gasp, let me breathe,</div>
- <div class="i1">Great Love, some legacies: Here I bequeathe</div>
- <div class="i1">Mine eyes to Argus, if mine eyes can see;</div>
- <div class="i1">If they be blind, then, Love, I give them thee;</div>
- <div class="i1">My tongue to fame; to embassadors mine ears;</div>
- <div class="i3">To women or the sea, my tears.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span></div>
- <div class="i2">Thou, Love, hast taught me heretofore,</div>
- <div class="i1">By making me serve her who had twenty more,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">That I should give to none but such as had too much before.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">My constancy I to the planets give;</div>
- <div class="i1">My truth to them who at the court do live;</div>
- <div class="i1">My ingenuity and openness</div>
- <div class="i1">To Jesuits; to buffoons my pensiveness;</div>
- <div class="i1">My silence to any who abroad have been;</div>
- <div class="i3">My money to a Capuchin.</div>
- <div class="i2">Thou, Love, taught’st me, by appointing me</div>
- <div class="i1">To love there where no love received can be,</div>
- <div>Only to give to such as have an incapacity.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">My faith I give to Roman Catholics;</div>
- <div class="i1">All my good works unto the schismatics</div>
- <div class="i1">Of Amsterdam; my best civility</div>
- <div class="i1">And courtship to a university;</div>
- <div class="i1">My modesty I give to soldiers bare;</div>
- <div class="i3">My patience let gamesters share.</div>
- <div class="i2">Thou, Love taught’st me, by making me</div>
- <div class="i1">Love her that holds my love disparity,</div>
- <div>Only to give to those that count my gifts indignity.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">I give my reputation to those</div>
- <div class="i1">Which were my friends; mine industry to foes;</div>
- <div class="i1">To schoolmen I bequeathe my doubtfulness;</div>
- <div class="i1">My sickness to physicians, or excess;</div>
- <div class="i1">To Nature all that I in rhyme have writ;</div>
- <div class="i3">And to my company my wit.</div>
- <div class="i2">Thou, Love, by making me adore</div>
- <div class="i1">Her who begot this love in me before,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Taught’st me to make as though I gave, when I do but restore.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">To him for whom the passing bell next tolls</div>
- <div class="i1">I give my physic-books; my written rolls</div>
- <div class="i1">Of moral counsel I to Bedlam give;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span></div>
- <div class="i1">My brazen medals unto them which live</div>
- <div class="i1">In want of bread; to them which pass among</div>
- <div class="i3">All foreigners, mine English tongue.</div>
- <div class="i2">Thou, Love, by making me love one</div>
- <div class="i1">Who thinks her friendship a fit portion</div>
- <div>For younger lovers, dost my gifts thus disproportion.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">Therefore I’ll give no more, but I’ll undo</div>
- <div class="i1">The world by dying, because love dies too.</div>
- <div class="i1">Then all your beauties will no more be worth</div>
- <div class="i1">Than gold in mines where none doth draw it forth;</div>
- <div class="i1">And all your graces no more use shall have</div>
- <div class="i3">Than a sundial in a grave.</div>
- <div class="i2">Thou, Love, taught’st me, by making me</div>
- <div class="i1">Love her who doth neglect both thee and me,</div>
- <div>To invent and practise this one way to annihilate all three.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Thomas Dekker was a prolific dramatic author of the period, and his
-satirical characterizations are among the wittiest of his day.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OBEDIENT HUSBANDS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There is a humour incident to a woman, which is, when a young man
-hath turmoiled himself so long that with much ado he hath gotten
-into marriage, and hath perhaps met with a wife according to his own
-desire, and perchance such an one that it had been better for him had
-he lighted on another, yet he likes her so well that he would not have
-missed her for any gold; for, in his opinion, there is no woman like
-unto her. He hath a great delight to hear her speak, is proud of his
-match, and is, peradventure, withal of so sheepish a nature, that he
-has purposed to govern himself wholly by her counsel and direction,
-so that if any one speak to him of a bargain, or whatsoever other
-business, he tells them that he will have his wife’s opinion on it, and
-if she be content, he will go through with it; if not, then will he
-give it over.</p>
-
-<p>Thus he is as tame and pliable as a jackanapes to his keeper. If the
-Prince set forth an army, and she be unwilling that he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span> should go,
-who (you may think) will ask her leave, then must he stay at home,
-fight who will for the country. But if she be desirous at any time to
-have his room (which many times she likes better than his company),
-she wants no journey to employ him in, and he is as ready as a page
-to undertake them. If she chide, he answers not a word; generally,
-whatsoever she does, or howsoever, he thinks it well done.</p>
-
-<p>Judge, now, in what a case this silly calf is! Is not he, think you,
-finely dressed, that is in such subjection? The honestest woman and
-most modest of that sex, if she wear the breeches, is so out of reason
-in taunting and controlling her husband&mdash;for this is their common
-fault&mdash;and be she never so wise, yet a woman, scarce able to govern
-herself, much less her husband and all his affairs; for, were it not
-so, God would have made her the head. Which, since it is otherwise,
-what can be more preposterous than that the head should be governed by
-the foot?</p>
-
-<p>If, then, a wise and honest woman’s superiority be unseemly, and breed
-great inconvenience, how is he dressed, think you, if he light on a
-fond, wanton, and malicious dame? Then doubtless he is soundly sped.
-She will keep a sweetheart under his nose, yet is he so blind that he
-can perceive nothing. But, for more security, she will many times send
-him packing beyond sea, about some odd errand that she will buzz in his
-ears, and he will perform it at her pleasure, though she send him forth
-at midnight, in hail, rain, and snow, for he must be a man for all
-weathers.</p>
-
-<p>Their children, if they have any, must be brought up, apparelled,
-taught, and fed according to her pleasure, and one point of their
-learning is always to make no account of their father. Finally, she
-orders all things as she thinks best herself, making no more account
-of him, especially if he be in years, than men do of an old horse that
-is put to labour. Thus is he mewed up, plunged in a sea of cares;
-and yet he, kind fool, deems himself most happy in his happiness,
-wherein he must now perforce remain while life doth last, and pity it
-were he should want it, since he likes it so well.&mdash;<i>The Bachelor’s
-Banquet.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span></p>
-
-<p>Horace is thus amusingly introduced as in the act of concocting an ode:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>To thee whose forehead swells with roses,</div>
- <div>Whose most haunted bower</div>
- <div>Gives life and scent to every flower,</div>
- <div>Whose most adoréd name encloses</div>
- <div>Things abstruse, deep and divine;</div>
- <div>Whose yellow tresses shine</div>
- <div>Bright as Eoan fire.</div>
- <div>Oh, me thy priest inspire!</div>
- <div>For I to thee and thine immortal name,</div>
- <div>In&mdash;in&mdash;in golden tunes,</div>
- <div>For I to thee and thine immortal name&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">In&mdash;sacred raptures flowing, flowing, swimming, swimming:</div>
- <div>In sacred raptures swimming,</div>
- <div>Immortal name, game, dame, tame, lame, lame, lame,</div>
- <div>[Foh,] hath, shame, proclaim, oh&mdash;</div>
- <div>In sacred raptures flowing, will proclaim [no!].</div>
- <div>Oh, me they priest inspire!</div>
- <div>For I to thee and thine immortal name,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">In flowing numbers filled with spright and flame (Good, good!)</div>
- <div>In flowing numbers filled with spright and flame.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>John Fletcher is believed to have composed the greater part of the
-plays by Beaumont and Fletcher.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Laughing Song</i> is attributed to Fletcher alone.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><i>LAUGHING SONG</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">(<i>For several voices</i>)</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Oh how my lungs do tickle! ha ha ha!</div>
- <div>Of how my lungs do tickle! ho ho ho ho!</div>
- <div class="i4">Set a sharp jest</div>
- <div class="i4">Against my breast,</div>
- <div>Then how my lungs do tickle!</div>
- <div class="i4">As nightingales,</div>
- <div class="i4">And things in cambric rails,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span></div>
- <div>Sing best against a prickle.</div>
- <div class="i4">Ha ha ha ha!</div>
- <div class="i4">Ho ho ho ho ho!</div>
- <div>Laugh! Laugh! Laugh! Laugh!</div>
- <div>Wide! Loud! And vary!</div>
- <div>A smile is for a simpering novice,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i3">One that ne’er tasted caviarë,</div>
- <div>Nor knows the smack of dear anchovies.</div>
- <div class="i4">Ha ha ha ha ha!</div>
- <div class="i4">Ho ho ho ho ho!</div>
- <div>A giggling waiting-wench for me,</div>
- <div>That shows her teeth how white they be,&mdash;</div>
- <div>A thing not fit for gravity,</div>
- <div>For theirs are foul and hardly three.</div>
- <div class="i4">Ha ha ha!</div>
- <div class="i4">Ho ho ho!</div>
- <div>“Democritus, thou ancient fleerer,</div>
- <div class="i1">How I miss thy laugh, and ha’ since!”</div>
- <div>There thou named the famous[est] jeerer</div>
- <div class="i1">That e’er jeered in Rome or Athens.</div>
- <div class="i4">Ha ha ha!</div>
- <div class="i4">Ho ho ho!</div>
- <div>“How brave lives he that keeps a fool,</div>
- <div class="i1">Although the rate be deeper!”</div>
- <div>But he that is his own fool, sir,</div>
- <div class="i1">Does live a great deal cheaper.</div>
- <div>“Sure I shall burst, burst, quite break,</div>
- <div class="i1">Thou art so witty.”</div>
- <div>“’Tis rare to break at court,</div>
- <div class="i1">For that belongs to the city.”</div>
- <div>Ha ha! my spleen is almost worn</div>
- <div class="i1">To the last laughter.</div>
- <div>“Oh keep a corner for a friend!</div>
- <div class="i1">A jest may come hereafter.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Bishop Corbet, more sociable and vivacious than many of his calling
-wrote rollicking verses as well as wise and serious sermons.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span></p>
-
-<p>Perhaps this is the first known example of sheer nonsense verse.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>LIKE TO THE THUNDERING TONE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Like to the thundering tone of unspoke speeches,</div>
- <div>Or like a lobster clad in logic breeches,</div>
- <div>Or like the gray fur of a crimson cat,</div>
- <div>Or like the mooncalf in a slipshod hat;</div>
- <div>E’en such is he who never was begotten</div>
- <div>Until his children were both dead and rotten.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Like to the fiery tombstone of a cabbage,</div>
- <div>Or like a crab-louse with its bag and baggage,</div>
- <div>Or like the four square circle of a ring,</div>
- <div>Or like to hey ding, ding-a, ding-a, ding;</div>
- <div>E’en such is he who spake, and yet, no doubt,</div>
- <div>Spake to small purpose, when his tongue was out.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Like to a fair, fresh, fading, wither’d rose,</div>
- <div>Or like to rhyming verse that runs in prose,</div>
- <div>Or like the stumbles of a tinder-box,</div>
- <div>Or like a man that’s sound yet sickness mocks;</div>
- <div>E’en such is he who died and yet did laugh</div>
- <div>To see these lines writ for his epitaph.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>It may be that utter nonsense was more in vogue at this time than can
-be definitely asserted, for such productions would, naturally, not be
-preserved as were the more important matters.</p>
-
-<p>This anonymous bit of nonsense is said to have been written in 1617,
-and may be from the pen of the same worthy Bishop.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>NONSENSE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Oh, that my lungs could bleat like butter’d Pease;</div>
- <div class="i1">But bleating of my lungs hath caught the itch,</div>
- <div>And are as mangy as the Irish seas</div>
- <div class="i1">That offer wary windmills to the Rich.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I grant that Rainbowes being lull’d asleep,</div>
- <div class="i1">Snort like a woodknife in a Lady’s eyes;</div>
- <div>Which makes her grieve to see a pudding creep,</div>
- <div class="i1">For Creeping puddings only please the wise.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Not that a hard-row’d herring should presume</div>
- <div class="i1">To swing a tyth pig in a Cateskin purse;</div>
- <div>For fear the hailstons which did fall at Rome,</div>
- <div class="i1">By lesning of the fault should make it worse.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For ’tis most certain Winter woolsacks grow</div>
- <div class="i1">From geese to swans if men could keep them so.</div>
- <div>Till that the sheep shorn Planets gave the hint</div>
- <div class="i1">To pickle pancakes in Geneva print.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Some men there were that did suppose the skie</div>
- <div class="i1">Was made of Carbonado’d Antidotes;</div>
- <div>But my opinion is, a Whale’s left eye,</div>
- <div class="i1">Need not be coynéd all King Harry groates.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The reason’s plain, for Charon’s Westerne barge</div>
- <div class="i1">Running a tilt at the Subjunctive mood,</div>
- <div>Beckoned to Bednal Green, and gave him charge</div>
- <div class="i1">To fasten padlockes with Antartic food.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The End will be the Mill ponds must be laded,</div>
- <div class="i1">To fish for white pots in a Country dance;</div>
- <div>So they that suffered wrong and were upbraded</div>
- <div class="i1">Shall be made friends in a left-handed trance.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">A charming lyric by Bishop Corbet is:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>FAREWELL TO THE FAIRIES</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Farewell, rewards and fairies!”</div>
- <div class="i1">Good housewives now may say,</div>
- <div>For now foul sluts in dairies</div>
- <div class="i1">Do fare as well as they.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span></div>
- <div>And, though they sweep their hearths no less</div>
- <div class="i1">Than maids were wont to do,</div>
- <div>Yet who of late, for cleanliness,</div>
- <div class="i1">Finds sixpence in her shoe?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Lament, lament, old Abbeys,</div>
- <div class="i1">The fairies lost command!</div>
- <div>They did but change priests’ babies,</div>
- <div class="i1">But some have changed your land;</div>
- <div>And all your children stoln from thence</div>
- <div class="i1">Are now grown Puritans;</div>
- <div>Who live as changelings ever since,</div>
- <div class="i1">For love of your domains.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At morning and at evening both,</div>
- <div class="i1">You merry were and glad,</div>
- <div>So little care of sleep or sloth</div>
- <div class="i1">These pretty ladies had;</div>
- <div>When Tom came home from labour,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or Cis to milking rose,</div>
- <div>Then merrily went their tabor,</div>
- <div class="i1">And nimbly went their toes.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Witness those rings and roundelays</div>
- <div class="i1">Of theirs, which yet remain,</div>
- <div>Were footed in Queen Mary’s days</div>
- <div class="i1">On many a grassy plain;</div>
- <div>But, since of late Elizabeth,</div>
- <div class="i1">And later James, came in,</div>
- <div>They never danced on any heath</div>
- <div class="i1">As when the time hath been.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>By which we note the fairies</div>
- <div class="i1">Were of the old profession,</div>
- <div>Their songs were Ave-Maries,</div>
- <div class="i1">Their dances were procession:</div>
- <div>But now, alas! they all are dead,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or gone beyond the seas;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span></div>
- <div>Or further for religion fled,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or else they take their ease.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A tell-tale in their company</div>
- <div class="i1">They never could endure,</div>
- <div>And whoso kept not secretly</div>
- <div class="i1">Their mirth was punished sure;</div>
- <div>It was a just and Christian deed</div>
- <div class="i1">To pinch such black and blue:</div>
- <div>Oh how the commonwealth doth need</div>
- <div class="i1">Such justices as you!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Bishop Corbet’s epigram on Beaumont’s early death is well known:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He that hath such acuteness and such wit,</div>
- <div>As would ask ten good heads to husband it;</div>
- <div>He, that can write so well that no man dare</div>
- <div>Refuse it for the best, let him beware:</div>
- <div class="i1">Beaumont is dead, by whose sole death appears,</div>
- <div class="i1">Wit’s a disease consumes men in few years.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Sir Walter Raleigh, the graceful and brilliant courtier, is thought by
-most students of the subject to have written <i>The Lie</i>. Though it
-has been attributed to various authors the weight of evidence is in
-favor of Raleigh.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE LIE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Go, Soul, the body’s guest,</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon a thankless errand;</div>
- <div>Fear not to touch the best;</div>
- <div class="i1">The truth shall be thy warrant.</div>
- <div class="i2">Go, since I needs must die,</div>
- <div class="i2">And give them all the lie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Go tell the Court it glows</div>
- <div class="i1">And shines like rotten wood;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span></div>
- <div>Go tell the Church it shows</div>
- <div class="i1">What’s good, but does no good.</div>
- <div class="i2">If Court and Church reply,</div>
- <div class="i2">Give Court and Church the lie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell Potentates they live</div>
- <div class="i1">Acting, but oh! their actions;</div>
- <div>Not loved, unless they give,</div>
- <div class="i1">Not strong but by their factions.</div>
- <div class="i2">If Potentates reply,</div>
- <div class="i2">Give Potentates the lie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell men of high condition,</div>
- <div class="i1">That rule affairs of state,</div>
- <div>Their purpose is ambition;</div>
- <div class="i1">Their practice only hate;</div>
- <div class="i2">And if they do reply,</div>
- <div class="i2">Then give them all the lie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell those that brave it most,</div>
- <div class="i1">They beg for more by spending,</div>
- <div>Who in their greatest cost</div>
- <div class="i1">Seek nothing but commending;</div>
- <div class="i2">And if they make reply,</div>
- <div class="i2">Spare not to give the lie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell zeal it wants devotion;</div>
- <div class="i1">Tell love it is but lust;</div>
- <div>Tell time it is but motion;</div>
- <div class="i1">Tell flesh it is but dust:</div>
- <div class="i2">And wish them not reply,</div>
- <div class="i2">For thou must give the lie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell age it daily wasteth;</div>
- <div class="i1">Tell honor how it alters;</div>
- <div>Tell beauty how she blasteth;</div>
- <div class="i1">Tell favor how it falters:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span></div>
- <div class="i2">And as they shall reply,</div>
- <div class="i2">Give every one the lie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell wit how much it wrangles</div>
- <div class="i1">In tickle points of niceness;</div>
- <div>Tell wisdom she entangles</div>
- <div class="i1">Herself in over-wiseness:</div>
- <div class="i2">And when they do reply,</div>
- <div class="i2">Straight give them both the lie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell physic of her boldness;</div>
- <div class="i1">Tell skill it is pretension;</div>
- <div>Tell charity of coldness;</div>
- <div class="i1">Tell law it is contention:</div>
- <div class="i2">And as they do reply,</div>
- <div class="i2">So give them still the lie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell fortune of her blindness;</div>
- <div class="i1">Tell nature of decay;</div>
- <div>Tell friendship of unkindness;</div>
- <div class="i1">Tell justice of delay:</div>
- <div class="i2">And if they will reply,</div>
- <div class="i2">Then give them all the lie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell arts they have no soundness,</div>
- <div class="i1">But vary by esteeming;</div>
- <div>Tell schools they want profoundness,</div>
- <div class="i1">And stand too much on seeming:</div>
- <div class="i2">If arts and schools reply,</div>
- <div class="i2">Give arts and schools the lie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell faith it’s fled the city;</div>
- <div class="i1">Tell how the country erreth;</div>
- <div>Tell, manhood shakes off pity;</div>
- <div class="i1">Tell, virtue least preferreth:</div>
- <div class="i2">And if they do reply,</div>
- <div class="i2">Spare not to give the lie.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So when thou hast, as I</div>
- <div class="i1">Commanded thee, done blabbing,&mdash;</div>
- <div>Although to give the lie</div>
- <div class="i1">Deserves no less than stabbing,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i2">Yet, stab at thee that will,</div>
- <div class="i2">No stab the soul can kill.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The following well-known and thoroughly characteristic verses
-originally appeared in <i>Gammer Gurton’s Needle</i>, an old English
-comedy, which was long supposed to be the earliest written in the
-language, but which now ranks as the second in point of age. It was
-written by John Still, afterwards Bishop of Bath and Wells.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>JOLLY GOOD ALE AND OLD</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I cannot eat but little meat;</div>
- <div class="i1">My stomach is not good;</div>
- <div>But sure I think that I can drink</div>
- <div class="i1">With him that wears a hood.</div>
- <div>Though I go bare, take ye no care,</div>
- <div class="i1">I nothing am a-cold,</div>
- <div>I stuff my skin so full within</div>
- <div class="i1">Of jolly good ale and old.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Back and side go bare, go bare;</div>
- <div class="i1">Both foot and hand go cold;</div>
- <div>But, belly, God send thee good ale enough,</div>
- <div class="i1">Whether it be new or old.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I love no roast but a nut-brown toast,</div>
- <div class="i1">And a crab laid in the fire;</div>
- <div>And little bread shall do me stead;</div>
- <div class="i1">Much bread I nought desire.</div>
- <div>No frost, no snow, no wind, I trow,</div>
- <div class="i1">Can hurt me if I wold,</div>
- <div>I am so wrapp’d, and thoroughly lapp’d,</div>
- <div class="i1">Of jolly good ale and old.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5">Back and side, etc.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And Tib, my wife, that as her life</div>
- <div class="i1">Loveth well good ale to seek,</div>
- <div>Full oft drinks she, till ye may see</div>
- <div class="i1">The tears run down her cheek:</div>
- <div>Then doth she troul to me the bowl,</div>
- <div class="i1">Even as a maltworm should,</div>
- <div>And saith, “Sweetheart, I took my part</div>
- <div class="i1">Of this jolly good ale and old.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5">Back and side, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now let them drink till they nod and wink</div>
- <div class="i1">Even as good fellows should do;</div>
- <div>They shall not miss to have the bliss</div>
- <div class="i1">Good ale doth bring men to.</div>
- <div>And all poor souls that have scour’d bowls</div>
- <div class="i1">Or have them lustily troul’d,</div>
- <div>God save the lives of them and their wives,</div>
- <div class="i1">Whether they be young or old.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5">Back and side, etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Sir John Davies, poet and lawyer, wrote many acrostics to Queen
-Elizabeth, and other witty verses.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ACROSTICS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Earth now is green and heaven is blue;</div>
- <div>Lively spring which makes all new,</div>
- <div>Iolly spring doth enter.</div>
- <div>Sweet young sunbeams do subdue</div>
- <div>Angry aged winter.</div>
- <div>Blasts are mild and seas are calm,</div>
- <div>Every meadow flows with balm,</div>
- <div>The earth wears all her riches,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span></div>
- <div>Harmonious birds sing such a psalm</div>
- <div>As ear and heart bewitches.</div>
- <div>Reserve (sweet spring) this nymph of ours,</div>
- <div>Eternal garlands of thy flowers,</div>
- <div>Green garlands never wasting;</div>
- <div>In her shall last our state’s fair spring,</div>
- <div>Now and forever flourishing,</div>
- <div>As long as heaven is lasting.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE MARRIED STATE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Wedlock, indeed, hath oft comparèd been</div>
- <div>To public feasts, where meet a public rout,</div>
- <div>Where they that are without would fain go in,</div>
- <div>And they that are within would fain go out.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>John Marston, both dramatist and divine, gives us this bit of humorous
-satire&mdash;</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE SCHOLAR AND HIS DOG</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I was a scholar: seven useful springs</div>
- <div>Did I deflower in quotations</div>
- <div>Of cross’d opinions ’bout the soul of man;</div>
- <div>The more I learnt, the more I learnt to doubt.</div>
- <div>Delight my spaniel slept, whilst I baus’d leaves,</div>
- <div>Toss’d o’er the dunces, pored on the old print</div>
- <div>Of titled words: and still my spaniel slept.</div>
- <div>Whilst I wasted lamp-oil, baited my flesh,</div>
- <div>Shrunk up my veins: and still my spaniel slept.</div>
- <div>And still I held converse with Zabarell,</div>
- <div>Aquinas, Scotus, and the musty saw</div>
- <div>Of antick Donate: still my spaniel slept.</div>
- <div>Still on went I; first, <i>an sit anima</i>;</div>
- <div>Then, an it were mortal. Oh, hold, hold! at that</div>
- <div>They’re at brain buffets, fell by the ears amain</div>
- <div>Pell-mell together; still my spaniel slept.</div>
- <div>Then, whether ’t were corporeal, local, fixt,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span></div>
- <div><i>Ex traduce</i>, but whether ’t had free will</div>
- <div>Or no, hot philosophers</div>
- <div>Stood banding factions, all so strongly propt,</div>
- <div>I stagger’d, knew not which was firmer part,</div>
- <div>But thought, quoted, read, observ’d, and pryed,</div>
- <div>Stufft noting-books: and still my spaniel slept.</div>
- <div>At length he wak’d, and yawned; and by yon sky,</div>
- <div>For aught I know he knew as much as I.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Following the example of Jest Books and collections of Merry Tales,
-came the Anthologies.</p>
-
-<p>The most important of these was the <i>Miscellany</i>, which went
-through eight editions in thirty years, and is said to be the book of
-songs and sonnets that Master Slender missed so much.</p>
-
-<p>This book was first published in 1557 and was followed by many less
-worthy collections.</p>
-
-<p>In 1576 appeared <i>The Paradise of Dainty Devices</i> which also ran
-through many editions.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule these collections were uninteresting and composed largely
-of dull and prosy numbers. Their chief charm lay in their titles,
-which were such as <i>A Gorgeous Gallery of Gallant Inventions</i>,
-<i>A Handful of Pleasant Delights</i>, and <i>A Bouquet of Dainty
-Conceits</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Yet it must be remembered that this latter half of the Sixteenth
-Century saw the splendid flowering of lyric poetry, and in the last
-year appeared a famous book called <i>England’s Helicon</i> or <i>The
-Muses’ Harmony</i>, which was a sort of Golden Treasury of the
-Elizabethan age.</p>
-
-<p>This was supplemented two years later by the <i>Poetical Rhapsody</i>,
-edited by Francis Davison, and from then on, the collected songs and
-verses of England showed poetry from the masters.</p>
-
-<p>Also there were produced at this period many translations, both of
-the classics and of more modern works of various countries; though no
-important humorous work was translated until the next century, when
-Urquhart gave Rabelais to the English people.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span></p>
-
-<h3>FRENCH WIT AND HUMOR</h3>
-
-<p>Rutebœuf, the Trouvère, of the Thirteenth Century, if not the principal
-author of the Fabliaux was the first to put them into rhyme.</p>
-
-<p>Most of his tales are too long and rambling to quote, and we content
-ourselves with one.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE ASS’S TESTAMENT</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A priest there was in times of old,</div>
- <div>Fond of his church, but fonder of gold,</div>
- <div>Who spent his days and all his thought</div>
- <div>In getting what he preached was naught.</div>
- <div>His chests were full of robes and stuff,</div>
- <div>Corn filled his garners to the roof,</div>
- <div>Stored up against the fair-times gay,</div>
- <div>From Saint Rémy to Easter Day.</div>
- <div>An ass he had within his stable,</div>
- <div>A beast most sound and valuable.</div>
- <div>For twenty years he lent his strength</div>
- <div>For the priest, his master, till at length,</div>
- <div>Worn out with work and age, he died.</div>
- <div>The priest, who loved him, wept and cried;</div>
- <div>And, for his service long and hard,</div>
- <div>Buried him in his own churchyard.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now turn we to another thing:</div>
- <div>’Tis of a bishop that I sing.</div>
- <div>No greedy miser he, I ween;</div>
- <div>Prelate so generous ne’er was seen.</div>
- <div>Full well he loved in company</div>
- <div>Of all good Christians still to be;</div>
- <div>When he was well, his pleasure still,</div>
- <div>His medicine best when he was ill.</div>
- <div>Always his hall was full, and there</div>
- <div>His guests had ever best of fare.</div>
- <div>Whate’er the bishop lack’d or lost</div>
- <div>Was bought at once despite the cost;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span></div>
- <div>And so, in spite of rent and score,</div>
- <div>The bishop’s debts grew more and more.</div>
- <div>For true it is&mdash;this ne’er forget&mdash;</div>
- <div>Who spends too much gets into debt.</div>
- <div>One day his friends all with him sat,</div>
- <div>The bishop talking this and that,</div>
- <div>Till the discourse on rich clerks ran,</div>
- <div>Of greedy priests, and how their plan</div>
- <div>Was all good bishops still to grieve,</div>
- <div>And of their dues their lords deceive.</div>
- <div>And then the priest of whom I’ve told</div>
- <div>Was mention’d; how he loved his gold.</div>
- <div>And because men do often use</div>
- <div>More freedom than the truth would choose,</div>
- <div>They gave him wealth, and wealth so much,</div>
- <div>As those like him could scarcely touch.</div>
- <div>“And then besides, a thing he’s done,</div>
- <div>By which great profit might be won,</div>
- <div>Could it be only spoken here.”</div>
- <div>Quoth the bishop, “Tell it without fear.”</div>
- <div>“He’s worse, my lord, than Bedouin,</div>
- <div>Because his own dead ass, Baldwin,</div>
- <div>He buried in the sacred ground.”</div>
- <div>“If this is truth, as shall be found,”</div>
- <div>The bishop cried, “a forfeit high</div>
- <div>Will on his worldly riches lie.</div>
- <div>Summon this wicked priest to me;</div>
- <div>I will myself in this case be</div>
- <div>The judge. If Robert’s word be true,</div>
- <div>Mine are the fine and forfeit too.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing1">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Disloyal! God’s enemy and mine,</div>
- <div>Prepare to pay a heavy fine.</div>
- <div>Thy ass thou buriedst in the place</div>
- <div>Sacred to church. Now, by God’s grace,</div>
- <div>I never heard of crime more great.</div>
- <div>What! Christian men with asses wait?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span></div>
- <div>Now, if this thing be proven, know</div>
- <div>Surely to prison thou wilt go.”</div>
- <div>“Sir,” said the priest, “thy patience grant;</div>
- <div>A short delay is all I want.</div>
- <div>Not that I fear to answer now&mdash;</div>
- <div>But give me what the laws allow.”</div>
- <div>And so the bishop leaves the priest,</div>
- <div>Who does not feel as if at feast.</div>
- <div>But still, because one friend remains,</div>
- <div>He trembles not at prison pains.</div>
- <div>His purse it is which never fails</div>
- <div>For tax or forfeit, fine or vails.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The term arrived, the priest appeared,</div>
- <div>And met the bishop, nothing feared;</div>
- <div>For ’neath his girdle safe there hung</div>
- <div>A leathern purse, well stocked and strung</div>
- <div>With twenty pieces fresh and bright,</div>
- <div>Good money all, none clipped or light.</div>
- <div>“Priest,” said the bishop, “if thou have</div>
- <div>Answer to give to charge so grave,</div>
- <div>’Tis now the time.”</div>
- <div class="i11">“Sir, grant me leave</div>
- <div>My answer secretly to give.</div>
- <div>Let me confess to you alone,</div>
- <div>And, if needs be, my sins atone.”</div>
- <div>The bishop bent his head to hear,</div>
- <div>The priest he whispered in his ear:</div>
- <div>“Sir, spare a tedious tale to tell.</div>
- <div>My poor ass served me long and well,</div>
- <div>For twenty years my faithful slave,</div>
- <div>Each year his work a saving gave</div>
- <div>Of twenty sous&mdash;-so that in all</div>
- <div>To twenty livres the sum will fall;</div>
- <div>And, for the safety of his soul,</div>
- <div>To you, my lord, he left the whole.”</div>
- <div>“’Twas rightly done,” the bishop said,</div>
- <div>And gravely shook his godly head:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span></div>
- <div>“And, that his soul to heaven may go,</div>
- <div>My absolution I bestow.”</div>
- <div>Now have you heard a truthful lay,</div>
- <div>How with rich priests the bishops play;</div>
- <div>And Rutebœuf the moral draws</div>
- <div>That, spite of kings’ and bishops’ laws,</div>
- <div>’Gainst evil is the man secure</div>
- <div>That shields himself with money’s lure.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>In the Fourteenth century, Eustache Deschampes wrote more than a
-thousand ballades, virelais and other forms of light verse.</p>
-
-<p>One of his ballades, here given in translation, is of a distinctly
-modern type of wit.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ADVICE TO A FRIEND ON MARRIAGE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ope! Who? A friend! What wouldst obtain?</div>
- <div class="i1">Advice! Whereof? Is’t well to wed?</div>
- <div>I wish to marry. What’s your pain?</div>
- <div class="i1">No wife have I for board and bed,</div>
- <div class="i1">By whom my house is wisely led.</div>
- <div>One meek and fair I wish to gain,</div>
- <div class="i1">Young, wealthy, too, and nobly bred;</div>
- <div>You’re crazy&mdash;batter out your brain!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Consider! Grief can you sustain?</div>
- <div class="i1">Women have tempers bold and dread;</div>
- <div>When for a dish of eggs you’re fain,</div>
- <div class="i1">Broth, cheese, you’ll have before you spread:</div>
- <div class="i1">Now free, you’ll be a slave instead&mdash;</div>
- <div>When married, you yourself have slain.</div>
- <div class="i1">Think well. My first resolve is said;</div>
- <div>You’re crazy&mdash;batter out your brain!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>No wife will be like her you feign;</div>
- <div class="i1">On angry words you shall be fed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span></div>
- <div>So shall you bitterly complain,</div>
- <div class="i1">With woes too hard to bear, bested:</div>
- <div class="i1">Better a life in forest led</div>
- <div>Than of such beast to bear the strain.</div>
- <div class="i1">No! The sweet fancy fills my head;</div>
- <div>You’re crazy&mdash;batter out your brain!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ENVOY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Soon you will long that you were dead</div>
- <div class="i1">When married; seek in street or lane</div>
- <div>Some love. No! Passion bids me wed;</div>
- <div class="i1">You’re crazy&mdash;batter out your brain!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Olivier Basselin who flourished in the Fifteenth century, and who was
-a fuller by trade, is another one of the literary “Fathers,” his title
-being, “Le Pere Joyeux du Vaudeville.” Born at Vire, surrounded by
-valleys, it is held by some, while contradicted by others, that the
-modern term vaudeville is a corruption of Vaux de Vire.</p>
-
-<p>His songs are mostly convivial and his humor broad and rollicking.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO MY NOSE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Fair Nose! whose rubies red have cost me many a barrel</div>
- <div class="i1">Of claret wine and white,</div>
- <div>Who wearest in thy rich and sumptuous apparel</div>
- <div class="i1">Such red and purple light!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Great Nose! who looks at thee through some huge glass at revel,</div>
- <div class="i1">More of thy beauty thinks:</div>
- <div>For thou resemblest not the nose of some poor devil</div>
- <div class="i1">Who only water drinks.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The turkey-cock doth wear, resembling thee, his wattles,</div>
- <div class="i1">How many rich men now</div>
- <div>Have not so rich a nose! To paint thee, many bottles</div>
- <div class="i1">And much time I allow.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The glass my pencil is for thine illumination;</div>
- <div class="i1">My color is the wine,</div>
- <div>With which I’ve painted thee more red than the carnation,</div>
- <div class="i1">By drinking of the fine.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Tis said it hurts the eyes; but shall they be the masters?</div>
- <div class="i1">Wine is the cure for all;</div>
- <div>Better the windows both should suffer some disasters,</div>
- <div class="i1">Than have the whole house fall.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>APOLOGY FOR CIDER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Though Frenchmen at our drink may laugh,</div>
- <div class="i1">And think their taste is wondrous fine,</div>
- <div>The Norman cider, which we quaff,</div>
- <div class="i1">Is quite the equal of his wine,&mdash;</div>
- <div>When down, down, down it freely goes,</div>
- <div>And charms the palate as it flows.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Whene’er a potent draught I take,</div>
- <div class="i1">How dost thou bid me drink again?</div>
- <div>Yet, pray, for my affection’s sake,</div>
- <div class="i1">Dear Cider, do not turn my brain.</div>
- <div>O, down, down, down it freely goes,</div>
- <div>And charms the palate as it flow.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I find I never lose my wits,</div>
- <div class="i1">However freely I carouse,</div>
- <div>And never try in angry fits</div>
- <div class="i1">To raise a tempest in the house;</div>
- <div>Though down, down, down the cider goes,</div>
- <div>And charms the palate as it flows.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>To strive for riches in all stuff,</div>
- <div class="i1">Just take the good the gods have sent;</div>
- <div>A man is sure to have enough</div>
- <div class="i1">If with his own he is content;</div>
- <div>As down, down, down, the cider goes,</div>
- <div>And charms the palate as it flows.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In truth that was a hearty bout;</div>
- <div class="i1">Why, not a drop is left,&mdash;not one;</div>
- <div>I feel I’ve put my thirst to rout;</div>
- <div class="i1">The stubborn foe at last is gone.</div>
- <div>So down, down, down the cider goes,</div>
- <div>And charms the palate as it flows.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Francois Villon, born 1431, though not paternally designated, is
-called, and rightly, the Prince of Ballade Makers.</p>
-
-<p>Two translations are here given of one of his most popular poems, and
-another witty Ballade is added.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><i>THE BALLADE OF DEAD LADIES</i><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>Translated by Dante Gabriel Rossetti</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell me now in what hidden way is</div>
- <div class="i1">Lady Flora the lovely Roman?</div>
- <div>Where’s Hipparchia, and where is Thais,</div>
- <div class="i1">Neither of them the fairer woman?</div>
- <div class="i1">Where is Echo, beheld of no man,</div>
- <div>Only heard on river and mere,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">She whose beauty was more than human?...</div>
- <div>But where are the snows of yester-year?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Where’s Héloïse, the learned nun,</div>
- <div class="i1">For whose sake Abeillard, I ween,</div>
- <div>Lost manhood and put priesthood on?</div>
- <div class="i1">(From Love he won such dule and teen!)</div>
- <div class="i1">And where, I pray you, is the Queen</div>
- <div>Who willed that Buridan should steer</div>
- <div class="i1">Sewed in a sack’s mouth down the Seine?...</div>
- <div>But where are the snows of yester-year?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>White Queen Blanche, like a queen of lilies,</div>
- <div class="i1">With a voice like any mermaiden,&mdash;</div>
- <div>Bertha Broad-foot, Beatrice, Alice,</div>
- <div class="i1">And Ermengarde the lady of Maine,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">And that good Joan whom Englishmen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span></div>
- <div>At Rouen doomed and burned her there,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Mother of God, where are they then?...</div>
- <div>But where are the snows of yester-year?</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>Envoi</i>:</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">Nay, never ask this week, fair lord,</div>
- <div>Where they are gone, nor yet this year,</div>
- <div class="i1">Except with this for an overword,&mdash;</div>
- <div>But where are the snows of yester-year?</div>
- </div>
-
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><i>A BALLADE OF OLD TIME LADIES</i><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>Translated by John Payne</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell me, where, in what land of shade,</div>
- <div class="i1">Hides fair Flora of Rome? and where</div>
- <div>Are Thaìs and Archipiade,</div>
- <div class="i1">Cousins-german in beauty rare?</div>
- <div class="i1">And Echo, more than mortal fair,</div>
- <div>That when one calls by river flow,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or marish, answers out of the air?</div>
- <div>But what has become of last year’s snow?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Where did the learn’d Héloïsa vade,</div>
- <div class="i1">For whose sake Abelard did not spare</div>
- <div>(Such dole for love on him was laid)</div>
- <div class="i1">Manhood to lose and a cowl to wear?</div>
- <div class="i1">And where is the queen who will’d whilere</div>
- <div>That Buridan, tied in a sack, should go</div>
- <div class="i1">Floating down Seine from the turret-stair?</div>
- <div>But what has become of last year’s snow?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Blanche, too, the lily-white queen, that made</div>
- <div class="i1">Sweet music as if she a siren were?</div>
- <div>Broad-foot Bertha? and Joan, the maid,</div>
- <div class="i1">The good Lorrainer the English bare</div>
- <div class="i1">Captive to Rouen, and burn’d her there?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span></div>
- <div>Beatrix, Eremburge, Alys&mdash;lo!</div>
- <div class="i1">Where are they, virgins debonair?</div>
- <div>But what has become of last year’s snow?</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>Envoi</i>:</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Prince, you may question how they fare,</div>
- <div class="i1">This week, or liefer this year, I trow:</div>
- <div>Still shall the answer this burden bear&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">But what has become of last year’s snow?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>BALLAD OF THE WOMEN OF PARIS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Albeit the Venice girls get praise</div>
- <div class="i1">For their sweet speech and tender air,</div>
- <div>And though the old women have wise ways</div>
- <div class="i1">Of chaffering for amorous ware,</div>
- <div class="i1">Yet at my peril dare I swear,</div>
- <div>Search Rome, where God’s grace mainly tarries,</div>
- <div class="i1">Florence and Savoy, everywhere,</div>
- <div>There’s no good girl’s lip out of Paris.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Naples women, as folk prattle,</div>
- <div class="i1">Are sweetly spoken and subtle enough:</div>
- <div>German girls are good at tattle,</div>
- <div class="i1">And Prussians make their boast thereof;</div>
- <div class="i1">Take Egypt for the next remove,</div>
- <div>Or that waste land the Tartar harries,</div>
- <div class="i1">Spain or Greece, for the matter of love,</div>
- <div>There’s no good girl’s lip out of Paris.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Breton and Swiss know nought of the matter,</div>
- <div class="i1">Gascony girls or girls of Toulouse;</div>
- <div>Two fisherwomen with a half-hour’s chatter</div>
- <div class="i1">Would shut them up by threes and twos;</div>
- <div class="i1">Calais, Lorraine, and all their crews,</div>
- <div>(Names enow the mad song marries)</div>
- <div class="i1">England and Picardy, search them and choose,</div>
- <div>There’s no good girl’s lip out of Paris.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span></div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>Envoi</i>:</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Prince, give praise to our French ladies</div>
- <div class="i1">For the sweet sound their speaking carries;</div>
- <div>’Twixt Rome and Cadiz many a maid is,</div>
- <div class="i1">But no good girl’s lip out of Paris.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>From Clement Marot, a delightful French poet of the Sixteenth century,
-we give the following two extracts translated by Leigh Hunt.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A LOVE-LESSON</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A sweet “No! no!” with a sweet smile beneath</div>
- <div class="i1">Becomes an honest girl,&mdash;I’d have you learn it;</div>
- <div>As for plain “Yes!” it may be said, i’ faith.</div>
- <div class="i1">Too plainly and too oft,&mdash;pray, well discern it!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Not that I’d have my pleasure incomplete,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or lose the kiss for which my lips beset you;</div>
- <div>But that in suffering me to take it, Sweet!</div>
- <div class="i1">I’d have you say&mdash;“No! no! I will not let you.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MADAME D’ALBRET’S LAUGH</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Yes! that fair neck, too beautiful by half,</div>
- <div>Those eyes, that voice, that bloom, all do her honour;</div>
- <div>Yet, after all, that little giddy laugh</div>
- <div>Is what, in my mind, sits the best upon her.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Good God! ’twould make the very streets and ways,</div>
- <div>Through which she passes, burst into a pleasure!</div>
- <div>Did melancholy come to mar my days</div>
- <div>And kill me in the lap of too much leisure,</div>
- <div>No spell were wanting, from the dead to raise me,</div>
- <div>But only that sweet laugh wherewith she slays me.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>About this time appeared the Heptameron, a series of tales of similar
-form and character to the Decameron of Boccaccio.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span> This work was
-attributed to Margaret of Navarre, and doubtless was written by the
-queen with the assistance of some of her people. The tales are too long
-to quote.</p>
-
-<p>Jehan du Pontalais wrote a clever satirical skit on the love of money.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MONEY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Who money has, well wages the campaign;</div>
- <div>Who money has, becomes of gentle strain;</div>
- <div>Who money has, to honor all accord:</div>
- <div class="i15">He is my lord.</div>
- <div>Who money has, the ladies ne’er disdain;</div>
- <div>Who money has, loud praises will attain;</div>
- <div>Who money has, in the world’s heart is stored,</div>
- <div class="i15">The flower adored.</div>
- <div>O’er all mankind he holds his conquering track&mdash;</div>
- <div>They only are condemned who money lack.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Who money has, will wisdom’s credit gain;</div>
- <div>Who money has, all earth is his domain;</div>
- <div>Who money has, praise is his sure reward,</div>
- <div class="i15">Which all afford.</div>
- <div>Who money has, from nothing need refrain;</div>
- <div>Who money has, on him is favor poured;</div>
- <div class="i15">And, in a word,</div>
- <div>Who money has, need never fear attack&mdash;</div>
- <div>They only are condemned who money lack.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Who money has, in every heart does reign;</div>
- <div>Who money has, all to approach are fain;</div>
- <div>Who money has, of him no fault is told,</div>
- <div class="i15">Nor harm can hold.</div>
- <div>Who money has, none does his right restrain;</div>
- <div>Who money has, can whom he will maintain;</div>
- <div>Who money has, clerk, prior, by his gold,</div>
- <div class="i15">Is straight enrolled.</div>
- <div>Who money has, all raise, none hold him back&mdash;</div>
- <div>They only are condemned who money lack.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span></p>
-
-<p>Francois Rabelais was born in or about 1495, in Chinon, Touraine.
-Successively, monk, physician and scientist, he is best known as a
-master of humor and grotesque invention. His romance of Gargantua and
-Pantagruel is an extravagant, satirical criticism of the follies and
-vices of the period, burlesquing the current abuses of government and
-religion.</p>
-
-<p>Unable to escape a paternal label,</p>
-
-<p>An able writer in the <i>Foreign Quarterly Review</i> speaks of
-Rabelais as “an author without parallel in the history of literature:
-an author who is the literary parent of many authors, since without him
-we should probably have never known a Swift, a Sterne, a Jean Paul, or,
-in fact, any of the irregular humorists: an author who did not appear
-as a steadily shining light to the human race, but as a wild, startling
-meteor, predicting the independence of thought, and the downfall of
-the authority of ages: an author who for the union of heavy learning
-with the most miraculous power of imagination, is perhaps without a
-competitor.”</p>
-
-<p>The works of Rabelais abound in learning and serious intent, but the
-riotous humor and flashing wit are presented with an accompaniment of
-repulsive coarseness intolerable to the modern mind.</p>
-
-<p>This phase, however, was a part of the manners and customs of his time,
-and to philosophers and students Rabelais will ever be a mine of deep
-and recondite wisdom and thought.</p>
-
-<p>Indicative of his wildly extravagant fancy are the following extracts.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF THE ECLIPSES THIS YEAR</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">This year there will be so many eclipses of the sun and moon, that I
-fear (not unjustly) our pockets will suffer inanition, be full empty,
-and our feeling at a loss. Saturn will be retrograde, Venus direct,
-Mercury as unfixed as quicksilver. And a pack of planets won’t go as
-you would have them.</p>
-
-<p>For this reason the crabs will go side-long, and the rope-makers
-backward; the little stools will get upon the benches, and the spits on
-the racks, and the bands on the hats; fleas<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span> will be generally black;
-bacon will run away from peas in lent; there won’t be a bean left in a
-twelfth cake, nor an ace in a flush; the dice won’t run as you wish,
-tho’ you cog them, and the chance that you desire will seldom come;
-brutes shall speak in several places; Shrovetide will have its day; one
-part of the world shall disguise itself to gull and chouse the other,
-and run about the streets like a parcel of addle-pated animals and mad
-devils; such a hurly-burly was never seen since the devil was a little
-boy; and there will be above seven and twenty irregular verbs made this
-year, if Priscian don’t hold them in. If God don’t help us, we shall
-have our hands and hearts full.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF THE DISEASES THIS YEAR</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">This year the stone-blind shall see but very little; the deaf shall
-hear but scurvily; the dumb shan’t speak very plain; the rich shall
-be somewhat in a better case than the poor, and the healthy than the
-sick. Whole flocks, herds, and droves of sheep, swine and oxen; cocks
-and hens, ducks and drakes, geese and ganders, shall go to pot; but
-the mortality will not be altogether so great among apes, monkeys,
-baboons and dromedaries. As for old age, ’twill be incurable this year,
-because of the years past. Those who are sick of the pleurisy will
-feel a plaguy stitch in their sides; catarrhs this year shall distill
-from the brain on the lower parts; sore eyes will by no means help the
-sight; ears shall be at least as scarce and short in Gascony, and among
-knights of the post, as ever; and a most horrid and dreadful, virulent,
-malignant, catching, perverse and odious malady, shall be almost
-epidemical, insomuch that many shall run mad upon it, not knowing what
-nails to drive to keep the wolf from the door, very often plotting,
-contriving, cudgeling and puzzling their weak shallow brains, and
-syllogizing and prying up and down for the philosopher’s stone, tho’
-they only get Midas’s lugs by the bargain. I quake for very fear when
-I think on’t; for I assure you, few will escape this disease, which
-Averroes calls lack of money, and by consequence of the last year’s
-comet, and Saturn’s retrogradation, there will be a horrid clutter
-between the cats and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span> rats, hounds and hares, hawks and ducks, and
-eke between the monks and eggs.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF THE FRUITS OF THE EARTH THIS YEAR</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">I find by the calculations of Albumazar in his book of the great
-conjunction, and elsewhere, that this will be a plentiful year of
-all manner of good things to those who have enough; but your hops
-of Picardy will go near to fare the worse for the cold. As for oats
-they’ll be a great help to horses. I dare say, there won’t be much
-more bacon than swine. Pisces having the ascendant, ’twill be a mighty
-year for muscles, cockles, and periwinkles. Mercury somewhat threatens
-our parsly-beds, yet parsly will be to be had for money. Hemp will
-grow faster than the children of this age, and some will find there’s
-but too much on’t. There will be a very few <i>bon-chretiens</i>, but
-choak-pears in abundance. As for corn, wine, fruit and herbs, there
-never was such plenty as will be now, if poor folks may have their wish.</p>
-
-<h4><i>RABELAIS IMITATES DIOGENES</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">(<i>From the Author’s Prologue to Book III.</i>)</span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">When Philip, King of Macedon, enterprised the siege and ruin of
-Corinth, the Corinthians having received certain intelligence by their
-spies, that he with a numerous army in battle array was coming against
-them, were all of them, not without cause, most terribly afraid; and,
-therefore, were not neglective of their duty, in doing their best
-endeavors to put themselves in a fit posture to resist his hostile
-approach, and defend their own city. Some from the fields brought
-into the fortified places their movables, cattle, corn, wine, fruit,
-victuals and other necessary provisions. Others did fortify and rampire
-their walls, set up little fortresses, bastions, squared ravelins,
-digged trenches, cleansed countermines, fenced themselves with gabions,
-contrived platforms, emptied casemates, barricaded the false brayes,
-erected the cavalliers, repaired the contrescarpes, plaistered the
-courtines,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span> lengthened ravelins, stopped parapets, mortised barbacans,
-new pointed the portcullises with fine steel or good iron, fastened the
-herses and cataracts, placed their sentries and doubled their patrol.</p>
-
-<p>Every one did watch and ward, and not one was exempted from carrying
-the basket. Some polished corselets, varnished backs and breasts,
-cleaned the headpieces, mailcoats, brigandins, salads, helmets,
-murrions, jacks, gushets, gorgets, hoguines, brassars and cuissars,
-corselets, haubergeons, shields, bucklers, targets, greves, gauntlets
-and spurs.</p>
-
-<p>Others made ready bows, slings, cross-bows, pellets, catapults,
-migraines or fire-balls, firebrands, balists, scorpions, and other such
-warlike engines, repugnatory, and destructive to the Helepolides.</p>
-
-<p>They sharpened and prepared spears, staves, pikes, brown bills,
-halberts, long hooks, lances, zagages, quarterstaves, eelspears,
-partisans, troutstaves, clubs, battle-axes, maces, darts, dartlets,
-glaves, javelins, javelots, and truncheons.</p>
-
-<p>They set edges upon scimetars, cutlasses, badelairs, backswords, tucks,
-rapiers, bayonets, arrow-heads, dags, daggers, mandousians, poniards,
-whinyards, knives, skenes, chipping knives, and raillons.</p>
-
-<p>Diogenes seeing them all so warm at work, and himself not employed
-by the magistrates in any business whatsoever, he did very seriously
-(for many days together, without speaking one word) consider, and
-contemplate the countenance of his fellow-citizens.</p>
-
-<p>Then on a sudden, as if he had been roused up and inspired by a martial
-spirit, he girded his cloak, scarf-ways, about his left arm, tucked
-up his sleeves to the elbow, trussed himself like a clown gathering
-apples, and giving to one of his old acquaintance his wallet, books,
-and opistographs, away went he out of town towards a little hill or
-promontory of Corinth called Craneum; and there on, the strand, a
-pretty level place, did he roll his jolly tub, which served him for an
-house to shelter him from the injuries of the weather: there, I say, in
-a great vehemency of spirit, did he turn it veer it, wheel it, whirl
-it, frisk it, jumble it, shuffle it, hurdle it, tumble it, hurry it,
-jolt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span> it, jostle it, overthrow it, evert it, invert it, subvert it,
-overturn it, beat it, thwack it, bump it, batter it, knock it, thrust
-it, push it, jerk it, shock it, shake it, toss it, throw it, overthrow
-it upside down, topsyturvy, tread it, trample it, stamp it, tap it,
-ting it, ring it, tingle it, towl it, sound it, resound it, stop it,
-shut it, unbung it, close it, unstopple it. And then again in a mighty
-bustle he bandied it, slubbered it, hacked it, whittled it, wayed it,
-darted it, hurled it, staggered it, reeled it, swinged it, brangled it,
-tottered it, lifted it, heaved it, transformed it, transfigured it,
-transposed it, transplaced it, reared it, raised it, hoised it, washed
-it, dighted it, cleansed it, rinsed it, nailed it, settled it, fastened
-it, shackled it, fettered it, levelled it, blocked it, tugged it, tewed
-it, carried it, bedashed it, bewrayed it, parched it, mounted it,
-broached it, nicked it, notched it, bespattered it, decked it, adorned
-it, trimmed it, garnished it, gaged it, furnished it, bored it, pierced
-it, tapped it, rumbled it, slid it down the hill, and precipitated it
-from the very height of the Craneum; then from the foot to the top
-(like another Sisyphus with his stone) bore it up again, and every way
-so banged it and belabored it, that it was ten thousand to one he had
-not struck the bottom of it out.</p>
-
-<p>Which when one of his friends had seen, and asked him why he did
-so toil his body, perplex his spirit, and torment his tub? the
-philosopher’s answer was, that not being employed in any other office
-by the Republic, he thought it expedient to thunder and storm it so
-tempestuously upon his tub, that amongst a people so fervently busy
-and earnest at work, he alone might not seem a loitering slug and lazy
-fellow. To the same purpose may I say to myself,&mdash;</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tho’ I be rid from fear,</div>
- <div>I am not void of care.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>For perceiving no account to be made of me towards the discharge of a
-trust of any great concernment, and considering that through all the
-parts of this most noble kingdom of France, both on this and on the
-other side of the mountains, every one is most diligently exercised
-and busied; some in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span> fortifying of their own native country, for
-its defence; others, in the repulsing of their enemies by an offensive
-war; and all this with a policy so excellent, and such admirable order,
-so manifestly profitable for the future, whereby France shall have
-its frontiers most magnifically enlarged, and the French assured of a
-long and well-grounded peace, that very little withholds me from the
-opinion of good Heraclitus, which affirmeth war to be the parent of all
-good things; and therefore do I believe that war is in Latin called
-<i>bellum</i>, not by antiphrasis, as some patchers of old rusty Latin
-would have us to think, because in war there is little beauty to be
-seen; but absolutely and simply; for that in war (<i>bellum</i> in
-<i>Latin</i>) appears all that is good and graceful, <i>bon</i> and
-<i>bel</i> in French, and that by the wars is purged out all manner
-of wickedness and deformity. For proof whereof the wise and pacific
-Solomon could no better represent the unspeakable perfection of the
-divine wisdom, than by comparing it to the due disposure and ranking of
-an army in battle array, well provided and ordered.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore by reason of my weakness and inability, being reputed by my
-compatriots unfit for the offensive part of warfare; and on the other
-side, being no way employed in matter of the defensive, although it had
-been but to carry burdens, fill ditches, or break clods, each whereof
-had been to me indifferent, I held it not a little disgraceful to be
-only an idle spectator of so many valorous, eloquent, and warlike
-persons, who in the view and sight of all Europe act this notable
-interlude or tragicomedy, and not exert myself, and contribute thereto
-this nothing, my all; which remained for me to do. For, in my opinion,
-little honor is due to such as are mere lookers on, liberal of their
-eyes, and of their strength parsimonious; who conceal their crowns and
-hide their silver; scratching their head with one finger like grumbling
-puppies, gaping at the flies like tithe calves; clapping down their
-ears like Arcadian asses at the melody of musicians, who with their
-very countenances in the depth of silence express their consent to the
-prosopopeia.</p>
-
-<p>Having made this choice and election, it seemed to me that my exercise
-therein would be neither unprofitable nor troublesome<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span> to any, whilst I
-should thus set agoing my Diogenical Tub.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE LOST HATCHET</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There once lived a poor honest country fellow of Gravot, Tom Wellhung
-by name, a wood-cleaver by trade, who in that low drudgery made shift
-so to pick up a sorry livelihood. It happened that he lost his hatchet.
-Now tell me who ever had more cause to be vexed than poor Tom? Alas,
-his whole estate and life depended on his hatchet; by his hatchet he
-earned many a fair penny of the best wood-mongers or log-merchants,
-among whom he went a-jobbing; for want of his hatchet he was like to
-starve; and had Death but met him six days after without a hatchet, the
-grim fiend would have mowed him down in the twinkling of a bed-staff.
-In this sad case he began to be in a heavy taking, and called upon
-Jupiter with most eloquent prayers (for, you know, necessity was the
-mother of eloquence), with the whites of his eyes turned up toward
-heaven, down on his marrow-bones, his arms reared high, his fingers
-stretched wide, and his head bare, the poor wretch without ceasing was
-roaring out by way of Litany at every repetition of his supplications,
-“My hatchet, Lord Jupiter, my hatchet, my hatchet, only my hatchet,
-oh, Jupiter, or money to buy another, and nothing else; alas, my poor
-hatchet!”</p>
-
-<p>Jupiter happened then to be holding a grand council about certain
-urgent affairs, and old Gammer Cybele was just giving her opinion, or,
-if you had rather have it so, it was young Phœbus the Beau; but, in
-short, Tom’s outcry and lamentations were so loud that they were heard
-with no small amazement at the council-board by the whole consistory
-of the gods. “What a devil have we below,” quoth Jupiter, “that howls
-so horridly? By the mud of Styx, haven’t we had all along, and haven’t
-we here still, enough to do to set to rights a world of puzzling
-businesses of consequence? Let us, however, despatch this howling
-fellow below; you, Mercury, go see who it is, and discover<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[330]</span> what he
-wants.” Mercury looked out at heaven’s trapdoor, through which, as I
-am told, they hear what’s said here below. By the way, one might well
-enough mistake it for the scuttle of a ship; though Icaromenippus said
-it was like the mouth of a well. The light-heeled deity saw that it
-was honest Tom, who asked for his lost hatchet; and, accordingly, he
-made his report to the Synod. “Marry,” said Jupiter, “we are finely
-holped up, as if we had now nothing else to do here but to restore lost
-hatchets. Well, he must have it for all that, for so ’tis written in
-the Book of Fate, as well as if it was worth the whole Duchy of Milan.
-The truth is, the fellow’s hatchet is as much to him as a kingdom to a
-king. Come, come, let no more words be scattered about it; let him have
-his hatchet again. Run down immediately, and cast at the poor fellow’s
-feet three hatchets! his own, another of gold, and a third of massy
-silver, all of one size; then, having left it to his will to take his
-choice, if he take his own, and be satisfied with it, give him t’other
-two. If he take another, chop his head off with his own; and henceforth
-serve me all those losers of hatchets after that manner.”</p>
-
-<p>Having said this, Jupiter, with an awkward turn of his head, like a
-jackanapes swallowing pills, made so dreadful a phiz that all the
-vast Olympus quaked again. Heaven’s foot-messenger, thanks to his
-low-crowned, narrow-brimmed hat, and plume of feathers, heel-pieces,
-and running-stick with pigeon-wings, flings himself out at heaven’s
-wicket, through the empty deserts of the air, and in a trice nimbly
-alights on the earth, and throws at friend Tom’s feet the three
-hatchets, saying to him: “Thou hast bawled long enough to be a-dry; thy
-prayers and requests are granted by Jupiter; see which of these three
-is thy hatchet, and take it away with thee.”</p>
-
-<p>Wellhung lifts up the golden hatchet, peeps upon it, and finds it very
-heavy; then staring on Mercury cries, “Gadzooks, this is none of mine;
-I won’t ha’t.” The same he did with the silver one, and said, “’Tis not
-this either; you may e’en take them again.” At last, he takes up his
-own<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span> hatchet, examines the end of the helve, and finds his mark there;
-then, ravished with joy, like a fox that meets some straggling poultry,
-and sneering from the tip of the nose, he cries, “By the Mass, this
-is my hatchet; Master God, if you will leave it me, I will sacrifice
-to you a very good and huge pot of milk, brim full, covered with fine
-strawberries, next Ides, <i>i.e.</i>, the 15th of May.”</p>
-
-<p>“Honest fellow,” said Mercury, “I leave it thee; take it; and because
-thou hast wished and chosen moderately, in point of hatchet, by
-Jupiter’s command I give thee these two others; thou hast now wherewith
-to make thyself rich: be honest.”</p>
-
-<p>Honest Tom gave Mercury a whole cart-load of thanks, and paid reverence
-to the most great Jupiter. His old hatchet he fastened close to his
-leathern girdle, and girds it about his breech like Martin of Cambray;
-the two others, being more heavy, he lays on his shoulder. Thus he
-plods on, trudging over the fields, keeping a good countenance among
-his neighbors and fellow-parishioners, with one merry saying or other,
-after Patelin’s way.</p>
-
-<p>The next day, having put on a clean white jacket, he takes on his
-back the two precious hatchets, and comes to Chinon, the famous city,
-noble city, ancient city, yea, the first city in the world, according
-to the judgment and assertion of the most learned Massoreths. In
-Chinon he turned his silver hatchet into fine testons, crown-pieces,
-and other white cash; his golden hatchet into fine angels, curious
-ducats, substantial ridders, spankers, and rose nobles. Then with
-them purchases a good number of farms, barns, houses, outhouses,
-thatch-houses, stables, meadows, orchards, fields, vineyards, woods,
-arable lands, pastures, ponds, mills, gardens, nurseries, oxen,
-cows, sheep, goats, swine, hogs, asses, horses, hens, cocks, capons,
-chickens, geese, ganders, ducks, drakes, and a world of all other
-necessaries, and in a short time became the richest man in all the
-country. His brother bumpkins, and the yeomen and other country-puts
-thereabout, perceiving his good fortune, were not a little amazed,
-insomuch that their former pity of poor Tom was soon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span> changed into an
-envy of his so great and unexpected rise; and, as they could not for
-their souls devise how this came about, they made it their business to
-pry up and down, and lay their heads together, to inquire, seek, and
-inform themselves by what means, in what place, on what day, what hour,
-how, why, and wherefore, he had come by this great treasure.</p>
-
-<p>At last, hearing it was by losing his hatchet, “Ha, ha!” said they,
-“was there no more to do, but to lose a hatchet, to make us rich?” With
-this they all fairly lost their hatchets out of hand. The devil a one
-that had a hatchet left; he was not his mother’s son, that did not lose
-his hatchet. No more was wood felled or cleared in that country through
-want of hatchets. Nay, the Æsopian apologue even saith, that certain
-petty country gents, of the lower class, who had sold Wellhung their
-little mill and little field to have wherewithal to make a figure at
-the next muster, having been told that this treasure was come to him by
-that means only, sold the only badge of their gentility, their swords,
-to purchase hatchets to go to lose them, as the silly clodpates did, in
-hopes to gain store of coin by that loss.</p>
-
-<p>You would have truly sworn they had been a parcel of your petty
-spiritual usurers, Rome-bound, selling their all, and borrowing of
-others to buy store of mandates, a pennyworth of a new-made pope.</p>
-
-<p>Now they cried out and brayed, and prayed and bawled, and lamented and
-invoked Jupiter, “My hatchet! My hatchet! Jupiter, my hatchet!” On this
-side, “My hatchet!” On that side, “My hatchet! Ho, ho, ho, ho, Jupiter,
-my hatchet!” The air round about rung again with the cries and howlings
-of these rascally losers of hatchets.</p>
-
-<p>Mercury was nimble in bringing them hatchets; to each offering that
-which he had lost, as also another of gold, and a third of silver.</p>
-
-<p>Everywhere he still was for that of gold, giving thanks in abundance
-to the great giver Jupiter; but in the very nick of time, that they
-bowed and stooped to take it from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[333]</span> ground, whip in a trice, Mercury
-lopped off their heads, as Jupiter had commanded. And of heads thus cut
-off, the number was just equal to that of the lost hatchets.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Gargantua and Pantagruel.</i></p>
-
-<p>There is an epigram in Martial, and one of the very good ones&mdash;for he
-has all sorts&mdash;where he pleasantly tells the story of Cælius, who, to
-avoid making his court to some great men of Rome, to wait their rising,
-and to attend them abroad, pretended to have the gout; and the better
-to color this, anointed his legs and had them lapped up in a great many
-swathings, and perfectly counterfeited both the gesture and countenance
-of a gouty person; till in the end, Fortune did him the kindness to
-make him one indeed.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Tantum cura potest, et ars doloris!</div>
- <div>Desit fingere Cælius podagram.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>I think I have read somewhere in Appian, a story like this, of one who
-to escape the proscriptions of the triumvirs of Rome, and the better to
-be concealed from the discovery of those who pursued him, having hidden
-himself in a disguise, would yet add this invention, to counterfeit
-having but one eye; but when he came to have a little more liberty,
-and went to take off the plaster he had a great while worn over his
-eye, he found he had totally lost the sight of it indeed, and that it
-was absolutely gone. ’Tis possible that the action of sight was dulled
-from having been so long without exercise, and that the optic power
-was wholly retired into the other eye for we evidently perceive that
-the eye we keep shut sends some part of its virtue to its fellow, so
-that it will swell and grow bigger; and so, inaction, with the heat of
-ligatures and plaster might very well have brought some gouty humor
-upon this dissembler of Martial.</p>
-
-<p>Reading in Froissart the vow of a troop of young English gallants,
-to keep their left eyes bound up till they had arrived in France and
-performed some notable exploit upon us, I have often been tickled with
-the conceit: suppose it had befallen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span> them as it did the Roman, and
-they had returned with but one eye apiece to their mistresses, for
-whose sakes they had made his ridiculous vow.</p>
-
-<p>Mothers have reason to rebuke their children when they counterfeit
-having but one eye, squinting, lameness, or any other personal defect;
-for, besides that their bodies being then so tender may be subject to
-take an ill bent, Fortune, I know not how, sometimes seems to delight
-in taking us at our word; and I have heard several examples related
-of people who have become really sick, by only feigning to be so. I
-have always used, whether on horseback or on foot, to carry a stick in
-my hand, and even to affect doing it with an elegant air; many have
-threatened that this fancy would one day be turned into necessity: if
-so, I should be the first of my family to have the gout.</p>
-
-<p>But let us a little lengthen this chapter, and add another anecdote
-concerning blindness. Pliny reports of one who, dreaming he was blind,
-found himself so indeed in the morning without any preceding infirmity
-in his eyes. The force of imagination might assist in this case, as I
-have said elsewhere, and Pliny seems to be of the same opinion; but it
-is more likely that the motions which the body felt within, of which
-physicians, if they please, may find out the cause, taking away his
-sight, were the occasion of his dream.</p>
-
-<p>Let us add another story, not very improper for this subject, which
-Seneca relates in one of his epistles: “You know,” says he, writing
-to Lucilius, “that Harpaste, my wife’s fool, is thrown upon me as an
-hereditary charge for I have naturally an aversion to those monsters;
-and if I have a mind to laugh at a fool, I need not seek him far, I
-can laugh at myself. This fool has suddenly lost her sight: I tell
-you a strange, but a very true thing; she is not sensible that she is
-blind, but eternally importunes her keeper to take her abroad, because
-she says the house is dark. That what we laugh at in her, I pray you
-to believe, happens to every one of us: no one knows himself to be
-avaricious or grasping: and again, the blind call for a guide, while we
-stray of our own accord. I am not ambitious, we say; but a man cannot
-live otherwise at Rome; I am not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span> wasteful, but the city requires a
-great outlay; ’tis not my fault if I am choleric&mdash;if I have not yet
-established any certain course of life: ’tis the fault of youth. Let us
-not seek our disease out of ourselves; ’tis in us, and planted in our
-bowels; and the mere fact that we do not perceive ourselves to be sick,
-renders us more hard to be cured. If we do not betimes begin to see to
-ourselves, when shall we have provided for so many wounds and evils
-wherewith we abound? And yet we have a most sweet and charming medicine
-in philosophy; for of all the rest we are sensible of no pleasure till
-after the cure: this pleases and heals at once.” This is what Seneca
-says, that has carried me from my subject, but there is advantage in
-the change.</p>
-
-<p>As in England, the French published many jest books containing short
-anecdotes or epigrams, as well as the ubiquitous noodle stories.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A wife said to her husband, who was much attached to reading, “I wish
-I were a book, that I might always have your company.” <i>Then</i>,
-answered he, <i>I should wish you an almanac, that I might change once
-a year</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was said of a malicious parasite, that he never opened his mouth
-but at the expense of others; because he always ate at the tables of
-others, and spoke ill of everybody.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Duke of Vivonne, who was a heretic in medicine, being indisposed,
-his friends sent for a physician. When the Duke was told a physician
-was below, he said, <i>Tell him I cannot see him, because I am not
-well. Let him call again at another time</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Marechal de Faber, at a siege, was pointing out a place with his
-finger. As he spoke, a musket-ball carried off the finger. Instantly
-stretching another, he continued his discourse, <i>Gentlemen, as I was
-saying</i>&mdash;. This was true <i>sang froid</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span></p>
-
-<p>A man, carrying on an unjust process, was advised to pray to God for
-its success. <i>Stop, stop</i>, replied he, <i>God must hear nothing of
-this</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another princess of France, being espoused by the king of Spain, in
-passing through a town, on her way to Madrid, the magistrates of the
-place, which was a famous mart for stockings, waited on the queen with
-a present of a dozen pairs of remarkable fineness. The Spanish grandee,
-who attended her, full of the jealous humour of his nation, said, in
-a passion. “You fools, know that a queen of Spain has no legs.” The
-magistrates retired in terror, and the poor queen, weeping sadly, said,
-<i>Must I then have both my legs cut off?</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In a village of Poitou, a peasant’s wife, after a long illness, fell
-into a lethargy. She was thought dead; and being only wrapped in linen,
-as the custom of burying the poor in that country is, she was carried
-to the place of interment. In going to church, the body, being borne
-aloft, was caught hold of by some briars, and so scratched, that as
-if bled by a surgeon, she revived. Fourteen years after, she died in
-earnest, as was thought; and as they carried her to church, the husband
-exclaimed, <i>For God’s sake, do not go near the briars</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A gentleman, seeing in his yard a mass of rubbish, blamed his people
-for not removing it. A domestic said, no cart could be got. “Why,”
-answered the master, “do you not make a pit beside the rubbish, and
-bury it?” “But,” answered the domestic, “where shall we put the earth
-that comes out of the pit?” <i>You great fool</i>, replied his master,
-<i>make the pit so large as to hold all</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A lady sitting near the fire, and telling a long story, a spark flew on
-her gown, and she did not perceive it till it had burnt a good while.
-<i>I saw it at first, madam</i>, said a lady who was present, <i>but I
-could not be so rude as to interrupt you</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span></p>
-
-<p>When Rabelais lay on his death-bed, he could not help jesting at the
-very last moment; for, having received the extreme unction, a friend
-coming to see him, said, he hoped he was prepared for the next world.
-<i>Yes, yes</i>, answered Rabelais, <i>I am ready for my journey now;
-they have just greased my boots</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>GERMAN WIT AND HUMOR</h3>
-
-
-<p>Brandt’s <i>Das Narrenschiff</i>, or <i>The Ship of Fools</i>, a long
-satirical poem, was published at the close of the Fifteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>It was followed by <i>The Boats of Foolish Women</i> and other
-imitative works.</p>
-
-<p>Among them, was <i>The Praise of Folly</i>, by Desiderius Erasmus, a
-Dutch classical scholar and satirist.</p>
-
-<p>The following is from the Dedicatory Epistle which introduces <i>The
-Praise of Folly</i>, and which is addressed to Sir Thomas More.</p>
-
-<p>“But those who are offended at the lightness and pedantry of this
-subject, I would have them consider that I do not set myself for the
-first example of this kind, but that the same has been oft done by many
-considerable authors. For thus, several ages since, Homer wrote of no
-more weighty a subject than of a war between the frogs and mice; Virgil
-of a gnat and a pudding cake; and Ovid of a nut. Polycrates commended
-the cruelty of Busiris; and Isocrates, that corrects him for this, did
-as much for the injustice of Glaucus. Favorinus extolled Thersites,
-and wrote in praise of a quartane ague. Synesius pleaded in behalf of
-baldness; and Lucian defended a sipping fly. Seneca drollingly related
-the deifying of Claudius; Plutarch the dialogue betwixt Gryllus and
-Ulysses; Lucian and Apuleius the story of an ass; and somebody else
-records the last will of a hog, of which St. Hierom makes mention. So
-that, if they please, let themselves think the worst of me, and fancy
-to themselves that I was, all this while, a playing at push-pin, or
-riding astride on a hobby-horse. For how unjust is it, if when we allow
-different recreations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[338]</span> to each particular course of life, we afford no
-diversion to studies; especially when trifles may be a whet to more
-serious thoughts, and comical matters may be so treated of, as that
-a reader of ordinary sense may possibly thence reap more advantage
-than from some more big and stately argument.... As to what relates
-to myself, I must be forced to submit to the judgment of others, yet,
-except I am too partial to be judge in my own case, I am apt to believe
-I have praised Folly in such a manner as not to have deserved the name
-of fool for my pains.”</p>
-
-<p>A short extract from the book follows.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It is one farther very commendable property of fools, that
-they always speak the truth, than which there is nothing more
-noble and heroical. For so, though Plato relates it as a
-sentence of Alcibiades, that in the sea of drunkenness truth
-swims uppermost, and so wine is the only teller of truth, yet
-this character may more justly be assumed by me, as I can make
-good from the authority of Euripides, who lays down this as an
-axiom, ‘Children and fools always speak the truth.’ Whatever the
-fool has in his heart, he betrays in his face; or what is more
-notifying, discovers it by his words; while the wise man, as
-Euripides observes, carries a double tongue; the one to speak
-what may be said, the other what ought to be; the one what
-truth, the other what time requires; whereby he can in a trice
-so alter his judgment, as to prove that to be now white, which
-he had just swore to be black; like the satyr at his porridge,
-blowing hot and cold at the same breath; in his lips professing
-one thing, when in his heart he means another.</p>
-
-<p>Furthermore, princes in their greatest splendor seem upon this
-account unhappy, in that they miss the advantage of being told
-the truth, and are shammed off by a parcel of insinuating
-courtiers, that acquit themselves as flatterers more than as
-friends. But some will perchance object that princes do not love
-to hear the truth, and therefore wise men must be very cautious
-how they behave themselves before them, lest they should take
-too great a liberty in speaking what is true, rather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span> than what
-is acceptable. This must be confessed, truth indeed is seldom
-palatable to the ears of kings, yet fools have so great a
-privilege as to have free leave, not only to speak bare truths,
-but the most bitter ones too; so as the same reproof which, had
-it come from the mouth of a wise man would have cost him his
-head, being blurted out by a fool, is not only pardoned, but
-well taken, and rewarded. For truth has naturally a mixture of
-pleasure, if it carry with it nothing of offence to the person
-whom it is applied to; and the happy knack of ordering it so, is
-bestowed only on fools....”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>However, but few individual names stand out in the early German
-literature that can by any stretch of definition be called humorous.</p>
-
-<p>As in all other countries, legends and folk lore tales were rife, and
-eventually produced popular heroes about whom stories were invented.</p>
-
-<p>Brother Rush, who seems to be merely a demon of darkness, is first
-found in print in Germany in 1515.</p>
-
-<p>He is a tricksy sprite and goes through various vicissitudes of rather
-dull interest.</p>
-
-<p>He was followed by Tyll Eulenspiegel, a far more popular personage, and
-translated to England under the name of Owleglas or Howleglas.</p>
-
-<p>Eulenspiegel was a shrewd and cunning proposition and had many
-startling adventures, two of which are here given.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>EULENSPIEGEL’S PRANKS</i><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>The Golden Horseshoes</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Eulenspiegel came to the court of the King of Denmark, who liked him
-well, and said that if he would make him some diversion, then might he
-have the best of shoes for his horse’s hoofs. Eulenspiegel asked the
-king if he was minded to keep his word well and truly, and the king did
-answer most solemnly, “Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>Now did Eulenspiegel ride his horse to a goldsmith, by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span> whom he
-suffered to be beaten upon the horse’s hoofs shoes of gold with silver
-nails. This done, Eulenspiegel went to the king, that the king might
-send his treasurer to pay for the shoeing. The treasurer believed
-he should pay a blacksmith, but Eulenspiegel conducted him to the
-goldsmith, who did require and demand one hundred Danish marks. This
-would the treasurer not pay, but went and told his master.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore the king caused Eulenspiegel to be summoned into his
-presence, and spoke to him:</p>
-
-<p>“Eulenspiegel, why did you have such costly shoes? Were I to shoe all
-my horses thus, soon would I be without land or any possessions.”</p>
-
-<p>To which Eulenspiegel did make reply:</p>
-
-<p>“Gracious King, you did promise me the best of shoes for my horse’s
-hoofs, and I did think the best were of gold.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the king laughed:</p>
-
-<p>“You shall be of my court, for you act upon my very word.”</p>
-
-<p>And the king commanded his treasurer to pay the hundred marks for the
-horse’s golden shoes. But these Eulenspiegel caused to be taken off,
-and iron shoes put on in their stead; and he remained many a long day
-in the service of the King of Denmark.</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>Paying with the Sound of a Penny</i></h5>
-
-<p>Eulenspiegel was at a tavern where the host did one day put the meat
-on the spit so late that Eulenspiegel got hungry for dinner. The host,
-seeing his discontent, said to him:</p>
-
-<p>“Who cannot wait till the dinner be ready, let him eat what he may.”</p>
-
-<p>Therefore Eulenspiegel went aside, and ate some dry bread; after that
-he had eaten he sat by the fire and turned the spit until the meat was
-roasted. Then was the meat borne upon the table, and the host, with the
-guests, did feast upon it. But Eulenspiegel stayed on the bench by the
-fire, nor would he sit at the board, since he told the host that he had
-his fill from the odor of the meat. So when they had eaten, and the
-host came to Eulenspiegel with the tray,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span> that he might place in it the
-price of the food, Eulenspiegel did refuse, saying:</p>
-
-<p>“Why must I pay for what I have not eaten?”</p>
-
-<p>To which the host replied, in anger:</p>
-
-<p>“Give me your penny; for by sitting at the fire, and swallowing the
-savor of the meat, you had the same nourishment as though you had
-partaken of the meat at the board.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Eulenspiegel searched in his purse for a penny, and threw it on
-the bench, saying to the host:</p>
-
-<p>“Do you hear this sound?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do, indeed,” answered the host.</p>
-
-<p>Then did Eulenspiegel pick up the penny and restore it to his purse;
-which done, he spoke again:</p>
-
-<p>“To my belly the odor of the meat is worth as much as the sound of the
-penny is to you.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>About this time came into being the tales of the Schildburgers, or
-Noodles, who correspond to the Gothamites of England.</p>
-
-<p>Schildburg, we are told, was a town “in Misnopotamia, beyond Utopia,
-in the kingdom of Calecut.” The Schildburgers were originally so
-renowned for their wisdom, that they were continually invited into
-foreign countries to give their advice, until at length not a man was
-left at home, and their wives were obliged to assume the charge of the
-duties of their husbands. This became at length so onerous, that the
-wives held a council, and resolved on despatching a solemn message in
-writing to call the men home. This had the desired effect; all the
-Schildburgers returned to their own town, and were so joyfully received
-by their wives that they resolved upon leaving it no more. They
-accordingly held a council, and it was decided that, having experienced
-the great inconvenience of a reputation of wisdom, they would avoid
-it in future by assuming the character of fools. One of the first
-evil results of their long neglect of home affairs was the want of a
-council-hall, and this want they now resolved to supply without delay.
-They accordingly went to the hills and woods, cut down the timber,
-dragged it with great labour to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span> town, and in due time completed
-the erection of a handsome and substantial building. But, when they
-entered their new council-hall, what was their consternation to find
-themselves in perfect darkness! In fact, they had forgotten to make
-any windows. Another council was held, and one who had been among the
-wisest in the days of their wisdom, gave his opinion very oracularly;
-the result of which was that they should experiment on every possible
-expedient for introducing light into the hall, and that they should
-first try that which seemed most likely to succeed. They had observed
-that the light of day was caused by sunshine, and the plan proposed was
-to meet at mid-day when the sun was brightest, and fill sacks, hampers,
-jugs, and vessels of all kinds, with sunshine and daylight, which they
-proposed afterwards to empty into the unfortunate council-hall. Next
-day, as the clock struck one, you might see a crowd of Schildburgers
-before the council-house door, busily employed, some holding the sacks
-open, and others throwing the light into them with shovels and any
-other appropriate implements which came to hand. While they were thus
-labouring, a stranger came into the town of Schildburg, and, hearing
-what they were about, told them they were labouring to no purpose,
-and offered to show them how to get the daylight into the hall. It is
-unnecessary to say more than that this new plan was to make an opening
-in the roof, and that the Schildburgers witnessed the effect with
-astonishment, and were loud in their gratitude to the new comer.</p>
-
-<p>The Schildburgers met with further difficulties before they completed
-their council-hall. They sowed a field with salt, and when the
-salt-plant grew up next year, after a meeting of the council, at which
-it was stiffly disputed whether it ought to be reaped, or mowed, or
-gathered in in some other manner, it was finally discovered that
-the crop consisted of nothing but nettles. After many accidents of
-this kind, the Schildburgers are noticed by the emperor, and obtain
-a charter of incorporation and freedom, but they profit little by
-it. In trying some experiments to catch mice, they set fire to their
-houses, and the whole town is burnt to the ground, upon which, in their
-sorrow, they abandon it altogether, and become, like the Jews of old,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span>
-scattered over the world, carrying their own folly into every country
-they visit.</p>
-
-<p>Another tale relates how the boors of Schilda contrived to get their
-millstone twice down from a high mountain:</p>
-
-<p>The boors of Schilda had built a mill, and with extraordinary labour
-they had quarried a millstone for it out of a quarry which lay on
-the summit of a high mountain; and when the stone was finished, they
-carried it with great labour and pain down the hill. When they had
-got to the bottom, it occurred to one of them that they might have
-spared themselves the trouble of carrying it down by letting it roll
-down. “Verily,” said he, “we are the stupidest of fools to take these
-extraordinary pains to do that which we might have done with so little
-trouble. We will carry it up, and then let it roll down the hill
-by itself, as we did before with the tree which we felled for the
-council-house.”</p>
-
-<p>This advice pleased them all, and with greater labour they carried
-the stone to the top of the mountain again, and were about to roll it
-down, when one of them said, “But how shall we know where it runs to?
-Who will be able to tell us aught about it?” “Why,” said the bailiff,
-who had advised the stone being carried up again, “this is very easily
-managed. One of us must stick in the hole [for the millstone, of
-course, had a hole in the middle], and run down with it.” This was
-agreed to, and one of them, having been chosen for the purpose, thrust
-his head through the hole, and ran down the hill with the millstone.
-Now at the bottom of the mountain was a deep fish-pond, into which the
-stone rolled, and the simpleton with it, so that the Schildburgers
-lost both stone and man, and not one among them knew what had become
-of them. And they felt sorely angered against their old companion who
-had run down the hill with the stone, for they considered that he had
-carried it off for the purpose of disposing of it. So they published a
-notice in all the neighbouring boroughs, towns, and villages, calling
-on them, that “if any one come there with a millstone round his neck,
-they should treat him as one who had stolen the common goods, and give
-him to justice.” But the poor fellow lay in the pond, dead. Had he been
-able to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span> speak, he would have been willing to tell them not to worry
-themselves on his account, for he would give them their own again. But
-his load pressed so heavily upon him, and he was so deep in the water,
-that he, after drinking water enough&mdash;more, indeed, than was good for
-him&mdash;died; and he is dead at the present day, and dead he will, shall,
-and must remain!</p>
-
-<p>The earliest known edition of the history of the Schildburgers was
-printed in 1597, but the story itself is no doubt older. It will be
-seen at once that it involves a satire upon the municipal towns of the
-middle ages.</p>
-
-
-<h3>ITALIAN WIT AND HUMOR</h3>
-
-
-<p>Of Italian wit and humor up to and through the Sixteenth Century there
-is little to be said. Translators who have given us in English the
-early literature of Italy have been so concerned with the serious
-poetry and prose that they neglected the lighter veins.</p>
-
-<p>If, indeed, there were any worth while.</p>
-
-<p>The outstanding name of the Fourteenth Century is that of Giovanni
-Boccaccio.</p>
-
-<p>But though the Decameron, a collection of one hundred stories, is a
-mirror of the humorous taste of that time, the stories are for the most
-part, long, dull and prosy.</p>
-
-<p>They relate the intrigues of lovers in a freely licentious way, but
-both humorous description and witty repartee are consciously lacking.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most amusing of the decent tales is here given, also a
-sonnet of Boccaccio’s translated by Rossetti.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>OF THREE GIRLS AND THEIR TALK</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>By a clear well, within a little field</div>
- <div>Full of green grass and flowers of every hue,</div>
- <div>Sat three young girls, relating (as I knew)</div>
- <div>Their loves. And each had twined a bough to shield</div>
- <div>Her lovely face; and the green leaves did yield<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span></div>
- <div>The golden hair their shadow,&mdash;while the two</div>
- <div>Sweet colours mingled, both blown lightly through</div>
- <div>With a soft wind for ever stirr’d and still’d.</div>
- <div>After a little while one of them said</div>
- <div>(I heard her)&mdash;“Think! if ere the next hour struck</div>
- <div>Each of our lovers should come here to-day,</div>
- <div>Think you that we should fly or feel afraid?”</div>
- <div>To whom the others answer’d&mdash;“From such luck</div>
- <div>A girl would be a fool to run away!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<h4><i>THE STOLEN PIG</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Calandrino had a little farm, not far from Florence, which came to him
-through his wife. There he used to have a pig fatted every year, and
-some time about December he and his wife went always to kill and salt
-it for the use of the family. Now it happened once&mdash;she being unwell
-at the time&mdash;that he went thither by himself to kill his pig; which
-Bruno and Buffalmacco hearing, and knowing she was not to be there,
-they went to spend a few days with a great friend of theirs, a priest
-in Calandrino’s neighborhood. Now the pig had been killed the very day
-they came thither, and Calandrino, seeing them along with the priest,
-called to them and said, “Welcome, kindly; I would gladly you should
-see what a good manager I am.” Then, taking them into the house, he
-showed them this pig. They saw that it was fat, and were told by him
-that it was to be salted for his family. “Salted, booby?” said Bruno.
-“Sell it, let us make merry with the money, and tell your wife that it
-was stolen.” “No,” said Calandrino, “she will never believe it; and,
-besides, she would turn me out of doors. Trouble me, then, no further
-about any such thing, for I will never do it.” They said a great deal
-more to him, but all to no purpose. At length he invited them to
-supper, but did it in such a manner that they refused.</p>
-
-<p>After they had come away from him, said Bruno to Buffalmacco, “Suppose
-we steal this pig from him to-night.” “How is it possible?” “Oh,
-I know well enough how to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span> do it, if he does not remove it in the
-meantime from the place where we just now saw it.” “Then let us do it,
-and afterward we and the parson will make merry over it.” The priest
-assured them that he should like it above all things. “We must use a
-little art,” quoth Bruno; “you know how covetous he is, and how freely
-he drinks when it is at another’s cost. Let us get him to the tavern,
-where the parson shall make a pretense of treating us all, out of
-compliment to him. He will soon get drunk, and then the thing will be
-easy enough, as there is nobody in the house but himself.”</p>
-
-<p>This was done, and Calandrino, finding that the parson was to pay, took
-his glasses pretty freely, and, getting his dose, walked home betimes,
-left the door open, thinking that it was shut, and so went to bed.
-Buffalmacco and Bruno went from the tavern to sup with the priest, and
-as soon as supper was over they took proper tools with them to get into
-the house; but finding the door open, they carried off the pig to the
-priest’s and went to bed likewise.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning, as soon as Calandrino had slept off his wine, he rose,
-came down-stairs, and finding the door open and his pig gone, began to
-inquire of everybody if they knew anything of the matter; and receiving
-no tidings of it, he made a terrible outcry, saying, “What shall I do
-now? Somebody has stolen my pig!” Bruno and Buffalmacco were no sooner
-out of bed than they went to his house to hear what he would say;
-and the moment he saw them he roared out, “Oh, my friends, my pig is
-stolen!” Upon this Bruno whispered to him and said, “Well, I am glad
-to see you wise in your life for once.” “Alas!” quoth he, “it is too
-true.” “Keep to the same story,” said Bruno, “and make noise enough for
-every one to believe you.”</p>
-
-<p>Calandrino now began to bawl louder, “Indeed! I vow and swear to you
-that it is stolen.” “That’s right; be sure you let everybody hear you,
-that it may appear so.” “Do you think that I would forswear myself
-about it? May I be hanged this moment if it is not so!” “How is it
-possible!” quoth Bruno; “I saw it but last night; never imagine that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span>
-I can believe it.” “It is so, however,” answered he, “and I am undone.
-I dare not now go home again, for my wife will never believe me, and
-I shall have no peace this twelve-month.” “It is a most unfortunate
-thing,” said Bruno, “if it be true; but you know I put it into your
-head to say so last night, and you should not make sport both of your
-wife and us at the same time.”</p>
-
-<p>At this Calandrino began to roar out afresh, saying, “Good God! you
-make me mad to hear you talk. I tell you once for all it was stolen
-this very night!” “Nay, if it be so,” quoth Buffalmacco, “we must think
-of some way to get it back again.” “And what way must we take,” said he
-“to find it?” “Depend upon it,” replied the other, “that nobody came
-from the Indies to steal it; it must be somewhere in your neighborhood,
-and if you could get the people together I could make a charm, with
-some bread and cheese, that would soon discover the thief.” “True,”
-said Bruno, “but they would know in that case what you were about; and
-the person that has it would never come near you.” “How must we manage,
-then?” said Buffalmacco. “Oh!” replied Bruno, “you shall see me do it
-with some pills of ginger and a little wine, which I will ask them to
-come and drink. They will have no suspicion what our design is, and we
-can make a charm of these as well as of the bread and cheese.” “Very
-well,” quoth the other. “What do you say, Calandrino? Have you a mind
-we should try it?” “For Heaven’s sake do,” he said; “if I only knew who
-the thief is, I should be half comforted.” “Well, then,” quoth Bruno,
-“I am ready to go to Florence for the things, if you will only give me
-some money.” He happened to have a few florins in his pocket, which he
-gave him, and off went Bruno.</p>
-
-<p>When he got to Florence, Bruno went to a friend’s house and bought a
-pound of ginger made into pills. He also got two pills made of aloes,
-which had a private mark that he should not mistake them, being candied
-over with sugar like the rest. Then, having bought a jar of good
-wine, he returned to Calandrino, and said, “To-morrow you must take
-care to invite every one that you have the least suspicion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span> of; it is
-a holiday, and they will be glad to come. We will finish the charm
-to-night, and bring the things to your house in the morning, and then I
-will take care to do and say on your behalf what is necessary upon such
-an occasion.”</p>
-
-<p>Calandrino did as he was told, and in the morning he had nearly all the
-people in the parish assembled under an elm-tree in the churchyard. His
-two friends produced the pills and wine, and, making the people stand
-round in a circle, Bruno said to them, “Gentlemen, it is fit that I
-should tell you the reason of your being summoned here in this manner,
-to the end, if anything should happen which you do not like, that I
-be not blamed for it. You must know, then, that Calandrino had a pig
-stolen last night, and, as some of the company here must have taken
-it, he, that he may find out the thief, would have every man take and
-eat one of these pills, and drink a glass of wine after it. Whoever
-the guilty person is, you will find he will not be able to get a bit
-of it down, but it will taste so bitter that he will be forced to spit
-it out. Therefore, to prevent such open shame, he had better, whoever
-he is, make a secret confession to the priest, and I will proceed no
-further.”</p>
-
-<p>All present declared their readiness to eat; so, placing them all in
-order, he gave every man his pill and coming to Calandrino, he gave one
-of the aloe pills to him, which he straightway put into his mouth, and
-no sooner did he began to chew it than he was forced to spit it out.
-Every one was now attentive to see who spit his pill out, and while
-Bruno kept going round, apparently taking no notice of Calandrino, he
-heard somebody say behind him, “Hey-day! what is the meaning of its
-disagreeing so with Calandrino?” Bruno now turned suddenly about, and
-seeing that Calandrino had spit out his pill, he said, “Stay a little,
-honest friends, and be not too hasty in judging; it may be something
-else that has made him spit, and therefore he shall try another.” So he
-gave him the other aloe pill, and then went on to the rest that were
-unserved. But if the first was bitter to him, this he thought much
-more so. However, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span> endeavored to get it down as well as he could.
-But it was impossible; it made the tears run down his cheeks, and he
-was forced to spit it out at last, as he had done the other. In the
-meantime Buffalmacco was going about with the wine; but when he and all
-of them saw what Calandrino had done, they began to bawl out that he
-had robbed himself, and some of them abused him roundly.</p>
-
-<p>After they were all gone, Buffalmacco said, “I always thought that you
-yourself were the thief, and that you were willing to make us believe
-the pig was stolen in order to keep your money in your pocket, lest we
-should expect a treat upon the occasion.” Calandrino, who had still the
-taste of the aloes in his mouth, fell a-swearing that he knew nothing
-of the matter. “Honor bright, now, comrade,” said Buffalmacco, “what
-did you get for it?” This made Calandrino quite furious.</p>
-
-<p>To crown all, Bruno struck in: “I was just now told,” said he, “by
-one of the company, that you have a mistress in this neighborhood to
-whom you are very kind, and that he is confident you have given it to
-her. You know you once took us to the plains of Mugnone, to look for
-some black stones, when you left us in the lurch, and pretended you
-had found them; and now you think to make us believe that your pig is
-stolen, when you have either given it away or sold it. You have played
-so many tricks upon us, that we intend to be fooled no more by you.
-Therefore, as we have had a deal of trouble in the affair, you shall
-make us amends by giving us two couple of fowls, unless you mean that
-we should tell your wife.”</p>
-
-<p>Calandrino, now perceiving that he would not be believed, and being
-unwilling to have them add to his troubles by bringing his wife upon
-his back, was forced to give them the fowls, which they joyfully
-carried off along with the pork.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>The Decameron.</i></p>
-
-<p>Rather earlier than Boccaccio lived Rustico di Filippo, who gives us
-the following satirical bit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE MAKING OF MASTER MESSERIN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When God had finished Master Messerin,</div>
- <div class="i1">He really thought it something to have done:</div>
- <div class="i1">Bird, man, and beast had got a chance in one,</div>
- <div>And each felt flattered, it was hoped, therein.</div>
- <div>For he is like a goose i’ the windpipe thin,</div>
- <div class="i1">And like a camelopard high i’ the loins,</div>
- <div class="i1">To which for manhood, you’ll be told, he joins</div>
- <div>Some kind of flesh hues and a callow chin.</div>
- <div>As to his singing, he affects the crow,</div>
- <div>As to his learning, beasts in general,</div>
- <div class="i1">And sets all square by dressing like a man.</div>
- <div>God made him, having nothing else to do,</div>
- <div>And proved there is not anything at all</div>
- <div class="i1">He cannot make, if that’s a thing He can.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Among other collections of tales was the <i>Novellino</i>, collected by
-Massuchio di Salerno, about the middle of the Fifteenth Century.</p>
-
-<p>We quote</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE INHERITANCE OF A LIBRARY</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Jeronimo, who had inherited the place of master and head of the house,
-found himself in possession of many thousand florins in ready money.
-Wherefore the youth, seeing that he himself had endured no labor and
-weariness in gathering together the same, forthwith made up his mind
-not to place his affection in possessions of this sort, and at once
-began to array himself in sumptuous garments, to taste the pleasures of
-the town in the company of certain chosen companions of his, to indulge
-in amorous adventures, and in a thousand other ways to dissipate his
-substance abroad without restraint of any kind. Not only did he banish
-from his mind all thought and design of continuing his studies, but he
-even went so far as to harbor against the books, which his father had
-held in such high esteem and reverence and had bequeathed to him, the
-most fierce and savage hatred.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span> So violent, indeed, was his resentment
-against them that he set them down as the worst foes he had in the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>On a certain day it happened that the young man, either by accident
-or for some reason of his own, betook himself into the library of his
-dead father, and there his eye fell upon a vast quantity of handsome
-and well-arranged books, such as are wont to be found in places of this
-sort. At the first sight of these he was somewhat stricken with fear,
-and with a certain apprehension that the spirit of his father might
-pursue him; but, having collected his courage somewhat, he turned with
-a look of hatred on his face toward the aforesaid books and began to
-address them in the following terms:</p>
-
-<p>“Books, books, so long as my father was alive you waged against me war
-unceasing, forasmuch as he spent all his time and trouble either in
-purchasing you, or in putting you in fair bindings; so that, whenever
-it might happen that there came upon me the need of a few florins or
-of certain other articles, which all youths find necessary, he would
-always refuse to let me have them, saying that it was his will and
-pleasure to dispense his money only in the purchase of such books as
-might please him. And over and beyond this, he purposed in his mind
-that I, altogether against my will, should spend my life in close
-companionship with you, and over this matter there arose between us
-many times angry and contumelious words. Many times, also, you have put
-me in danger of being driven into perpetual exile from this my home.
-Therefore it cannot but be pleasing to God&mdash;since it is no fault of
-yours that I was not hunted forth from this place&mdash;that I should send
-you packing from this my house in such fashion that not a single one
-of you will ever behold my door again. And, in sooth, I wonder more
-especially that you have not before this disordered my wits, a feat
-you might well have accomplished with very little more trouble on your
-part, in your desire to do with me as you did with my father, according
-to my clear recollection. He, poor man, as if he had become bemused
-through conversing with you alone, was accustomed to demean himself
-in strange fashion,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span> moving his hands and his head in such wise that
-over and over again I counted him to be one bereft of reason. Now, on
-account of all this, I bid you have a little patience, for the reason
-that I have made up my mind to sell you all forthwith, and thus in a
-single hour to avenge myself for all the outrages I have suffered on
-your account and, over and beyond this, to set myself free from the
-possible danger of going mad.”</p>
-
-<p>After he had thus spoken, and had packed up divers volumes of the
-aforesaid books&mdash;one of his servants helping him in the work&mdash;he sent
-the parcel to the house of a certain lawyer, who was a friend of his,
-and then in a very few words came to an agreement with the lawyer as to
-the business, the issue of the affair being that, though he had simply
-expelled the books from his house, and had not sold them, he received,
-nevertheless, on account of the same, several hundred florins. With
-these, added to the money which still remained in his purse, he
-continued to pursue the course of pleasure he had begun.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another ironical skit is by Francesco Berni, entitled</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>LIVING IN BED</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Yet field-sports, dice, cards, balls, and such like courses,</div>
- <div class="i1">Things which he might be thought to set store by,</div>
- <div>Gave him but little pleasure. He liked horses,</div>
- <div class="i1">But was content to let them please his eye&mdash;</div>
- <div>Buying them, not squaring with his resources.</div>
- <div class="i1">Therefore his <i>summum bonum</i> was to lie</div>
- <div>Stretch’d at full length&mdash;yea, frankly be it said,</div>
- <div>To do no single thing but lie in bed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Twas owing all to that infernal writing.</div>
- <div class="i1">Body and brains had borne such grievous rounds</div>
- <div>Of kicks, cuffs, floors, from copying and inditing,</div>
- <div class="i1">That he could find no balsam for his wounds,</div>
- <div>No harbor for his wreck half so inviting</div>
- <div class="i1">As to lie still, far from all sights and sounds,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span></div>
- <div>And so, in bed, do nothing on God’s earth</div>
- <div>But try and give his senses a new birth.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Bed&mdash;bed’s the thing, by Heaven!” thus would he swear.</div>
- <div class="i1">“Bed is your only work, your only duty.</div>
- <div>Bed is one’s gown, one’s slippers, one’s armchair,</div>
- <div class="i1">Old coat; you’re not afraid to spoil its beauty.</div>
- <div>Large you may have it, long, wide, brown, or fair,</div>
- <div class="i1">Down-bed or mattress, just as it may suit ye.</div>
- <div>Then take your clothes off, turn in, stretch, lie double;</div>
- <div>Be but in bed, you’re quit of earthly trouble!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Borne to the fairy palace then, but tired</div>
- <div class="i1">Of seeing so much dancing, he withdrew</div>
- <div>Into a distant room, and there desired</div>
- <div class="i1">A bed might be set up, handsome and new,</div>
- <div>With all the comforts that the case required:</div>
- <div class="i1">Mattresses huge, and pillows not a few</div>
- <div>Put here and there, in order that no ease</div>
- <div>Might be found wanting to cheeks, or arms, or knees.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The bed was eight feet wide, lovely to see,</div>
- <div class="i1">With white sheets, and fine curtains, and rich loops</div>
- <div>Things vastly soothing to calamity;</div>
- <div class="i1">The coverlet hung light in silken droops;</div>
- <div>It might have held six people easily;</div>
- <div class="i1">But he disliked to lie in bed by groups.</div>
- <div>A large bed to himself, that was his notion,</div>
- <div>With room enough to swim in&mdash;like the ocean.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In this retreat there joined him a good soul,</div>
- <div class="i1">A Frenchman, one who had been long at court,</div>
- <div>An admirable cook&mdash;though, on the whole,</div>
- <div class="i1">His gains of his deserts had fallen short.</div>
- <div>For him was made, cheek, as it were, by jowl,</div>
- <div class="i1">A second bed of the same noble sort,</div>
- <div>Yet not so close but that the folks were able</div>
- <div>To set between the two a dinner-table.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Here was served up, on snow-white table-cloths,</div>
- <div class="i1">Each daintiest procurable comestible</div>
- <div>In the French taste (all others being Goths),</div>
- <div class="i1">Dishes alike delightful and digestible.</div>
- <div>Only our scribe chose sirups, soups, and broths,</div>
- <div class="i1">The smallest trouble being a detestable</div>
- <div>Bore, into which not ev’n his dinner led him.</div>
- <div>Therefore the servants always came and fed him.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nothing at these times but his head was seen;</div>
- <div class="i1">The coverlet came close beneath his chin;</div>
- <div>And then, from out the bottle or tureen,</div>
- <div class="i1">They fill’d a silver pipe, which he let in</div>
- <div>Between his lips, all easy, smooth, and clean,</div>
- <div class="i1">And so he filled his philosophic skin.</div>
- <div>And not a finger all the while he stirred,</div>
- <div>Nor, lest his tongue should tire, scarce uttered word.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The name of that same cook was Master Pierre;</div>
- <div class="i1">He told a tale well&mdash;something short and light.</div>
- <div>Quoth scribe, “Those people who keep dancing there</div>
- <div class="i1">Have little wit.” Quoth Pierre, “You’re very right.”</div>
- <div>And then he told a tale, or hummed an air;</div>
- <div class="i1">Then took a sip of something, or a bite;</div>
- <div>And then he turned himself to sleep; and then</div>
- <div>Awoke and ate. And then he slept again.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One more thing I may note that made the day</div>
- <div class="i1">Pass well&mdash;one custom, not a little healing,</div>
- <div>Which was, to look above him, as he lay.</div>
- <div class="i1">And count the spots and blotches in the ceiling;</div>
- <div>Noting what shapes they took to, and which way,</div>
- <div class="i1">And where the plaster threatened to be peeling;</div>
- <div>Whether the spot looked new, or old, or what&mdash;</div>
- <div>Or whether ’twas, in fact, a spot or not.</div>
- <div class="right">&mdash;From <i>Roland Enamored</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Francho Sacchetti, poet and novelist, wrote many stories and verses in
-lighter vein.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON A WET DAY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As I walk’d thinking through a little grove,</div>
- <div>Some girls that gather’d flowers came passing me,</div>
- <div>Saying&mdash;“Look here! look there!” delightedly.</div>
- <div>“O here it is!” “What’s that?” “A lily? love!”</div>
- <div>“And there are violets!”</div>
- <div>“Farther for roses! O the lovely pets!</div>
- <div>The darling beauties! O the nasty thorn!</div>
- <div>Look here, my hand’s all torn!”</div>
- <div>“What’s that that jumps?” “O don’t! it’s a grasshopper!”</div>
- <div>“Come, run! come, run!</div>
- <div>Here’s blue-bells!” “O what fun!”</div>
- <div>“Not that way! stop her!”</div>
- <div>“Yes! this way!” “Pluck them then!”</div>
- <div>“O, I’ve found mushrooms! O look here!” “O, I’m</div>
- <div>Quite sure that farther on we’ll get wild thyme.”</div>
- <div>“O, we shall stay too long; it’s going to rain;</div>
- <div>There’s lightning; O! there’s thunder!”</div>
- <div>“O sha’n’t we hear the vesper bell? I wonder.”</div>
- <div>“Why, it’s not nones, you silly little thing!</div>
- <div>And don’t you hear the nightingales that sing&mdash;</div>
- <div>Fly away O die away?”</div>
- <div>“O, I hear something; hush!”</div>
- <div>“Why, where? what is it then?” “Ah! in that bush.”</div>
- <div>So every girl here knocks it, shakes and shocks it:</div>
- <div>Till with the stir they make</div>
- <div>Out skurries a great snake.</div>
- <div>“O Lord! O me! Alack! Ah me! alack!”</div>
- <div>They scream, and then all run and scream again,</div>
- <div>And then in heavy drops comes down the rain.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Each running at the other in a fright,</div>
- <div>Each trying to get before the other, and crying.</div>
- <div>And flying, and stumbling, tumbling, wrong or right;&mdash;</div>
- <div>One sets her knee</div>
- <div>There where her foot should be;</div>
- <div>One has her hands and dress</div>
- <div>All smother’d up with mud in a fine mess;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span></div>
- <div>And one gets trampled on by two or three.</div>
- <div>What’s gathered is let fall</div>
- <div>About the wood, and not pick’d up at all.</div>
- <div>The wreaths of flowers are scatter’d on the ground,</div>
- <div>And still as, screaming, hustling, without rest,</div>
- <div>They run this way and that and round and round,</div>
- <div>She thinks herself in luck who runs the best.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I stood quite still to have a perfect view,</div>
- <div>And never noticed till I got wet through.</div>
- <div class="right">&mdash;<i>Translated by Rossetti.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>This brings us to Benvenuto Cellini, who, though not classed among the
-humorists, gives us many flashes of wit and humor in his celebrated
-Biography.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>A COMPULSORY MARRIAGE AT SWORD’S POINT</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">One of those busy personages who delight in spreading mischief came to
-inform me that Paolo Micceri had taken a house for his new lady and her
-mother, and that he made use of the most injurious and contemptuous
-expressions regarding me, to wit:</p>
-
-<p>“Poor Benvenuto! he paid the piper while I danced; and now he goes
-about boasting of the exploit. He thinks I am afraid of him&mdash;I, who can
-wear a sword and dagger as well as he. But I would have him to know my
-weapons are as keen as his. I, too, am a Florentine, and come of the
-Micceri, a much better house than the Cellini any time of day.”</p>
-
-<p>In short, the vile informer painted the things in such colors to my
-disadvantage that it fired my whole blood. I was in a fever of the most
-dangerous kind. And feeling it must kill me unless it found vent, I had
-recourse to my usual means on such occasions. I called to my workman,
-Chioccia, to accompany me, and told another to follow me with my horse.
-On reaching the wretch’s house, finding the door half open, I entered
-abruptly in. There he sat with his precious “lady-love,” his boasted
-sword and dagger beside him, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span> the very act of jesting with the elder
-woman upon my affairs. To slam the door, draw my sword and present the
-point to his throat, was the work of a moment, giving him no time to
-think of defending himself:</p>
-
-<p>“Vile poltroon, recommend thy soul to God! Thou art a dead man!”</p>
-
-<p>In the excess of his terror he cried out thrice, in a feeble voice,
-“Mama! mama! mama! Help, help, help!”</p>
-
-<p>At this ludicrous appeal, so like a girl’s, and the ridiculous manner
-in which it was uttered, though I had a mind to kill, I lost half my
-rage and could not forbear laughing. Turning to Chioccia, however, I
-bade him make fast the door; for I was resolved to inflict the same
-punishment upon all three. Still with my sword-point at his throat,
-and pricking him a little now and then, I terrified him with the most
-desperate threats, and finding that he made no defense, was rather at
-a loss how to proceed. It was too poor a revenge&mdash;it was nothing&mdash;when
-suddenly it came into my head to make it effectual, and compel him to
-espouse the girl upon the spot.</p>
-
-<p>“Up! Off with that ring on thy finger, villain!” I cried. “Marry her
-this instant, and then I shall have my full revenge.”</p>
-
-<p>“Anything&mdash;anything you like, provided you will not kill me,” he
-eagerly answered.</p>
-
-<p>Removing my sword a little:</p>
-
-<p>“Now, then,” I said, “put on the ring.”</p>
-
-<p>He did so, trembling all the time.</p>
-
-<p>“This is not enough. Go and bring me two notaries to draw up the
-contract.” Then, addressing the girl and her mother in French:</p>
-
-<p>“While the notaries and witnesses are coming, I will give you a word of
-advice. The first of you that I know to utter a word about my affairs,
-I will kill you&mdash;all three. So remember.”</p>
-
-<p>I afterward said in Italian to Paolo:</p>
-
-<p>“If you offer the slightest opposition to the least thing I choose to
-propose, I will cut you up into mince-meat with this good sword.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[358]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It is enough,” he interrupted in alarm, “that you will not kill me. I
-will do whatever you wish.”</p>
-
-<p>So this singular contract was duly drawn out and signed. My rage
-and fever were gone. I paid the notaries, and went home.&mdash;<i>The
-Biography.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>CRITICISM OF A STATUE OF HERCULES</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Bandinello was incensed to such a degree that he was ready to burst
-with fury, and turning to me said, “What faults have you to find with
-my statues?”</p>
-
-<p>I answered, “I will soon tell them, if you have but the patience to
-hear me.”</p>
-
-<p>He replied, “Tell them, then.”</p>
-
-<p>The duke and all present listened with the utmost attention. I began
-by promising that I was sorry to be obliged to lay before him all
-the blemishes of his work, and that I was not so properly delivering
-my own sentiments as declaring what was said of it by the artistic
-school of Florence. However, as the fellow at one time said something
-disobliging, at another made some offensive gesture with his hands or
-his feet, he put me into such a passion that I behaved with a rudeness
-which I should otherwise have avoided.</p>
-
-<p>“The artistic school of Florence,” said I, “declares what follows:
-If the hair of your Hercules were shaved off, there would not remain
-skull enough to hold his brains. With regard to his face, it is hard
-to distinguish whether it be the face of a man, or that of a creature
-something between a lion and an ox; it discovers no attention to what
-it is about; and it is so ill set upon the neck, with so little art
-and in so ungraceful a manner, that a more shocking piece of work was
-never seen. His great brawny shoulders resemble the two pommels of an
-ass’s packsaddle. His breasts and their muscles bear no similitude to
-those of a man, but seem to have been drawn from a sack of melons.
-As he leans directly against the wall, the small of the back has the
-appearance of a bag filled with long cucumbers. It is impossible to
-conceive in what manner the two legs are fastened to this distorted
-figure, for it is hard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span> to distinguish upon which leg he stands, or
-upon which he exerts any effort of his strength; nor does he appear to
-stand upon both, as he is sometimes represented by those masters of
-the art of statuary who know something of their business. It is plain,
-too, that the statue inclines more than one-third of a cubit forward;
-and this is the greatest and the most insupportable blunder which
-pretenders to sculpture can be guilty of. As for the arms, they both
-hang down in the most awkward and ungraceful manner imaginable; and so
-little art is displayed in them that people would be almost tempted to
-think that you had never seen a naked man in your life. The right leg
-of Hercules and that of Cacus touch at the middle of their calves, and
-if they were to be separated, not one of them only, but both, would
-remain without a calf, in the place where they touch. Besides, one of
-the feet of the Hercules is quite buried, and the other looks as if it
-stood upon hot coals.”&mdash;<i>The Biography.</i></p>
-
-
-<h3>SPANISH WIT AND HUMOR</h3>
-
-<p>The Spanish literature of this time contains little that can be quoted
-as humor.</p>
-
-<p>Hurtado de Mendoza, a novelist, historian and poet, and Lope de Vega,
-dramatist, are the principal names among the Spanish writers.</p>
-
-<p>About 1600 there flourished a poet named Baltazar del Alcazar, whose
-work shows a rather modern type of humor.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>SLEEP</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Sleep is no servant of the will;</div>
- <div class="i1">It has caprices of its own;</div>
- <div class="i1">When most pursued, ’tis swiftly gone;</div>
- <div>When courted least, it lingers still.</div>
- <div>With its vagaries long perplext,</div>
- <div class="i1">I turned and turned my restless sconce,</div>
- <div class="i1">Till, one fine night, I thought at once</div>
- <div>I’d master it. So hear my text.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When sleep doth tarry, I begin</div>
- <div class="i1">My long and well-accustomed prayer,</div>
- <div class="i1">And in a twinkling sleep is there,</div>
- <div>Through my bed-curtains peeping in.</div>
- <div>When sleep hangs heavy on my eyes,</div>
- <div class="i1">I think of debts I fain would pay,</div>
- <div class="i1">And then, as flies night’s shade from day,</div>
- <div>Sleep from my heavy eyelids flies.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And, thus controlled, the winged one bends</div>
- <div class="i1">E’en his fantastic will to me,</div>
- <div class="i1">And, strange yet true, both I and he</div>
- <div>Are friends&mdash;the very best of friends.</div>
- <div>We are a happy wedded pair,</div>
- <div class="i1">And I the lord and he the dame;</div>
- <div class="i1">Our bed, our board, our dreams the same,</div>
- <div>And we’re united everywhere.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I’ll tell you where I learned to school</div>
- <div class="i1">This wayward sleep: a whispered word</div>
- <div class="i1">From a church-going hag I heard,</div>
- <div>And tried it, for I was no fool.</div>
- <div>So, from that very hour I knew</div>
- <div class="i1">That, having ready prayers to pray,</div>
- <div class="i1">And having many debts to pay,</div>
- <div>Will serve for sleep, and waking too.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>In 1605 was published the first part of <i>Don Quixote de la Mancha</i>
-the celebrated satirical work of Miguel de Cervantes.</p>
-
-<p>Of this book Hallam says, “it is the only Spanish book which can be
-said to possess a European reputation.”</p>
-
-<p>Its reputation is world wide and fine translations have given us the
-spirit of the original.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>HE SECURES SANCHO PANZA AS HIS SQUIRE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">In the meantime, Don Quixote tampered with a laborer, a neighbor of
-his and an honest man (if such an epithet can be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span> given to one that is
-poor), but shallow-brained; in short, he said so much, used so many
-arguments and made so many promises, that the poor fellow resolved to
-sally out with him and serve him in the capacity of a squire. Among
-other things, Don Quixote told him that he ought to be very glad to
-accompany him, for such an adventure might, some time or the other,
-occur that by one stroke an island might be won, where he might leave
-him governor. With this and other promises, Sancho Panza (for that was
-the laborer’s name) left his wife and children and engaged himself as
-squire to his neighbor. Don Quixote now set about raising money; and,
-by selling one thing, pawning another, and losing by all, he collected
-a tolerable sum. He fitted himself likewise with a buckler, which he
-borrowed of a friend, and, patching up his broken helmet in the best
-manner he could, he acquainted his squire Sancho of the day and hour
-he intended to set out, that he might provide himself with what he
-thought would be most needful. Above all, he charged him not to forget
-a wallet, which Sancho assured him he would not neglect; he said also
-that he thought of taking an ass with him, as he had a very good one,
-and he was not used to travel much on foot. With regard to the ass,
-Don Quixote paused a little, endeavoring to recollect whether any
-knight-errant had ever carried a squire mounted on ass-back, but no
-instance of the kind occurred to his memory. However, he consented that
-he should take his ass, resolving to accommodate him more honorably, at
-the earliest opportunity, by dismounting the first discourteous knight
-he should meet. He provided himself also with shirts, and other things,
-conformably to the advice given him by the innkeeper.</p>
-
-<p>All this being accomplished, Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, without
-taking leave, the one of his wife and children, or the other of
-his housekeeper and niece, one night sallied out of the village
-unperceived; and they travelled so hard that by break of day they
-believed themselves secure, even if search were made after them. Sancho
-Panza proceeded upon his ass like a patriarch, with his wallet and
-leathern bottle, and with a vehement desire to find himself governor
-of the island which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span> his master had promised him. Don Quixote happened
-to take the same route as on his first expedition, over the plain of
-Montiel, which he passed with less inconvenience than before; for it
-was early in the morning, and the rays of the sun, darting on them
-horizontally, did not annoy them. Sancho Panza now said to his master,
-“I beseech your worship, good Sir Knight-errant, not to forget your
-promise concerning that same island, for I shall know how to govern
-it, be it ever so large.” To which Don Quixote answered: “Thou must
-know, friend Sancho Panza, that it was a custom much in use among the
-knights-errant of old to make their squires governors of the islands or
-kingdoms they conquered; and I am determined that so laudable a custom
-shall not be lost through my neglect; on the contrary, I resolve to
-outdo them in it, for they, sometimes, and perhaps most times, waited
-till their squires were grown old; and when they were worn out in
-their service, and had endured many bad days and worse nights, they
-conferred on them some title, such as count, or at least marquis, of
-some valley or province of more or less account; but if you live and
-I live, before six days have passed I may probably win such a kingdom
-as may have others depending on it, just fit for thee to be crowned
-king of one of them. And do not think this any extraordinary matter,
-for things fall out to knights by such unforeseen and unexpected ways,
-that I may easily give thee more than I promise.” “So, then,” answered
-Sancho Panza, “if I were a king, by some of those miracles your worship
-mentions, Joan Gutierrez, my duck, would come to be a queen, and my
-children infantas!” “Who doubts it?” answered Don Quixote. “I doubt
-it,” replied Sancho Panza; “for I am verily persuaded that, if God
-were to rain down kingdoms upon the earth, none of them would set well
-upon the head of Mary Gutierrez; for you must know, sir, she is not
-worth two farthings for a queen. The title of countess would sit better
-upon her, with the help of Heaven and good friends.” “Recommend her
-to God, Sancho,” answered Don Quixote, “and He will do what is best
-for her; but do thou have a care not to debase thy mind so low as to
-content thyself with being less than a viceroy.” “Sir, I will not,”
-answered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span> Sancho; “especially having so great a man for my master as
-your worship, who will know how to give me whatever is most fitting for
-me and what I am best able to bear.”</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>OF THE VALOROUS DON QUIXOTE’S SUCCESS IN THE DREADFUL AND
-NEVER-BEFORE-IMAGINED ADVENTURE OF THE WINDMILLS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Engaged in this discourse, they came in sight of thirty or forty
-windmills which are in that plain; and as soon as Don Quixote espied
-them, he said to his squire, “Fortune disposes our affairs better than
-we ourselves could have desired; look yonder, friend Sancho Panza,
-where thou mayest discover somewhat more than thirty monstrous giants,
-whom I intend to encounter and slay, and with their spoils we will
-begin to enrich ourselves; for it is lawful war, and doing God good
-service, to remove so wicked a generation from off the face of the
-earth.” “What giants?” said Sancho Panza. “Those thou seest yonder,”
-answered his master, “with their long arms; for some are wont to have
-them almost of the length of two leagues.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look, sir,” answered Sancho, “those which appear yonder are not
-giants, but windmills, and what seem to be arms are the sails, which,
-whirled about by the wind, make the millstone go.” “It is very
-evident,” answered Don Quixote, “that thou art not versed in the
-business of adventures. They are giants; and if thou art afraid, get
-thee aside and pray, whilst I engage with them in fierce and unequal
-combat.” So saying, he clapped spurs to his steed, notwithstanding the
-cries his squire sent after him, assuring him that they were certainly
-windmills, and not giants. But he was so fully possessed that they were
-giants, that he neither heard the outcries of his squire Sancho, nor
-yet discerned what they were, though he was very near them, but went
-on, crying out aloud, “Fly not, ye cowards and vile caitiffs! for it is
-a single knight who assaults you.” The wind now rising a little, the
-great sails began to move, upon which Don Quixote called out, “Although
-ye should have more arms than the giant Briareus, ye shall pay for it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span></p>
-
-<p>Thus recommending himself devoutly to his lady Dulcinea, beseeching
-her to succor him in the present danger, being well covered with his
-buckler and setting his lance in the rest he rushed on as fast as
-Rozinante could gallop and attacked the first mill before him, when,
-running his lance into the sail, the wind whirled it about with so
-much violence that it broke the lance to shivers, dragging horse and
-rider after it, and tumbling them over and over on the plain in very
-evil plight. Sancho Panza hastened to his assistance as fast as the ass
-could carry him; and when he came up to his master he found him unable
-to stir, so violent was the blow which he and Rozinante had received in
-their fall.</p>
-
-<p>“God save me!” quoth Sancho, “did not I warn you to have a care of what
-you did, for that they were nothing but windmills? And nobody could
-mistake them but one that had the like in his head.”</p>
-
-<p>“Peace, friend Sancho,” answered Don Quixote; “for matters of war
-are, of all others, most subject to continual change. Now I verily
-believe, and it is most certainly the fact, that the sage Freston, who
-stole away my chamber and books, has metamorphosed these giants into
-windmills, on purpose to deprive me of the glory of vanquishing them,
-so great is the enmity he bears me! But his wicked arts will finally
-avail but little against the goodness of my sword.”</p>
-
-<p>“God grant it!” answered Sancho Panza. Then, helping him to rise, he
-mounted him again upon his steed, which was almost disjointed.&mdash;<i>Don
-Quixote.</i></p>
-
-
-<h3>THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY</h3>
-
-<p>Though still serious-minded in the main, the world at the beginning of
-the Seventeenth century recognized and appreciated humor.</p>
-
-<p>And, growing with what it fed upon the vein of humor became more marked
-and more important in literature.</p>
-
-<p>Wherefore our outline must from now on be less comprehensive and more
-discriminating.</p>
-
-<p>The field is getting too wide, the harvest too bountiful for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span> gleaning,
-even for general reaping; we can now only pluck spears of ripened grain.</p>
-
-<p>An Outline can touch only the high spots, and though many wonderful
-flashes of wit and humor occur in the works of the most serious writers
-space cannot be given to such, it must be conserved for the definitely
-and intentionally humorous writers.</p>
-
-<p>This is greatly to be regretted, for not infrequently the jests of the
-serious-minded are more intrinsically witty than those of professed
-humorists.</p>
-
-<p>As an example may be mentioned George Herbert, the famous clergyman who
-was called Holy George Herbert.</p>
-
-<p>His religious writings are interspersed with flashes of exquisite wit.</p>
-
-<p>“God gave thy soul brave wings; put not those feathers Into a bed to
-sleep out all ill weathers,”</p>
-
-<p>is a most graceful bit of word play.</p>
-
-<p>And so with scores, even hundreds of worthy writers, among whose pages
-brilliant shafts of wit are found.</p>
-
-<p>Such excursions we have no room for, and must abide by the inexorable
-laws of limitation.</p>
-
-<p>Nor can such a matter as the Ballads be touched upon.</p>
-
-<p>The historical ballads of this time were narrative poems of exceeding
-great length and usually, of exceeding great dulness. Fun they show,
-here and there, but the bulk of them are destitute of mirth-provoking
-lines.</p>
-
-<p>Not so the Ballad Literature intended for social diversion and lovers
-of ribaldry. These, in large numbers, were put forth, and were oftener
-than not, founded on the old Jest Books, the Merry Tales, and even the
-Gesta and Fabliaux of earlier days.</p>
-
-<p>Collections of these include the effusions of the balladists from the
-short stanzas, mere epigrams, to the intolerably long tales based on
-political or religious matters.</p>
-
-<p>Yet it is at this juncture we must mention the name of Thomas Hobbes,
-the Malmesbury Philosopher, and a most important figure of the
-seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<p>Not because of his own wit or humor, but of his understanding and
-valuation of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span></p>
-
-<p>His observations on laughter, hereinbefore referred to, must be quoted
-entire.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">From Human Nature</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>LAUGHTER</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">There is a passion that hath no name; but the sign of it is that
-distortion of the countenance which we call laughter, which is always
-joy: but what joy, what we think, and wherein we triumph when we laugh,
-is not hitherto declared by any. That it consisteth in wit, or, as they
-call it, in the jest, experience confuteth; for men laugh at mischances
-and indecencies, wherein there lieth no wit nor jest at all. And
-forasmuch as the same thing is no more ridiculous when it groweth stale
-or usual, whatsoever it be that moveth laughter, it must be new and
-unexpected. Men laugh often&mdash;especially such as are greedy of applause
-from everything they do well&mdash;at their own actions performed never so
-little beyond their own expectations as also at their own jests: and
-in this case it is manifest that the passion of laughter proceedeth
-from a sudden conception of some ability in himself that laugheth.
-Also, men laugh at the infirmities of others by comparison wherewith
-their own abilities are set off and illustrated. Also men laugh at
-jests the wit whereof always consisteth in the elegant discovering and
-conveying to our minds some absurdity of another; and in this case also
-the passion of laughter proceedeth from the sudden imagination of our
-own odds and eminency; for what is else the recommending of ourselves
-to our own good opinion, by comparison with another man’s infirmity or
-absurdity? For when a jest is broken upon ourselves, or friends, of
-whose dishonour we participate, we never laugh thereat. I may therefore
-conclude that the passion of laughter is nothing else but sudden glory
-arising from a sudden conception of some eminency in ourselves, by
-comparison with the infirmity of others, or with our own formerly; for
-men laugh at the follies of themselves past, when they come suddenly
-to remembrance, except they bring with them any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span> present dishonour.
-It is no wonder, therefore, that men take heinously to be laughed at
-or derided&mdash;that is, triumphed over. Laughing without offence must be
-at absurdities and infirmities abstracted from persons, and when all
-the company may laugh together; for laughing to one’s self putteth all
-the rest into jealousy and examination of themselves. Besides, it is
-vain-glory, and an argument of little worth, to think the infirmity of
-another sufficient matter for his triumph.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Robert Herrick, among the most exquisite of lyric poets, was a
-classical scholar, addicted to Martial. His works, neglected for long
-years, came into their own about a century ago, and his spontaneous
-gayety and tenderness is not frequently equalled.</p>
-
-<p>The temptation is to quote his lyrics, but his whimsical humor is more
-clearly shown in his waggish lines.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE KISS&mdash;A DIALOGUE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft1">1. Among thy fancies, tell me this:</div>
- <div class="ih">What is the thing we call a kisse?</div>
- <div class="ileft1">2. I shall resolve ye, what it is.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>It is a creature born and bred</div>
- <div>Between the lips, (all cherrie red,)</div>
- <div>By love and warme desires fed;</div>
- <div class="ih"><i>Chorus.</i>&mdash;And makes more soft the bridal bed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft1">2. It is an active flame, that flies</div>
- <div>First to the babies of the eyes,<span style="margin-left: 6em;">pupils</span></div>
- <div>And charms them there with lullabies;</div>
- <div class="ih"><i>Chorus.</i>&mdash;And stils the bride too, when she cries.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft1">2. Then to the chin, the cheek, the eare</div>
- <div>It frisks and flyes; now here, now there;</div>
- <div>’Tis now farre off, and then ’tis nere;</div>
- <div class="ih"><i>Chorus.</i>&mdash;And here, and there, and every where.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft1">1. Has it a speaking virtue?&mdash;2. Yes.</div>
- <div class="ileft1">1. How speaks it, say?&mdash;2. Do you but this,</div>
- <div>Part your joyn’d lips, then speaks your kisse;</div>
- <div class="ih"><i>Chorus.</i>&mdash;And this loves sweetest language is.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft1">1. Has it a body?&mdash;2. Ay, and wings,</div>
- <div>With thousand rare encolourings;</div>
- <div>And as it flies, it gently sings,</div>
- <div class="ih"><i>Chorus.</i>&mdash;Love honie yeelds, but never stings.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A TERNARY OF LITTLES, UPON A PIPKIN OF JELLY SENT TO A LADY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A little saint best fits a little shrine,</div>
- <div>A little prop best fits a little vine;</div>
- <div>As my small cruse best fits my little wine.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A little seed best fits a little soil,</div>
- <div>A little trade best fits a little toil;</div>
- <div>As my small jar best fits my little oil.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A little bin best fits a little bread,</div>
- <div>A little garland fits a little head;</div>
- <div>As my small stuff best fits my little shed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A little hearth best fits a little fire,</div>
- <div>A little chapel fits a little choir;</div>
- <div>As my small bell best fits my little spire.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A little stream best fits a little boat,</div>
- <div>A little lead best fits a little float;</div>
- <div>As my small pipe best fits my little note.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A little meat best fits a little belly,</div>
- <div>As sweetly, lady, give me leave to tell ye,</div>
- <div>This little pipkin fits this little jelly.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Thomas Carew, Edmund Waller, Sir John Suckling and Richard Lovelace
-all followed more or less in Herrick’s footsteps,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span> and though each
-possessed what is called a pretty wit, they were not primarily humorous
-writers.</p>
-
-<p>A few poems are given, perhaps of more lyric than witty value.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Richard Lovelace</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>SONG</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Why should you swear I am forsworn,</div>
- <div class="i1">Since thine I vowed to be?</div>
- <div>Lady, it is already morn,</div>
- <div class="i1">And ’twas last night I swore to thee</div>
- <div class="i1">That fond impossibility.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Have I not loved thee much and long,</div>
- <div class="i1">A tedious twelve hours’ space?</div>
- <div>I must all other beauties wrong,</div>
- <div class="i1">And rob thee of a new embrace,</div>
- <div class="i1">Could I still dote upon thy face.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Not but all joy in thy brown hair</div>
- <div class="i1">By others may be found;</div>
- <div>But I must search the black and fair,</div>
- <div class="i1">Like skilful mineralists that sound</div>
- <div class="i1">For treasure in unploughed-up ground.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then, if when I have loved my round,</div>
- <div class="i1">Thou prov’st the pleasant she;</div>
- <div>With spoils of meaner beauties crowned</div>
- <div class="i1">I laden will return to thee,</div>
- <div class="i1">Even sated with variety.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><span class="smcap">Sir John Suckling</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>THE CONSTANT LOVER</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">Out upon it! I have loved</div>
- <div>Three whole days together,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span></div>
- <div>And am like to love three more,</div>
- <div class="i1">If it prove fair weather.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Time shall moult away his wings</div>
- <div class="i1">Ere he shall discover</div>
- <div>In the whole wide world again</div>
- <div class="i1">Such a constant lover.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But the spite on ’tis, no praise</div>
- <div class="i1">Is due at all to me:</div>
- <div>Love with me had made no stays,</div>
- <div class="i1">Had it any been but she.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Had it any been but she,</div>
- <div class="i1">And that very face,</div>
- <div>There had been at least ere this</div>
- <div class="i1">A dozen dozen in her place.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE REMONSTRANCE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Why so pale and wan, fond lover?</div>
- <div class="i1">Prithee, why so pale?</div>
- <div>Will, when looking well can’t move her,</div>
- <div class="i1">Looking ill prevail?</div>
- <div class="i1">Prithee, why so pale?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Why so dull and mute, young sinner?</div>
- <div class="i1">Prithee, why so mute?</div>
- <div>Will, when speaking well can’t win her,</div>
- <div class="i1">Saying nothing do’t?</div>
- <div class="i1">Prithee, why so mute?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Quite, quit, for shame! this will not move,</div>
- <div class="i1">This cannot take her;</div>
- <div>If of herself she will not love,</div>
- <div class="i1">Nothing can make her:</div>
- <div class="i1">The devil take her!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span></p>
-
-<p>John Milton, second only to Shakespeare in all literature, is not
-usually looked upon as a humorist.</p>
-
-<p>A wise commentator (of more wisdom than wit), has said, of Milton, “Few
-great poets are so utterly without humor; alone among the greatest
-poets he has not sung of love.”</p>
-
-<p>We take objection to both these statements, though with the second we
-are not now concerned.</p>
-
-<p>But surely no humorless pen could have indited <i>L’Allegro</i>, and as
-to less subtle humor, we give in evidence the well known Epitaph on the
-Carrier.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>FROM L’ALLEGRO</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">But come, thou goddess fair and free,</div>
- <div>In heaven yclep’d Euphrosyne,</div>
- <div>And by men, heart-easing Mirth;</div>
- <div>Whom lovely Venus, at a birth,</div>
- <div>With two sister Graces more,</div>
- <div>To ivy-crowned Bacchus bore:</div>
- <div>Or whether (as some sages sing)</div>
- <div>The frolic wind that breathes the spring,</div>
- <div>Zephyr, with Aurora, playing,</div>
- <div>As he met her once a-Maying!</div>
- <div>There on beds of violets blue,</div>
- <div>And fresh-blown roses wash’d in dew,</div>
- <div>Fill’d her with thee, a daughter fair,</div>
- <div>So buxom, blithe, and debonair.</div>
- <div class="i1">Haste thee, nymph, and bring with thee</div>
- <div>Jest, and youthful jollity,</div>
- <div>Quips, and cranks, and wanton wiles,</div>
- <div>Nods, and becks, and wreathed smiles,</div>
- <div>Such as hang on Hebe’s cheek,</div>
- <div>And love to live in dimple sleek;</div>
- <div>Sport that wrinkled Care derides,</div>
- <div>And Laughter holding both his sides</div>
- <div>Come, and trip it, as you go,</div>
- <div>On the light fantastic toe;</div>
- <div>And in thy right hand lead with thee</div>
- <div>The mountain nymph, sweet Liberty;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span></div>
- <div>And if I give thee honor due,</div>
- <div>Mirth, admit me of thy crew,</div>
- <div>To live with her, and live with thee,</div>
- <div>In unreproved pleasures free:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing1">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then to the spicy nut-brown ale,</div>
- <div>With stories told of many a feat,</div>
- <div>How faery Mab the junkets ate;</div>
- <div>She was pinch’d, and pulled, she said;</div>
- <div>And he, by friar’s lantern led,</div>
- <div>Tells how the drudging goblin sweat</div>
- <div>To earn his cream-bowl duly set,</div>
- <div>When in one night, ere glimpses of morn,</div>
- <div>His shadowy flail had thresh’d the corn,</div>
- <div>That ten day-laborers could not end;</div>
- <div>Then lies him down, the lubber fiend,</div>
- <div>And, stretched out all the chimney’s length,</div>
- <div>Basks at the fire his hairy strength;</div>
- <div>And, crop-full, out of doors he flings,</div>
- <div>Ere the first cock his matin rings.</div>
- <div>Thus done the tales, to bed they creep,</div>
- <div>By whispering winds soon lull’d asleep.</div>
- <div class="i1">Tower’d cities please us then,</div>
- <div>And the busy hum of men.</div>
- <div>Where throngs of knights and barons bold,</div>
- <div>In weeds of peace, high triumphs hold,</div>
- <div>With store of ladies, whose bright eyes</div>
- <div>Rain influence, and judge and prize</div>
- <div>Of wit or arms, while both contend</div>
- <div>To win her grace, whom all commend.</div>
- <div>There let Hymen oft appear</div>
- <div>In saffron robes, with taper clear,</div>
- <div>And pomp, and feast, and revelry,</div>
- <div>With mask and antique pageantry;</div>
- <div>Such sights as youthful poets dream</div>
- <div>On summer eves by haunted stream.</div>
- <div>Then to the well-trod stage anon,</div>
- <div>If Jonson’s learned sock be on,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span></div>
- <div>Or sweetest Shakespeare, Fancy’s child,</div>
- <div>Warble his native wood-notes wild.</div>
- <div>And ever, against eating cares,</div>
- <div>Lap me in soft Lydian airs,</div>
- <div>Married to immortal verse;</div>
- <div>Such as the melting soul may pierce,</div>
- <div>In notes with many a winding bout</div>
- <div>Of linked sweetness long drawn out,</div>
- <div>With wanton heed and giddy cunning,</div>
- <div>The melting voice through mazes running,</div>
- <div>Untwisting all the chains that tie</div>
- <div>The hidden soul of harmony;</div>
- <div>That Orpheus’ self may heave his head</div>
- <div>From golden slumber on a bed</div>
- <div>Of heap’d Elysian flowers, and hear</div>
- <div>Such strains as would have won the ear</div>
- <div>Of Pluto, to have quite set free</div>
- <div>His half-regain’d Eurydice.</div>
- <div class="i1">These delights if thou canst give,</div>
- <div>Mirth, with thee I mean to live.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>EPITAPH FOR AN OLD UNIVERSITY CARRIER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Here lieth one who did most truly prove</div>
- <div>That he could never die while he could move;</div>
- <div>So hung his destiny, never to rot</div>
- <div>While he might still jog on and keep his trot;</div>
- <div>Made of sphere-metal, never to decay</div>
- <div>Until his revolution was at stay.</div>
- <div>Time numbers motion, yet (without a crime</div>
- <div>’Gainst old truth) motion number’d out his time,</div>
- <div>And, like an engine moved with wheel and weight,</div>
- <div>His principles being ceased, he ended straight.</div>
- <div>Rest, that gives all men life, gave him his death,</div>
- <div>And too much breathing put him out of breath.</div>
- <div>Nor were it contradiction to affirm,</div>
- <div>Too long vacation hastened on his term.</div>
- <div>Merely to drive away the time, he sicken’d,</div>
- <div>Fainted, died, nor would with ale be quicken’d.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span></div>
- <div>“Nay,” quoth he, on his swooning bed outstretch’d,</div>
- <div>“If I mayn’t carry, sure I’ll ne’er be fetch’d,</div>
- <div>But vow, though the cross doctors all stood hearers,</div>
- <div>For one carrier put down to make six bearers.”</div>
- <div>Ease was his chief disease; and, to judge right,</div>
- <div>He died for heaviness that his cart went light.</div>
- <div>His leisure told him that his time was come,</div>
- <div>And lack of load made his life burdensome,</div>
- <div>That even to his last breath (there be that say’t),</div>
- <div>As he were press’d to death, he cried, “More weight!”</div>
- <div>But had his doings lasted as they were,</div>
- <div>He had been an immortal carrier.</div>
- <div>Obedient to the moon, he spent his date</div>
- <div>In course reciprocal, and had his fate</div>
- <div>Link’d to the mutual flowing of the seas,</div>
- <div>Yet (strange to think) his <i>wain</i> was his <i>increase</i>.</div>
- <div>His letters are deliver’d all and gone;</div>
- <div>Only remains this superscription.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Samuel Butler, a brilliant and satiric wit, wrote <i>Hudibras</i>, the
-immortal Cavalier burlesque of the views and manners of the English
-Puritans. In some degree imitated from <i>Don Quixote</i> as to plan,
-this burlesque is so full of shrewd wit and felicitous drollery as to
-hold a unique place in literature.</p>
-
-<p>Like all such long works, it is difficult to quote from, but some
-passages are given, as well as some of Butler’s clever epigrams.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE RELIGION OF HUDIBRAS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For his religion it was fit</div>
- <div>To match his learning and his wit:</div>
- <div>Twas Presbyterian true blue;</div>
- <div>For he was of that stubborn crew</div>
- <div>Of errant saints, whom all men grant</div>
- <div>To be the true Church militant;</div>
- <div>Such as do build their faith upon</div>
- <div>The holy text of pike and gun;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[375]</span></div>
- <div>Decide all controversies by</div>
- <div>Infallible artillery,</div>
- <div>And prove their doctrine orthodox,</div>
- <div>By apostolic blows and knocks;</div>
- <div>Call fire, and sword, and desolation,</div>
- <div>A godly, thorough reformation.</div>
- <div>Which always must be carried on,</div>
- <div>And still be doing, never done;</div>
- <div>As if religion were intended</div>
- <div>From nothing else but to be mended;</div>
- <div>A sect whose chief devotion lies</div>
- <div>In odd perverse antipathies;</div>
- <div>In falling out with that or this,</div>
- <div>And finding somewhat still amiss;</div>
- <div>More peevish, cross, and splenetic,</div>
- <div>Than dog distract or monkey sick;</div>
- <div>That with more care keep holy-day</div>
- <div>The wrong, than others the right way;</div>
- <div>Compound for sins they are inclin’d to,</div>
- <div>By damning those they have no mind to;</div>
- <div>Still so perverse and opposite,</div>
- <div>As if they worshipped God for spite;</div>
- <div>The self-same thing they will abhor</div>
- <div>One way, and long another for;</div>
- <div>Free-will they one way disavow,</div>
- <div>Another, nothing else allow;</div>
- <div>All piety consists therein</div>
- <div>In them, in other men all sin;</div>
- <div>Rather than fail, they will defy</div>
- <div>That which they love most tenderly;</div>
- <div>Quarrel with minc’d pies, and disparage</div>
- <div>Their best and dearest friend, plum porridge;</div>
- <div>Fat pig and goose itself oppose,</div>
- <div>And blaspheme custard through the nose.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>SAINTSHIP VERSUS CONSCIENCE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Why didst thou choose that cursed sin,</div>
- <div>Hypocrisy, to set up in?”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[376]</span></div>
- <div>“Because it is the thriving’st calling,</div>
- <div>The only saints’ bell that rings all in;</div>
- <div>In which all churches are concern’d,</div>
- <div>And is the easiest to be learn’d.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing1">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Quoth he, “I am resolv’d to be</div>
- <div>Thy scholar in this mystery;”</div>
- <div>“And therefore first desire to know</div>
- <div>Some principles on which you go.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“What makes a knave a child of God,</div>
- <div>And one of us?” “A livelihood.”</div>
- <div>“What renders beating out of brains,</div>
- <div>And murder, godliness?” “Great gains.”</div>
- <div>“What’s tender conscience?” “’Tis a botch</div>
- <div>That will not bear the gentlest touch;</div>
- <div>But, breaking out, despatches more</div>
- <div>Than th’ epidemical’st plague-sore.”</div>
- <div>“What makes y’ incroach upon our trade,</div>
- <div>And damn all others?” “To be paid.”</div>
- <div>“What’s orthodox and true believing</div>
- <div>Against a conscience?” “A good living.”</div>
- <div>“What makes rebelling against kings</div>
- <div>A good old cause?” “Administ’rings.”</div>
- <div>“What makes all doctrines plain and clear?”</div>
- <div>“About two hundred pounds a-year.”</div>
- <div>“And that which was proved true before,</div>
- <div>Prove false again?” “Two hundred more.”</div>
- <div>“What makes the breaking of all oaths</div>
- <div>A holy duty?” “Food and clothes.”</div>
- <div>“What laws and freedom, persecution?”</div>
- <div>“Being out of power, and contribution.”</div>
- <div>“What makes a church a den of thieves?”</div>
- <div>“A dean and chapter, and white sleeves.”</div>
- <div>“And what would serve, if those were gone,</div>
- <div>To make it orthodox?” “Our own.”</div>
- <div>“What makes morality a crime,</div>
- <div>The most notorious of the time&mdash;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[377]</span></div>
- <div>Morality, which both the saints</div>
- <div>And wicked too cry out against?”</div>
- <div>“’Cause grace and virtue are within</div>
- <div>Prohibited degrees of kin;</div>
- <div>And therefore no true saint allows</div>
- <div>They shall be suffered to espouse.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>DESCRIPTION OF HOLLAND</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A country that draws fifty foot of water,</div>
- <div>In which men live as in the hold of Nature,</div>
- <div>And when the sea does in upon them break,</div>
- <div>And drowns a province, does but spring a leak;</div>
- <div>That always ply the pump, and never think</div>
- <div>They can be safe but at the rate they stink;</div>
- <div>They live as if they had been run aground,</div>
- <div>And, when they die, are cast away and drowned;</div>
- <div>That dwell in ships, like swarms of rats, and prey</div>
- <div>Upon the goods all nations’ fleets convey;</div>
- <div>And when their merchants are blown up and crackt,</div>
- <div>Whole towns are cast away in storms, and wreckt;</div>
- <div>That feed, like cannibals, on other fishes,</div>
- <div>And serve their cousin-germans up in dishes:</div>
- <div>A land that rides at anchor, and is moored,</div>
- <div>In which they do not live, but go aboard.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>POETS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">It is not poetry that makes men poor;</div>
- <div>For few do write that were not so before;</div>
- <div>And those that have writ best, had they been rich,</div>
- <div>Had ne’er been clapp’d with a poetic itch;</div>
- <div>Had loved their ease too well to take the pains</div>
- <div>To undergo that drudgery of brains;</div>
- <div>But, being for all other trades unfit,</div>
- <div>Only t’ avoid being idle, set up wit.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>PUFFING</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">They that do write in authors’ praises,</div>
- <div>And freely give their friends their voices,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[378]</span></div>
- <div>Are not confined to what is true;</div>
- <div>That’s not to give, but pay a due:</div>
- <div>For praise, that’s due, does give no more</div>
- <div>To worth, than what it had before;</div>
- <div>But to commend, without desert,</div>
- <div>Requires a mastery of art,</div>
- <div>That sets a gloss on what’s amiss,</div>
- <div>And writes what should be, not what is.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Samuel Pepys, whose literary work is in Diary form, is no doubt one of
-the world’s greatest egoists. But the spontaneity and naturalness of
-the account of his daily doings, as told by himself, have a charm all
-their own and a unique and inimitable humor.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>EXTRACTS FROM THE DIARY</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Rose early, and put six spoons and a porringer of silver in my pocket
-to give away to-day. To dinner at Sir William Batten’s; and then, after
-a walk in the fine gardens, we went to Mrs. Browne’s, where Sir W. Pen
-and I were godfathers, and Mrs. Jordan and Shipman godmothers to her
-boy. And there, before and after the christening, we were with the
-woman above in her chamber; but whether we carried ourselves well or
-ill, I know not; but I was directed by young Mrs. Batten. One passage
-of a lady that ate wafers with her dog did a little displease me. I did
-give the midwife 10<i>s.</i> and the nurse 5<i>s.</i> and the maid of
-the house 2<i>s.</i> But for as much I expected to give the name to the
-child, but did not (it being called John), I forbore then to give my
-plate.</p>
-
-<p><i>December 26th, 1662.</i>&mdash;Up, my wife to the making of Christmas
-pies all day, doeing now pretty well again, and I abroad to several
-places about some businesses, among others bought a bake-pan in Newgate
-Market, and sent it home, it cost me 16<i>s.</i> So to Dr Williams,
-but he is out of town, then to the Wardrobe. Hither come Mr Battersby;
-and we falling into discourse of a new book of drollery in use, called
-Hudibras, I would needs go find it out, and met with it at the Temple:
-cost me 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> But when I come to read it, it is so
-silly an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[379]</span> abuse of the Presbyter Knight going to the warrs, that I am
-ashamed of it; and by and by meeting at Mr Townsend’s at dinner, I sold
-it to him for 18<i>d.</i> ...</p>
-
-<p><i>February 6th.</i>&mdash; ... Thence to Lincoln’s Inn Fields; and it being
-too soon to go to dinner, I walked up and down, and looked upon the
-outside of the new theatre now a-building in Covent Garden, which will
-be very fine. And so to a bookseller’s in the Strand, and there bought
-Hudibras again, it being certainly some ill-humour to be so against
-that which all the world cries up to be the example of wit; for which
-I am resolved once more to read him, and see whether I can find it or
-no....</p>
-
-<p><i>November 28th.</i>&mdash; ... And thence abroad to Paul’s Churchyard, and
-there looked upon the second part of Hudibras, which I buy not, but
-borrow to read, to see if it be as good as the first, which the world
-cry so mightily up, though it hath not a good liking in me, though I
-had tried by twice or three times reading to bring myself to think it
-witty. Back again and home to my office....</p>
-
-<p><i>May 11th, 1667.</i>&mdash;And so away with my wife, whose being dressed
-this day in fair hair did make me so mad, that I spoke not one word to
-her, though I was ready to burst with anger.... After that ... Creed
-and I into the Park, and walked, a most pleasant evening, and so took
-coach, and took up my wife, and in my way home discovered my trouble
-to my wife for her white locks [false hair], swearing by God several
-times, which I pray God forgive me for, and bending my fist, that I
-would not endure it. She, poor wretch, was surprized with it, and made
-me no answer all the way home; but there we parted, and I to the office
-late, and then home, and without supper to bed, vexed.</p>
-
-<p><i>12th</i> (Lord’s Day).&mdash;Up and to my chamber, to settle some
-accounts there, and by and by down comes my wife to me in her
-night-gown, and we begun calmly, that, upon having money to lace her
-gown for second mourning, she would promise to wear white locks no more
-in my sight, which I, like a severe fool, thinking not enough, began to
-except against, and made her fly out to very high terms and cry, and
-in her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[380]</span> heat told me of keeping company with Mrs Knipp, saying, that
-if I would promise never to see her more&mdash;of whom she hath more reason
-to suspect than I had heretofore of Pembleton&mdash;she would never wear
-white locks more. This vexed me, but I restrained myself from saying
-anything, but do think never to see this woman&mdash;at least, to have her
-here more; but by and by I did give her money to buy lace, and she
-promised to wear no more white locks while I lived, and so all very
-good friends as ever, and I to my business, and she to dress herself.</p>
-
-<p><i>August 18th</i> (Lord’s Day).&mdash;Up, and being ready, walked up and
-down to Cree Church, to see it how it is: but I find no alteration
-there, as they say there was, for my Lord Mayor and Aldermen to come
-to sermon, as they do every Sunday, as they did formerly to Paul’s....
-There dined with me Mr Turner and his daughter Betty. Betty is grown
-a fine young lady as to carriage and discourse. I and my wife are
-mightily pleased with her. We had a good haunch of venison, powdered
-and boiled, and a good dinner and merry.... I walked towards Whitehall,
-but, being wearied, turned into St Dunstan’s Church, where I heard an
-able sermon of the minister of the place; and stood by a pretty, modest
-maid, whom I did labour to take by the hand ...; but she would not,
-but got further and further from me; and, at last, I could perceive
-her to take pins out of her pocket to prick me if I should touch her
-again&mdash;which seeing, I did forbear, and was glad I did spy her design.
-And then I fell to gaze upon another pretty maid, in a pew close to
-me, and she on me; and I did go about to take her by the hand, which
-she suffered a little, and then withdrew. So the sermon ended, and the
-church broke up.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>John Dryden, famous alike for his verse, prose and drama, shows his wit
-in biting, stinging satire.</p>
-
-<p>Equally caustic are his epigrams, save one&mdash;the immortal lines on
-Milton.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON SHADWELL</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>All human things are subject to decay,</div>
- <div>And, when Fate summons, monarchs must obey.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[381]</span></div>
- <div>This Flecknoe found, who, like Augustus, young</div>
- <div>Was called to empire, and had governed long.</div>
- <div>In prose and verse was owned, without dispute,</div>
- <div>Through all the realms of Nonsense absolute.</div>
- <div>This aged prince, now flourishing in peace,</div>
- <div>And blest with issue of a large increase,</div>
- <div>Worn out with business, did at length debate</div>
- <div>To settle the succession of the state;</div>
- <div>And pondering which of all his sons was fit</div>
- <div>To reign, and wage immortal war with Wit,</div>
- <div>Cried: “’Tis resolved; for Nature pleads that he</div>
- <div>Should only rule who most resembles me.</div>
- <div>Shadwell alone my perfect image bears,</div>
- <div>Mature in dulness from his tender years;</div>
- <div>Shadwell alone of all my sons is he</div>
- <div>Who stands confirmed in full stupidity.</div>
- <div>The rest to some faint meaning make pretence,</div>
- <div>But Shadwell never deviates into sense.</div>
- <div>Some beams of wit on other souls may fall,</div>
- <div>Strike through, and make a lucid interval,</div>
- <div>But Shadwell’s genuine night admits no ray;</div>
- <div>His rising fogs prevail upon the day.</div>
- <div>Besides, his goodly fabric fills the eye,</div>
- <div>And seems designed for thoughtless majesty&mdash;</div>
- <div>Thoughtless as monarch oaks that shade the plain,</div>
- <div>And, spread in solemn state, supinely reign.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON THE DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Some of their chiefs were princes of the land:</div>
- <div>In the first rank of these did Zimri stand,</div>
- <div>A man so various, that he seemed to be</div>
- <div>Not one, but all mankind’s epitome:</div>
- <div>Stiff in opinions, always in the wrong,</div>
- <div>Was everything by starts, and nothing long,</div>
- <div>But, in the course of one revolving moon,</div>
- <div>Was chemist, fiddler, statesman, and buffoon,</div>
- <div>Then all for women, painting, rhyming, drinking,</div>
- <div>Besides ten thousand freaks that died in thinking.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[382]</span></div>
- <div>Blest madman, who could every hour employ</div>
- <div>With something new to wish or to enjoy,</div>
- <div>Railing, and praising, were his usual themes;</div>
- <div>And both, to show his judgment, in extremes:</div>
- <div>So over-violent, or over-civil,</div>
- <div>That every man with him was god or devil.</div>
- <div>In squandering wealth was his peculiar art;</div>
- <div>Nothing went unrewarded but desert.</div>
- <div>Beggared by fools, whom still he found too late,</div>
- <div>He had his jest and they had his estate.</div>
- <div>He laughed himself from court, then sought relief</div>
- <div>By forming parties, but could ne’er be chief;</div>
- <div>For spite of him, the weight of business fell</div>
- <div>On Absalom and wise Achitophel.</div>
- <div>Thus, wicked but in will, of means bereft,</div>
- <div>He left not faction, but of that was left.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><i>MILTON COMPARED WITH HOMER AND VIRGIL</i><br />
-<span class="subhed1">Under a Picture of Milton in the 4th Edition of <i>Paradise Lost</i>.</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Three Poets, in three distant ages born,</div>
- <div>Greece, Italy, and England did adorn.</div>
- <div>The first, in loftiness of thought surpass’d</div>
- <div>The next, in majesty; in both the last.</div>
- <div>The force of nature could no further go;</div>
- <div>To make a third, she join’d the former two.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The original of these fine lines was probably a Latin distich written
-by Selvaggi at Rome, which has been thus translated:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Greece boasts her Homer, Rome her Virgil’s name,</div>
- <div>But England’s Milton vies with both in fame.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Cowper’s lines on Milton may be compared with Dryden’s:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ages elapsed ere Homer’s lamp appear’d,</div>
- <div>And ages ere the Mantuan Swan was heard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[383]</span></div>
- <div>To carry Nature lengths unknown before,</div>
- <div>To give a Milton birth, ask’d ages more.</div>
- <div>Thus Genius rose and set at order’d times,</div>
- <div>And shot a day-spring into distant climes,</div>
- <div>Ennobling every region that he chose;</div>
- <div>He sunk in Greece, in Italy he rose;</div>
- <div>And, tedious years of gothic darkness pass’d,</div>
- <div>Emerged all splendour in our isle at last,</div>
- <div>Thus lovely halcyons dive into the main,</div>
- <div>Then show far off their shining plumes again.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>In Bishop Gibson’s edition of Camden’s <i>Britannia</i>, there is a
-very free translation of some old monkish verses on S. Oswald by Basil
-Kennet, brother of Bishop White Kennet. The last line, to which there
-is nothing corresponding in the Latin, seems to have been copied from
-the last line of Dryden’s epigram:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>Cæsar</i> and <i>Hercules</i> applaud thy fame,</div>
- <div>And <i>Alexander</i> owns thy greater name,</div>
- <div>Tho’ one himself, one foes, and one the world o’ercame:</div>
- <div>Great conquests all! but bounteous Heav’n in thee,</div>
- <div>To make a greater, join’d the former three.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The comedies of William Congreve, brilliantly witty though they are,
-offer no suitable passages to quote.</p>
-
-<p>Likewise the works of Daniel Defoe, who, beside the story of
-<i>Robinson Crusoe</i>, wrote satirical humor.</p>
-
-<h4><i>FROM ROBINSON CRUSOE</i><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>Friday’s Conflict with the Bear</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">But never was a fight managed so hardily, and in such a surprising
-manner, as that between Friday and the bear, which gave us all&mdash;though
-at first we were surprised and afraid for him&mdash;the greatest diversion
-imaginable.</p>
-
-<p>My man Friday had delivered our guide, and when we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[384]</span> came up to him
-he was helping him off from his horse, for the man was both hurt and
-frightened, and indeed the last more than the first, when on a sudden
-we espied the bear come out of the wood, and a vast, monstrous one it
-was, the biggest by far that ever I saw. We were all a little surprised
-when we saw him; but when Friday saw him, it was easy to see joy and
-courage in the fellow’s countenance. “Oh, oh, oh!” says Friday three
-times, pointing to him; “oh, master! you give me te leave, me shakee te
-hand with him; me makee you good laugh.”</p>
-
-<p>I was surprised to see the fellow so pleased. “You fool!” said I, “he
-will eat you up.” “Eatee me up! eatee me up!” says Friday twice over
-again; “me eatee him up; me makee you good laugh; you all stay here,
-me show you good laugh.” So down he sits, and gets his boots off in a
-moment, and puts on a pair of pumps (as we call the flat shoes they
-wear, and which he had in his pocket), gives my other servant his
-horse, and with his gun away he flew, swift like the wind.</p>
-
-<p>The bear was walking softly on, and offered to meddle with nobody,
-till Friday, coming pretty near, calls to him as if the bear could
-understand him, “Hark ye, hark ye,” says Friday, “me speakee with you.”
-We followed at a distance, for now, being come down to the Gascony
-side of the mountains, we were entered a vast, great forest, where
-the country was plain and pretty open, though it had many trees in it
-scattered here and there. Friday, who had, as we say, the heels of the
-bear, came up with him quickly, and took up a great stone and threw it
-at him, and hit him just on the head, but did him no more harm than if
-he had thrown it against a wall; but it answered Friday’s end, for the
-rogue was so void of fear that he did it purely to make the bear follow
-him and show us some laugh, as he called it. As soon as the bear felt
-the stone, and saw him, he turns about and comes after him, taking very
-long strides, and shuffling on at a strange rate, so as would have put
-a horse to a middling gallop. Away runs Friday, and takes his course
-as if he ran toward us for help; so we all resolved to fire at once
-upon the bear, and deliver my man; though I was angry at him heartily
-for bringing the bear back upon us, when he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">[385]</span> was going about his own
-business another way; and especially I was angry that he had turned
-the bear upon us and then run away; and I called out, “You dog!” said
-I, “is this your making us laugh? Come away, and take your horse, that
-we may shoot the creature.” He heard me, and cried out, “No shoot! no
-shoot! stand still, you get much laugh.” And as the nimble creature
-ran two feet for the beast’s one, he turned on a sudden on one side of
-us, and seeing a great oak-tree fit for his purpose, he beckoned us to
-follow; and doubling his pace, he got nimbly up the tree, laying his
-gun down upon the ground, at about five or six yards from the bottom of
-the tree.</p>
-
-<p>The bear soon came to the tree, and we followed at a distance. The
-first thing he did, he stopped at the gun, smelled at it, but let it
-lie, and up he scrambles into the tree, climbing like a cat, though so
-monstrous heavy. I was amazed at the folly, as I thought it, of my man,
-and could not for my life see anything to laugh at yet, till, seeing
-the bear get up the tree, we all rode near to him.</p>
-
-<p>When we came to the tree, there was Friday got out to the small end of
-a large limb of the tree, and the bear got about half-way to him. As
-soon as the bear got out to that part where the limb of the tree was
-weaker, “Ha!” says he to us, “now you see me teachee the bear dance”;
-so he began jumping and shaking the bough, at which the bear began to
-totter, but stood still, and began to look behind him, to see how he
-should get back; then, indeed, we did laugh heartily. But Friday had
-not done with him by a great deal. When seeing him stand still, he
-called out to him again, as if he had supposed the bear could speak
-English, “What, you no come farther? Pray you come farther.” So he
-left jumping and shaking the bough; and the bear, just as if he had
-understood what he had said, did come a little farther. Then he began
-jumping again, and the bear stopped again. We thought now was a good
-time to knock him on the head, and called to Friday to stand still, and
-we would shoot the bear; but he cried out earnestly, “Oh, pray! oh,
-pray! no shoot! me shoot by-and-then.” He would have said by-and-by.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[386]</span></p>
-
-<p>However, to shorten the story, Friday danced so much, and the bear
-stood so ticklish, that we had laughing enough indeed, but still could
-not imagine what the fellow would do; for first we thought he depended
-upon shaking the bear off; and we found the bear was too cunning for
-that too; for he would not go out far enough to be thrown down, but
-clung fast with his great broad claws and feet, so that we could not
-imagine what would be the end of it, and what the jest would be at
-last. But Friday put us out of doubt quickly; for, seeing the bear
-cling fast to the bough, and that he would not be persuaded to come any
-farther, “Well, well,” says Friday, “you no come farther, me go; you no
-come to me, me come to you.” And upon this he went out to the smaller
-end of the bough, where it would bend with his weight, and gently let
-himself down by it, sliding down the bough till he came near enough
-to jump down on his feet, and away he ran to his gun, took it up, and
-stood still. “Well,” said I to him, “Friday, what will you do now? Why
-don’t you shoot him?” “No shoot,” says Friday, “no yet; me shoot now,
-me no kill; me stay, give you one more laugh.” And, indeed, so he did,
-as you will see presently. For when the bear saw his enemy gone, he
-came back from the bough where he stood, but did it very cautiously,
-looking behind him every step, and coming backward till he got into
-the body of the tree. Then, with the same hinder end foremost, he came
-down the tree, grasping it with his claws, and moving one foot at a
-time, very leisurely. At this juncture, and just before he could set
-his hind feet upon the ground, Friday stepped up close to him, clapped
-the muzzle of his piece into his ear, and shot him dead as a stone.
-Then the rogue turned about to see if we did not laugh; and when he saw
-we were pleased by our looks, he began to laugh very loud. “So we kill
-bear in my country,” says Friday. “So you kill them?” says I; “why, you
-have no guns.” “No,” says he, “no gun, but shoot great much long arrow.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Matthew Prior was called by Thackeray the most charmingly humorous of
-the English poets, and Cowper speaks of Prior’s charming ease.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">[387]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>AN EPITAPH</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Interred beneath this marble stone</div>
- <div>Lie sauntering Jack and idle Joan.</div>
- <div>While rolling threescore years and one</div>
- <div>Did round this globe their courses run.</div>
- <div>If human things went ill or well,</div>
- <div>If changing empires rose or fell,</div>
- <div>The morning past, the evening came,</div>
- <div>And found this couple just the same.</div>
- <div>They walked and ate, good folks. What then?</div>
- <div>Why, then they walked and ate again;</div>
- <div>They soundly slept the night away;</div>
- <div>They did just nothing all the day,</div>
- <div>Nor sister either had, nor brother;</div>
- <div>They seemed just tallied for each other.</div>
- <div>Their moral and economy</div>
- <div>Most perfectly they made agree;</div>
- <div>Each virtue kept its proper bound,</div>
- <div>Nor trespassed on the other’s ground.</div>
- <div>Nor fame nor censure they regarded;</div>
- <div>They neither punished nor rewarded.</div>
- <div>He cared not what the footman did;</div>
- <div>Her maids she neither praised nor chid;</div>
- <div>So every servant took his course,</div>
- <div>And, bad at first, they all grew worse;</div>
- <div>Slothful disorder filled his stable.</div>
- <div>And sluttish plenty decked her table.</div>
- <div>Their beer was strong, their wine was port;</div>
- <div>Their meal was large, their grace was short.</div>
- <div>They gave the poor the remnant meat,</div>
- <div>Just when it grew not fit to eat.</div>
- <div>They paid the church and parish rate,</div>
- <div>And took, but read not, the receipt:</div>
- <div>For which they claimed their Sunday’s due</div>
- <div>Of slumbering in an upper pew.</div>
- <div>No man’s defects sought they to know,</div>
- <div>So never made themselves a foe.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[388]</span></div>
- <div>No man’s good deeds did they commend,</div>
- <div>So never raised themselves a friend.</div>
- <div>Nor cherished they relations poor,</div>
- <div>That might decrease their present store;</div>
- <div>Nor barn nor house did they repair,</div>
- <div>That might oblige their future heir.</div>
- <div>They neither added nor confounded;</div>
- <div>They neither wanted nor abounded.</div>
- <div>Nor tear nor smile did they employ</div>
- <div>At news of grief or public joy</div>
- <div>When bells were rung and bonfires made,</div>
- <div>If asked, they ne’er denied their aid;</div>
- <div>Their jug was to the ringers carried,</div>
- <div>Whoever either died or married</div>
- <div>Their billet at the fire was found,</div>
- <div>Whoever was deposed or crowned.</div>
- <div>Nor good, nor bad, nor fools, nor wise;</div>
- <div>They would not learn, nor could advise;</div>
- <div>Without love, hatred, joy, or fear,</div>
- <div>They led&mdash;a kind of&mdash;as it were;</div>
- <div>Nor wished, nor cared, nor laughed, nor cried.</div>
- <div>And so they lived, and so they died.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A SIMILE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Dear Thomas, didst thou never pop</div>
- <div>Thy head into a tin-man’s shop?</div>
- <div>There, Thomas, didst thou never see</div>
- <div>(’Tis but by way of simile)</div>
- <div>A squirrel spend his little rage,</div>
- <div>In jumping round a rolling cage?</div>
- <div>The cage, as either side turned up,</div>
- <div>Striking a ring of bells a-top?&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Mov’d in the orb, pleas’d with the chimes,</div>
- <div>The foolish creature thinks he climbs:</div>
- <div>But here or there, turn wood or wire,</div>
- <div>He never gets two inches higher.</div>
- <div class="i1">So fares it with those merry blades,</div>
- <div>That frisk it under Pindus’ shades.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[389]</span></div>
- <div>In noble songs, and lofty odes,</div>
- <div>They tread on stars, and talk with gods;</div>
- <div>Still dancing in an airy round,</div>
- <div>Still pleased with their own verses’ sound;</div>
- <div>Brought back, how fast soe’er they go,</div>
- <div>Always aspiring, always low.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>PHILLIS’ AGE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>How old may Phillis be, you ask,</div>
- <div class="i1">Whose beauty thus all hearts engages?</div>
- <div>To answer is no easy task:</div>
- <div class="i1">For she has really two ages.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Stiff in brocade, and pinch’d in stays,</div>
- <div class="i1">Her patches, paint and jewels on;</div>
- <div>All day let envy view her face,</div>
- <div class="i1">And Phillis is but twenty-one.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Paint, patches, jewels laid aside,</div>
- <div class="i1">At night astronomers agree,</div>
- <div>The evening has the day belied;</div>
- <div class="i1">And Phillis is some forty-three.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Prior delighted in epigrams on ladies who wore false hair and teeth,
-and who attempted to retain the beauty of youth by means of paint and
-dye. They are generally imitated from Martial.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A REASONABLE AFFLICTION</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In a dark corner of the house</div>
- <div>Poor Helen sits, and sobs, and cries;</div>
- <div>She will not see her loving spouse,</div>
- <div class="i1">Nor her more dear picquet allies:</div>
- <div class="i2">Unless she find her eye-brows,</div>
- <div class="i2">She’ll e’en weep out her eyes.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">[390]</span></p>
-
-<h3>FRENCH HUMOR</h3>
-
-
-<p>The first French humorist of note in the seventeenth century was Cyrano
-de Bergerac. His History of the Moon and History of the Sun are of the
-nature of <i>Gulliver’s Travels</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE SOUL OF THE CABBAGE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">We laid ourselves along upon very soft quilts, covered with large
-carpets; and a young man that waited on us, taking the oldest of our
-philosophers led him into a little parlor apart, where my Spirit called
-to him to come back to us as soon as he had supped.</p>
-
-<p>This humor of eating separately gave me the curiosity of asking the
-cause of it. “He’ll not relish,” said he, “the steam of meat, nor yet
-of herbs, unless they die of themselves, because he thinks they are
-sensible of pain.” “I wonder not so much,” replied I, “that he abstains
-from flesh, and all things that have had a sensitive life. For in our
-world the Pythagoreans, and even some holy Anchorites, have followed
-that rule; but not to dare, for instance, cut a cabbage, for fear of
-hurting it&mdash;that seems to me altogether ridiculous.” “And for my part,”
-answered my Spirit, “I find a great deal of reason in his opinion.</p>
-
-<p>“For, tell me is not that cabbage you speak of a being existent in
-Nature as well as you? Is not she the common mother of you both? Yet
-the opinion that Nature is kinder to mankind than to cabbage-kind,
-tickles and makes us laugh. But, seeing she is incapable of passion,
-she can neither love nor hate anything; and were she susceptible of
-love, she would rather bestow her affection upon this cabbage, which
-you grant cannot offend her, than upon that man who would destroy her
-if it lay in his power.</p>
-
-<p>“And, moreover, man cannot be born innocent, being a part of the
-first offender. But we know very well that the first cabbage did not
-offend its Creator. If it be said that we are made after the image
-of the Supreme Being, and the cabbage is not&mdash;grant that to be true;
-yet by polluting our soul, wherein we resembled Him, we have effaced
-that likeness,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[391]</span> seeing nothing is more contrary to God than sin. If,
-then, our soul be no longer His image, we resemble Him no more in our
-feet, hands, mouth, forehead, and ears, than a cabbage in its leaves,
-flowers, stalk, pith, and head&mdash;do not you really think that if this
-poor plant could speak when one cuts it, it would not say, ‘Dear
-brother man, what have I done to thee that deserves death? I never
-grow but in gardens, and am never to be found in desert places, where
-I might live in security; I disdain all other company but thine, and
-scarcely am I sowed in thy garden when, to show thee my good-will, I
-blossom, stretch out my arms to thee, offer thee my children in grain;
-and, as a requital for my civility, thou causest my head to be chopped
-off.’ Thus would a cabbage discourse if it could speak.</p>
-
-<p>“To massacre a man is not so great sin as to cut and kill a cabbage,
-because one day the man will rise again, but the cabbage has no other
-life to hope for. By putting to death a cabbage, you annihilate it;
-but in killing a man, you make him only change his habitation. Nay,
-I’ll go farther with you still: since God doth equally cherish all His
-works, and hath equally, divided the benefits betwixt us and plants, it
-is but just we should have an equal esteem for them as for ourselves.
-It is true we were born first, but in the family of God there is no
-birthright. If, then, the cabbage share not with us in the inheritance
-of immortality, without doubt that want was made up by some other
-advantage, that may make amends for the shortness of its being&mdash;maybe
-by an universal intellect, or a perfect knowledge of all things in
-their causes. And it is for that reason that the wise Mover of all
-things hath not shaped for it organs like ours, which are proper only
-for simple reasoning, not only weak, but often fallacious too; but
-others, more ingeniously framed, stronger, and more numerous, which
-serve to conduct its speculative exercises. You’ll ask me, perhaps,
-whenever any cabbage imparted those lofty conceptions to us? But tell
-me, again, who ever discovered to us certain beings, which we allow
-to be above us, to whom we bear no analogy nor proportion, and whose
-existence it is as hard for us to comprehend as the understanding and
-ways<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[392]</span> whereby a cabbage expresses itself to its like, though not to us,
-because our senses are too dull to penetrate so far?</p>
-
-<p>“Moses, the greatest of philosophers, who drew the knowledge of nature
-from the fountain-head, Nature herself, hinted this truth to us when
-he spoke of the Tree of Knowledge; and without doubt he intended to
-intimate to us under that figure that plants, in exclusion of mankind,
-possess perfect philosophy. Remember, then, oh, thou proudest of
-animals, that though a cabbage which thou cuttest sayeth not a word,
-yet it pays in thinking. But the poor vegetable has no fit organs to
-howl as you do, nor yet to frisk about and weep. Yet it hath those
-that are proper to complain of the wrong you do it, and to draw a
-judgment from Heaven upon you for the injustice. But if you still
-demand of me how I come to know that cabbages and coleworts conceive
-such pretty thoughts, then will I ask you, how come you to know that
-they do not; and how that some among them, when they shut up at
-night, may not compliment one another as you do, saying, ‘Good-night,
-Master <i>Cole-Curled-Pate</i>! Your most humble servant, good Master
-<i>Cabbage-Round-Head</i>!’”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Marc-Antoine Gerard, sieur de Saint Amant, was one of the brightest and
-best of the French early poets.</p>
-
-<p>We give a specimen of his lighter verse. The following is “An Address
-to Bacchus:”</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In idle rhymes we waste our days,</div>
- <div>With yawning fits for all our praise,</div>
- <div>While Bacchus, god of mirth and wine,</div>
- <div>Invites us to a life divine.</div>
- <div>Apollo, prince of bards and prigs,</div>
- <div>May scrape his fiddle to the pigs;</div>
- <div>And for the Muses, old maids all,</div>
- <div>Why let them twang their lyres, and squall</div>
- <div>Their hymns and odes on classic themes,</div>
- <div>Neglected by their sacred streams.</div>
- <div>As for the true poetic fire,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">[393]</span></div>
- <div>What is it but a mad desire?</div>
- <div>While Pegasus himself, at best,</div>
- <div>Only a horse must be confess’d;</div>
- <div>And he must be an ass indeed,</div>
- <div>Who would bestride the winged steed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Bacchus, thou who watchest o’er</div>
- <div>All feasts of ours, whom I adore</div>
- <div>With each new draught of rosy wine</div>
- <div>That makes my red face like to thine&mdash;</div>
- <div>By thy ivied coronet,</div>
- <div>By this glass with rubies set,</div>
- <div>By thy thyrsus&mdash;fear of earth&mdash;</div>
- <div>By thine everlasting mirth,</div>
- <div>By the honor of the feast,</div>
- <div>By thy triumphs, greatest, least,</div>
- <div>By thy blows, not struck, but drunk,</div>
- <div>With king and bishop, priest and monk,</div>
- <div>By the jesting, keen and sharp,</div>
- <div>By the violin and harp,</div>
- <div>By the bells, which are but flasks,</div>
- <div>By our sighs which are but masks</div>
- <div>Of mirth and sacred mystery,</div>
- <div>By thy panthers fierce to see,</div>
- <div>By this place so fair and sweet,</div>
- <div>By the he-goat at thy feet,</div>
- <div>By Ariadne, buxom lass,</div>
- <div>By Silenus on his ass,</div>
- <div>By this sausage, by this stoup,</div>
- <div>By this rich and thirsty soup,</div>
- <div>By this pipe from which I wave</div>
- <div>All the incense thou dost crave,</div>
- <div>By this ham, well spiced, long hung,</div>
- <div>By this salt and wood-smoked tongue,</div>
- <div>Receive us in the happy band</div>
- <div>Of those who worship glass in hand.</div>
- <div>And, to prove thyself divine,</div>
- <div>Leave us never without wine.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[394]</span></p>
-
-<p>Molière (the stage name of Jean Baptiste Poquelin), the greatest comic
-dramatist of France, wrote thirty or more plays. Though difficult to
-quote significant passages, two are here given:</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FROM “THE LEARNED WOMEN”</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Trissotin.</i> Your verses have beauties unequaled by any others.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Venus and the graces reign in all yours.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> You have an easy style, and a fine choice of words.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> In all your writings one finds <i>ithos</i> and
-<i>pathos</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> We have seen some eclogues of your composition which
-surpass in sweetness those of Theocritus and Vergil.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Your odes have a noble, gallant, and tender manner,
-which leaves Horace far behind.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> Is there anything more lovely than your canzonets?</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Is there anything equal to the sonnets you write?</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> Is there anything more charming than your little
-rondeaus?</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Anything so full of wit as your madrigals?</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> If France could appreciate your value&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> If the age could render justice to a lofty genius&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> You would ride in the streets in a gilt coach.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> We should see the public erect statues to you. Hem&mdash;It
-is a ballad; and I wish you frankly to&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> Have you heard a certain little sonnet upon the
-Princess Urania’s fever?</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Yes; I heard it read yesterday.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> Do you know the author of it?</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> No, I do not; but I know very well that, to tell him the
-truth, his sonnet is good for nothing.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> Yet a great many people think it admirable.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> It does not prevent it from being wretched; and if you
-had read it you would think like me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> I know that I should differ from you altogether, and
-that few people are able to write such a sonnet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">[395]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Heaven forbid that I should ever write one so bad!</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> I maintain that a better one cannot be made, and my
-reason is that I am the author of it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> You?</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> Myself.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> I cannot understand how the thing could have happened.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> It is unfortunate that I had not the power of
-pleasing you.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> My mind must have wandered during the reading, or else
-the reader spoiled the sonnet; but let us leave that subject, and come
-to my ballad.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> The ballad is, to my mind, an insipid thing; it is no
-longer the fashion, and savors of ancient times.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Yet a ballad has charms for many people.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> It does not prevent me from thinking it unpleasant.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> That does not make it worse.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> It has wonderful attractions for pedants.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Yet we see that it does not please you.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> You stupidly impose your qualities on others.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> You very impertinently cast yours upon me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> Go, you little dunce, you pitiful quill-driver!</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Go, you penny-a-liner, you disgrace to the profession!</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> Go, you book-manufacturer, you impudent plagiarist!</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Go, you pedantic snob!</p>
-
-<p><i>Philosopher.</i> Ah! gentlemen, what are you about?</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin</i> (<i>to</i> <span class="smcap">Vadius</span>). Go, go, and make
-restitution to the Greeks and Romans for all your shameful thefts!</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Go, and do penance on Parnassus for having murdered
-Horace in your verses!</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> Remember your book, and the little stir it made.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> And you, remember your bookseller, reduced to the
-workhouse.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> My fame is established; in vain would you endeavor to
-shake it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">[396]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> Yes, yes; I’ll send you to the author of the
-<i>Satires</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> I, too, will send you to him.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> I have the satisfaction of having been honorably treated
-by him; he gives me a passing thrust, and includes me among several
-authors well known at court. But you he never leaves in peace; in all
-his verses he attacks you.</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> By that we see the honorable rank I hold. He leaves
-you in the crowd, and esteems one blow enough to crush you. He has
-never done you the honor of repeating his attacks, whereas he assails
-me separately, as a noble adversary against whom all his efforts are
-necessary. His blows, repeated against me on all occasions, show that
-he never thinks himself victorious.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> My pen will teach you what soft of man I am!</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> And mine will make you know your master!</p>
-
-<p><i>Vadius.</i> I defy you in verse, prose, Greek, and Latin!</p>
-
-<p><i>Trissotin.</i> Very well, we shall meet again at the bookseller’s!</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FROM “THE GENTLEMAN CIT”</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1"><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> I will thoroughly explain all these
-curiosities to you.</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> Pray do. And now I want to entrust you with a great
-secret. I am in love with a lady of quality, and I should be glad if
-you would help me to write something to her in a short letter which I
-mean to drop at her feet.</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> Very well.</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> That will be gallant, will it not?</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> Undoubtedly. Is it verse you wish to
-write to her?</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> Oh, no, not verse.</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> You only wish for prose?</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> No, I wish neither verse nor prose.</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> It must be one or the other.</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> Why?</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> Because, sir, there is nothing by which
-we can express ourselves except prose or verse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">[397]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> There is nothing but prose or verse?</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> No, sir. Whatever is not prose is
-verse, and whatever is not verse is prose.</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> And when we speak, what is that, then?</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> Prose.</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> What! when I say, “Nicole, bring me my slippers,
-and give me my night-cap,” is that prose?</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> Yes, sir.</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> Upon my word, I have been talking prose these forty
-years without being aware of it! I am under the greatest obligation to
-you for informing me. Well, then, I wish to write to her in a letter,
-<i>Fair marchioness, your beautiful eyes make me die of love!</i> but I
-would have this worded in a genteel manner, and turned prettily.</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> Say that the fire of her eyes has
-reduced your heart to ashes; that you suffer day and night for her
-tortures&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> No, no, no; I don’t want any of that. I simply wish
-to say what I tell you: <i>Fair marchioness, your beautiful eyes make
-me die of love</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> Still, you might amplify the thing a
-little?</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> No, I tell you, I will have nothing but those very
-words in the letter; but they must be put in a fashionable way, and
-arranged as they should be. Pray explain a little, so that I may see
-the different ways in which they can be put.</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> They may be put, first of all, as
-you have said, <i>Fair marchioness, your beautiful eyes make me die
-of love</i>; or else, <i>Of love die make me, fair marchioness, your
-beautiful eyes</i>; or, <i>Your beautiful eyes of love make me, fair
-marchioness, die</i>; or, <i>Die of love your beautiful eyes, fair
-marchioness, make me</i>; or else, <i>Me make your beautiful eyes die,
-fair marchioness, of love</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> But of all these ways, which is the best?</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i> The one you said&mdash;<i>Fair marchioness,
-your beautiful eyes make me die of love</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Jourdain.</i> Yet I have never studied, and I did all that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">[398]</span> right
-off at the first shot. I thank you with all my heart, and I beg you to
-come early again to-morrow morning.</p>
-
-<p><i>Professor of Philosophy.</i>&mdash;I shall not fail you.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Paul Scarron, described as a “pure bird of pleasure,” wrote plays,
-novels, epigrams, letters, and best known of all, a classic burlesque
-called <i>Virgile Travesti</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Quotations cannot be made from his longer works, but two poems are
-given.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>FAREWELL TO CHLORIS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Adieu, fair Chloris, adieu:</div>
- <div class="i1">’Tis time that I speak,</div>
- <div class="i1">After many and many a week,</div>
- <div>(’Tis not thus that at Paris we woo)</div>
- <div>You pay me for all with a smile</div>
- <div>And cheat me the while,</div>
- <div class="i1">Speak now. Let me go.</div>
- <div>Close your doors, or open them wide,</div>
- <div class="i1">Matters not, so that I am outside;</div>
- <div>Devil take me, if ever I show</div>
- <div class="i1">Love or pity for you and your pride.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>To laugh in my face,</div>
- <div class="i1">It is all that she grants me</div>
- <div>Of pity and grace:</div>
- <div class="i1">Can it mean that she wants me?</div>
- <div>This for five or six months is my pay.</div>
- <div class="i1">Now hear my command,</div>
- <div>Shut your doors, keep them tight night and day,</div>
- <div class="i1">With a porter at hand</div>
- <div>To keep every one in;</div>
- <div class="i1">Well, I know my own mind.</div>
- <div>The devil himself, if once you begin</div>
- <div class="i1">To go out, couldn’t keep me behind.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The following is better known. It is his description of Paris:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">[399]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Houses in labyrinthine maze:</div>
- <div class="i1">The streets with mud bespattered all;</div>
- <div>Palace and prison, churches, quays,</div>
- <div class="i1">Here stately shop, there shabby stall.</div>
- <div>Passengers black, red, gray, and white,</div>
- <div class="i1">The pursed-up prude, the light coquette;</div>
- <div>Murder and treason dark as night;</div>
- <div class="i1">With clerks, their hands with inkstains wet;</div>
- <div>A gold-laced coat without a sou,</div>
- <div class="i1">And trembling at a bailiff’s sight;</div>
- <div>A braggart shivering with fear;</div>
- <div class="i1">Pages and lackeys, thieves of night;</div>
- <div>And ’mid the tumult, noise, and stink of it,</div>
- <div class="i1">There’s Paris&mdash;Pray, what do you think of it?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>François de la Rochefoucauld, famous French moralist, is best known
-through the wit and wisdom of his Maxims.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A woman is faithful to her first lover a long time&mdash;unless she happens
-to take a second.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>He who is pleased with nobody is much more unhappy than he with whom
-nobody is pleased.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We all have sufficient fortitude to bear the misfortunes of our friends.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Had we no faults of our own, we should notice them with less pleasure
-in others.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We promise according to our hopes, and perform according to our fears.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Old men are fond of giving good advice to console themselves for their
-impotence to give bad examples.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We often do good in order that we may do evil with impunity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">[400]</span></p>
-
-<p>If we resist our passions it is more from their weakness than from our
-strength.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We should have very little pleasure if we did not sometimes flatter
-ourselves.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is easier to be wise for others than for ourselves.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Men would not live long in society if they were not dupes to each other.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Virtue would not travel so far if vanity did not keep her company.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Hypocrisy is the homage which vice renders to virtue.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the adversity of our best friends we often find something which does
-not displease us.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Gravity is a mystery of the face, invented to conceal the defects of
-the mind.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Affected simplicity is refined imposture.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We often pardon those who weary us, but never those whom we weary.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Blaise Pascal, celebrated geometrician and writer, left a series of
-delightful satires upon the Jesuits.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FROM LES PROVINCIALES</i><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>ON MENTAL RESERVATIONS</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">“I proceed to the facilities we have invented for the avoidance of
-sin in the conversation and intrigues of the world. One of the most
-embarrassing things to provide against is <i>lying</i>, when it is
-the object to excite confidence in any false representation. In this
-case, our doctrine of <i>equivocals</i> is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">[401]</span> of admirable service, by
-which, says Sanchez, ‘it is lawful to use ambiguous terms to give the
-impression a different sense from that which you understand yourself.’”
-“This I am well aware of, father.” “We have,” continued he, “published
-it so frequently, that in fact every body is acquainted with it; but
-pray, do you know what is to be done when no equivocal terms can be
-found?” “No, father.” “Ha, I thought this would be new to you: it is
-the doctrine of <i>mental reservations</i>. Sanchez states it in the
-same place: ‘A person may take an oath that he has not done such a
-thing, though in fact he has, by saying to himself, it was not done
-on a certain specified day or before he was born, or by concealing
-any other similar circumstance which gives another meaning to the
-statement. This is in numberless instances extremely convenient, and
-is always justifiable when it is necessary to your welfare, honor, or
-property.’”</p>
-
-<p>“But, father, is not this adding perjury to lying?” “No; Sanchez and
-Filiutius show the contrary: ‘It is the <i>intention</i> which stamps
-the quality of the action’; and the latter furnishes another and surer
-method of avoiding lying. After saying in an audible voice, <i>I swear
-that I did not do this</i>, you may add inwardly, <i>to-day</i>; or
-after affirming aloud, <i>I swear</i> you may repeat in a whisper, <i>I
-say</i>; and then resuming the former tone&mdash;<i>I did not do it</i>.
-Now this you must admit is telling the truth.” “I own it is,” said I;
-“but it is telling truth in a whisper, and a lie in an audible voice;
-besides, I apprehend that very few people have sufficient presence of
-mind to avail themselves of this deception.” “Our fathers,” answered
-the Jesuit, “have in the same place given directions for those who do
-not know how to manage these niceties, so that they may be indemnified
-against the sin of lying, while plainly declaring they have not done
-what in reality they have, provided ‘that, in general, they intended to
-give the same sense to their assertion which a skilful man would have
-contrived to do.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Now confess,” he asked, “have not you sometimes been embarrassed
-through an ignorance of this doctrine?” “Certainly.” “And will you
-not admit, too, that it would often<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">[402]</span> be very convenient to violate
-your word with a good conscience?” “Surely, one of the most convenient
-things in the world!” “Then, sir, listen to Escobar; he gives this
-general rule: ‘Promises are not obligatory when a man has no intention
-of being bound to fulfil them; and it seldom happens that he has such
-an intention, unless he confirms it by an oath or bond, so that when
-he merely says <i>I will do it</i>, it is to be understood <i>if he do
-not change his mind</i>; for he did not intend by what he promised to
-deprive himself of his liberty.’ He furnishes some other rules which
-you may read for yourself, and concludes thus: ‘Everything is taken
-from Molina and our other authors&mdash;<i>omnia ex Molina et aliis’</i>; it
-is, consequently, indisputable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Father,” exclaimed I, “I never knew before that the direction of the
-intention could nullify the obligation of a promise.” “Now, then,”
-said he, “you perceive this very much facilitates the intercourse of
-mankind.”</p>
-
-<p>Jean de la Fontaine, the universally known French Fabulist, was a
-prolific writer, but his wit shows at its best in his <i>Fables</i>.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE COUNCIL HELD BY THE RATS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">Old Rodilard, a certain cat,</div>
- <div class="i3">Such havoc of the rats had made,</div>
- <div class="i2">’Twas difficult to find a rat</div>
- <div class="i3">With nature’s debt unpaid.</div>
- <div class="i2">The few that did remain,</div>
- <div class="i3">To leave their holes afraid.</div>
- <div class="i2">From usual food abstain,</div>
- <div class="i3">Not eating half their fill.</div>
- <div class="i3">And wonder no one will,</div>
- <div>That one, who made on rats his revel,</div>
- <div>With rats passed not for cat, but devil.</div>
- <div>Now, on a day, this dread rat-eater,</div>
- <div>Who had a wife, went out to meet her;</div>
- <div>And while he held his caterwauling,</div>
- <div>The unkilled rats, their chapter calling,</div>
- <div>Discussed the point, in grave debate,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">[403]</span></div>
- <div>How they might shun impending fate.</div>
- <div class="i1">Their dean, a prudent rat,</div>
- <div>Thought best, and better soon than late,</div>
- <div class="i1">To bell the fatal cat;</div>
- <div>That, when he took his hunting-round,</div>
- <div>The rats, well cautioned by the sound,</div>
- <div>Might hide in safety under ground;</div>
- <div class="i1">Indeed, he knew no other means.</div>
- <div class="i2">And all the rest</div>
- <div class="i2">At once confessed</div>
- <div class="i1">Their minds were with the dean’s.</div>
- <div>No better plan, they all believed,</div>
- <div>Could possibly have been conceived;</div>
- <div>No doubt, the thing would work right well,</div>
- <div>If any one would hang the bell.</div>
- <div>But, one by one, said every rat,</div>
- <div>“I’m not so big a fool as that.”</div>
- <div>The plan knocked up in this respect,</div>
- <div>The council closed without effect.</div>
- <div>And many a council I have seen,</div>
- <div>Or reverend chapter with its dean,</div>
- <div class="i1">That, thus resolving wisely,</div>
- <div class="i1">Fell through like this precisely.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">To argue or refute,</div>
- <div class="i3">Wise counsellors abound;</div>
- <div class="i2">The man to execute</div>
- <div class="i3">Is harder to be found.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE COCK AND THE FOX</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">Upon a tree there mounted guard</div>
- <div>A veteran cock, adroit and cunning;</div>
- <div>When to the roots a fox up running</div>
- <div class="i1">Spoke thus, in tones of kind regard:</div>
- <div>“Our quarrel, brother, is at an end;</div>
- <div>Henceforth I hope to live your friend;</div>
- <div class="i2">For peace now reigns</div>
- <div class="i2">Throughout the animal domains.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">[404]</span></div>
- <div class="i1">I bear the news. Come down, I pray,</div>
- <div>And give me the embrace fraternal:</div>
- <div class="i1">And please, my brother, don’t delay:</div>
- <div>So much the tidings do concern all,</div>
- <div class="i1">That I must spread them far to-day.</div>
- <div>Now you and yours can take your walks</div>
- <div>Without a fear or thought of hawks;</div>
- <div>And should you clash with them or others,</div>
- <div>In us you’ll find the best of brothers&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i2">For which you may, this joyful night,</div>
- <div class="i2">Your merry bonfires light.</div>
- <div class="i3">But, first, let’s seal the bliss</div>
- <div class="i3">With one fraternal kiss.”</div>
- <div>“Good friend,” the cock replied, “upon my word,</div>
- <div>A better thing I never heard;</div>
- <div class="i2">And doubly I rejoice</div>
- <div class="i2">To hear it from your voice:</div>
- <div>And, really, there must be something in it,</div>
- <div class="i1">For yonder come two greyhounds, which I flatter</div>
- <div class="i1">Myself, are couriers on this very matter;</div>
- <div>They come so fast, they’ll be here in a minute,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’ll down, and all of us will seal the blessing</div>
- <div class="i1">With general kissing and caressing.”</div>
- <div>“Adieu,” said the fox; “my errand’s pressing,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’ll hurry on my way,</div>
- <div class="i1">And we’ll rejoice some other day.”</div>
- <div>So off the fellow scampered, quick and light,</div>
- <div>To gain the fox-holes of the neighboring height&mdash;</div>
- <div>Less happy in his stratagem than flight.</div>
- <div class="i1">The cock laughed sweetly in his sleeve&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">’Tis doubly sweet deceiver to deceive.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE CROW AND THE FOX</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A master crow, perched on a tree one day</div>
- <div class="i2">Was holding in his beak a cheese&mdash;</div>
- <div>A master fox, by the odor drawn that way,</div>
- <div class="i2">Spake unto him in words like these:</div>
- <div class="i2">“O, good morning, my Lord Crow!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">[405]</span></div>
- <div class="i2">How well you look, how handsome you do grow!</div>
- <div class="i3">’Pon my honor, if your note</div>
- <div class="i3">Bears a resemblance to your coat,</div>
- <div>You are the phœnix of the dwellers in these woods.”</div>
- <div class="i1">At these words does the crow exceedingly rejoice;</div>
- <div class="i1">And, to display his beauteous voice,</div>
- <div>He opens a wide beak, lets fall his stolen goods.</div>
- <div class="i2">The fox seized on’t, and said, “My good Monsieur,</div>
- <div class="i2">Learn that every flatterer</div>
- <div class="i1">Lives at the expense of him who hears him out.</div>
- <div class="i1">This lesson is well worth a cheese, no doubt.”</div>
- <div>The crow, ashamed, and much in pain,</div>
- <div>Swore, but a little late, they’d not catch him so again.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Nicolas Boileau-Despreaux, commonly called Boileau, was a famous critic
-and poet. His <i>Art Poétique</i> had a decided influence on later
-French verse.</p>
-
-<p>His wit was keen and his satire sharp.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO PERRAULT</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>How comes it, Perrault, I would gladly know,</div>
- <div>That authors of two thousand years ago,</div>
- <div>Whom in their native dress all times revere,</div>
- <div>In your translations should so flat appear?</div>
- <div>’Tis you divest them of their own sublime,</div>
- <div>By your vile crudities and odious rime.</div>
- <div>They’re thine when suffering thy wretched phrase,</div>
- <div>And then no wonder if they meet no praise.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON COTIN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Of all the pens which my poor rimes molest,</div>
- <div>Cotin’s is sharpest, and succeeds the best.</div>
- <div>Others outrageous scold and rail downright,</div>
- <div>With hearty rancor, and true Christian spite.</div>
- <div>But he, a readier method does design,</div>
- <div>Writes scoundrel verses, and then says they’re mine.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">[406]</span></p>
-
-<p>Alan René Le Sage, novelist and dramatist, is best known for his
-celebrated work, <i>Gil Blas</i>. He also wrote many farce-operettas,
-which offer no opportunity for quotation.</p>
-
-<p>Jean de la Bruyère, is best known for his work called <i>The
-Characters</i>, an imitation of Theophrastus.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>IPHIS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Iphis at church sees a new-fashioned shoe; he looks upon his own and
-blushes, and can no longer believe himself dressed. He came to prayers
-only to show himself, and now he hides himself. The foot keeps him in
-his room the rest of the day. He has a soft hand, with which he gives
-you a gentle pat. He is sure to laugh often to show his white teeth.
-He strains his mouth to a perpetual smile. He looks upon his legs, he
-views himself in the glass, and nobody can have so good an opinion of
-another as he has of himself. He has acquired a delicate and clear
-voice, and has a happy manner in talking. He has a turn of the head, a
-sweetness in his glance that he never fails to make use of. His gait is
-slow, and the prettiest he is able to contrive. He sometimes employs a
-little rouge, but seldom; he will not make a habit of it. It is true
-that he wears breeches and a hat, has neither earrings nor necklace,
-therefore I have not put him in the chapter on woman.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THOUGHTS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The pleasure of criticizing robs us of the pleasure of unconscious
-delight.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The most accomplished work of the age would fail under the hands
-of censors and critics, if the author would listen to all their
-objections, and allow each one to throw out the passage that had
-pleased him least.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This good we get from the perfidiousness of woman, that it cures us of
-jealousy.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There are but two ways of rising in the world&mdash;by your own industry, or
-by the weakness of others.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">[407]</span></p>
-
-<p>If life is miserable, it is painful to live; if happy, it is terrible
-to die; both come to the same thing.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is nothing men are so anxious to preserve, or so careless about,
-as life.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We are afraid of old age, and afraid not to attain it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If some men died, and others did not, death would indeed be a terrible
-affliction.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There are but three events that happen to men&mdash;birth, life, and death.
-They know nothing of their birth, suffer when they die, and forget to
-live.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Gilles Ménage, a French philologist, is now best known as the Author
-of <i>Ménagiana</i>, one of the most excellent and original of the
-celebrated Ana of France. The following poem bears a remarkable
-resemblance to Goldsmith’s <i>Madame Blaize</i>, and it is quite
-possible that the latter may have been suggested by it.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>La Gallisse now I wish to touch;</div>
- <div class="i1">Droll air! if I can strike it,</div>
- <div>I’m sure the song will please you much;</div>
- <div class="i1">That is, if you should like it.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>La Gallisse was indeed, I grant,</div>
- <div class="i1">Not used to any dainty</div>
- <div>When he was born&mdash;but could not want,</div>
- <div class="i1">As long as he had plenty.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Instructed with the greatest care,</div>
- <div class="i1">He always was well bred,</div>
- <div>And never used a hat to wear,</div>
- <div class="i1">But when ’twas on his head.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">[408]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>His temper was exceeding good,</div>
- <div class="i1">Just of his father’s fashion;</div>
- <div>And never quarrels broil’d his blood,</div>
- <div class="i1">Except when in a passion.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>His mind was on devotion bent;</div>
- <div class="i1">He kept with care each high day,</div>
- <div>And Holy Thursday always spent,</div>
- <div class="i1">The day before Good Friday.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He liked good claret very well,</div>
- <div class="i1">I just presume to think it;</div>
- <div>For ere its flavour he could tell,</div>
- <div class="i1">He thought it best to drink it.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Than doctors more he loved the cook,</div>
- <div class="i1">Though food would make him gross;</div>
- <div>And never any physic took,</div>
- <div class="i1">But when he took a dose.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>O happy, happy is the swain</div>
- <div class="i1">The ladies so adore;</div>
- <div>For many followed in his train,</div>
- <div class="i1">Whene’er he walk’d before.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Bright as the sun his flowing hair</div>
- <div class="i1">In golden ringlets shone;</div>
- <div>And no one could with him compare,</div>
- <div class="i1">If he had been alone.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>His talents I can not rehearse,</div>
- <div class="i1">But every one allows,</div>
- <div>That whatsoe’er he wrote in verse,</div>
- <div class="i1">No one could call it prose.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He argued with precision nice,</div>
- <div class="i1">The learnèd all declare;</div>
- <div>And it was his decision wise,</div>
- <div class="i1">No horse could be a mare.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">[409]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>His powerful logic would surprise,</div>
- <div class="i1">Amuse, and much delight:</div>
- <div>He proved that dimness of the eyes</div>
- <div class="i1">Was hurtful to the sight.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They liked him much&mdash;so it appears</div>
- <div class="i1">Most plainly&mdash;who preferr’d him;</div>
- <div>And those did never want their ears,</div>
- <div class="i1">Who any time had heard him.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He was not always right, ’tis true,</div>
- <div class="i1">And then he must be wrong;</div>
- <div>But none had found it out, he knew,</div>
- <div class="i1">If he had held his tongue.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Whene’er a tender tear he shed,</div>
- <div class="i1">’Twas certain that he wept;</div>
- <div>And he would lay awake in bed,</div>
- <div class="i1">Unless, indeed, he slept.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In tilting everybody knew</div>
- <div class="i1">His very high renown;</div>
- <div>Yet no opponents he o’erthrew,</div>
- <div class="i1">But those that he knock’d down.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At last they smote him in the head&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">What hero e’er fought all?</div>
- <div>And when they saw that he was dead,</div>
- <div class="i1">They knew the wound was mortal.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And when at last he lost his breath,</div>
- <div class="i1">It closed his every strife;</div>
- <div>For that sad day that seal’d his death,</div>
- <div class="i1">Deprived him of his life.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Italy and Spain offer us little of seventeenth century humor. Their
-comedies are long and verbose, and rather dull. Also, there are few
-satisfactory translations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">[410]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Italian, Francesca Redi, gives us a rollicking song of a
-Bacchanalian order.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>DIATRIBE AGAINST WATER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">He who drinks water,</div>
- <div class="i2">I wish to observe,</div>
- <div class="i2">Gets nothing from me;</div>
- <div class="i2">He may eat it and starve.</div>
- <div>Whether it’s well, or whether it’s fountain,</div>
- <div>Or whether it comes foaming white from the mountain,</div>
- <div class="i2">I cannot admire it,</div>
- <div class="i2">Nor ever desire it.</div>
- <div>’Tis a fool, and a madman, an impudent wretch,</div>
- <div>Who now will live in a nasty ditch,</div>
- <div>And then grows proud, and full of his whims,</div>
- <div>Comes playing the devil, and cursing his brims,</div>
- <div>And swells, and tumbles, and bothers his margins,</div>
- <div>And ruins the flowers, although they be virgins.</div>
- <div>Wharves and piers, were it not for him,</div>
- <div class="i2">Would last forever,</div>
- <div class="i2">If they’re built clever;</div>
- <div>But no, it’s all one with him&mdash;sink or swim.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Let the people yclept Mameluke</div>
- <div>Praise the Nile without any rebuke;</div>
- <div>Let the Spaniards praise the Tagus;</div>
- <div>I cannot like either, even for negus.</div>
- <div>If any follower of mine</div>
- <div>Dares so far to forget his wine</div>
- <div>As to drink a drop of water,</div>
- <div>Here’s the hand to devote him to slaughter.</div>
- <div>Let your meager doctorlings</div>
- <div>Gather herbs and such like things,</div>
- <div>Fellows who with streams and stills</div>
- <div>Think to cure all sorts of ills;</div>
- <div>I’ve no faith in their washery,</div>
- <div>Nor think it worth a glance of my eye.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">[411]</span></div>
- <div>Yes, I laugh at them, for that matter,</div>
- <div>To think how they, with their heaps of water,</div>
- <div>Petrify their skulls profound,</div>
- <div>And make ’em all so thick and so round,</div>
- <div>That Viviana, with all his mathematics,</div>
- <div>Would fail to square the circle of their attics.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Away with all water wherever I come;</div>
- <div>I forbid it ye, gentlemen, all and some.</div>
- <div class="i2">Lemonade water,</div>
- <div class="i2">Jessamine water,</div>
- <div class="i2">Our tavern knows none of ’em&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i2">Water’s a hum!</div>
- <div>Jessamine makes a pretty crown,</div>
- <div>But as a drink ’twill never go down.</div>
- <div>All your hydromels and flips</div>
- <div>Come not near these prudent lips.</div>
- <div>All your sippings and sherbets,</div>
- <div>And a thousand such pretty sweets,</div>
- <div>Let your mincing ladies take ’em,</div>
- <div>And fops whose little fingers ache ’em.</div>
- <div>Wine, wine is your only drink!</div>
- <div>Grief never dares to look at the brink.</div>
- <div>Six times a year to be mad with wine,</div>
- <div>I hold it no shame, but a very good sign.</div>
- <div>I, for my part, take my can,</div>
- <div>Solely to act like a gentleman,</div>
- <div>And, acting so, I care not, I,</div>
- <div>For all the hail and snow in the sky.</div>
- <div class="i2">I never go poking,</div>
- <div class="i2">And cowering and cloaking,</div>
- <div>And wrapping myself from head to foot,</div>
- <div>As some people do, with their wigs to boot&mdash;</div>
- <div>For example, like dry and shivering Redi,</div>
- <div>Who looks just like a peruk’d old lady.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>From the Spanish poet, José Morell we include two quotations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">[412]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ADVICE TO AN INNKEEPER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“‘Mingle the sweet and useful,’ says a sage,</div>
- <div>Whose name, perchance, is lost in history’s page,</div>
- <div>But whose advice withal is good and wise.</div>
- <div>It caught a tavern-keeper’s busy eyes,</div>
- <div>And he exclaimed, ‘Delightful! That’s for me!’</div>
- <div>I see the sense, I read the mystery;</div>
- <div>This is its meaning, I can well divine:</div>
- <div>‘Mix useful water with your luscious wine.’”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO A POET</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“You say your verses are of gold.</div>
- <div class="i1">And how, my friend? I’d fain inquire.</div>
- <div>But, no&mdash;I see the truth you’ve told:</div>
- <div class="i1">They must be purified by fire.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-<h3>GERMAN HUMOR</h3>
-
-
-<p>Germany in the seventeenth century wakes up to a dim and dawning
-humorous sense, but gives little definite expression to it, unless we
-except Abraham á Sancta Clara, an Augustinian monk and satirical writer
-of repute.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE DONKEY’S VOICE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A certain singer was most vain of his voice, thinking it so enchanting
-it might allure the very dolphins, or if not them, the pike, from out
-of the deep. But it is an old custom of the Lord to punish the vain
-ones of the earth, who like nothing better than praise. So the Lord
-made this man sing false at Holy Mass, and the whole congregation was
-utterly displeased. Close by the altar there was kneeling an old woman,
-who wept bitterly during the Mass. The conceited songster, thinking
-that the old woman had been moved to those tears by the sweetness of
-his voice, after Mass approached the dame, asking her, in the presence
-of the congregation, why she had wept so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">[413]</span> sadly. His mouth watered
-for the expected praise, when, “Sir,” said the woman, “while you were
-singing I remembered my donkey; I lost him, poor soul three days ago,
-and his voice was very natural, like yours. Oh, heavenly Father, if I
-could only find that good and useful beast!”</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Judas, the Arch-Rogue.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>A BURDENSOME WIFE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A man set sail from Venice for Ancona, with his wife, both being minded
-to offer their devotions at the shrine of Santa Maria di Loreto. But
-during the voyage there arose such a great storm that all thought the
-ship in extreme peril of sinking. The owner of the ship therefore
-gave his command that each traveler should forthwith throw his most
-burdensome possessions into the sea, so that the vessel might be made
-lighter. Some rolled casks of wine overboard, and others bales of
-cloth; the man from Venice, who did not desire to be found tarrying
-behind the rest, seized his wife, exclaiming, “Forgive me, Ursula
-mine, but this day you must drink to my health in salt water!” and
-would throw her into the sea. The frightened wife making a commotion
-with her screams, others ran up, and scolded the husband, asking him
-the cause of his action. “The owner of the ship,” said he, “urgently
-commanded that we all should throw overboard our heaviest burdens. Now,
-throughout my whole life nothing has ever been so burdensome to me
-as this woman; hence I was gladly willing to make her over to Father
-Neptune.”</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Hie! Fie!</i></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ST. ANTHONY’S SERMON TO THE FISHES</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Saint Anthony at church</div>
- <div>Was left in the lurch,</div>
- <div>So he went to the ditches</div>
- <div>And preached to the fishes.</div>
- <div class="i1">They wriggled their tails,</div>
- <div class="i1">In the sun glanced their scales.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">[414]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The carps with their spawn,</div>
- <div>Are all thither drawn;</div>
- <div>Have opened their jaws,</div>
- <div>Eager for each clause.</div>
- <div class="i1">No sermon beside</div>
- <div class="i1">Had the carps so edified.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Sharp-snouted pikes,</div>
- <div>Who keep fighting like tikes,</div>
- <div>Now swam up harmonious</div>
- <div>To hear Saint Antonius.</div>
- <div class="i1">No sermon beside</div>
- <div class="i1">Had the pikes so edified.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And that very odd fish,</div>
- <div>Who loves fast-days, the cod-fish,&mdash;</div>
- <div>The stock-fish, I mean,&mdash;</div>
- <div>At the sermon was seen.</div>
- <div class="i1">No sermon beside</div>
- <div class="i1">Had the cods so edified.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Good eels and sturgeon,</div>
- <div>Which aldermen gorge on,</div>
- <div>Went out of their way</div>
- <div>To hear preaching that day.</div>
- <div class="i1">No sermon beside</div>
- <div class="i1">Had the eels so edified.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Crabs and turtles also,</div>
- <div>Who always move low,</div>
- <div>Make haste from the bottom</div>
- <div>As if the devil had got ’em.</div>
- <div class="i1">No sermon beside</div>
- <div class="i1">The crabs so edified.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Fish great and fish small,</div>
- <div>Lord, lackeys, and all,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">[415]</span></div>
- <div>Each looked at the preacher</div>
- <div>Like a reasonable creature,</div>
- <div class="i1">At God’s word,</div>
- <div class="i1">They Anthony heard.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The sermon now ended,</div>
- <div>Each turned and descended;</div>
- <div>The pikes went on stealing,</div>
- <div>The eels went on eeling.</div>
- <div class="i1">Much delighted were they,</div>
- <div class="i1">But preferred the old way.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The crabs are back-sliders,</div>
- <div>The stock-fish thick-siders,</div>
- <div>The carps are sharp-set,</div>
- <div>All the sermon forget.</div>
- <div class="i1">Much delighted were they,</div>
- <div class="i1">But preferred the old way.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-<h3>THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY</h3>
-
-<p>Jonathan Swift, the famous author of <i>Gulliver’s Travels</i>, wrote
-voluminously. His wit was rather heavy, his satire stinging.</p>
-
-<p>It is unsatisfactory to quote from his longer works, but examples of
-his lighter vein are offered.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>AGAINST ABOLISHING CHRISTIANITY</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Another advantage proposed by the abolishing of Christianity is the
-clear gain of one day in seven, which is now entirely lost, and
-consequently the kingdom one-seventh less considerable in trade,
-business, and pleasure; besides the loss to the public of so many
-stately structures now in the hands of the clergy, which might
-be converted into play-houses, exchanges, market-houses, common
-dormitories, and other public edifices.</p>
-
-<p>I hope I shall be forgiven a hard word if I call this a perfect<span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">[416]</span> cavil.
-I readily own there hath been an old custom, time out of mind, for
-people to assemble in the churches every Sunday, and that shops are
-still frequently shut, in order, as it is conceived, to preserve the
-memory of that ancient practice; but how this can prove a hindrance to
-business or pleasure is hard to imagine. What if the men of pleasure
-are forced, one day in the week, to game at home instead of the
-chocolate-house? Are not the taverns and coffee-houses open? Can there
-be a more convenient season for taking a dose of physic? Is not that
-the chief day for traders to sum up the accounts of the week, and for
-lawyers to prepare their briefs? But I would fain know how it can be
-pretended that the churches are misapplied? Where are more appointments
-and rendezvouses of gallantry? Where more care to appear in the
-foremost box, with greater advantage of dress? Where more meetings for
-business? Where more bargains driven of all sorts? And where so many
-conveniences or incitements to sleep?...</p>
-
-<p>It may perhaps admit a controversy, whether the banishing all notions
-of religion whatsoever would be inconvenient for the vulgar. Not that
-I am in the least of opinion, with those who hold religion to have
-been the invention of politicians, to keep the lower part of the world
-in awe by the fear of invisible powers, unless mankind were then very
-different from what it is now; for I look upon the mass or body of
-our people here in England to be as Freethinkers&mdash;that is to say, as
-staunch unbelievers&mdash;as any of the highest rank. But I conceive some
-scattered notions about a superior Power to be of singular use for the
-common people, as furnishing excellent materials to keep children quiet
-when they grow peevish, and providing topics of amusement in a tedious
-winter night.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE FURNITURE OF A WOMAN’S MIND</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A set of phrases learned by rote;</div>
- <div>A passion for a scarlet coat;</div>
- <div>When at a play, to laugh or cry,</div>
- <div>Yet cannot tell the reason why;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">[417]</span></div>
- <div>Never to hold her tongue a minute,</div>
- <div>While all she prates has nothing in it;</div>
- <div>Whole hours can with a coxcomb sit,</div>
- <div>And take his nonsense all for wit.</div>
- <div>Her learning mounts to read a song,</div>
- <div>But half the words pronouncing wrong;</div>
- <div>Has every repartee in store</div>
- <div>She spoke ten thousand times before;</div>
- <div>Can ready compliments supply</div>
- <div>On all occasions, cut and dry;</div>
- <div>Such hatred to a parson’s gown,</div>
- <div>The sight would put her in a swoon;</div>
- <div>For conversation well endued,</div>
- <div>She calls it witty to be rude;</div>
- <div>And, placing raillery in railing,</div>
- <div>Will tell aloud your greatest failing;</div>
- <div>Nor make a scruple to expose</div>
- <div>Your bandy leg or crooked nose;</div>
- <div>Can at her morning tea run o’er</div>
- <div>The scandal of the day before;</div>
- <div>Improving hourly in her skill,</div>
- <div>To cheat and wrangle at quadrille.</div>
- <div>In choosing lace, a critic nice,</div>
- <div>Knows to a groat the lowest price;</div>
- <div>Can in her female clubs dispute</div>
- <div>What linen best the silk will suit,</div>
- <div>What colours each complexion match,</div>
- <div>And where with art to place a patch.</div>
- <div>If chance a mouse creeps in her sight,</div>
- <div>Can finely counterfeit a fright;</div>
- <div>So sweetly screams, if it comes near her,</div>
- <div>She ravishes all hearts to hear her.</div>
- <div>Can dexterously her husband tease,</div>
- <div>By taking fits whene’er she please;</div>
- <div>By frequent practice learns the trick</div>
- <div>At proper season to be sick;</div>
- <div>Thinks nothing gives one airs so pretty,</div>
- <div>At once creating love and pity.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">[418]</span></div>
- <div>If Molly happens to be careless,</div>
- <div>And but neglects to warm her hair-lace,</div>
- <div>She gets a cold as sure as death,</div>
- <div>And vows she scarce can fetch her breath;</div>
- <div>Admires how modest woman can</div>
- <div>Be so robustious, like a man.</div>
- <div>In party, furious to her power,</div>
- <div>A bitter Whig, or Tory sour,</div>
- <div>Her arguments directly tend</div>
- <div>Against the side she would defend;</div>
- <div>Will prove herself a Tory plain,</div>
- <div>From principles the Whigs maintain,</div>
- <div>And, to defend the Whiggish cause,</div>
- <div>Her topics from the Tories draws.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>SUNT QUI SERVARI NOLUNT</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As Thomas was cudgell’d one day by his wife,</div>
- <div>He took to the street, and he fled for his life.</div>
- <div>Tom’s three dearest friends came by in the squabble</div>
- <div>And sav’d him at once from the shrew and the rabble;</div>
- <div>Then ventur’d to give him some sober advice&mdash;</div>
- <div>But Tom is a person of honour so nice,</div>
- <div>Too wise to take counsel, too proud to take warning,</div>
- <div>That he sent to all three a challenge next morning.</div>
- <div>Three duels he fought, thrice ventur’d his life,</div>
- <div>Went home&mdash;and was cudgell’d again by his wife.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON HIS OWN DEAFNESS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Deaf, giddy, helpless, left alone,</div>
- <div>To all my friends a burden grown;</div>
- <div>No more I hear my church’s bell,</div>
- <div>Than if it rang out for my knell;</div>
- <div>At thunder now no more I start,</div>
- <div>Than at the rumbling of a cart;</div>
- <div>And what’s incredible, alack!</div>
- <div>No more I hear a woman’s clack.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">[419]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO MRS. HOUGHTON OF BORMOUNT, UPON PRAISING HER HUSBAND TO DR.
-SWIFT</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You always are making a god of your spouse;</div>
- <div>But this neither reason nor conscience allows:</div>
- <div>Perhaps you will say, ’tis in gratitude due,</div>
- <div>And you adore him, because he adores you.</div>
- <div>Your argument’s weak, and so you will find;</div>
- <div>For you, by this rule, must adore all mankind.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Alexander Pope, a true poet and humorist, sometimes dropped into sheer
-nonsense, and often into satirical epigrammatic writing.</p>
-
-<p>For some inexplicable reason, certain commentators have denied any
-sense of humor to Pope, but the following extracts refute this:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>LINES BY A PERSON OF QUALITY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Fluttering spread thy purple pinions,</div>
- <div class="i1">Gentle Cupid, o’er my heart,</div>
- <div>I a slave in thy dominions,</div>
- <div class="i1">Nature must give way to art.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mild Arcadians, ever blooming,</div>
- <div class="i1">Nightly nodding o’er your flocks,</div>
- <div>See my weary days consuming,</div>
- <div class="i1">All beneath yon flowery rocks.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thus the Cyprian goddess weeping,</div>
- <div class="i1">Mourned Adonis, darling youth:</div>
- <div>Him the boar, in silence creeping,</div>
- <div class="i1">Gored with unrelenting tooth.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Cynthia, tune harmonious numbers;</div>
- <div class="i1">Fair Discretion, tune the lyre;</div>
- <div>Soothe my ever-waking slumbers;</div>
- <div class="i1">Bright Apollo, lend thy choir.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_420">[420]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Gloomy Pluto, king of terrors,</div>
- <div class="i1">Armed in adamantine chains,</div>
- <div>Lead me to the crystal mirrors,</div>
- <div class="i1">Watering soft Elysian plains.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mournful Cypress, verdant willow,</div>
- <div class="i1">Gilding my Aurelia’s brows,</div>
- <div>Morpheus, hovering o’er my pillow,</div>
- <div class="i1">Hear me pay my dying vows.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Melancholy, smooth Mæaunder,</div>
- <div class="i1">Swiftly purling in a round,</div>
- <div>On thy margin lovers wander</div>
- <div class="i1">With thy flowery chaplets crowned.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thus when Philomela, drooping,</div>
- <div class="i1">Softly seeks her silent mate,</div>
- <div>So the bird of Juno stooping;</div>
- <div class="i1">Melody resigns to fate.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><i>WORMS</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">To the Ingenious Mr. Moore, inventor of the celebrated worm powder.</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>How much, egregious Moore? are we,</div>
- <div class="i1">Deceived by shows and forms?</div>
- <div>Whate’er we think, whate’er we see,</div>
- <div class="i1">All human race are worms.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Man is a very worm by birth,</div>
- <div class="i1">Proud reptile, vile and vain,</div>
- <div>Awhile he crawls upon the earth,</div>
- <div class="i1">Then shrinks to earth again.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>That woman is a worm, we find,</div>
- <div class="i1">E’er since our grannum’s evil;</div>
- <div>She first conversed with her own kind,</div>
- <div class="i1">That ancient worm, the Devil.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_421">[421]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The fops are painted butterflies,</div>
- <div class="i1">That flutter for a day;</div>
- <div>First from a worm they took their rise,</div>
- <div class="i1">Then in a worm decay.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The flatterer an ear-wig grows,</div>
- <div class="i1">Some worms suit all conditions;</div>
- <div>Misers are muck-worms; silk-worms, beaus,</div>
- <div class="i1">And death-watches, physicians.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>That statesmen have a worm, is seen</div>
- <div class="i1">By all their winding play;</div>
- <div>Their conscience is a worm within,</div>
- <div class="i1">That gnaws them night and day.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ah, Moore! thy skill were well employ’d,</div>
- <div class="i1">And greater gain would rise</div>
- <div>If thou couldst make the courtier void</div>
- <div class="i1">That worm that never dies.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thou only canst our fate adjourn</div>
- <div class="i1">Some few short years, no more;</div>
- <div>E’en Button’s wits to worms shall turn,</div>
- <div class="i1">Who maggots were before.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><i>EPIGRAM ON MRS. TOFTS</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">(<i>A celebrated Opera Singer.</i>)</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So bright is thy beauty, so charming thy song,</div>
- <div>As had drawn both the beasts and their Orpheus along;</div>
- <div>But such is thy avarice, and such is thy pride,</div>
- <div>That the beasts must have starved and the poet have died.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Joseph Addison, whose literary work had a decided influence on English
-letters and manners, contributed much to <i>The Tatler</i> and <i>The
-Spectator</i>, from which the following extract is taken.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">[422]</span></p>
-
-<h4><i>THE WILL OF A VIRTUOSO</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">I, Nicholas Gimcrack, being in sound health of mind, but in great
-weakness of body, do, by this my last will and testament, bestow my
-worldly goods and chattels in manner following:</p>
-
-<p class="p-min"><i>Imprimis.</i>&mdash;To my dear wife,</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">One box of butterflies,</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">One drawer of shells,</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">A female skeleton,</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">A dried cockatrice.</p>
-
-<p class="p-min"><i>Item.</i>&mdash;To my daughter Elizabeth,</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">My receipt for preserving dead caterpillars,</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">As also my preparations of winter Maydew and embryo-pickle.</p>
-
-<p class="p-min"><i>Item.</i>&mdash;To my little daughter Fanny,</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">Three crocodile’s eggs,</p>
-<p class="p-min">And upon the birth of her first child, if she marries with her mother’s consent,</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">The nest of a humming-bird.</p>
-
-<p class="p-min"><i>Item.</i>&mdash;To my eldest brother, as an acknowledgment for the lands he has vested in my son Charles, I bequeath</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">My last year’s collection of grasshoppers.</p>
-
-<p class="p-min"><i>Item.</i>&mdash;To his daughter Susanna, being his only child, I bequeath my</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">English weeds pasted on royal paper,</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">With my large folio of Indian cabbage.</p>
-
-<p class="p-min">Having fully provided for my nephew Isaac, by making over to him some years since,</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">A horned scarabæus,</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">The skin of a rattlesnake, and</p>
-<p class="left2 p-min">The mummy of an Egyptian king,</p>
-<p class="p-min">I make no further provision for him in this my will.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-min">My eldest son, John, having spoke disrespectfully of his little sister,
-whom I keep by me in spirits of wine, and in many other instances
-behaved himself undutifully toward me, I do disinherit, and wholly cut
-off from any part of this my personal estate, by giving him a single
-cockle-shell.</p>
-
-<p class="p-min">To my second son, Charles, I give and bequeath all my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_423">[423]</span> flowers, plants,
-minerals, mosses, shells, pebbles, fossils, beetles, butterflies,
-caterpillars, grasshoppers, and vermin, not above specified; as also
-all my monsters, both wet and dry; making the said Charles whole and
-sole executor of this my last will and testament: he paying, or causing
-to be paid, the aforesaid legacies within the space of six months after
-my decease. And I do hereby revoke all other wills whatsoever by me
-formerly made.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>John Philips, who was a devoted student and admirer of Milton, wrote a
-poem in which he parodied Milton’s style, and which Addison called the
-finest burlesque in the English language.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE SPLENDID SHILLING</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza sm">
- <div class="i3">“Sing, heavenly Muse.</div>
- <div>Things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme”;</div>
- <div>A shilling, breeches, and chimeras dire.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Happy the man, who, void of acres and strife,</div>
- <div>In silken or in leathern purse retains</div>
- <div>A Splendid Shilling: he nor hears with pain</div>
- <div>New oysters cried, nor sighs for cheerful ale;</div>
- <div>But with his friends, when nightly mists arise,</div>
- <div>To Juniper’s Magpie, or Town Hall repairs;</div>
- <div>Where, mindful of the nymph, whose wanton eye</div>
- <div>Transfixed his soul, and kindled amorous flames,</div>
- <div>Chloe or Phyllis, he each circling glass</div>
- <div>Wisheth her health and joy and equal love.</div>
- <div>Meanwhile he smokes, and laughs at merry tale,</div>
- <div>Or pun ambiguous or conundrum quaint.</div>
- <div>But I, whom griping penury surrounds,</div>
- <div>And hunger, sure attendant upon want,</div>
- <div>With scanty offals, and small acid tiff</div>
- <div>(Wretched repast!) my meagre corpse sustain:</div>
- <div>Then solitary walk, or doze at home</div>
- <div>In garret vile, and with a warming puff</div>
- <div>Regale chilled fingers; or from tube as black<span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">[424]</span></div>
- <div>As winter-chimney or well-polished jet,</div>
- <div>Exhale mundungus, ill-perfuming scent.</div>
- <div>Not blacker tube, nor of a shorter size,</div>
- <div>Smokes Cambro-Briton (versed in pedigree,</div>
- <div>Sprung from Cadwallador and Arthur, kings</div>
- <div>Full famous in romantic tale) when he</div>
- <div>O’er many a craggy hill and barren cliff,</div>
- <div>Upon a cargo of famed Cestrian cheese,</div>
- <div>High overshadowing rides, with a design</div>
- <div>To wend his wares at the Arvonian mart,</div>
- <div>Or Maridunum, or the ancient town</div>
- <div>Ycleped Brechinia, or where Vaga’s stream</div>
- <div>Encircles Ariconium, fruitful soil!</div>
- <div>Whence flow nectareous wines, that well may vie</div>
- <div>With Massic, Setin, or renowned Falern.</div>
- <div class="i1">Thus, while my joyless minutes tedious flow,</div>
- <div>With looks demure, and silent pace, a Dun,</div>
- <div>Horrible monster! hated by gods and men,</div>
- <div>To my aerial citadel ascends.</div>
- <div>With vocal heel thrice thundering at my gate,</div>
- <div>With hideous accent thrice he calls; I know</div>
- <div>The voice ill-boding, and the solemn sound,</div>
- <div>What should I do? or whither turn? Amazed,</div>
- <div>Confounded, to the dark recess I fly</div>
- <div>Of wood-hole; straight my bristling hairs erect</div>
- <div>Through sudden fear; a chilly sweat bedews</div>
- <div>My shuddering limbs, and (wonderful to tell!)</div>
- <div>My tongue forgets her faculty of speech;</div>
- <div>So horrible he seems! His faded brow</div>
- <div>Intrenched with many a frown, and conic beard,</div>
- <div>And spreading band, admired by modern saints,</div>
- <div>Disastrous acts forebode; in his right hand</div>
- <div>Long scrolls of paper solemnly he waves,</div>
- <div>With characters and figures dire inscribed,</div>
- <div>Grievous to mortal eyes, (ye gods, avert</div>
- <div>Such plagues from righteous men!) Behind him stalks</div>
- <div>Another monster, not unlike itself,</div>
- <div>Sullen of aspect, by the vulgar called<span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">[425]</span></div>
- <div>A Catchpole, whose polluted hands the gods</div>
- <div>With force incredible, and magic charms,</div>
- <div>First have endued: if he his ample palm</div>
- <div>Should haply on ill-fated shoulder lay</div>
- <div>Of debtor, straight his body to the touch</div>
- <div>Obsequious (as whilom knights were wont)</div>
- <div>To some enchanted castle is conveyed,</div>
- <div>Where gates impregnable, and coercive chains,</div>
- <div>In durance strict detain him, till, in form</div>
- <div>Of money, Pallas sets the captive free.</div>
- <div class="i1">Beware, ye debtors! when ye walk, beware,</div>
- <div>Be circumspect; oft with insidious ken</div>
- <div>The caitiff eyes your steps aloof, and oft</div>
- <div>Lies perdue in a nook or gloomy cave,</div>
- <div>Prompt to enchant some inadvertent wretch</div>
- <div>With his unhallowed touch. So (poets sing)</div>
- <div>Grimalkin to domestic vermin sworn</div>
- <div>An everlasting foe, with watchful eye</div>
- <div>Lies nightly brooding o’er a chinky gap,</div>
- <div>Portending her fell claws, to thoughtless mice</div>
- <div>Sure ruin. So her disembowelled web</div>
- <div>Arachne, in a hall or kitchen, spreads</div>
- <div>Obvious to vagrant flies; she secret stands</div>
- <div>Within her woven cell; the humming prey,</div>
- <div>Regardless of their fate, rush on the toils</div>
- <div>Inextricable, nor will aught avail</div>
- <div>Their arts, or arms, or shapes of lovely hue.</div>
- <div>The wasp insidious, and the buzzing drone,</div>
- <div>And butterfly proud of expanded wings</div>
- <div>Distinct with gold, entangled in her snares,</div>
- <div>Useless resistance make; with eager strides,</div>
- <div>She towering flies to her expected spoils:</div>
- <div>Then with envenomed jaws the vital blood</div>
- <div>Drinks of reluctant foes, and to her cave</div>
- <div>Their bulky carcasses triumphant drags.</div>
- <div class="i1">So pass my days. But when nocturnal shades</div>
- <div>This world envelop, and the inclement air</div>
- <div>Persuades men to repel benumbing frosts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_426">[426]</span></div>
- <div>With pleasant wines and crackling blaze of wood,</div>
- <div>Me, lonely sitting, nor the glimmering light</div>
- <div>Of make-weight candle, nor the joyous talk</div>
- <div>Of loving friend, delights; distressed, forlorn,</div>
- <div>Amidst the horrors of the tedious night,</div>
- <div>Darkling I sigh, and feed with dismal thoughts</div>
- <div>My anxious mind; or sometimes mournful verse</div>
- <div>Indite, and sing of groves and myrtle shades,</div>
- <div>Or desperate lady near a purling stream,</div>
- <div>Or lover pendent on a willow-tree.</div>
- <div>Meanwhile I labor with eternal drought,</div>
- <div>And restless wish, and rave; my parchèd throat</div>
- <div>Finds no relief, nor heavy eyes repose:</div>
- <div>But if a slumber haply does invade</div>
- <div>My weary limbs, my fancy, still awake,</div>
- <div>Thoughtful of drink, and eager, in a dream,</div>
- <div>Tipples imaginary pots of ale;</div>
- <div>In vain;&mdash;awake I find the settled thirst</div>
- <div>Still gnawing, and the pleasant phantom curse.</div>
- <div class="i1">Thus do I live, from pleasure quite debarred,</div>
- <div>Nor taste the fruits that the sun’s genial rays</div>
- <div>Mature, john-apple, nor the downy peach,</div>
- <div>Nor walnut in rough-furrowed coat secure,</div>
- <div>Nor medlar fruit delicious in decay;</div>
- <div>Afflictions great! yet greater still remain.</div>
- <div>My galligaskins, that have long withstood</div>
- <div>The winter’s fury and encroaching frosts,</div>
- <div>By time subdued, (what will not time subdue!)</div>
- <div>An horrid chasm disclose with orifice</div>
- <div>Wide, discontinuous; at which the winds</div>
- <div>Eurus and Auster and the dreadful force</div>
- <div>Of Boreas, that congeals the Cronian waves,</div>
- <div>Tumultuous enter with dire chilling blasts,</div>
- <div>Portending agues. Thus a well-fraught ship,</div>
- <div>Long sails secure, or through the Ægean deep,</div>
- <div>Or the Ionian, till cruising near</div>
- <div>The Lilybean shore, with hideous crush</div>
- <div>On Scylla or Charybdis (dangerous rocks)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_427">[427]</span></div>
- <div>She strikes rebounding; whence the shattered oak,</div>
- <div>So fierce a shock unable to withstand,</div>
- <div>Admits the sea. In at the gaping side</div>
- <div>The crowding waves gush with impetuous rage,</div>
- <div>Resistless, overwhelming; horrors seize</div>
- <div>The mariners; Death in their eyes appears,</div>
- <div>They stare, they lave, they pump, they swear, they pray:</div>
- <div>(Vain efforts!) still the battering waves rush in,</div>
- <div>Implacable, till, deluged by the foam,</div>
- <div>The ship sinks foundering in the vast abyss.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>John Arbuthnot, celebrated both as a physician and a man of letters,
-leaves us this bit of nonsense.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">John Arbuthnot</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>A DISSERTATION ON DUMPLINGS</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The dumpling is, indeed, an ancient institution and of foreign origin;
-but, alas! what were those dumplings? Nothing but a few lentils sodden
-together, moistened and cemented with a little seethed fat, not much
-unlike our grit or oatmeal pudding; yet were they of such esteem among
-the ancient Romans, that a statue was erected to Fulvius Agricola, the
-first inventor of these lentil dumplings. How unlike the gratitude
-shown by the public to our modern projectors!</p>
-
-<p>The Romans, though our conquerors, found themselves much outdone in
-dumplings by our forefathers, the Roman dumplings being no more to
-compare to those made by the Britons than a stone-dumpling is to a
-marrow-pudding; though, indeed, the British dumpling at that time was
-little better than what we call a stone-dumpling, nothing else but
-flour and water. But every generation growing wiser and wiser, the
-project was improved, and dumpling grew to be pudding. One projector
-found milk better than water; another introduced butter; some added
-marrow, others plums; and some found out the use of sugar; so that, to
-speak truth, we know not where to fix the genealogy or chronology of
-any of these pudding projectors; to the reproach of our historians,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_428">[428]</span>
-who ate so much pudding, yet have been so ungrateful to the first
-professors of this most noble science as not to find them a place in
-history....</p>
-
-<p>The invention of eggs was merely accidental, two or three of which
-having casually rolled from a shelf into the pudding which a goodwife
-was making, she found herself under the necessity either of throwing
-away her pudding or letting the eggs remain. But concluding, from the
-innocent quality of the eggs, that they would do no hurt, if they did
-no good, she wisely jumbled them all together, after having carefully
-picked out the shells. The consequence is easily imagined: the pudding
-became a pudding of puddings, and the use of eggs from thence took its
-date. The woman was sent for to Court to make puddings for King John,
-who then swayed the scepter, and gained such favour that she was the
-making of the whole family.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot conclude this paragraph without owning I received this
-important part of the history of pudding from Mr. Lawrence, of
-Wilson-Green, the greatest antiquary of the present age....</p>
-
-<p>From that time the English became so famous for puddings, that they are
-called pudding-eaters all over the world to this day.</p>
-
-<p>At her demise, the woman’s son was taken into favour, and made the
-King’s chief cook; and so great was his fame for puddings, that he was
-called Jack Pudding all over the kingdom, though, indeed, his real name
-was John Brand, as by the records of the kitchen you will find. This
-Jack Pudding became yet a greater favourite than his mother, insomuch
-that he had the King’s ear as well as his mouth at command, for the
-King, you must know, was a mighty lover of pudding. It is needless to
-enumerate the many sorts of pudding he made. He made every pudding
-except quaking pudding, which was solely invented by our friends of the
-<i>Bull and Mouth</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Lord Chesterfield, best known for his <i>Letters to his Son</i>, showed
-clever wit in his ideas and Phraseology.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_429">[429]</span></p>
-
-<p>Men who converse only with women are frivolous, effeminate puppies, and
-those who never converse with them are bears.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The desire of being pleased is universal. The desire of pleasing should
-be so too. Misers are not so much blamed for being misers as envied for
-being rich.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Dissimulation to a certain degree is as necessary in business as
-clothes are in the common intercourse of life; and a man would be as
-imprudent who should exhibit his inside naked, as he would be indecent
-if he produced his outside so.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Hymen comes whenever he is called, but Love only when he pleases.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>An abject flatterer has a worse opinion of others, and, if possible, of
-himself, than he ought to have.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A woman will be implicitly governed by the man whom she is in love
-with, but will not be directed by the man whom she esteems the most.
-The former is the result of passion, which is her character; the latter
-must be the effect of reasoning, which is by no means of the feminine
-gender.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The best moral virtues are those of which the vulgar are, perhaps, the
-best judges.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A fool never has thought, a madman has lost it; and an absent man is
-for the time without it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Advice is seldom welcome; and those who want it the most always like it
-the least.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Of the writers who come next, chronologically, Fielding, Sterne,
-Garrick, Smollett, Foote, and others of lesser degree, we can quote no
-extracts, owing to the continuous character of their work.</p>
-
-<p>At this time, humor was broad and wit coarse, yet the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_430">[430]</span> plays and novels
-of the period have lasted and retained their reputation.</p>
-
-<p>Which brings us to Samuel Johnson.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Johnson’s wit was ponderous, but as his is one of the greatest
-names in Eighteenth Century literature, we give a bit from <i>The
-Idler</i> which is not entirely inappropriate to the present day.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>ON LYING NEWS-WRITERS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">No species of literary men has lately been so much multiplied as the
-writers of news. Not many years ago the nation was content with one
-gazette; but now we have not only in the metropolis papers for every
-morning and every evening, but almost every large town has its weekly
-historian, who regularly circulates his periodical intelligence, and
-fills the villages of his district with conjectures on the events of
-war, and with debates on the true interest of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>To write news in its perfection requires such a combination of
-qualities, that a man completely fitted for the task is not always to
-be found. In Sir Henry Wotton’s jocular definition, “An ambassador is
-said to be a man of virtue sent abroad to tell lies for the advantage
-of his country; a news-writer is a man without virtue, who writes lies
-at home for his own profit.” To these compositions is required neither
-genius nor knowledge, neither industry nor sprightliness; but contempt
-of shame and indifference to truth are absolutely necessary. He who
-by a long familiarity with infamy has obtained these qualities, may
-confidently tell to-day what he intends to contradict to-morrow; he may
-affirm fearlessly what he knows that he shall be obliged to recant, and
-may write letters from Amsterdam or Dresden to himself.</p>
-
-<p>In a time of war the nation is always of one mind, eager to hear
-something good of themselves and ill of the enemy. At this time the
-task of news-writers is easy; they have nothing to do but to tell that
-a battle is expected, and afterward that a battle has been fought, in
-which we and our friends, whether conquering or conquered, did all, and
-our enemies did nothing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_431">[431]</span></p>
-
-<p>Scarcely anything awakens attention like a tale of cruelty. The writer
-of news never fails in the intermission of action to tell how the
-enemies murdered children and ravished virgins; and, if the scene of
-action be somewhat distant, scalps half the inhabitants of a province.</p>
-
-<p>Among the calamities of war may be justly numbered the diminution
-of the love of truth, by the falsehoods which interest dictates and
-credulity encourages. A peace will equally leave the warrior and
-relater of wars destitute of employment; and I know not whether more
-is to be dreaded from the streets filled with soldiers accustomed to
-plunder, or from garrets filled with scribblers accustomed to lie.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Also, lapsing into sheer nonsense verse, Doctor Johnson has left for
-our delectation these delightful rhymes.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As with my hat upon my head</div>
- <div class="i1">I walked along the Strand,</div>
- <div>I there did meet another man</div>
- <div class="i1">With his hat in his hand.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The tender infant, meek and mild,</div>
- <div class="i1">Fell down upon the stone;</div>
- <div>The nurse took up the squealing child,</div>
- <div class="i1">But still the child squealed on.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If a man who turnips cries,</div>
- <div>Cry not when his father dies,</div>
- <div>’Tis a proof that he would rather</div>
- <div>Have a turnip than a father.</div>
- </div>
-
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Oliver Goldsmith, humorous writer of plays and novels, left many world
-famous books.</p>
-
-<p>His rhymes are often of the nonsense variety, and, as was common in his
-day, abounded in puns, or punning ideas.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_432">[432]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>AN ELEGY ON THE DEATH OF A MAD DOG</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Good people all, of every sort,</div>
- <div class="i1">Give ear unto my song;</div>
- <div>And if you find it wondrous short</div>
- <div class="i1">It cannot hold you long.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In Islington there was a man</div>
- <div class="i1">Of whom the world might say</div>
- <div>That still a godly race he ran</div>
- <div class="i1">Whene’er he went to pray.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A kind and gentle heart he had,</div>
- <div class="i1">To comfort friends and foes;</div>
- <div>The naked every day he clad,</div>
- <div class="i1">When he put on his clothes.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And in that town a dog was found,</div>
- <div class="i1">As many dogs there be,</div>
- <div>Both mongrel, puppy, whelp, and hound,</div>
- <div class="i1">And curs of low degree.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>This dog and man at first were friends,</div>
- <div class="i1">But when a pique began,</div>
- <div>The dog, to gain his private ends,</div>
- <div class="i1">Went mad, and bit the man.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Around from all the neighbouring streets</div>
- <div class="i1">The wondering neighbours ran,</div>
- <div>And swore the dog had lost his wits</div>
- <div class="i1">To bite so good a man.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The wound it seemed both sore and sad</div>
- <div class="i1">To every Christian eye;</div>
- <div>And while they swore the dog was mad,</div>
- <div class="i1">They swore the man would die.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_433">[433]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But soon a wonder came to light,</div>
- <div class="i1">That show’d the rogues they lied:</div>
- <div>The man recover’d of the bite,</div>
- <div class="i1">The dog it was that died.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><i>AN ELEGY</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">ON THE GLORY OF HER SEX, MRS. MARY BLAIZE</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Good people all, with one accord,</div>
- <div class="i1">Lament for Madam Blaize,</div>
- <div>Who never wanted a good word&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">From those who spoke her praise.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The needy seldom pass’d her door,</div>
- <div class="i1">And always found her kind:</div>
- <div>She freely lent to all the poor&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Who left a pledge behind.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>She strove the neighborhood to please</div>
- <div class="i1">With manners wondrous winning;</div>
- <div>And never follow’d wicked ways&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Unless when she was sinning.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At church, in silks and satins new,</div>
- <div class="i1">With hoop of monstrous size,</div>
- <div>She never slumber’d in her pew&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">But when she shut her eyes.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Her love was sought, I do aver,</div>
- <div class="i1">By twenty beaux and more;</div>
- <div>The King himself has follow’d her&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">When she has walk’d before.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But now, her wealth and finery fled,</div>
- <div class="i1">Her hangers-on cut short all;</div>
- <div>The doctors found, when she was dead&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Her last disorder mortal.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_434">[434]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Let us lament, in sorrow sore,</div>
- <div class="i1">For Kent Street well may say,</div>
- <div>That had she lived a twelvemonth more</div>
- <div class="i1">She had not died to-day.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>PARSON GRAY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A quiet home had Parson Gray,</div>
- <div class="i1">Secluded in a vale;</div>
- <div>His daughters all were feminine,</div>
- <div class="i1">And all his sons were male.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>How faithfully did Parson Gray</div>
- <div class="i1">The bread of life dispense&mdash;</div>
- <div>Well “posted” in theology,</div>
- <div class="i1">And post and rail his fence.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Gainst all the vices of the age</div>
- <div class="i1">He manfully did battle;</div>
- <div>His chickens were a biped breed,</div>
- <div class="i1">And quadruped his cattle.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>No clock more punctually went,</div>
- <div class="i1">He ne’er delayed a minute&mdash;</div>
- <div>Nor ever empty was his purse,</div>
- <div class="i1">When he had money in it.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>His piety was ne’er denied;</div>
- <div class="i1">His truths hit saint and sinner;</div>
- <div>At morn he always breakfasted;</div>
- <div class="i1">He always dined at dinner.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He ne’er by any luck was grieved,</div>
- <div class="i1">By any care perplexed&mdash;</div>
- <div>No filcher he, though when he preached,</div>
- <div class="i1">He always “took” a text.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_435">[435]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As faithful characters he drew</div>
- <div class="i1">As mortal ever saw;</div>
- <div>But, ah! poor parson, when he died,</div>
- <div class="i1">His breath he could not draw.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>William Cowper for the most part writes with a gentle, genial spirit, a
-love of nature and a joy in the domestic relations</p>
-
-<p>His muse, when humorous, is also a bit stilted.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A FAITHFUL PICTURE OF ORDINARY SOCIETY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The circle formed, we sit in silent state,</div>
- <div>Like figures drawn upon a dial-plate.</div>
- <div>“Yes, ma’am” and “No, ma’am” uttered softly, show</div>
- <div>Every five minutes how the minutes go.</div>
- <div>Each individual, suffering a constraint&mdash;</div>
- <div>Poetry may, but colours cannot, paint&mdash;</div>
- <div>As if in close committee on the sky,</div>
- <div>Reports it hot or cold, or wet or dry,</div>
- <div>And finds a changing clime a happy source</div>
- <div>Of wise reflection and well-timed discourse.</div>
- <div>We next inquire, but softly and by stealth,</div>
- <div>Like conservators of the public health,</div>
- <div>Of epidemic throats, if such there are</div>
- <div>Of coughs and rheums, and phthisic and catarrh.</div>
- <div>That theme exhausted, a wide chasm ensues,</div>
- <div>Filled up at last with interesting news:</div>
- <div>Who danced with whom, and who are like to wed;</div>
- <div>And who is hanged, and who is brought to bed,</div>
- <div>But fear to call a more important cause,</div>
- <div>As if ’twere treason against English laws.</div>
- <div>The visit paid, with ecstasy we come,</div>
- <div>As from a seven years’ transportation, home</div>
- <div>And there resume an unembarrassed brow,</div>
- <div>Recovering what we lost we know not how,</div>
- <div>The faculties that seemed reduced to naught,</div>
- <div>Expression, and the privilege of thought.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_436">[436]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE COLUBRIAD</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Close by the threshold of a door nailed fast,</div>
- <div>Three kittens sat; each kitten looked aghast.</div>
- <div>I, passing swift and inattentive by,</div>
- <div>At the three kittens cast a careless eye;</div>
- <div>Not much concerned to know what they did there;</div>
- <div>Not deeming kittens worth a poet’s care.</div>
- <div>But presently, a loud and furious hiss</div>
- <div>Caused me to stop, and to exclaim, “What’s this</div>
- <div>When lo! upon the threshold met my view,</div>
- <div>With head erect, and eyes of fiery hue,</div>
- <div>A viper long as Count de Grasse’s queue.</div>
- <div>Forth from his head his forked tongue he throws,</div>
- <div>Darting it full against a kitten’s nose;</div>
- <div>Who, having never seen, in field or house,</div>
- <div>The like, sat still and silent as a mouse;</div>
- <div>Only projecting, with attention due,</div>
- <div>Her whiskered face, she asked him, “Who are you?”</div>
- <div>On to the hall went I, with pace not slow,</div>
- <div>But swift as lightning, for a long Dutch hoe:</div>
- <div>With which well armed, I hastened to the spot</div>
- <div>To find the viper&mdash;but I found him not.</div>
- <div>And, turning up the leaves and shrubs around,</div>
- <div>Found only that he was not to be found;</div>
- <div>But still the kittens, sitting as before,</div>
- <div>Sat watching close the bottom of the door.</div>
- <div>“I hope,” said I, “the villain I would kill</div>
- <div>Has slipped between the door and the door-sill;</div>
- <div>And if I make despatch, and follow hard,</div>
- <div>No doubt but I shall find him in the yard”:</div>
- <div>(For long ere now it should have been rehearsed,</div>
- <div>’Twas in the garden that I found him first.)</div>
- <div>E’en there I found him: there the full-grown cat</div>
- <div>His head, with velvet paw, did gently pat;</div>
- <div>As curious as the kittens erst had been</div>
- <div>To learn what this phenomenon might mean.</div>
- <div>Filled with heroic ardour at the sight,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_437">[437]</span></div>
- <div>And fearing every moment he would bite,</div>
- <div>And rob our household of our only cat</div>
- <div>That was of age to combat with a rat;</div>
- <div>With outstretched hoe I slew him at the door</div>
- <div>And taught him never to come there no more!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Richard Brinsley Sheridan, brilliant dramatist and gifted political
-orator, wrote many plays, from which it is not possible to quote at
-length.</p>
-
-<p>His epigrammatic style, and his humorous trend are shown in the bits
-here given.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><i>LET THE TOAST PASS</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">FROM “THE SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL”</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Here’s to the maiden of bashful fifteen;</div>
- <div class="i1">Here’s to the widow of fifty;</div>
- <div>Here’s to the flaunting extravagant quean,</div>
- <div class="i1">And here’s to the housewife that’s thrifty.</div>
- <div class="i4h">Let the toast pass,</div>
- <div class="i4h">Drink to the lass,</div>
- <div>I’ll warrant she’ll prove an excuse for the glass.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Here’s to the charmer whose dimples we prize,</div>
- <div class="i1">Now to the maid who has none, sir;</div>
- <div>Here’s to the girl with a pair of blue eyes,</div>
- <div class="i1">And here’s to the nymph with but one, sir.</div>
- <div class="i4h">Let the toast pass, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Here’s to the maid with a bosom of snow;</div>
- <div class="i1">Now to her that’s as brown as a berry;</div>
- <div>Here’s to the wife with a face full of woe,</div>
- <div class="i1">And now to the damsel that’s merry.</div>
- <div class="i4h">Let the toast pass, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For let ’em be clumsy, or let ’em be slim,</div>
- <div class="i1">Young or ancient, I care not a feather;</div>
- <div>So fill a pint bumper quite up to the brim,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_438">[438]</span></div>
- <div>So fill up your glasses, nay, fill to the brim,</div>
- <div class="i1">And let us e’en toast them together.</div>
- <div class="i4h">Let the toast pass, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>LORD ERSKINE’S SIMILE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Lord Erskine, at woman presuming to rail,</div>
- <div>Called a wife a tin canister tied to one’s tail;</div>
- <div>And fair Lady Anne, while this raillery he carries on,</div>
- <div>Seems hurt at his lordship’s degrading comparison.</div>
- <div>But wherefore degrading, if taken aright?</div>
- <div>A canister’s useful and polished and bright,</div>
- <div>And if dirt its original purity hide,</div>
- <div>’Tis the fault of the puppy to whom it is tied.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>SHERIDAN’S CALENDAR</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>January snowy,</div>
- <div>February flowy,</div>
- <div>March blowy,</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>April showry,</div>
- <div>May flowry,</div>
- <div>June bowery,</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>July moppy,</div>
- <div>August croppy,</div>
- <div>September poppy,</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>October breezy,</div>
- <div>November wheezy,</div>
- <div>December freezy.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>George Colman, the Younger, best known as a comic dramatist, also wrote
-many poetical travesties, which he published under various titles,
-including the well known one of Broad Grins. These compositions show a
-broad humor, not always in the best taste.</p>
-
-<p>George Canning, among other amusements, chose to ridicule<span class="pagenum" id="Page_439">[439]</span> the Sapphic
-rhymes of Southey, and wrote this burlesque upon the humanitarian
-sentiments of Southey in his younger days, as well as of the Sapphic
-stanzas in which he sometimes embodied them.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE FRIEND OF HUMANITY AND THE KNIFE-GRINDER</i></h4>
-<h5 class="smaller">FRIEND OF HUMANITY</h5>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Needy knife-grinder! whither are you going?</div>
- <div>Rough is the road; your wheel is out of order.</div>
- <div>Bleak blows the blast;&mdash;your hat has got a hole in’t;</div>
- <div class="i7h">So have your breeches!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Weary knife-grinder! little think the proud ones,</div>
- <div>Who in their coaches roll along the turnpike-</div>
- <div>Road, what hard work ’tis crying all day,</div>
- <div class="i8">“Knives and</div>
- <div class="i7h">Scissors to grind O!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tell me, knife-grinder, how came you to grind knives?</div>
- <div>Did some rich man tyrannically use you?</div>
- <div>Was it the squire? or parson of the parish?</div>
- <div class="i7h">Or the attorney?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Was it the squire for killing of his game? or</div>
- <div>Covetous parson for his tithes distraining?</div>
- <div>Or roguish lawyer made you lose your little</div>
- <div class="i7h">All in a lawsuit?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>(Have you not read the Rights of Man, by Tom Paine?)</div>
- <div>Drops of compassion tremble on my eyelids,</div>
- <div>Ready to fall as soon as you have told your</div>
- <div class="i7h">Pitiful story.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5 class="smaller">KNIFE-GRINDER</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Story! God bless you! I have none to tell, sir;</div>
- <div>Only, last night, a-drinking at the Chequers,</div>
- <div>This poor old hat and breeches, as you see, were</div>
- <div class="i7h">Torn in a scuffle.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_440">[440]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Constables came up for to take me into</div>
- <div>Custody; they took me before the justice;</div>
- <div>Justice Oldmixon put me into the parish</div>
- <div class="i7h">Stocks for a vagrant.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I should be glad to drink your honor’s health in</div>
- <div>A pot of beer, if you will give me sixpence;</div>
- <div>But for my part, I never love to meddle</div>
- <div class="i7h">With politics, sir.</div>
- </div>
-
- <h5 class="smaller">FRIEND TO HUMANITY</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I give thee sixpence! I will see thee damned first,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Wretch! whom no sense of wrongs can rouse to vengeance,&mdash;</div>
- <div>Sordid, unfeeling, reprobate, degraded,</div>
- <div class="i7h">Spiritless outcast!</div>
- </div>
-
-<p><i>(Kicks the knife-grinder, overturns his wheel, and exit in a
-transport of republican enthusiasm and universal philanthropy.)</i></p>
-
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Robert Burns, one of the chief names in Scottish literature, has been
-called the Dictionary of Poetical Quotations.</p>
-
-<p>Byron said, “The rank of Burns is the very first of his art”; and the
-many-sided Scotchman had both admirers and detractors galore.</p>
-
-<p>It has been noted that the Scotch have a sense of humor, “because
-it is a gift.” Burns’ sense of humor secures for him a high place
-among humorists, and though coarse in his expressions, he is not
-intentionally vulgar.</p>
-
- <h4><i>HOLY WILLIE’S PRAYER</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1 sm">Holy Willie was a small farmer, leading elder to Dr. Auld, austere in
-speech, scrupulous to all outward appearances, a professing Christian.
-He experienced, however, “a sore fall”; he was “found out” to be a
-hypocrite after Burns’ castigation, and was expelled the church for
-embezzling the money of the poor of the parish. His name was William
-Fisher.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>O Thou, wha in the Heavens dost dwell,</div>
- <div>Wha, as it pleases best thysel’,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_441">[441]</span></div>
- <div>Sends ane to Heaven and ten to Hell,</div>
- <div class="i4">A’ for thy glory,</div>
- <div>And no for onie guid or ill</div>
- <div class="i4">They’ve done afore thee.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I bless and praise thy matchless might,</div>
- <div>Whan thousands thou hast left in night,</div>
- <div>That I am here afore thy sight,</div>
- <div class="i4">For gifts and grace,</div>
- <div>A burning an’ a shining light</div>
- <div class="i4">To a’ this place.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What was I, or my generation,</div>
- <div>That I should get such exaltation?</div>
- <div>I, wha deserve such just damnation,</div>
- <div class="i4">For broken laws,</div>
- <div>Five thousand years ’fore my creation,</div>
- <div class="i4">Thro’ Adam’s cause.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When frae my mither’s womb I fell,</div>
- <div>Thou might hae plung’d me into Hell,</div>
- <div>To gnash my gums, to weep and wail</div>
- <div class="i4">In burnin’ lake,</div>
- <div>Where damned Devils roar and yell,</div>
- <div class="i4">Chain’d to a stake.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Yet I am here a chosen sample,</div>
- <div>To show thy grace is great and ample;</div>
- <div>I’m here a pillar in thy temple,</div>
- <div class="i4">Strong as a rock.</div>
- <div>A guide, a buckler, an example,</div>
- <div class="i4">To a’ thy flock.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>O L&mdash;d, thou kens what zeal I bear,</div>
- <div>When drinkers drink, and swearers swear,</div>
- <div>And singin’ here, and dancing there,</div>
- <div class="i4">Wi’ great and sma’:</div>
- <div>For I am keepit by thy fear,</div>
- <div class="i4">Free frae them a’.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_442">[442]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But yet, O L&mdash;d! confess I must,</div>
- <div>At times I’m fash’d wi’ fleshly lust,</div>
- <div>An’ sometimes, too, wi’ warldly trust&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i4">Vile self gets in;</div>
- <div>But thou remembers we are dust,</div>
- <div class="i4">Defil’d in sin.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>O L&mdash;d! yestreen, thou kens, wi’ Meg&mdash;</div>
- <div>Thy pardon I sincerely beg,</div>
- <div>O! may it ne’er be a livin’ plague</div>
- <div class="i4">To my dishonor,</div>
- <div>An’ I’ll ne’er lift a lawless leg</div>
- <div class="i4">Again upon her.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Besides, I farther maun allow,</div>
- <div>Wi’ Lizzie’s lass, three times I trow;</div>
- <div>But, L&mdash;d, that Friday I was fou,</div>
- <div class="i4">When I came near her,</div>
- <div>Or else thou kens thy servant true</div>
- <div class="i4">Wad ne’er hae steer’d her.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>May be thou lets this fleshly thorn</div>
- <div>Beset thy servant e’en and morn,</div>
- <div>Lest he owre high and proud should turn,</div>
- <div class="i4">’Cause he’s sae gifted;</div>
- <div>If sae, thy hand maun e’en be borne,</div>
- <div class="i4">Until thou lift it.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>L&mdash;d, bless thy chosen in this place,</div>
- <div>For here thou hast a chosen race;</div>
- <div>But G&mdash;d confound their stubborn face,</div>
- <div class="i4">And blast their name,</div>
- <div>Wha bring thine elders to disgrace,</div>
- <div class="i4">An’ public shame.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>L&mdash;d, mind Gawn Hamilton’s deserts,</div>
- <div>He drinks, an swears, an’ plays at cartes,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_443">[443]</span></div>
- <div>Yet has sae monie takin’ arts,</div>
- <div class="i4">Wi’ great and sma’,</div>
- <div>Frae God’s ain priests the people’s hearts</div>
- <div class="i4">He steals awa’.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>An’ whan we chasten’d him therefore,</div>
- <div>Thou kens how he bred sic a splore,</div>
- <div>As set the warld in a roar</div>
- <div class="i4">O’ laughin’ at us,</div>
- <div>Curse thou his basket and his store,</div>
- <div class="i4">Kail and potatoes.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>L&mdash;d, hear my earnest cry an’ pray’r,</div>
- <div>Against that presbyt’ry o’ Ayr;</div>
- <div>Thy strong right hand, L&mdash;d, make it bare,</div>
- <div class="i4">Upo’ their heads;</div>
- <div>L&mdash;d, weigh it down, and dinna spare,</div>
- <div class="i4">For their misdeeds.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>O L&mdash;d, my G&mdash;d, that glib-tongued Aiken,</div>
- <div>My very heart and saul are quakin’,</div>
- <div>To think how we stood sweatin’, shakin’,</div>
- <div class="i4">An’ swat wi’ dread,</div>
- <div>While he wi’ hingin’ lips gaed snakin’,</div>
- <div class="i4">And hid his head.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>L&mdash;d, in the day of vengeance try him,</div>
- <div>L&mdash;d, visit them wha did employ him,</div>
- <div>And pass not in thy mercy by ’em,</div>
- <div class="i4">Nor hear their pray’r;</div>
- <div>But, for thy people’s sake, destroy ’em,</div>
- <div class="i4">And dinna spare.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But, L&mdash;d, remember me and mine</div>
- <div>Wi’ mercies temp’ral and divine,</div>
- <div>That I for gear and grace may shine,</div>
- <div class="i4">Excelled by nane,</div>
- <div>An’ a’ the glory shall be thine,</div>
- <div class="i4">Amen, Amen.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_444">[444]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ADDRESS TO THE TOOTHACHE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My curse upon thy venomed stang,</div>
- <div>That shoots my tortured gums alang;</div>
- <div>An’ through my lugs gies mony a twang,</div>
- <div class="i4">Wi’ gnawing vengeance!</div>
- <div>Tearing my nerves wi’ bitter pang,</div>
- <div class="i4">Like racking engines.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When fevers burn, or ague freezes,</div>
- <div>Rheumatics gnaw, or cholic squeezes;</div>
- <div>Our neighbor’s sympathy may ease us,</div>
- <div class="i4">Wi’ pitying moan;</div>
- <div>But thee,&mdash;thou hell o’ a’ diseases,</div>
- <div class="i4">Aye mocks our groan.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Adown my beard the slavers trickle;</div>
- <div>I throw the wee stools o’er the mickle,</div>
- <div>As round the fire the giglets keckle</div>
- <div class="i4">To see me loup;</div>
- <div>While, raving mad, I wish a heckle</div>
- <div class="i4">Were in their doup.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>O’ a’ the numerous human dools,</div>
- <div>Ill har’sts, daft bargains, cutty-stools,</div>
- <div>Or worthy friends raked i’ the mools,</div>
- <div class="i4">Sad sight to see!</div>
- <div>The tricks o’ knaves or fash o’ fools,</div>
- <div class="i4">Thou bear’st the gree.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Where’er that place be priests ca’ hell,</div>
- <div>Whence a’ the tones o’ mis’ry yell,</div>
- <div>And rankèd plagues their numbers tell,</div>
- <div class="i4">In dreadfu’ raw,</div>
- <div>Thou, Toothache, surely bear’st the bell,</div>
- <div class="i4">Among them a’;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>O thou grim mischief-making chiel,</div>
- <div>That gars the notes of discord squeal,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_445">[445]</span></div>
- <div>Till daft mankind aft dance a reel</div>
- <div class="i4">In gore a shoe-thick!&mdash;</div>
- <div>Gie a’ the faes o’ Scotland’s weal</div>
- <div class="i4">A fowmond’s Toothache!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-<h3>THE NINETEENTH CENTURY</h3>
-
-<p>Quite lately, a well known humorist of the present day was making
-an after dinner speech. A voice from the audience called out,
-“Louder!&mdash;and funnier!”</p>
-
-<p>Some such voice must have called out to the World’s Humor at the close
-of the Eighteenth Century, for the beginning of the Nineteenth finds
-the Humorous element in literature decidedly louder and funnier.</p>
-
-<p>The Romantic Revival which at this time affected all literature and art
-has been called both the effect and the cause of the French Revolution.</p>
-
-<p>It has also been called the Renascence of Wonder, and as such it let
-loose hitherto hidebound fancies and imaginations on boundless and
-limitless flights. In these flights Humor showed speed and endurance
-quite equal to those of Romance or Poesy.</p>
-
-<p>Both in energy and methods, Humor came to the front with tremendous
-strides. In quality and quantity it forged ahead, both as a component
-part of more serious writings and also independently.</p>
-
-<p>And while this was a consummation devoutly to be wished, it makes
-harder the task of the Outliner.</p>
-
-<p>Many great writers held to the conviction that in Romantic poetry humor
-has no place. Others were avowed comic writers of verse or prose. But
-others still allowed humor to meet and mingle with their numbers, to a
-greater or less degree.</p>
-
-<p>And the difficulty of selection lies in the fact that the incidental
-humor is often funnier than the entirely humorous concept.</p>
-
-<p>It is hard to omit such as Jane Austen, Sir Walter Scott, William
-Wordsworth, yet quotations from their works, showing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_446">[446]</span> their humorous
-vein, would occupy space demanded by the humorists themselves.</p>
-
-<p>So, let us start in boldly with Sydney Smith, one of the most popular
-wits of all ages.</p>
-
-<p>Aside from this author’s epigrams and witty sayings, he wrote with
-great wisdom and insight about the principles of humor itself, from
-which we quote his sapient remarks on punning.</p>
-
-<p>“It is imagined that wit is a sort of inexplicable visitation, that
-it comes and goes with the rapidity of lightning, and that it is
-quite as unattainable as beauty or just proportion. I am so much of a
-contrary way of thinking, that I am convinced a man might sit down as
-systematically and as successfully, to the study of wit as he might to
-the study of mathematics; and I would answer for it that by giving up
-only six hours a day to being witty, he should come on prodigiously
-before midsummer, so that his friends should hardly know him again.
-For what is there to hinder the mind from gradually acquiring a habit
-of attending to the lighter relations of ideas in which wit consists?
-Punning grows upon everybody, and punning is the wit of words. I do not
-mean to say that it is so easy to acquire a habit of discovering new
-relations in <i>ideas</i> as in <i>words</i>, but the difficulty is
-not so much greater as to render it insuperable to habit. One man is
-unquestionably much better calculated for it by nature than another;
-but association, which gradually makes a bad speaker a good one, might
-give a man wit who had it not, if any man chose to be so absurd as to
-sit down to acquire it.</p>
-
-<p>“I have mentioned puns. They are, I believe, what I have denominated
-them&mdash;the wit of words. They are exactly the same to words which wit
-is to ideas, and consist in the sudden discovery of relations in
-language. A pun, to be perfect in its kind, should contain two distinct
-meanings; the one common and obvious, the other more remote; and in
-the notice which the mind takes of the relation between these two
-sets of words, and in the surprise which that relation excites, the
-pleasure of a pun consists. Miss Hamilton, in her book on Education,
-mentions the instance of a boy so very neglectful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_447">[447]</span> that he could never
-be brought to read the word <i>patriarchs</i>; but whenever he met with
-it he always pronounced it <i>partridges</i>. A friend of the writer
-observed to her that it could hardly be considered as a mere piece
-of negligence, for it appeared to him that the boy, in calling them
-partridges, was <i>making game</i> of the patriarchs. Now here are
-two distinct meanings contained in the same phrase: for to make game
-of the patriarchs is to laugh at them; or to make game of them is by
-a very extravagant and laughable sort of ignorance of words, to rank
-them among pheasants, partridges, and other such delicacies, which the
-law takes under its protection and calls game: and the whole pleasure
-derived from this pun consists in the sudden discovery that two such
-different meanings are referable to one form of expression. I have very
-little to say about puns; they are in very bad repute, and so they
-ought to be. The wit of language is so miserably inferior to the wit of
-ideas that it is very deservedly driven out of good company. Sometimes,
-indeed, a pun makes its appearance which seems for a moment to redeem
-its species; but we must not be deceived by them: it is a radically
-bad race of wit. By unremitting persecution, it has been at last got
-under, and driven into cloisters&mdash;from whence it must never again be
-suffered to emerge into the light of the world. One invaluable blessing
-produced by the banishment of punning is an immediate reduction of the
-number of wits. It is a wit of so low an order, and in which some sort
-of progress is so easily made, that the number of those endowed with
-the gift of wit would be nearly equal to those endowed with the gift of
-speech. The condition of putting together ideas in order to be witty
-operates much in the same salutary manner as the condition of finding
-rhymes in poetry;&mdash;it reduces the number of performers to those who
-have vigour enough to overcome incipient difficulties, and make a sort
-of provision that that which need not be done at all should be done
-<i>well</i> whenever it <i>is</i> done.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This quotation from one of Sydney Smith’s Speeches is characteristic of
-his style.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_448">[448]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>MRS. PARTINGTON</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">I do not mean to be disrespectful, but the attempt of the Lords to stop
-the progress of reform reminds me very forcibly of the great storm of
-Sidmouth, and of the conduct of the excellent Mrs. Partington on that
-occasion. In the winter of 1824 there set in a great flood upon that
-town&mdash;the tide rose to an incredible height&mdash;the waves rushed in upon
-the houses&mdash;and everything was threatened with destruction. In the
-midst of this sublime storm, Dame Partington, who lived upon the beach,
-was seen at the door of her house with mop and pattens, trundling her
-mop, and squeezing out the seawater, and vigorously pushing away the
-Atlantic Ocean. The Atlantic was roused; Mrs. Partington’s spirit was
-up; but I need not tell you that the contest was unequal. The Atlantic
-Ocean beat Mrs. Partington. She was excellent at a slop or a puddle,
-but she should not have meddled with a tempest.&mdash;(From a Speech at
-Taunton in 1831.)</p>
-
-<p>And we add the ever popular Recipe for a Salad.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>SALAD</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>To make this condiment, your poet begs</div>
- <div>The pounded yellow of two hard-boiled eggs.</div>
- <div>Two boiled potatoes, passed through kitchen-sieve,</div>
- <div>Smoothness and softness to the salad give.</div>
- <div>Let onion atoms lurk within the bowl,</div>
- <div>And, half-suspected, animate the whole.</div>
- <div>Of mordant mustard add a single spoon,</div>
- <div>Distrust the condiment that bites so soon;</div>
- <div>But deem it not, thou man of herbs, a fault,</div>
- <div>To add a double quantity of salt.</div>
- <div>And, lastly, o’er the flavoured compound toss</div>
- <div>A magic soup-spoon of anchovy sauce.</div>
- <div>Oh, green and glorious! Oh, herbaceous treat!</div>
- <div>’Twould tempt the dying anchorite to eat;</div>
- <div>Back to the world he’d turn his fleeting soul,</div>
- <div>And plunge his fingers in the salad bowl!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_449">[449]</span></div>
- <div>Serenely full, the epicure would say,</div>
- <div>Fate cannot harm me, I have dined to-day!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Charles Lamb, beloved alike of the humorous and serious minded,
-disagrees with Sydney Smith regarding the pun.</p>
-
-<p>His opinion,</p>
-
-<p>“A pun is a noble thing <i>per se</i>. It is a sole digest of
-reflection; it is entire; it fills the mind; it is as perfect as a
-sonnet&mdash;better. It limps ashamed in the train and retinue of humour; it
-knows it should have an establishment of its own.”</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">is shown in this instance.</p>
-
-<p>Lamb was reserved among strangers. A friend, about to introduce him to
-a circle of new faces, said, “Now will you promise, <i>Lamb</i>, not to
-be as <i>sheepish</i> as usual?” Charles replied, with a rustic air, “I
-<i>wool</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Such masterpieces as Lamb’s <i>Dissertation Upon Roast Pig</i>, and his
-<i>Farewell to Tobacco</i> are too lengthy to quote. We give some of
-his shorter witty allusions.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Coleridge went to Germany, and left word to Lamb that if he wished any
-information on any subject, he might apply to him (i.e., by letter), so
-Lamb sent him the following abstruse propositions, to which, however,
-Coleridge did not deign an answer.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Whether God loves a dying angel better than a true man?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Whether the archangel Uriel <i>could</i> knowingly affirm an untruth,
-and whether, if he <i>could</i>, he <i>would</i>?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Whether the higher order of seraphim illuminati ever <i>sneeze</i>?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Whether an immortal and amenable soul may not come <i>to be damned at
-last</i>, and the man never suspect it beforehand?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_450">[450]</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Good Actions.</span>&mdash;The greatest pleasure I know is to do a good
-action by stealth, and to have it found out by accident.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Paying for Things.</span>&mdash;One cannot bear to pay for articles he
-used to get for nothing. When Adam laid out his first penny upon
-nonpareils at some stall in Mesopotamia, I think it went hard with
-him, reflecting upon his old goodly orchard, where he had so many for
-nothing.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nothing to do.</span>&mdash;Positively the best thing a man can have to do
-is nothing, and, <i>next to that</i>, perhaps, good works.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Robert Southey, though one time Poet Laureate, is not to be too highly
-rated as a writer. His humorous poems are largely of the “jagged
-categorical” type, and are whimseys rather than wit.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding the aspersion even then cast upon the pun, he regards
-it as a legitimate vehicle.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE TEN LOST TRIBES OF ISRAEL</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">That the lost ten tribes of Israel may be found in London, is a
-discovery which any person may suppose he has made, when he walks for
-the first time from the city to Wapping. That the tribes of Judah and
-Benjamin nourish there is known to all mankind; and from them have
-sprung the Scripites, and the Omniumites, and the Threepercentites.</p>
-
-<p>But it is not so well known that many other tribes noticed in the Old
-Testament are to be found in this island of Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>There are the Hittites, who excel in one branch of gymnastics. And
-there are the Amorites, who are to be found in town and country;
-and there are the Gadites, who frequent watering-places, and take
-picturesque tours.</p>
-
-<p>Among the Gadites I shall have some of my best readers, who being in
-good humour with themselves and with everything else, except on a
-rainy day, will even then be in good humour with me. There will be the
-Amorites in their company;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_451">[451]</span> and among the Amorites, too, there will be
-some who in the overflowing of their love, will have some liking to
-spare for the doctor and his faithful memorialist.</p>
-
-<p>The poets, those especially who deal in erotics, lyrics, sentimentals,
-or sonnets, are the Ah-oh-ites.</p>
-
-<p>The gentlemen who speculate in chapels are the Puhites.</p>
-
-<p>The chief seat of the Simeonites is at Cambridge; but they are spread
-over the land. So are the Man-ass-ites, of whom the finest specimens
-are to be seen in St. James’s Street, at the fashionable time of day
-for exhibiting the dress and the person upon the pavement.</p>
-
-<p>The freemasons are of the family of the Jachinites.</p>
-
-<p>The female Haggites are to be seen, in low life wheeling barrows, and
-in high life seated at card-tables.</p>
-
-<p>The Shuhamites are the cordwainers.</p>
-
-<p>The Teamanites attend the sales of the East India Company.</p>
-
-<p>Sir James Mackintosh, and Sir James Scarlett, and Sir James Graham
-belong to the Jim-nites.</p>
-
-<p>Who are the Gazathites, if the people of London are not, where anything
-is to be seen? All of them are the Gettites when they can, all would be
-Havites if they could.</p>
-
-<p>The journalists should be Geshurites, if they answered to their
-profession; instead of this they generally turn out to be Geshuwrongs.</p>
-
-<p>There are, however, three tribes in England, not named in the Old
-Testament, who considerably outnumber all the rest. These are the High
-Vulgarites, who are the children of Rahank and Phashan, the Middle
-Vulgarites, who are the children of Mammon and Terade, and the Low
-Vulgarities, who are the children of Tahag, Rahag, and Bohobtay-il.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;From “<i>The Doctor</i>.”</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE WELL OF ST. KEYNE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A well there is in the West country,</div>
- <div class="i1">And a clearer one never was seen;</div>
- <div>There is not a wife in the West country</div>
- <div class="i1">But has heard of the Well of St. Keyne.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_452">[452]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>An oak and an elm tree stand beside,</div>
- <div class="i1">And behind does an ash-tree grow,</div>
- <div>And a willow from the bank above</div>
- <div class="i1">Droops to the water below.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A traveller came to the Well of St. Keyne;</div>
- <div class="i1">Pleasant it was to his eye,</div>
- <div>For from cock-crow he had been travelling,</div>
- <div class="i1">And there was not a cloud in the sky.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He drank of the water so cool and clear,</div>
- <div class="i1">For thirsty and hot was he,</div>
- <div>And he sat down upon the bank,</div>
- <div class="i1">Under the willow-tree.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There came a man from the neighboring town</div>
- <div class="i1">At the well to fill his pail,</div>
- <div>On the well-side he rested it,</div>
- <div class="i1">And bade the stranger hail.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Now art thou a bachelor, stranger?” quoth he,</div>
- <div class="i1">“For an if thou hast a wife,</div>
- <div>The happiest draught thou hast drank this day</div>
- <div class="i1">That ever thou didst in thy life.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“O has your good woman, if one you have,</div>
- <div class="i1">In Cornwall ever been?</div>
- <div>For an if she have, I’ll venture my life</div>
- <div class="i1">She has drunk of the Well of St. Keyne.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I have left a good woman who never was here,”</div>
- <div class="i1">The stranger he made reply;</div>
- <div>“But that my draught should be better for that,</div>
- <div class="i1">I pray you answer me why.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“St. Keyne,” quoth the countryman, “many a time</div>
- <div class="i1">Drank of this crystal well,</div>
- <div>And before the angel summoned her</div>
- <div class="i1">She laid on the water a spell.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_453">[453]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“If the husband of this gifted well</div>
- <div class="i1">Shall drink before his wife,</div>
- <div>A happy man thenceforth is he,</div>
- <div class="i1">For he shall be master for life.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“But if the wife should drink of it first,</div>
- <div class="i1">Heaven help the husband then!”</div>
- <div>The stranger stooped to the Well of St. Keyne,</div>
- <div class="i1">And drank of the waters again.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“You drank of the well, I warrant, betimes?”</div>
- <div class="i1">He to the countryman said.</div>
- <div>But the countryman smiled as the stranger spake,</div>
- <div class="i1">And sheepishly shook his head.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I hastened, as soon as the wedding was done,</div>
- <div class="i1">And left my wife in the porch.</div>
- <div>But i’ faith, she had been wiser than me,</div>
- <div class="i1">For she took a bottle to church.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Theodore Hook, recorded as “a playwright, a punster and a practical
-joker,” also gives a dissertation on puns and a bit of helpful advice.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“Personal deformities or constitutional calamities are always to be
-laid hold of. If anybody tells you that a dear friend has lost his
-sight, observe that it will make him more hospitable than ever, since
-now he would be glad <i>to see anybody</i>. If a clergyman breaks his
-leg, remark that he is no longer a clergyman, but a <i>lame man</i>.
-If a poet is seized with apoplexy, affect to disbelieve it, though you
-know it to be true, in order to say, ‘Poeta nascitur non <i>fit</i>’;
-and then, to carry the joke one step farther, add that “it is not a
-<i>fit</i> subject for a jest.” A man falling into a tan-pit you may
-call ‘sinking in the <i>sublime</i>’; a climbing boy suffocated in a
-chimney meets with a <i>sootable</i> death; and a pretty girl having
-caught the small-pox is to be much <i>pitted</i>. On the subject of
-the ear and its defects, talk first of something in which a <i>cow
-sticks</i>, and end by telling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_454">[454]</span> the story of the man who, having taken
-great pains to explain something to his companion, at last got into a
-rage at his apparent stupidity, and exclaimed, ‘Why, my dear sir, don’t
-you comprehend? The thing is as plain as A B C.’ ‘I dare say it is,’
-said the other, ‘but I am D E F.’</p>
-
-<p>“It may be as well to give the beginner something of a notion of
-the use he may make of the most ordinary words, for the purposes of
-quibbleism.</p>
-
-<p>“The loss of a hat is always <i>felt</i>; if you don’t like sugar you
-may <i>lump</i> it; a glazier is a <i>panes</i>-taking man; candles are
-burnt because wick-ed things always come to <i>light</i>; a lady who
-takes you home from a party is kind in her <i>carriage</i>, and you
-say “nunc est <i>ridendum</i>” when you step into it; if it happens
-to be a chariot, she is a <i>charitable</i> person; birds’-nests and
-king-killing are synonymous, because they are <i>high trees on</i>;
-a Bill for building a bridge should be sanctioned by the Court of
-<i>Arches</i>, as well as the House of <i>Piers</i>; when a man is
-dull, he goes to the sea-side to <i>Brighton</i>; a Cockney lover, when
-sentimental, should live in <i>Heigh Hoburn</i>; the greatest fibber
-is the man most to <i>re-lie</i> upon; a dean expecting a bishopric
-looks <i>for lawn</i>; a <i>sui</i>cide kills pigs, and not himself;
-a butcher is a gross man, but a fig-seller is a <i>grocer</i>; Joshua
-never had a father or mother, because he was the son of <i>Nun</i>;
-your grandmother and your great-grandmother were your <i>aunt’s
-sisters</i>; a leg of mutton is better than heaven, because nothing is
-better than heaven, and a leg of mutton is better than nothing; races
-are matters of <i>course</i>; an ass can never be a horse, although he
-may be a <i>mayor</i>; the Venerable Bede was the mother of Pearl; a
-baker makes bread when he <i>kneads</i> it; a doctor cannot be a doctor
-all at once, because he comes to it by <i>degrees</i>; a man hanged at
-Newgate has taken a <i>drop</i> too much; the <i>bridle</i> day is that
-on which a man leads a woman to the halter. Never mind the aspirate;
-punning’s all fair, as the archbishop said in the dream.</p>
-
-<p>“Puns interrogatory are at times serviceable. You meet a man carrying
-a hare; ask him if it is his own <i>hare</i>, or a wig&mdash;there you
-stump him. Why is Parliament Street like a compendium? Because it goes
-to a <i>bridge</i>. Why is a man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_455">[455]</span> murdering his mother in a garret a
-worthy person? Because he is <i>above</i> committing a crime. Instances
-of this kind are innumerable. If you want to render your question
-particularly pointed, you are, after asking it once or twice, to say
-‘D’ye give it up?’ Then favour your friends with the solution.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Richard Harris Barham, author of the <i>Ingoldsby Legends</i>, was an
-intimate friend of Hook.</p>
-
-<p>Like many another true humorist he was of the clergy, being a minor
-canon of St. Paul’s cathedral.</p>
-
-<p>His delightful tales are too long to quote, and only some shorter
-pieces may be given.</p>
-
-<p>Barham was among the first to raise parody to a recognized art.</p>
-
-
-
-<h4><i>A “TRUE AND ORIGINAL” VERSION</i></h4>
-
-<p class="sm p1">In the autumn of 1824, Captain Medwin having hinted that certain
-beautiful lines on the burial of Sir John Moore might have been the
-production of Lord Byron’s muse, the late Mr. Sidney Taylor, somewhat
-indignantly, claimed them for their rightful owner, the Rev. Charles
-Wolfe. During the controversy a third claimant started up in the person
-of a <i>soi-disant</i> “Doctor Marshall,” who turned out to be a Durham
-blacksmith, and <i>his</i> pretensions a hoax. It was then that a
-certain “Dr. Peppercorn” put forth his pretensions, to what he averred
-was the only “true and original” version, viz.&mdash;</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Not a <i>sous</i> had he got,&mdash;not a guinea or note,</div>
- <div class="i1">And he looked confoundedly flurried,</div>
- <div>As he bolted away without paying his shot,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the landlady after him hurried.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>We saw him again at dead of night,</div>
- <div class="i1">When home from the Club returning;</div>
- <div>We twigged the Doctor beneath the light</div>
- <div class="i1">Of the gas-lamp brilliantly burning.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>All bare, and exposed to the midnight dews,</div>
- <div class="i1">Reclined in the gutter we found him;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_456">[456]</span></div>
- <div>And he looked like a gentleman taking a snooze,</div>
- <div class="i1">With his <i>Marshall</i> cloak around him.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“The Doctor’s as drunk as the devil,” we said,</div>
- <div class="i1">And we managed a shutter to borrow;</div>
- <div>We raised him, and sighed at the thought that his head</div>
- <div class="i1">Would “consumedly ache” on the morrow.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>We bore him home, and we put him to bed,</div>
- <div class="i1">And we told his wife and his daughter</div>
- <div>To give him, next morning a couple of red</div>
- <div class="i1">Herrings, with soda water.&mdash;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Loudly they talked of his money that’s gone,</div>
- <div class="i1">And his Lady began to upbraid him;</div>
- <div>But little he reck’d, so they let him snore on</div>
- <div class="i1">’Neath the counterpane just as we laid him.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>We tuck’d him in, and had hardly done</div>
- <div class="i1">When, beneath the window calling,</div>
- <div>We heard the rough voice of a son of a gun</div>
- <div class="i1">Of a watchman “One o’clock!” bawling.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Slowly and sadly we all walked down</div>
- <div class="i1">From his room in the uppermost story;</div>
- <div>A rushlight we placed on the cold hearthstone,</div>
- <div class="i1">And we left him alone in his glory.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>RAISING THE DEVIL</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">A LEGEND OF CORNELIUS AGRIPPA</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“And hast thou nerve enough?” he said,</div>
- <div>That gray Old Man, above whose head</div>
- <div class="i2">Unnumbered years had rolled,&mdash;</div>
- <div>“And hast thou nerve to view,” he cried,</div>
- <div class="i1">“The incarnate Fiend that Heaven defied!</div>
- <div class="i2">&mdash;Art thou indeed so bold?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_457">[457]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Say, canst thou, with unshrinking gaze,</div>
- <div>Sustain, rash youth, the withering blaze</div>
- <div class="i1">Of that unearthly eye,</div>
- <div>That blasts where’er it lights,&mdash;the breath</div>
- <div>That, like the Simoom, scatters death</div>
- <div class="i2">On all that yet <i>can</i> die!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>&mdash;“Darest thou confront that fearful form</div>
- <div>That rides the whirlwind and the storm,</div>
- <div class="i2">In wild unholy revel!</div>
- <div>The terrors of that blasted brow,</div>
- <div>Archangel’s once,&mdash;though ruined now&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i2">&mdash;Ay,&mdash;dar’st thou face <span class="smcap">The Devil</span>?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I dare!” the desperate youth replied,</div>
- <div>And placed him by that Old Man’s side,</div>
- <div class="i2">In fierce and frantic glee,</div>
- <div>Unblenched his cheek, and firm his limb:</div>
- <div>&mdash;“No paltry juggling Fiend, but <span class="smcap">Him</span>,</div>
- <div class="i2">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Devil</span>! I fain would see!&mdash;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“In all his Gorgon terrors clad,</div>
- <div>His worst, his fellest shape!” the Lad</div>
- <div class="i2">Rejoined in reckless tone.&mdash;</div>
- <div>&mdash;“Have then thy wish!” Agrippa said,</div>
- <div>And sighed, and shook his hoary head,</div>
- <div class="i2">With many a bitter groan.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He drew the Mystic circle’s bound,</div>
- <div>With skull and cross-bones fenced around;</div>
- <div class="i2">He traced full many a sigil there;</div>
- <div>He muttered many a backward pray’r,</div>
- <div class="i2">That sounded like a curse&mdash;</div>
- <div>“He comes!”&mdash;he cried with wild grimace,</div>
- <div>“The fellest of Apollyon’s race!”&mdash;</div>
- <div>&mdash;Then in his startled pupil’s face</div>
- <div class="i2">He dashed&mdash;an <span class="smcap">Empty Purse</span>!!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_458">[458]</span></p>
-
-<p>Thomas De Quincey, one of the best of humorists wrote <i>Confessions of
-an Opium Eater</i>, with alas, all the necessary conditions to speak at
-first hand.</p>
-
-<p>His clever essay, <i>Murder as a Fine Art</i>, we trust, was not
-founded on facts. This delightful bit of foolery, one of his many witty
-effusions, can be given only in part.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>MURDER AS ONE OF THE FINE ARTS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The first murder is familiar to you all. As the inventor of murder, and
-the father of the art, Cain must have been a man of first-rate genius.
-All the Cains were men of genius. Tubal Cain invented tubes, I think,
-or some such thing. But, whatever might be the originality and genius
-of the artist, every art was then in its infancy, and the works must be
-criticised with the recollection of that fact. Even Tubal’s work would
-probably be little approved at this day in Sheffield; and therefore
-of Cain (Cain senior, I mean) it is no disparagement to say, that his
-performance was but so-so. Milton, however, is supposed to have thought
-differently. By his way of relating the case, it should seem to have
-been rather a pet murder with him, for he retouches it with an apparent
-anxiety for its picturesque effect:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft">“Whereat he inly raged; and, as they talk’d,</div>
- <div>Smote him into the midriff with a stone</div>
- <div>That beat out life. He fell; and, deadly pale,</div>
- <div>Groan’d out his soul <i>with gushing blood effused</i>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Upon this, Richardson the painter, who had an eye for effect, remarks
-as follows, in his <i>Notes on Paradise Lost</i>, p. 497: “It has been
-thought,” says he, “that Cain beat&mdash;as the common saying is&mdash;the breath
-out of his brother’s body with a great stone; Milton gives in to this,
-with the addition, however, of a large wound.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But it is time that I should say a few words about the principles
-of murder, not with a view to regulate your practice,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_459">[459]</span> but your
-judgment. As to old women, and the mob of newspaper readers, they are
-pleased with anything, provided it is bloody enough; but the mind of
-sensibility requires something more. <i>First</i>, then, let us speak
-of the kind of person who is adapted to the purpose of the murderer;
-<i>secondly</i>, of the place where; <i>thirdly</i>, of the time when,
-and other little circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>As to the person, I suppose that it is evident that he ought to be a
-good man; because, if he were not, he might himself, by possibility, be
-contemplating murder at the very time; and such “diamond-cut-diamond”
-tussles, though pleasant enough when nothing better is stirring, are
-really not what a critic can allow himself to call murders.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The subject chosen ought to be in good health: for it is absolutely
-barbarous to murder a sick person, who is usually quite unable to
-bear it. On this principle, no tailor ought to be chosen who is above
-twenty-five, for after that age he is sure to be dyspeptic. Or at
-least, if a man will hunt in that warren, he will of course think it
-his duty, on the old established equation, to murder some multiple of
-9&mdash;say 18, 27, or 36. And here, in this benign attention to the comfort
-of sick people, you will observe the usual effect of a fine art to
-soften and refine the feelings. The world in general, gentlemen, are
-very bloody-minded; and all they want in a murder is a copious effusion
-of blood; gaudy display in this point is enough for <i>them</i>. But
-the enlightened connoisseur is more refined in his taste; and from our
-art, as from all the other liberal arts when thoroughly mastered, the
-result is, to humanise the heart.</p>
-
-<p>A philosophic friend, well known for his philanthropy and general
-benignity, suggests that the subject chosen ought also to have a
-family of young children wholly dependent upon his exertions, by
-way of deepening the pathos. And, undoubtedly, this is a judicious
-caution. Yet I would not insist too keenly on such a condition. Severe
-good taste unquestionably suggests it; but still, where the man was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_460">[460]</span>
-otherwise unobjectionable in point of morals and health, I would not
-look with too curious a jealousy to a restriction which might have the
-effect of narrowing the artist’s sphere.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the person. As to the time, the place, and the tools, I
-have many things to say, which at present I have no room for. The
-good sense of the practitioner has usually directed him to night and
-privacy. Yet there have not been wanting cases where this rule was
-departed from with excellent effect.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lord Byron</span>, whose works are variously adjudged by the critics,
-owes much to the fact that he was possessed of a distinct and definite
-sense of humor.</p>
-
-<p>It is that which saves many of his long and dull stretches of verse
-from utter unreadability.</p>
-
-<p>His facile rhymes, apparently tossed off with little of or no effort,
-embody in the best possible manner his graceful fun.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>ottava rima</i> of Don Juan, though often careless, even
-slovenly as to technical details, is surely the meter best fitted for
-the theme.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Juan embarked&mdash;the ship got under way,</div>
- <div class="i1">The wind was fair, the water passing rough;</div>
- <div>A devil of a sea rolls in that bay,</div>
- <div class="i1">As I, who’ve crossed it oft, know well enough;</div>
- <div>And, standing upon deck, the dashing spray</div>
- <div class="i1">Flies in one’s face, and makes it weather-tough;</div>
- <div>And there he stood to take, and take again,</div>
- <div>His first&mdash;perhaps his last&mdash;farewell of Spain.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I can’t but say it is an awkward sight</div>
- <div class="i1">To see one’s native land receding through</div>
- <div>The growing waters; it unmans one quite,</div>
- <div class="i1">Especially when life is rather new.</div>
- <div>I recollect Great Britain’s coast looks white,</div>
- <div class="i1">But almost every other country’s blue,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_461">[461]</span></div>
- <div>When gazing on them, mystified by distance,</div>
- <div>We enter on our nautical existence.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So Juan stood, bewildered on the deck:</div>
- <div class="i1">The wind sung, cordage strained, and sailors swore,</div>
- <div>And the ship creaked, the town became a speck,</div>
- <div class="i1">From which away so fair and fast they bore.</div>
- <div>The best of remedies is a beef-steak</div>
- <div class="i1">Against sea-sickness: try it, sir, before</div>
- <div>You sneer, and I assure you this is true,</div>
- <div>For I have found it answer&mdash;so may you.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“And oh! if e’er I should forget, I swear&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">But that’s impossible, and cannot be&mdash;</div>
- <div>Sooner shall this blue ocean melt to air,</div>
- <div class="i1">Sooner shall earth resolve itself to sea,</div>
- <div>Than I resign thine image, oh, my fair!</div>
- <div class="i1">Or think of anything excepting thee;</div>
- <div>A mind diseased no remedy can physic.”</div>
- <div>(Here the ship gave a lurch and he grew sea-sick.)</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Sooner shall heaven kiss earth!” (Here he fell sicker.)</div>
- <div class="i1">“Oh, Julia! what is every other woe?</div>
- <div>(For God’s sake let me have a glass of liquor;</div>
- <div class="i1">Pedro, Battista, help me down below.)</div>
- <div>Julia, my love! (you rascal, Pedro, quicker)</div>
- <div class="i1">Oh, Julia! (this curst vessel pitches so)</div>
- <div>Beloved Julia, hear me still beseeching!”</div>
- <div>(Here he grew inarticulate with retching.)</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He felt that chilling heaviness of heart,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or rather stomach, which, alas! attends,</div>
- <div>Beyond the best apothecary’s art,</div>
- <div class="i1">The loss of love, the treachery of friends,</div>
- <div>Or death of those we dote on, when a part</div>
- <div class="i1">Of us dies with them as each fond hope ends.</div>
- <div>No doubt he would have been much more pathetic,</div>
- <div>But the sea acted as a strong emetic.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_462">[462]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>AFTER SWIMMING THE HELLESPONT</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If, in the month of dark December,</div>
- <div class="i1">Leander, who was nightly wont</div>
- <div>(What maid will not the tale remember?)</div>
- <div class="i1">To cross thy stream, broad Hellespont;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If, when the wint’ry tempest roar’d,</div>
- <div class="i1">He sped to Hero nothing loath,</div>
- <div>And thus of old thy current pour’d,</div>
- <div class="i1">Fair Venus! how I pity both!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For <i>me</i>, degenerate, modern wretch,</div>
- <div class="i1">Though in the genial month of May,</div>
- <div>My dripping limbs I faintly stretch,</div>
- <div class="i1">And think I’ve done a feat to-day.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But since he crossed the rapid tide,</div>
- <div class="i1">According to the doubtful story,</div>
- <div>To woo&mdash;and&mdash;Lord knows what beside,</div>
- <div class="i1">And swam for Love, as I for Glory;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Twere hard to say who fared the best:</div>
- <div class="i1">Sad mortals, thus the gods still plague you!</div>
- <div>He lost his labour, I my jest;</div>
- <div class="i1">For he was drowned, and I’ve the ague.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Thomas Hood, versatile alike in humorous or pathetic vein, was a
-prolific and successful punster. If the form could be forgiven anybody
-it must be condoned in his case. He also was apt at parody and often
-blended pathos and tragedy with his humorous work.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>FAITHLESS NELLY GRAY</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">A PATHETIC BALLAD</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ben Battle was a soldier bold,</div>
- <div class="i1">And used to war’s alarms;</div>
- <div>But a cannon-ball took off his legs,</div>
- <div class="i1">So he laid down his arms!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_463">[463]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now, as they bore him off the field,</div>
- <div class="i1">Said he, “Let others shoot,</div>
- <div>For here I leave my second leg,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the Forty-Second Foot!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The army-surgeons made him limbs;</div>
- <div class="i1">Said he, “they’re only pegs:</div>
- <div>But there’s as wooden Members quite</div>
- <div class="i1">As represent my legs!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now Ben he loved a pretty maid,</div>
- <div class="i1">Her name was Nelly Gray;</div>
- <div>So he went to pay her his devours,</div>
- <div class="i1">When he devoured his pay!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But when he called on Nelly Gray,</div>
- <div class="i1">She made him quite a scoff;</div>
- <div>And when she saw his wooden legs,</div>
- <div class="i1">Began to take them off!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“O, Nelly Gray! O, Nelly Gray!</div>
- <div class="i1">Is this your love so warm?</div>
- <div>The love that loves a scarlet coat</div>
- <div class="i1">Should be more uniform!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Said she, “I loved a soldier once,</div>
- <div class="i1">For he was blithe and brave;</div>
- <div>But I will never have a man</div>
- <div class="i1">With both legs in the grave!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Before you had those timber toes,</div>
- <div class="i1">Your love I did allow;</div>
- <div>But then, you know, you stand upon</div>
- <div class="i1">Another footing now!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“O, Nelly Gray! O, Nelly Gray!</div>
- <div class="i1">For all your jeering speeches;</div>
- <div>At duty’s call I left my legs,</div>
- <div class="i1">In Badajos’s <i>breeches</i>!”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_464">[464]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Why then,” said she, “you’ve lost the feet</div>
- <div class="i1">Of legs in war’s alarms,</div>
- <div>And now you cannot wear your shoes</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon your feats of arms!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“O, false and fickle Nelly Gray!</div>
- <div class="i1">I know why you refuse:&mdash;</div>
- <div>Though I’ve no feet&mdash;some other man</div>
- <div class="i1">Is standing in my shoes!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I wish I ne’er had seen your face;</div>
- <div class="i1">But now, a long farewell!</div>
- <div>For you will be my death;&mdash;alas!</div>
- <div class="i1">You will not be my <i>Nell</i>!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now when he went from Nelly Gray</div>
- <div class="i1">His heart so heavy got,</div>
- <div>And life was such a burden grown,</div>
- <div class="i1">It made him take a knot!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So round his melancholy neck</div>
- <div class="i1">A rope he did entwine,</div>
- <div>And, for his second time in life,</div>
- <div class="i1">Enlisted in the Line.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One end he tied around a beam,</div>
- <div class="i1">And then removed his pegs,</div>
- <div>And, as his legs were off&mdash;of course</div>
- <div class="i1">He soon was off his legs!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And there he hung, till he was dead</div>
- <div class="i1">As any nail in town&mdash;</div>
- <div>For though distress had cut him up,</div>
- <div class="i1">It could not cut him down!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A dozen men sat on his corpse,</div>
- <div class="i1">To find out why he died&mdash;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_465">[465]</span></div>
- <div>And they buried Ben in four cross-roads,</div>
- <div class="i1">With a <i>stake</i> in his inside!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>NO!</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">No sun&mdash;no moon!</div>
- <div class="i1">No morn&mdash;no noon&mdash;</div>
- <div>No dawn&mdash;no dusk&mdash;no proper time of day&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No sky&mdash;no earthly view&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No distance looking blue&mdash;</div>
- <div>No road&mdash;no street&mdash;no “t’other side the way”&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No end to any Row&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No indications where the Crescents go&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No top to any steeple&mdash;</div>
- <div>No recognitions of familiar people&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No courtesies for showing ’em&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No knowing ’em!</div>
- <div>To travelling at all&mdash;no locomotion,</div>
- <div>No inkling of the way&mdash;no notion&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No go&mdash;by land or ocean&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No mail&mdash;no post&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No news from any foreign coast&mdash;</div>
- <div>No park&mdash;no ring&mdash;no afternoon gentility&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">No company&mdash;no nobility&mdash;</div>
- <div>No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease,</div>
- <div class="i1">No comfortable feel in any member&mdash;</div>
- <div>No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees.</div>
- <div class="i1">No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds.</div>
- <div class="i2">November!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The brothers James and Horace Smith, wrote what was in their day
-considered lively and amusing humor, but which seems a trifle dry to
-us. Their greatest work was the <i>Rejected Addresses</i>, a series of
-parodies on the poets, such as Wordsworth, Southey, Coleridge, Scott,
-Moore and many others.</p>
-
-<p>One of these, an imitation of Wordsworth’s most simple style, succeeds
-in parodying his mawkish affectations of childish simplicity and
-nursery stammering.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_466">[466]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE BABY’S DÉBUT</i></h4>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p1">[<i>Spoken in the character of Nancy Lake, a girl eight years of age,
-who is drawn upon the stage in a child’s chaise by Samuel Hughes, her
-uncle’s porter.</i>]</p>
-</div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My brother Jack was nine in May,</div>
- <div>And I was eight on New-Year’s day;</div>
- <div class="i1">So in Kate Wilson’s shop</div>
- <div>Papa (he’s my papa and Jack’s)</div>
- <div>Bought me, last week, a doll of wax,</div>
- <div class="i1">And brother Jack a top.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Jack’s in the pouts, and this it is,&mdash;</div>
- <div>He thinks mine came to more than his;</div>
- <div class="i1">So to my drawer he goes,</div>
- <div>Takes out the doll, and, oh, my stars!</div>
- <div>He pokes her head between the bars,</div>
- <div class="i1">And melts off half her nose!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Quite cross, a bit of string I beg,</div>
- <div>And tie it to his peg-top’s peg,</div>
- <div class="i1">And bang, with might and main,</div>
- <div>Its head against the parlour-door:</div>
- <div>Off flies the head, and hits the floor,</div>
- <div class="i1">And breaks a window-pane.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>This made him cry with rage and spite:</div>
- <div>Well, let him cry, it serves him right.</div>
- <div class="i1">A pretty thing, forsooth!</div>
- <div>If he’s to melt, all scalding hot,</div>
- <div>Half my doll’s nose, and I am not</div>
- <div class="i1">To draw his peg-top’s tooth!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Aunt Hannah heard the window break,</div>
- <div>And cried, “Oh naughty Nancy Lake,</div>
- <div class="i1">Thus to distress your aunt:</div>
- <div>No Drury-Lane for you to-day!”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_467">[467]</span></div>
- <div>And while papa said, “Pooh, she may!”</div>
- <div class="i1">Mamma said, “No, she sha’n’t!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Well, after many a sad reproach,</div>
- <div>They get into a hackney coach,</div>
- <div class="i1">And trotted down the street.</div>
- <div>I saw them go: one horse was blind,</div>
- <div>The tails of both hung down behind,</div>
- <div class="i1">Their shoes were on their feet.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The chaise in which poor brother Bill</div>
- <div>Used to be drawn to Pentonville,</div>
- <div class="i1">Stood in the lumber-room:</div>
- <div>I wiped the dust from off the top,</div>
- <div>While Molly mopp’d it with a mop,</div>
- <div class="i1">And brush’d it with a broom.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My uncle’s porter, Samuel Hughes,</div>
- <div>Came in at six to black the shoes</div>
- <div class="i1">(I always talk to Sam):</div>
- <div>So what does he, but takes, and drags</div>
- <div>Me in the chaise along the flags,</div>
- <div class="i1">And leaves me where I am.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My father’s walls are made of brick,</div>
- <div>But not so tall, and not so thick</div>
- <div class="i1">As these; and, goodness me!</div>
- <div>My father’s beams are made of wood,</div>
- <div>But never, never half so good</div>
- <div class="i1">As those that now I see.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What a large floor! ’tis like a town!</div>
- <div>The carpet, when they lay it down,</div>
- <div class="i1">Won’t hide it, I’ll be bound;</div>
- <div>And there’s a row of lamps!&mdash;my eye!</div>
- <div>How they do blaze! I wonder why</div>
- <div class="i1">They keep them on the ground.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_468">[468]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At first I caught hold of the wing,</div>
- <div>And kept away; but Mr. Thing-</div>
- <div class="i1">um bob, the prompter man,</div>
- <div>Gave with his hand my chaise a shove,</div>
- <div>And said, “Go on, my pretty love;</div>
- <div class="i1">Speak to ’em, little Nan.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“You’ve only got to curtsey, whisp-</div>
- <div>er, hold your chin up, laugh, and lisp,</div>
- <div class="i1">And then you’re sure to take:</div>
- <div>I’ve known the day when brats, not quite</div>
- <div>Thirteen, got fifty pounds a night;</div>
- <div class="i1">Then why not Nancy Lake?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But while I’m speaking, where’s papa?</div>
- <div>And where’s my aunt? and where’s mamma?</div>
- <div class="i1">Where’s Jack? Oh, there they sit!</div>
- <div>They smile, they nod; I’ll go my ways,</div>
- <div>And order round poor Billy’s chaise,</div>
- <div class="i1">To join them in the pit.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And now, good gentlefolks, I go</div>
- <div>To join mamma, and see the show;</div>
- <div class="i1">So, bidding you adieu,</div>
- <div>I curtsey, like a pretty miss,</div>
- <div>And if you’ll blow to me a kiss,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’ll blow a kiss to you.</div>
- <div class="right">[<i>Blows a kiss, and exit.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE MILKMAID AND THE BANKER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A Milkmaid, with a pretty face,</div>
- <div class="i3">Who lived at Acton,</div>
- <div>Had a black cow, the ugliest in the place,</div>
- <div class="i3">A crooked-backed one,</div>
- <div>A beast as dangerous, too, as she was frightful,</div>
- <div class="i3">Vicious and spiteful;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_469">[469]</span></div>
- <div>And so confirmed a truant that she bounded</div>
- <div>Over the hedges daily and got pounded:</div>
- <div>’Twas in vain to tie her with a tether,</div>
- <div>For then both cow and cord eloped together.</div>
- <div>Armed with an oaken bough&mdash;(what folly!</div>
- <div>It should have been of thorn, or prickly holly),</div>
- <div>Patty one day was driving home the beast,</div>
- <div class="i1">Which had as usual slipped its anchor,</div>
- <div class="i1">When on the road she met a certain Banker,</div>
- <div>Who stopped to give his eyes a feast,</div>
- <div>By gazing on her features crimsoned high</div>
- <div>By a long cow-chase in July.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Are you from Acton, pretty lass?” he cried;</div>
- <div>“Yes”&mdash;with a courtesy she replied.</div>
- <div>“Why, then, you know the laundress, Sally Wrench?”</div>
- <div class="i1">“Yes, she’s my cousin, sir, and next-door neighbor.”</div>
- <div>“That’s lucky&mdash;I’ve a message for the wench</div>
- <div>Which needs despatch, and you may save my labor.</div>
- <div>Give her this kiss, my dear, and say I sent it:</div>
- <div>But mind, you owe me one&mdash;I’ve only lent it.”</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“She shall know,” cried the girl, as she brandished her bough,</div>
- <div class="i1">“Of the loving intentions you bore me;</div>
- <div>But since you’re in haste for the kiss, you’ll allow,</div>
- <div>That you’d better run forward and give it my cow,</div>
- <div>For she, at the rate she is scampering now,</div>
- <div class="i1">Will reach Acton some minutes before me.”</div>
- <div class="right smcap">Horace Smith.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE JESTER CONDEMNED TO DEATH</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One of the Kings of Scanderoon,</div>
- <div class="i1">A royal jester,</div>
- <div>Had in his train a gross buffoon,</div>
- <div class="i1">Who used to pester</div>
- <div>The Court with tricks inopportune,</div>
- <div>Venting on the highest folks his</div>
- <div>Scurvy pleasantries and hoaxes.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_470">[470]</span></div>
- <div>It needs some sense to play the fool,</div>
- <div>Which wholesome rule</div>
- <div class="i1">Occurred not to our jackanapes,</div>
- <div>Who consequently found his freaks</div>
- <div class="i1">Lead to innumerable scrapes,</div>
- <div>And quite as many kicks and tweaks,</div>
- <div>Which only seemed to make him faster</div>
- <div>Try the patience of his master.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Some sin, at last, beyond all measure,</div>
- <div>Incurred the desperate displeasure</div>
- <div class="i1">Of his serene and raging highness:</div>
- <div>Whether he twitched his most revered</div>
- <div>And sacred beard,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or had intruded on the shyness</div>
- <div>Of the seraglio, or let fly</div>
- <div>An epigram at royalty,</div>
- <div>None knows: his sin was an occult one,</div>
- <div>But records tell us that the Sultan,</div>
- <div>Meaning to terrify the knave,</div>
- <div class="i1">Exclaimed, “’Tis time to stop that breath:</div>
- <div>Thy doom is sealed, presumptuous slave!</div>
- <div class="i1">Thou stand’st condemned to certain death:</div>
- <div>Silence, base rebel! no replying!</div>
- <div class="i1">But such is my indulgence still,</div>
- <div class="i1">That, of my own free grace and will,</div>
- <div>I leave to thee the mode of dying.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Thy royal will be done&mdash;’tis just,”</div>
- <div>Replied the wretch, and kissed the dust;</div>
- <div class="i1">“Since, my last moments to assuage,</div>
- <div>Your majesty’s humane decree</div>
- <div>Has deigned to leave the choice to me,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’ll die, so please you, of old age!”</div>
- <div class="right smcap">Horace Smith.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>It is to be regretted that the feminine writers of this period showed
-practically no evidence of humorous scintillation, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_471">[471]</span> we have
-searched in vain through the writings of Ann and Jane Taylor, Mary
-Russell Mitford, Felicia Hemans and Letitia Elizabeth Landon,&mdash;finding
-only some unconscious humor, not at all intentional on the part of the
-authoresses, as they were then called.</p>
-
-<p>William Maginn was also adept at parody, but his work was ephemeral.</p>
-
-<p>The rollicking rhyme of the Irishman is among the most interesting of
-his poems.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE IRISHMAN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i3">There was a lady lived at Leith,</div>
- <div class="i4">A lady very stylish, man,</div>
- <div class="i3">And yet, in spite of all her teeth,</div>
- <div class="i4">She fell in love with an Irishman,</div>
- <div class="i4h">A nasty, ugly Irishman,</div>
- <div class="i4h">A wild, tremendous Irishman,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">A tearing, swearing, thumping, bumping, ranting, roaring Irishman.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i3">His face was no ways beautiful,</div>
- <div class="i4">For with small-pox ’twas scarred across,</div>
- <div class="i3">And the shoulders of the ugly dog</div>
- <div class="i4">Were almost double a yard across.</div>
- <div class="i4h">Oh, the lump of an Irishman,</div>
- <div class="i4h">The whisky-devouring Irishman,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The great he-rogue, with his wonderful brogue, the fighting, rioting Irishman!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i3">One of his eyes was bottle-green,</div>
- <div class="i4">And the other eye was out, my dear,</div>
- <div class="i3">And the calves of his wicked-looking legs</div>
- <div class="i4">Were more than two feet about, my dear.</div>
- <div class="i4h">Oh, the great big Irishman,</div>
- <div class="i4h">The rattling, battling Irishman,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The stamping, ramping, swaggering, staggering, leathering swash of an Irishman!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_472">[472]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i3">He took so much of Lundy-foot</div>
- <div class="i4">That he used to snort and snuffle, oh,</div>
- <div class="i3">And in shape and size the fellow’s neck</div>
- <div class="i4">Was as bad as the neck of a buffalo.</div>
- <div class="i4h">Oh, the horrible Irishman,</div>
- <div class="i4h">The thundering, blundering Irishman,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The slashing, dashing, smashing, lashing, thrashing, hashing Irishman!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i3">His name was a terrible name indeed,</div>
- <div class="i4">Being Timothy Thady Mulligan;</div>
- <div class="i3">And whenever he emptied his tumbler of punch,</div>
- <div class="i4">He’d not rest till he’d filled it full again.</div>
- <div class="i4h">The boozing, bruising Irishman,</div>
- <div class="i4h">The ’toxicated Irishman,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The whisky, frisky, rummy, gummy, brandy, no-dandy Irishman.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i3">This was the lad the lady loved,</div>
- <div class="i4">Like all the girls of quality;</div>
- <div class="i3">And he broke the skulls of the men of Leith,</div>
- <div class="i4">Just by the way of jollity.</div>
- <div class="i4h">Oh, the leathering Irishman,</div>
- <div class="i4h">The barbarous, savage Irishman!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The hearts of the maids and the gentlemen’s heads were bothered, I’m sure, by this Irishman.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Thomas Haynes Bayly, though not especially a humorist, showed the
-influence of a witty muse in his songs, which were numerous and popular.</p>
-
-<p><i>She Wore a Wreath of Roses</i>, <i>Oh, No, We Never Mention Her</i>
-and <i>Gaily the Troubadour Touched his Guitar</i> are among the best
-remembered.</p>
-
-<p>He was the author of many bright bits of Society Verse, and wrote some
-deep and very real satire.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>WHY DON’T THE MEN PROPOSE?</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Why don’t the men propose, mamma?</div>
- <div class="i1">Why don’t the men propose?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_473">[473]</span></div>
- <div>Each seems just coming to the point,</div>
- <div class="i1">And then away he goes;</div>
- <div>It is no fault of yours, mamma,</div>
- <div class="i1"><i>That</i> everybody knows;</div>
- <div>You <i>fête</i> the finest men in town,</div>
- <div class="i1">Yet, oh! they won’t propose.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I’m sure I’ve done my best, mamma,</div>
- <div class="i1">To make a proper match;</div>
- <div>For coronets and eldest sons,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m ever on the watch;</div>
- <div>I’ve hopes when some <i>distingué</i> beau</div>
- <div class="i1">A glance upon me throws;</div>
- <div>But though he’ll dance and smile and flirt,</div>
- <div class="i1">Alas! he won’t propose.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I’ve tried to win by languishing,</div>
- <div class="i1">And dressing like a blue;</div>
- <div>I’ve bought big books and talked of them</div>
- <div class="i1">As if I’d read them through!</div>
- <div>With hair cropp’d like a man I’ve felt</div>
- <div class="i1">The heads of all the beaux;</div>
- <div>But Spurzheim could not touch their hearts,</div>
- <div class="i1">And oh! they won’t propose.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I threw aside the books, and thought</div>
- <div class="i1">That ignorance was bliss;</div>
- <div>I felt convinced that men preferred</div>
- <div class="i1">A simple sort of Miss;</div>
- <div>And so I lisped out nought beyond</div>
- <div class="i1">Plain “yesses” or plain “noes,”</div>
- <div>And wore a sweet unmeaning smile;</div>
- <div class="i1">Yet, oh! they won’t propose.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Last night at Lady Ramble’s rout</div>
- <div class="i1">I heard Sir Henry Gale</div>
- <div>Exclaim, “Now I <i>propose</i> again&mdash;&mdash;”</div>
- <div class="i1">I started, turning pale;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_474">[474]</span></div>
- <div>I really thought my time was come,</div>
- <div class="i1">I blushed like any rose;</div>
- <div>But oh! I found ’twas only at</div>
- <div class="i1"><i>Ecarté</i> he’d propose.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And what is to be done, mamma?</div>
- <div class="i1">Oh, what is to be done?</div>
- <div>I really have no time to lose,</div>
- <div class="i1">For I am thirty-one;</div>
- <div>At balls I am too often left</div>
- <div class="i1">Where spinsters sit in rows;</div>
- <div>Why don’t the men propose, mamma?</div>
- <div class="i1">Why <i>won’t</i> the men propose?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Frederick Marryat, oftener spoken of as Captain Marryat was among the
-most renowned writers of sea stories, and easily the most humorous of
-the authors who chose the sea for their fictional setting.</p>
-
-<p>His books are well known in all households, and after Dickens there is
-probably no English novelist who has caused more real chuckles.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>NAUTICAL TERMS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">All the sailors were busy at work, and the first lieutenant cried out
-to the gunner, “Now, Mr. Dispart, if you are ready, we’ll breech these
-guns.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, my lads,” said the first lieutenant, “we must slug (the part the
-breeches cover) more forward.” As I never had heard of a gun having
-breeches, I was very curious to see what was going on, and went up
-close to the first lieutenant, who said to me, “Youngster, hand me
-that <i>monkey’s tail</i>.” I saw nothing like a <i>monkey’s tail</i>,
-but I was so frightened that I snatched up the first thing that I saw,
-which was a short bar of iron, and it so happened that it was the very
-article which he wanted. When I gave it to him, the first lieutenant
-looked at me, and said, “So you know what a monkey’s tail is already,
-do you? Now don’t you ever sham stupid after that.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_475">[475]</span></p>
-
-<p>Thought I to myself, I’m very lucky, but if that’s a monkey’s tail,
-it’s a very stiff one!</p>
-
-<p>I resolved to learn the names of everything as fast as I could, that I
-might be prepared, so I listened attentively to what was said; but I
-soon became quite confused, and despaired of remembering anything.</p>
-
-<p>“How is this to be finished off, sir?” inquired a sailor of the
-boatswain.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I beg leave to hint to you, sir, in the most delicate manner
-in the world,” replied the boatswain, “that it must be with a
-<i>double-wall</i>&mdash;and be damned to you&mdash;don’t you know that yet?
-Captain of the foretop,” said he, “up on your <i>horses</i>, and take
-your <i>stirrups</i> up three inches.” “Aye, aye, sir.” I looked and
-looked, but I could see no horses.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Chucks,” said the first lieutenant to the boatswain, “what blocks
-have we below&mdash;not on charge?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me see, sir. I’ve one <i>sister</i>, t’other we split in half the
-other day, and I think I have a couple of <i>monkeys</i> down in the
-store-room. I say, you Smith, pass that brace through the <i>bull’s
-eye</i>, and take the <i>sheep-shank</i> out before you come down.”</p>
-
-<p>And then he asked the first lieutenant whether something should not
-be fitted with a <i>mouse</i> or only a <i>Turk’s-head</i>&mdash;told
-him the <i>goose-neck</i> must be spread out by the armourer as
-soon as the forge was up. In short, what with <i>dead-eyes</i> and
-<i>shrouds</i>, <i>cats</i> and <i>cat-blocks</i>, <i>dolphins</i> and
-<i>dolphin-strikers, whips</i> and <i>puddings</i>, I was so puzzled
-with what I heard, that I was about to leave the deck in absolute
-despair.</p>
-
-<p>“And, Mr. Chucks, recollect this afternoon that you <i>bleed</i> all
-the <i>buoys</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Bleed the boys, thought I; what can that be for? At all events, the
-surgeon appears to be the proper person to perform that operation.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Peter Simple.</i></p>
-
-<p>Douglas Jerrold was an infant prodigy and later a noted playwright;
-beside being the author of the world famous Caudle lectures.</p>
-
-<p>He was a celebrated wit and punster and though many<span class="pagenum" id="Page_476">[476]</span> epigrammatic
-sayings are wrongly attributed to him, yet he was the originator of as
-many more.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>COLD MUTTON, PUDDING, PANCAKES</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">“What am I grumbling about, now? It’s very well for you to ask that!
-I’m sure I’d better be out of the world than&mdash;there now, Mr Caudle;
-there you are again! I <i>shall</i> speak, sir. It isn’t often I open
-my mouth, Heaven knows! But you like to hear nobody talk but yourself.
-You ought to have married a negro slave, and not any respectable woman.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re to go about the house looking like thunder all the day, and
-I’m not to say a word. Where do you think pudding’s to come from every
-day? You show a nice example to your children, you do; complaining, and
-turning your nose up at a sweet piece of cold mutton, because there’s
-no pudding! You go a nice way to make ’em extravagant&mdash;teach ’em nice
-lessons to begin the world with. Do you know what puddings cost; or do
-you think they fly in at the window?</p>
-
-<p>“You hate cold mutton. The more shame for you, Mr. Caudle. I’m sure
-you’ve the stomach of a lord, you have. No, sir; I didn’t choose to
-hash the mutton. It’s very easy for you to say hash it; but <i>I</i>
-know what a joint loses in hashing: it’s a day’s dinner the less, if
-it’s a bit. Yes, I dare say; other people may have puddings with cold
-mutton. No doubt of it; and other people become bankrupts. But if ever
-you get into the <i>Gazette</i>, it sha’n’t be <i>my</i> fault&mdash;no;
-I’ll do my duty as a wife to you, Mr. Caudle; you shall never have it
-to say that it was <i>my</i> housekeeping that brought you to beggary.
-No; you may sulk at the cold meat&mdash;ha! I hope you’ll never live to want
-such a piece of cold mutton as we had to-day! and you may threaten
-to go to a tavern to dine; but, with our present means, not a crumb
-of pudding do you get from me. You shall have nothing but the cold
-joint&mdash;nothing, as I’m a Christian sinner.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; there you are, throwing those fowls in my face again! I know you
-once brought home a pair of fowls; I know it; but you were mean enough
-to want to stop ’em out of my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_477">[477]</span> week’s money! Oh, the selfishness&mdash;the
-shabbiness of men! They can go out and throw away pounds upon pounds
-with a pack of people who laugh at ’em afterward; but if it’s anything
-wanted for their own homes, their poor wives may hunt for it. I wonder
-you don’t blush to name those fowls again! I wouldn’t be so little for
-the world, Mr. Caudle!</p>
-
-<p>“What are you going to do? <i>Going to get up?</i> Don’t make yourself
-ridiculous, Mr. Caudle; I can’t say a word to you like any other wife,
-but you must threaten to get up. <i>Do</i> be ashamed of yourself.</p>
-
-<p>“Puddings, indeed! Do you think I’m made of puddings? Didn’t you have
-some boiled rice three weeks ago? Besides, is this the time of the
-year for puddings? It’s all very well if I had money enough allowed
-me like any other wife to keep the house with; then, indeed, I might
-have preserves like any other woman; now, it’s impossible; and it’s
-cruel&mdash;yes, Mr. Caudle, cruel&mdash;of you to expect it.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Apples ar’n’t so dear, are they?</i> I know what apples are, Mr.
-Caudle, without your telling me. But I suppose you want something more
-than apples for dumplings? I suppose sugar costs something, doesn’t it?
-And that’s how it is. That’s how one expense brings on another, and
-that’s how people go to ruin.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Pancakes?</i> What’s the use of your lying muttering there about
-pancakes? Don’t you always have ’em once a year&mdash;every Shrove Tuesday?
-And what would any moderate, decent man want more?</p>
-
-<p>“Pancakes, indeed! Pray, Mr. Caudle&mdash;no, it’s no use your saying fine
-words to me to let you go to sleep; I sha’n’t. Pray, do you know the
-price of eggs just now? There’s not an egg you can trust to under seven
-and eight a shilling; well, you’ve only just to reckon up how many
-eggs&mdash;don’t lie swearing there at the eggs in that manner, Mr. Caudle;
-unless you expect the bed to let you fall through. You call yourself a
-respectable tradesman, I suppose? Ha! I only wish people knew you as
-well as I do! Swearing at eggs, indeed! But I’m tired of this usage,
-Mr. Caudle; quite tired of it; and I don’t care how soon it’s ended!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_478">[478]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure I do nothing but work and labour, and think how to make the
-most of everything; and this is how I’m rewarded.”</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Mrs. Caudle’s Curtain Lectures.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Call that a kind man,” said an actor of an absent acquaintance; “a man
-who is away from his family, and never sends them a farthing! Call that
-kindness!” “Yes, unremitting kindness,” Jerrold replied.</p>
-
-<p>Some member of “Our Club,” hearing an air mentioned, exclaimed: “That
-always carries me away when I hear it.” “Can nobody whistle it?”
-exclaimed Jerrold.</p>
-
-<p>A friend said to Jerrold: “Have you heard about poor R&mdash;&mdash; [a lawyer]?
-His business is going to the devil.” Jerrold answered: “That’s all
-right: then he is sure to get it back again.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If an earthquake were to engulf England to-morrow, the English would
-meet and dine somewhere just to celebrate the event.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Of a man who had pirated one of his jests, and who was described in his
-hearing as an honest fellow, he said, “Oh yes, you can trust him with
-untold jokes.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Jerrold met Alfred Bunn one day in Piccadilly. Bunn stopped Jerrold,
-and said, “I suppose you’re strolling about, picking up character.”
-“Well, not exactly,” said Jerrold, “but there’s plenty lost hereabouts.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Jerrold was seriously disappointed with a certain book written by
-one of his friends. This friend heard that he had expressed his
-disappointment. <i>Friend</i> (to Jerrold): “I heard you said it was
-the worst book I ever wrote.” <i>Jerrold</i>: “No, I didn’t. I said it
-was the worst book anybody ever wrote.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Some one was talking with him about a gentleman as celebrated for
-the intensity as for the shortness of his friendships.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_479">[479]</span> “Yes,” said
-Jerrold, “his friendships are so warm, that he no sooner takes them up
-than he puts them down again.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Thomas Moore, called the most successful Irishman of letters of the
-nineteenth century, early developed a taste for music and a talent for
-versification. To this add his native wit, and we have a humorist of no
-mean order.</p>
-
-<p>He wrote epistles, odes, satires and songs with equal facility, and to
-these he added books of travel and biography and history.</p>
-
-<p>His quick wit is shown in his lighter verse and epigrams.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>NONSENSE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Good reader, if you e’er have seen,</div>
- <div class="i1">When Phœbus hastens to his pillow,</div>
- <div>The mermaids with their tresses green</div>
- <div class="i1">Dancing upon the western billow;</div>
- <div class="i2">If you have seen at twilight dim,</div>
- <div class="i2">When the lone spirit’s vesper hymn</div>
- <div class="i1">Floats wild along the winding shore,</div>
- <div>The fairy train their ringlets weave</div>
- <div class="i1">Glancing along the spangled green;&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i2">If you have seen all this, and more,</div>
- <div class="i1">God bless me! what a deal you’ve seen!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>LYING</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I do confess, in many a sigh,</div>
- <div>My lips have breath’d you many a lie,</div>
- <div>And who, with such delights in view,</div>
- <div>Would lose them for a lie or two?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nay&mdash;look not thus, with brow reproving:</div>
- <div>Lies are, my dear, the soul of loving!</div>
- <div>If half we tell the girls were true,</div>
- <div>If half we swear to think and do,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_480">[480]</span></div>
- <div>Were aught but lying’s bright illusion,</div>
- <div>The world would be in strange confusion!</div>
- <div>If ladies’ eyes were, every one,</div>
- <div>As lovers swear, a radiant sun,</div>
- <div>Astronomy should leave the skies,</div>
- <div>To learn her lore in ladies’ eyes!</div>
- <div>Oh no!&mdash;believe me, lovely girl,</div>
- <div>When nature turns your teeth to pearl,</div>
- <div>Your neck to snow, your eyes to fire,</div>
- <div>Your yellow locks to golden wire,</div>
- <div>Then, only then, can heaven decree,</div>
- <div>That you should live for only me,</div>
- <div>Or I for you, as night and morn,</div>
- <div>We’ve swearing kiss’d, and kissing sworn.</div>
- <div>And now, my gentle hints to clear,</div>
- <div>For once, I’ll tell you truth, my dear!</div>
- <div>Whenever you may chance to meet</div>
- <div>A loving youth, whose love is sweet,</div>
- <div>Long as you’re false and he believes you,</div>
- <div>Long as you trust and he deceives you,</div>
- <div>So long the blissful bond endures;</div>
- <div>And while he lies, his heart is yours:</div>
- <div>But, oh! you’ve wholly lost the youth</div>
- <div>The instant that he tells you truth!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>WHAT’S MY THOUGHT LIKE?</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1"><i>Quest.</i>&mdash;Why is a Pump like Viscount Castlereagh?</div>
- <div class="i1"><i>Answ.</i>&mdash;Because it is a slender thing of wood,</div>
- <div>That up and down its awkward arm doth sway,</div>
- <div>And coolly spout, and spout, and spout away,</div>
- <div class="i1">In one weak, washy, everlasting flood!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>OF ALL THE MEN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Of all the men one meets about,</div>
- <div class="i1">There’s none like Jack&mdash;he’s everywhere:</div>
- <div>At church&mdash;park&mdash;auction&mdash;dinner&mdash;rout&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Go when and where you will, he’s there.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_481">[481]</span></div>
- <div>Try the West End, he’s at your back&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Meets you, like Eurus, in the East&mdash;</div>
- <div>You’re call’d upon for “How do, Jack?”</div>
- <div class="i1">One hundred times a day, at least.</div>
- <div>A friend of his one evening said,</div>
- <div class="i1">As home he took his pensive way,</div>
- <div>“Upon my soul, I fear Jack’s dead&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">I’ve seen him but three times to-day!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON TAKING A WIFE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Come, come,” said Tom’s father, “at your time of life,</div>
- <div class="i1">There’s no longer excuse for thus playing the rake.&mdash;</div>
- <div>It is time you should think, boy, of taking a wife.”&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">“Why, so it is, father,&mdash;whose wife shall I take?”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>UPON BEING OBLIGED TO LEAVE A PLEASANT PARTY</i><br />
-<span class="subhed2">FROM THE WANT OF A PAIR OF BREECHES TO DRESS FOR DINNER IN</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Between Adam and me the great difference is,</div>
- <div class="i1">Though a paradise each has been forced to resign,</div>
- <div>That he never wore breeches till turn’d out of his,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">While, for want of my breeches, I’m banish’d from mine.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Samuel Lover and Charles James Lever are two more versatile Irish
-authors, the latter being the most eminent of the Irish novelists.</p>
-
-<p>Both wrote delightful light verse and many popular songs.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>RORY O’MORE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Young Rory O’More courted young Kathleen Bawn.</div>
- <div>He was bold as a hawk, and she soft as the dawn.</div>
- <div>He wished in his heart pretty Kathleen to please,</div>
- <div>And he thought the best way to do that was to tease.</div>
- <div>“Now, Rory, be aisy,” sweet Kathleen would cry,</div>
- <div>Reproof on her lips, but a smile in her eye;</div>
- <div>“With your tricks I don’t know in troth what I’m about!</div>
- <div>Faith! you’ve teased till I’ve put on my cloak inside out.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_482">[482]</span></div>
- <div>“Oh, jewel,” says Rory, “that same is the way</div>
- <div>You’ve thrated my heart for this many a day;</div>
- <div>And ’tis plased that I am, and why not, to be sure,</div>
- <div>For ’tis all for good luck,” says bold Rory O’More.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Indeed, then,” says Kathleen, “don’t think of the like,</div>
- <div>For I half gave a promise to soothering Mike;</div>
- <div>The ground that I walk on he loves, I’ll be bound.”</div>
- <div>“Faith,” says Rory, “I’d rather love you than the ground.”</div>
- <div>“Now, Rory, I’ll cry if you don’t let me go,</div>
- <div>Sure, I dream every night that I’m hating you so.”</div>
- <div>“Oh!” says Rory, “that same I’m delighted to hear,</div>
- <div>For dhrames always go by conthrairies, my dear;</div>
- <div>Oh! jewel, keep dhraming that same till you die,</div>
- <div>And bright morning will give dirty night the black lie.</div>
- <div>And ’tis plased that I am, and why not, to be sure,</div>
- <div>Since ’tis all for good luck,” says bold Rory O’More.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Arrah, Kathleen, my darlint, you’ve teased me enough,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And I’ve thrashed for your sake Dinny Grimes and Jim Duff;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And I’ve made myself, drinking your health, quite a baste,</div>
- <div>So, I think, after that, I may talk to the praste.”</div>
- <div>Then Rory, the rogue, stole his arm round her neck,</div>
- <div>So soft and so white, without freckle or speck!</div>
- <div>And he looked in her eyes that were beaming with light;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And he kissed her sweet lips. Don’t you think he was right?</div>
- <div>“Now, Rory, leave off, sir&mdash;you’ll hug me no more&mdash;</div>
- <div>There’s eight times to-day that you’ve kissed me before.”</div>
- <div>“Then here goes another,” says he, “to make sure.</div>
- <div>For there’s luck in odd numbers,” says Rory O’More.</div>
- <div class="right smcap">Samuel Lover.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>LANTY LEARY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Lanty was in love, you see,</div>
- <div class="i1">With lovely, lively Rosie Carey;</div>
- <div>But her father can’t agree</div>
- <div class="i1">To give the girl to Lanty Leary.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_483">[483]</span></div>
- <div>Up to fun, “Away we’ll run,”</div>
- <div class="i1">Says she; “my father’s so conthrairy.</div>
- <div>Won’t you follow me? Won’t you follow me?”</div>
- <div class="i1">“Faith, I will!” says Lanty Leary.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But her father died one day</div>
- <div class="i1">(I hear ’twas not by dhrinkin’ wather);</div>
- <div>House and land and cash, they say,</div>
- <div class="i1">He left by will to Rose his daughter;</div>
- <div>House and land and cash to seize,</div>
- <div class="i1">Away she cut so light and airy.</div>
- <div>“Won’t you follow me? Won’t you follow me?”</div>
- <div class="i1">“Faith, I will!” says Lanty Leary.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Rose, herself, was taken bad,</div>
- <div class="i1">The fayver worse each day was growin’;</div>
- <div>“Lanty, dear,” says she, “’tis sad,</div>
- <div class="i1">To th’ other world I’m surely goin’.</div>
- <div>You can’t survive my loss, I know,</div>
- <div class="i1">Nor long remain in Tipperary.</div>
- <div>Won’t you follow me? Won’t you follow me?”</div>
- <div class="i1">“Faith, I won’t!” says Lanty Leary.</div>
- <div class="right smcap">Samuel Lover.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>WIDOW MALONE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Did you hear of the Widow Malone, ohone!</div>
- <div>Who lived in the town of Athlone, ohone?</div>
- <div>Oh! she melted the hearts of the swains in them parts,</div>
- <div>So lovely the Widow Malone, ohone!</div>
- <div>So lovely the Widow Malone.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Of lovers she had a full score, or more,</div>
- <div>And fortunes they all had galore, in store;</div>
- <div>From the minister down to the clerk of the crown,</div>
- <div>All were courting the Widow Malone, ohone!</div>
- <div>All were courting the Widow Malone.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_484">[484]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But so modest was Mistress Malone, ’twas known,</div>
- <div>That no one could see her alone, ohone!</div>
- <div>Let them ogle and sigh, they could ne’er catch her eye,</div>
- <div>So bashful the Widow Malone, ohone!</div>
- <div>So bashful the Widow Malone.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Till one Mister O’Brien, from Clare&mdash;how quare!</div>
- <div>It’s little for blushing they care down there,</div>
- <div>Put his arm round her waist&mdash;gave ten kisses at laste&mdash;</div>
- <div>“Oh,” says he, “you’re my Molly Malone, my own!</div>
- <div>Oh,” says he, “you’re my Molly Malone.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And the widow they all thought so shy, my eye!</div>
- <div>Ne’er thought of a simper or sigh, for why?</div>
- <div>“But, Lucius,” says she, “since you’ve now made so free,</div>
- <div>You may marry your Mary Malone, ohone!</div>
- <div>You may marry your Mary Malone.”</div>
- <div class="right smcap">Charles Lever.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Winthrop Mackworth Praed belongs to the small group of Londoners which
-also included Calverley and Locker-Lampson. At least one great critic
-considers Praed the greatest of this band, and so far as metric skill
-and finished execution are concerned, he may well be called so. Also,
-his taste is impeccable, and his society verse ranks among the best.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A SONG OF IMPOSSIBILITIES</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Lady, I loved you all last year,</div>
- <div class="i1">How honestly and well&mdash;</div>
- <div>Alas! would weary you to hear,</div>
- <div class="i1">And torture me to tell;</div>
- <div>I raved beneath the midnight sky,</div>
- <div class="i1">I sang beneath the limes&mdash;</div>
- <div>Orlando in my lunacy,</div>
- <div class="i1">And Petrarch in my rhymes.</div>
- <div>But all is over! When the sun</div>
- <div class="i1">Dries up the boundless main,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_485">[485]</span></div>
- <div>When black is white, false-hearted one,</div>
- <div class="i1">I may be yours again!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When passion’s early hopes and fears</div>
- <div class="i1">Are not derided things;</div>
- <div>When truth is found in falling tears,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or faith in golden rings;</div>
- <div>When the dark Fates that rule our way</div>
- <div class="i1">Instruct me where they hide</div>
- <div>One woman that would ne’er betray,</div>
- <div class="i1">One friend that never lied;</div>
- <div>When summer shines without a cloud,</div>
- <div class="i1">And bliss without a pain;</div>
- <div>When worth is noticed in a crowd,</div>
- <div class="i1">I may be yours again!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When science pours the light of day</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon the lords of lands;</div>
- <div>When Huskisson is heard to say</div>
- <div class="i1">That Lethbridge understands;</div>
- <div>When wrinkles work their way in youth,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or Eldon’s in a hurry;</div>
- <div>When lawyers represent the truth,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or Mr. Sumner Surrey;</div>
- <div>When aldermen taste eloquence</div>
- <div class="i1">Or bricklayers champagne;</div>
- <div>When common law is common sense,</div>
- <div class="i1">I may be yours again!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When Pole and Thornton honour cheques,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or Mr. Const a rogue;</div>
- <div>When Jericho’s in Middlesex,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or minuets in vogue;</div>
- <div>When Highgate goes to Devonport,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or fashion to Guildhall;</div>
- <div>When argument is heard at Court,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or Mr. Wynn at all;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_486">[486]</span></div>
- <div>When Sydney Smith forgets to jest,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or farmers to complain;</div>
- <div>When kings that are are not the best,</div>
- <div class="i1">I may be yours again!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When peers from telling money shrink,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or monks from telling lies;</div>
- <div>When hydrogen begins to sink,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or Grecian scrip to rise;</div>
- <div>When German poets cease to dream,</div>
- <div class="i1">Americans to guess;</div>
- <div>When Freedom sheds her holy beam</div>
- <div class="i1">On Negroes, and the Press;</div>
- <div>When there is any fear of Rome,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or any hope of Spain;</div>
- <div>When Ireland is a happy home,</div>
- <div class="i1">I may be yours again!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When you can cancel what has been,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or alter what must be,</div>
- <div>Or bring once more that vanished scene,</div>
- <div class="i1">Those withered joys to me;</div>
- <div>When you can tune the broken lute,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or deck the blighted wreath,</div>
- <div>Or rear the garden’s richest fruit,</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon a blasted heath;</div>
- <div>When you can lure the wolf at bay</div>
- <div class="i1">Back to his shattered chain,</div>
- <div>To-day may then be yesterday&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">I may be yours again!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>William Makepeace Thackeray, combining all the highest mental and moral
-qualities in his work, adds thereto a delicate and subtle humor, never
-broad, but always forcible and original.</p>
-
-<p>This permeates all his novels, which, of course, may not be quoted
-here, even in excerpts.</p>
-
-<p>But Thackeray was equally happy in verse, and his contributions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_487">[487]</span> to
-London <i>Punch</i> are among the treasures of that journal’s history.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>LITTLE BILLEE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There were three sailors of Bristol City</div>
- <div class="i1">Who took a boat and went to sea,</div>
- <div>But first with beef and captain’s biscuits,</div>
- <div class="i1">And pickled pork they loaded she.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There was gorging Jack, and guzzling Jimmy,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the youngest he was little Billee.</div>
- <div>Now when they’d got as far as the Equator</div>
- <div class="i1">They’d nothing left but one split pea.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Says gorging Jack to guzzling Jimmy,</div>
- <div class="i1">“I am extremely hungaree.”</div>
- <div>To gorging Jack says guzzling Jimmy,</div>
- <div class="i1">“We’ve nothing left, us must eat we.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Says gorging Jack to guzzling Jimmy,</div>
- <div class="i1">“With one another we shouldn’t agree!</div>
- <div>There’s little Bill, he’s young and tender,</div>
- <div class="i1">We’re old and tough, so let’s eat he.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“O Billy! we’re going to kill and eat you,</div>
- <div class="i1">So undo the button of your chemie.”</div>
- <div>When Bill received this information,</div>
- <div class="i1">He used his pocket-handkerchie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“First let me say my catechism,</div>
- <div class="i1">Which my poor mother taught to me.”</div>
- <div>“Make haste! make haste!” says guzzling Jimmy,</div>
- <div class="i1">While Jack pulled out his snicker-snee.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then Bill went up to the main-top-gallant-mast,</div>
- <div class="i1">And down he fell on his bended knee,</div>
- <div>He scarce had come to the Twelfth Commandment</div>
- <div class="i1">When up he jumps&mdash;“There’s land I see!”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_488">[488]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Jerusalem and Madagascar,</div>
- <div class="i1">And North and South Amerikee,</div>
- <div>There’s the British flag a-riding at anchor,</div>
- <div class="i1">With Sir Admiral Napier, K. C. B.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So when they got aboard of the Admiral’s,</div>
- <div class="i1">He hanged fat Jack and flogged Jimmee,</div>
- <div>But as for little Bill, he made him</div>
- <div class="i1">The captain of a Seventy-three.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE WOLFE NEW BALLAD OF JANE RONEY AND MARY BROWN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>An igstrawnary tail I vill tell you this veek&mdash;</div>
- <div>I stood in the Court of A’Beckett the Beak,</div>
- <div>Vere Mrs. Jane Roney, a vidow, I see,</div>
- <div>Who charged Mary Brown with a robbin’ of she.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>This Mary was pore and in misery once,</div>
- <div>And she came to Mrs. Roney it’s more than twelve monce</div>
- <div>She adn’t got no bed, nor no dinner, nor no tea,</div>
- <div>And kind Mrs. Roney gave Mary all three.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mrs. Roney kep Mary for ever so many veeks</div>
- <div>(Her conduct disgusted the best of all Beax),</div>
- <div>She kept her for nothink, as kind as could be,</div>
- <div>Never thinking that this Mary was a traitor to she.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Mrs. Roney, O Mrs. Roney, I feel very ill;</div>
- <div>Will you jest step to the doctor’s for to fetch me a pill?”</div>
- <div>“That I will, my pore Mary,” Mrs. Roney says she:</div>
- <div>And she goes off to the doctor’s as quickly as may be.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>No sooner on this message Mrs. Roney was sped,</div>
- <div>Than hup gits vicked Mary, and jumps out a bed;</div>
- <div>She hopens all the trunks without never a key&mdash;</div>
- <div>She bustes all the boxes, and vith them makes free.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mrs. Roney’s best linning gownds, petticoats, and close,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Her children’s little coats and things, her boots and her hose,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_489">[489]</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent">She packed them, and she stole ’em, and avay vith them did flee</div>
- <div>Mrs. Roney’s situation&mdash;you may think vat it vould be!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Of Mary, ungrateful, who had served her this vay,</div>
- <div>Mrs. Roney heard nothink for a long year and a day,</div>
- <div>Till last Thursday, in Lambeth, ven whom should she see?</div>
- <div>But this Mary, as had acted so ungrateful to she.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>She was leaning on the helbo of a worthy young man;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">They were going to be married, and were walkin’ hand in hand;</div>
- <div>And the church-bells was a ringing for Mary and he,</div>
- <div>And the parson was ready, and a waitin’ for his fee.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When up comes Mrs. Roney, and faces Mary Brown,</div>
- <div>Who trembles, and castes her eyes upon the ground.</div>
- <div>She calls a jolly pleaseman, it happens to be me;</div>
- <div>I charge this young woman, Mr. Pleaseman, says she.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mrs. Roney, o, Mrs. Roney, o, do let me go,</div>
- <div>I acted most ungrateful I own, and I know,</div>
- <div>But the marriage bell is ringin’ and the ring you may see,</div>
- <div>And this young man is a waitin’ says Mary, says she.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I don’t care three fardens for the parson and clark,</div>
- <div>And the bell may keep ringing from noon day to dark.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Mary Brown, Mary Brown, you must come along with me.</div>
- <div>And I think this young man is lucky to be free.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So, in spite of the tears which bejewed Mary’s cheek,</div>
- <div>I took that young gurl to A’Beckett the Beak;</div>
- <div>That exlent justice demanded her plea&mdash;</div>
- <div>But never a sullable said Mary said she.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>On account of her conduck so base and so vile,</div>
- <div>That wicked young gurl is committed for trile,</div>
- <div>And if she’s transpawted beyond the salt sea,</div>
- <div>It’s a proper reward for such willians as she.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_490">[490]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now, you young gurls of Southwark for Mary who veep,</div>
- <div>From pickin’ and stealin’ your ’ands you must keep,</div>
- <div>Or it may be my dooty, as it was Thursday veek</div>
- <div>To pull you all hup to A’Beckett the Beak.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>WHEN MOONLIKE ORE THE HAZURE SEAS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When moonlike ore the hazure seas</div>
- <div class="i1">In soft effulgence swells,</div>
- <div>When silver jews and balmy breaze</div>
- <div class="i1">Bend down the Lily’s bells;</div>
- <div>When calm and deap, the rosy sleap</div>
- <div class="i1">Has lapt your soal in dreems,</div>
- <div>R Hangeline! R lady mine!</div>
- <div class="i1">Dost thou remember Jeames?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I mark thee in the Marble ’all,</div>
- <div class="i1">Where England’s loveliest shine&mdash;</div>
- <div>I say the fairest of them hall</div>
- <div class="i1">Is Lady Hangeline.</div>
- <div>My soul, in desolate eclipse,</div>
- <div class="i1">With recollection teems&mdash;</div>
- <div>And then I hask, with weeping lips,</div>
- <div class="i1">Dost thou remember Jeames?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Away! I may not tell thee hall</div>
- <div class="i1">This soughring heart endures&mdash;</div>
- <div>There is a lonely sperrit-call</div>
- <div class="i1">That Sorrow never cures;</div>
- <div>There is a little, little Star,</div>
- <div class="i1">That still above me beams;</div>
- <div>It is the Star of Hope&mdash;but ar!</div>
- <div class="i1">Dost thou remember Jeames?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>SORROWS OF WERTHER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Werther had a love for Charlotte</div>
- <div class="i1">Such as words could never utter.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_491">[491]</span></div>
- <div>Would you know how first he met her?</div>
- <div class="i1">She was cutting bread and butter.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Charlotte was a married lady,</div>
- <div class="i1">And a moral man was Werther,</div>
- <div>And, for all the wealth of Indies,</div>
- <div class="i1">Would do nothing for to hurt her.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So he sighed and pined and ogled,</div>
- <div class="i1">And his passion boiled and bubbled,</div>
- <div>Till he blew his silly brains out,</div>
- <div class="i1">And no more was by it troubled.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Charlotte, having seen his body</div>
- <div class="i1">Borne before her on a shutter,</div>
- <div>Like a well-conducted person</div>
- <div class="i1">Went on cutting bread and butter.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Charles Dickens, in some senses the world’s greatest humorist, is too
-much of a household word, to need either introduction or quotation.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is it easy to quote from his books, which must be read in their
-entirety or in long instalments to get their message.</p>
-
-<p>One short extract is given, from <i>Martin Chuzzlewit</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>MRS. GAMP’S APARTMENT</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Mrs. Gamp’s apartment in Kingsgate Street, High Holborn, wore,
-metaphorically speaking, a robe of state. It was swept and garnished
-for the reception of a visitor. That visitor was Betsy Prig; Mrs.
-Prig of Bartlemy’s; or, as some said, Barklemy’s; or, as some said,
-Bardlemy’s; for by all these endearing and familiar appellations had
-the hospital of St. Bartholomew become a household word among the
-sisterhood which Betsy Prig adorned.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Gamp’s apartment was not a spacious one, but, to a contented mind,
-a closet is a palace; and the first-floor front at Mr. Sweedlepipe’s
-may have been, in the imagination of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_492">[492]</span> Mrs. Gamp, a stately pile. If it
-were not exactly that to restless intellects, it at least comprised as
-much accommodation as any person not sanguine to insanity could have
-looked for in a room of its dimensions. For only keep the bedstead
-always in your mind, and you were safe. That was the grand secret.
-Remembering the bedstead, you might even stoop to look under the little
-round table for anything you had dropped, without hurting yourself
-much against the chest of drawers, or qualifying as a patient of St.
-Bartholomew by falling into the fire. Visitors were much assisted in
-their cautious efforts to preserve an unflagging recollection of this
-piece of furniture by its size, which was great. It was not a turn-up
-bedstead, nor yet a French bedstead, nor yet a four-post bedstead,
-but what is poetically called a tent; the sacking whereof was low and
-bulgy, insomuch that Mr. Gamp’s box would not go under it, but stopped
-half way, in a manner which, while it did violence to the reason,
-likewise endangered the legs of a stranger. The frame, too, which
-would have supported the canopy and hangings, if there had been any,
-was ornamented with divers pippins carved in timber, which, on the
-slightest provocation, and frequently on none at all, came tumbling
-down, harassing the peaceful guest with inexplicable terrors. The bed
-itself was decorated with a patchwork quilt of great antiquity; and
-at the upper end, upon the side nearest to the door, hung a scanty
-curtain of blue check, which prevented the zephyrs that were abroad in
-Kingsgate Street from visiting Mrs. Gamp’s head too roughly.</p>
-
-<p>The chairs in Mrs. Gamp’s apartment were extremely large and
-broad-backed, which was more than a sufficient reason for their being
-but two in number. They were both elbow-chairs of ancient mahogany,
-and were chiefly valuable for the slippery nature of their seats,
-which had been originally horsehair, but were now covered with a shiny
-substance of a bluish tint, from which the visitor began to slide away,
-with a dismayed countenance, immediately after sitting down. What Mrs.
-Gamp wanted in chairs she made up in band-boxes, of which she had a
-great collection, devoted to the reception of various miscellaneous
-valuables, which were not, however, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_493">[493]</span> well protected as the good
-woman, by a pleasant fiction, seemed to think; for though every
-band-box had a carefully-closed lid, not one among them had a bottom,
-owing to which cause the property within was merely, as it were,
-extinguished. The chest of drawers having been originally made to stand
-upon the top of another chest, had a dwarfish, elfin look alone; but,
-in regard of security, it had a great advantage over the band-boxes,
-for as all the handles had been long ago pulled off, it was very
-difficult to get at its contents. This, indeed, was only to be done
-by one of two devices; either by tilting the whole structure forward
-until all the drawers fell out together, or by opening them singly with
-knives, like oysters.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Gamp stored all her household matters in a little cupboard by the
-fireplace; beginning below the surface (as in nature) with the coals,
-and mounting gradually upwards to the spirits, which, from motives
-of delicacy, she kept in a teapot. The chimney-piece was ornamented
-with an almanac; it was also embellished with three profiles; one,
-in colors, of Mrs. Gamp herself in early life; one, in bronze, of a
-lady in feathers, supposed to be Mrs. Harris, as she appeared when
-dressed for a ball; and one, in black, of Mr. Gamp deceased. The last
-was a full-length, in order that the likeness might be rendered more
-obvious and forcible, by the introduction of the wooden leg. A pair
-of bellows, a pair of pattens, a toasting-fork, a kettle, a spoon for
-the administration of medicine to the refractory, and lastly, Mrs.
-Gamp’s umbrella, which, as something of great price and rarity, was
-displayed with particular ostentation, completed the decorations of the
-chimney-piece and adjacent wall.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>William Edmonstoune Aytoun and Theodore Martin, two young men of
-brilliant brains, produced together the collection of burlesque and
-parodies known as <i>The Bon Gaultier Ballads</i>.</p>
-
-<p>At this time, the middle of the eighteenth century, parody was greatly
-in vogue. The Ballads were whimsical, and as a whole, kindly. They were
-extremely popular, as much so as the Rejected Addresses, but today they
-seem dull and rather futile.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_494">[494]</span></p>
-
-<p>Another vogue of the day was Bathos, of which the following is a fair
-example.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE HUSBAND’S PETITION</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Come hither, my heart’s darling,</div>
- <div class="i1">Come, sit upon my knee,</div>
- <div>And listen, while I whisper</div>
- <div class="i1">A boon I ask of thee.</div>
- <div>You need not pull my whiskers</div>
- <div class="i1">So amorously, my dove;</div>
- <div>’T is something quite apart from</div>
- <div class="i1">The gentle cares of love.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I feel a bitter craving&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">A dark and deep desire,</div>
- <div>That glows beneath my bosom</div>
- <div class="i1">Like coals of kindled fire.</div>
- <div>The passion of the nightingale,</div>
- <div class="i1">When singing to the rose,</div>
- <div>Is feebler than the agony</div>
- <div class="i1">That murders my repose!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nay, dearest! do not doubt me,</div>
- <div class="i1">Though madly thus I speak&mdash;</div>
- <div>I feel thy arms about me,</div>
- <div class="i1">Thy tresses on my cheek:</div>
- <div>I know the sweet devotion</div>
- <div class="i1">That links thy heart with mine,&mdash;</div>
- <div>I know my soul’s emotion</div>
- <div class="i1">Is doubly felt by thine:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And deem not that a shadow</div>
- <div class="i1">Hath fallen across my love:</div>
- <div>No, sweet, my love is shadowless,</div>
- <div class="i1">As yonder heaven above.</div>
- <div>These little taper fingers&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Ah, Jane! how white they be!&mdash;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_495">[495]</span></div>
- <div>Can well supply the cruel want</div>
- <div class="i1">That almost maddens me.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thou wilt not sure deny me</div>
- <div class="i1">My first and fond request;</div>
- <div>I pray thee, by the memory</div>
- <div class="i1">Of all we cherish best&mdash;</div>
- <div>By all the dear remembrance</div>
- <div class="i1">Of those delicious days,</div>
- <div>When, hand in hand, we wandered</div>
- <div class="i1">Along the summer braes:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>By all we felt, unspoken,</div>
- <div class="i1">When ’neath the early moon,</div>
- <div>We sat beside the rivulet,</div>
- <div class="i1">In the leafy month of June;</div>
- <div>And by the broken whisper</div>
- <div class="i1">That fell upon my ear,</div>
- <div>More sweet than angel-music,</div>
- <div class="i1">When first I woo’d thee, dear!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>By that great vow which bound thee</div>
- <div class="i1">For ever to my side,</div>
- <div>And by the ring that made thee</div>
- <div class="i1">My darling and my bride!</div>
- <div>Thou wilt not fail nor falter,</div>
- <div class="i1">But bend thee to the task&mdash;</div>
- <div>A <span class="smcap">boiled sheep’s-head on Sunday</span></div>
- <div class="i1">Is all the boon I ask!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>This extract is from a long poem, called:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE LAY OF THE LOVELORN</i><br />
-<span class="subhed2">PARODY ON TENNYSON’S “LOCKSLEY HALL”</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Comrades, you may pass the rosy. With permission of the chair,</div>
- <div>I shall leave you for a little, for I’d like to take the air<span class="pagenum" id="Page_496">[496]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Whether ’t was the sauce at dinner, or that glass of ginger beer,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Or these strong cheroots, I know not, but I feel a little queer.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Let me go. Now, Chuckster, blow me, ’pon my soul, this is too bad!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">When you want me, ask the waiter, he knows where I’m to be had!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Whew! This is a great relief now! Let me but undo my stock,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Resting here beneath the porch, my nerves will steady like a rock.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In my ears I hear the singing of a lot of favorite tunes&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Bless my heart, how very odd! Why, surely there’s a brace of moons!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">See! the stars! how bright they twinkle, winking with a frosty glare,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Like my faithless cousin Amy when she drove me to despair.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">O, my cousin, spider-hearted! Oh, my Amy! No, confound it!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">I must wear the mournful willow,&mdash;all around my hat I’ve bound it.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Falser than the Bank of Fancy,&mdash;frailer than a shilling glove,</div>
- <div>Puppet to a father’s anger,&mdash;minion to a nabob’s love!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Is it well to wish thee happy? Having known me, could you ever</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Stoop to marry half a heart, and little more than half a liver?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Happy! Damme! Thou shalt lower to his level day by day,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Changing from the best of China to the commonest of clay.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_497">[497]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">As the husband is, the wife is,&mdash;he is stomach-plagued and old;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And his curry soups will make thy cheek the color of his gold.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">When his feeble love is sated, he will hold thee surely then</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Something lower than his hookah,&mdash;something less than his cayenne.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">What is this? His eyes are pinky. Was’t the claret? Oh, no, no,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Bless your soul, it was the salmon,&mdash;salmon always makes him so.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Take him to thy dainty chamber&mdash;soothe him with thy lightest fancies,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">He will understand thee, won’t he?&mdash;pay thee with a lover’s glances?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Louder than the loudest trumpet, harsh as harshest ophicleide,</div>
- <div>Nasal respirations answer the endearments of his bride.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Sweet response, delightful music! Gaze upon thy noble charge</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Till the spirit fill thy bosom that inspired the meek Laffarge.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Better thou wert dead before me,&mdash;better, better that I stood</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Looking on thy murdered body, like the injured Daniel Good!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Better, thou and I were lying, cold and limber-stiff and dead,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">With a pan of burning charcoal underneath our nuptial bed!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Cursed be the bank of England’s notes, that tempt the soul to sin!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Cursed be the want of acres,&mdash;doubly cursed the want of tin!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_498">[498]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Cursed be the marriage contract, that enslaved thy soul to greed!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Cursed be the sallow lawyer, that prepared and drew the deed!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Cursed be his foul apprentice, who the loathsome fees did earn!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Cursed be the clerk and parson,&mdash;cursed be the whole concern!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Charles Kingsley, a clergyman of attainments, possessed the same type
-of whimsical humor as the later and greater Lewis Carroll.</p>
-
-<p>His <i>Water Babies</i> from which a short extract is given, is a
-classic in child literature.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE PROFESSOR’S MALADY</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">They say that no one has ever yet seen a water-baby. For my part, I
-believe that the naturalists get dozens of them when they are out
-dredging, but they say nothing about them and throw them overboard
-again, for fear of spoiling their theories. But you see the professor
-was found out, as every one is in due time. A very terrible old fairy
-found the professor out. She felt his bumps, and cast his nativity, and
-took the lunars of him carefully inside and out; and so she knew what
-he would do as well as if she had seen it in a print book, as they say
-in the dear old west country. And he did it. And so he was found out
-beforehand, as everybody always is; and the old fairy will find out the
-naturalists some day, and put them in the <i>Times</i>; and then on
-whose side will the laugh be?</p>
-
-<p>So all the doctors in the country were called in to make a report on
-his case; and of course every one of them flatly contradicted the
-other: else what use is there in being men of science? But at last the
-majority agreed on a report, in the true medical language, one half
-bad Latin, the other half worse Greek, and the rest what might have
-been English, if they had only learned to write it. And this is the
-beginning thereof:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_499">[499]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The subanhypaposupernal anastomoses of peritomic diacellurite in the
-encephalo-digital region of the distinguished individual of whose
-symptomatic phenomena we had the melancholy honour (subsequent to a
-preliminary diagnostic inspection) of making an inspectorial diagnosis,
-presenting the interexclusively quadrilateral and antinomian diathesis
-known as Bumpsterhausen’s blue follicles, we proceeded&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>But what they proceeded to do my lady never knew, for she was so
-frightened at the long words that she ran for her life, and locked
-herself into her bedroom, for fear of being squashed by the words and
-strangled by the sentence. A boa-constrictor, she said, was bad company
-enough; but what was a boa-constrictor made of paving-stones?</p>
-
-<p>“It was quite shocking! What can they think is the matter with him?”
-said she to the old nurse.</p>
-
-<p>“That his wit’s just addled; maybe wi’ unbelief and heathenry,” quoth
-she.</p>
-
-<p>“Then why can’t they say so?”</p>
-
-<p>And the heaven, and the sea, and the rocks and vales re-echoed, “Why,
-indeed?” But the doctors never heard them.</p>
-
-<p>So she made Sir John write to the <i>Times</i> to command the
-chancellor of the exchequer for the time being to put a tax on long
-words:</p>
-
-<p>A light tax on words over three syllables, which are necessary evils,
-like rats, but, like them, must be kept down judiciously.</p>
-
-<p>A heavy tax on words over four syllables, as heterodoxy, spontaneity,
-spiritualism, spuriosity, etc.</p>
-
-<p>And on words over five syllables (of which I hope no one will wish to
-see any examples), a totally prohibitory tax.</p>
-
-<p>And a similar prohibitory tax on words derived from three or more
-languages at once, words derived from two languages, having become so
-common that there was no more hope of rooting out them than of rooting
-out peth-winds.</p>
-
-<p>The chancellor of the exchequer, being a scholar and a man of sense,
-jumped at the notion, for he saw in it the one and only plan for
-abolishing Schedule D. But when he brought in his bill, most of the
-Irish members, and (I am sorry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_500">[500]</span> to say) some of the Scotch likewise,
-opposed it most strongly, on the ground that in a free country no man
-was bound either to understand himself or to let others understand him.
-So the bill fell through on the first reading, and the chancellor,
-being a philosopher, comforted himself with the thought that it was
-not the first time that a woman had hit off a grand idea, and the men
-turned up their stupid noses thereat.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Alfred, Lord Tennyson, is conceded the gift of humor by some, but his
-other attributes so far outshine it that his amusing bits are hard to
-find. A moderately funny poem is:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE GOOSE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I knew an old wife lean and poor,</div>
- <div class="i1">Her rags scarce held together;</div>
- <div>There strode a stranger to the door,</div>
- <div class="i1">And it was windy weather.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He held a goose upon his arm,</div>
- <div class="i1">He utter’d rhyme and reason,</div>
- <div>“Here, take the goose, and keep you warm,</div>
- <div class="i1">It is a stormy season.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>She caught the white goose by the leg,</div>
- <div class="i1">A goose&mdash;’twas no great matter.</div>
- <div>The goose let fall a golden egg</div>
- <div class="i1">With cackle and with clatter.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>She dropt the goose, and caught the pelf,</div>
- <div class="i1">And ran to tell her neighbours;</div>
- <div>And bless’d herself, and cursed herself,</div>
- <div class="i1">And rested from her labours.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And feeding high and living soft,</div>
- <div class="i1">Grew plump and able-bodied;</div>
- <div>Until the grave churchwarden doff’d,</div>
- <div class="i1">The parson smirk’d and nodded.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_501">[501]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So sitting, served by man and maid,</div>
- <div class="i1">She felt her heart grow prouder:</div>
- <div>But, ah! the more the white goose laid</div>
- <div class="i1">It clack’d and cackled louder.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>It clutter’d here, it chuckled there;</div>
- <div class="i1">It stirr’d the old wife’s mettle;</div>
- <div>She shifted in her elbow-chair,</div>
- <div class="i1">And hurl’d the pan and kettle.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“A quinsy choke thy cursed note!”</div>
- <div class="i1">Then wax’d her anger stronger.</div>
- <div>“Go, take the goose, and wring her throat,</div>
- <div class="i1">I will not bear it longer.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then yelp’d the cur, and yawl’d the cat;</div>
- <div class="i1">Ran Gaffer, stumbled Gammer.</div>
- <div>The goose flew this way and flew that,</div>
- <div class="i1">And fill’d the house with clamour.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As head and heels upon the floor</div>
- <div class="i1">They flounder’d all together,</div>
- <div>There strode a stranger to the door,</div>
- <div class="i1">And it was windy weather:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He took the goose upon his arm,</div>
- <div class="i1">He utter’d words of scorning;</div>
- <div>“So keep you cold, or keep you warm,</div>
- <div class="i1">It is a stormy morning.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The wild wind rang from park and plain,</div>
- <div class="i1">And round the attics rumbled,</div>
- <div>Till all the tables danced again,</div>
- <div class="i1">And half the chimneys tumbled.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The glass blew in, the fire blew out,</div>
- <div class="i1">The blast was hard and harder.</div>
- <div>Her cap blew off, her gown blew up,</div>
- <div class="i1">And a whirlwind cleared the larder.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_502">[502]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And while on all sides breaking loose,</div>
- <div class="i1">Her household fled the danger,</div>
- <div>Quoth she, “The devil take the goose,</div>
- <div class="i1">And God forget the stranger!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Robert Browning, though scarcely to be called a humorous poet, had a
-fine wit and a quick and agile sense of whimsey.</p>
-
-<p>His <i>Pied Piper of Hamelin</i>, written to amuse a sick child of
-Macready’s, is a masterpiece of quiet humor. His satiric vein is shown
-in:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE POPE AND THE NET</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What, he on whom our voices unanimously ran,</div>
- <div>Made Pope at our last Conclave? Full low his life began:</div>
- <div>His father earned the daily bread as just a fisherman.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">So much the more his boy minds book, gives proof of mother-wit,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Becomes first Deacon, and then Priest, then Bishop: see him sit</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">No less than Cardinal ere long, while no one cries “Unfit!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">But some one smirks, some other smiles, jogs elbow and nods head;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Each wings at each: “I’ faith, a rise! Saint Peter’s net, instead</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Of sword and keys, is come in vogue!” You think he blushes red?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Not he, of humble holy heart! “Unworthy me!” he sighs:</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“From fisher’s drudge to Church’s prince&mdash;it is indeed a rise:</div>
- <div>So, here’s my way to keep the fact forever in my eyes!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">And straightway in his palace-hall, where commonly is set</div>
- <div>Some coat-of-arms, some portraiture ancestral, lo, we met</div>
- <div>His mean estate’s reminder in his fisher-father’s net!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Which step conciliates all and some, stops cavil in a trice:</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“The humble holy heart that holds of new-born pride no spice!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_503">[503]</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent">He’s just the saint to choose for Pope!” Each adds, “’Tis my advice.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">So Pope he was: and when we flocked&mdash;its sacred slipper on&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">To kiss his foot, we lifted eyes, alack, the thing was gone&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">That guarantee of lowlihead,&mdash;eclipsed that star which shone!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Each eyed his fellow, one and all kept silence. I cried “Pish!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">I’ll make me spokesman for the rest, express the common wish.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Why, Father, is the net removed?” “Son, it hath caught the fish.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Frederick Locker-Lampson, though following in the footsteps of Praed,
-was a more famous writer of the rhymes known as Vers de Société.</p>
-
-<p>There is no English equivalent for the French term, and attempts
-to coin one are usually failures. Society verse, Familiar Verse,
-Occasional verse,&mdash;each lacks somewhat of the real implication.</p>
-
-<p>Locker-Lampson, himself a discerning and severe critic, instructs us
-that the rhymes should be short, graceful, refined and fanciful, not
-seldom distinguished by chastened sentiment, and often playful.</p>
-
-<p>But, really, playfulness and light, bright humor are more a distinctive
-quality of Vers de Société than that dictum stipulates.</p>
-
-<p>Wit is the keynote, fun the undercurrent of the best of the material
-so often collected under this name; and Locker-Lampson made the
-first and perhaps the best collection, under the title of <i>Lyra
-Elegantiarum</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Typical of all that goes to make up the best form of Vers de Société is
-his poem,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MY MISTRESS’S BOOTS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They nearly strike me dumb,</div>
- <div>And I tremble when they come</div>
- <div class="i2">Pit-a-pat;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_504">[504]</span></div>
- <div>This palpitation means</div>
- <div>These boots are Geraldine’s&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i2">Think of that!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Oh, where did hunter win</div>
- <div>So delectable a skin</div>
- <div class="i2">For her feet?</div>
- <div>You lucky little kid,</div>
- <div>You perished, so you did,</div>
- <div class="i2">For my sweet!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The faëry stitching gleams</div>
- <div>On the sides, and in the seams,</div>
- <div class="i2">And it shows</div>
- <div>The Pixies were the wags</div>
- <div>Who tipt those funny tags</div>
- <div class="i2">And these toes.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What soles to charm an elf!</div>
- <div>Had Crusoe, sick of self,</div>
- <div class="i2">Chanced to view</div>
- <div><i>One</i> printed near the tide,</div>
- <div>Oh, how hard he would have tried</div>
- <div class="i2">For the two!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For Gerry’s debonair</div>
- <div>And innocent, and fair</div>
- <div class="i2">As a rose;</div>
- <div>She’s an angel in a frock,</div>
- <div>With a fascinating cock</div>
- <div class="i2">To her nose.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The simpletons who squeeze</div>
- <div>Their extremities to please</div>
- <div class="i2">Mandarins,</div>
- <div>Would positively flinch</div>
- <div>From venturing to pinch</div>
- <div class="i2">Geraldine’s.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_505">[505]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Cinderella’s <i>lefts and rights</i>,</div>
- <div>To Geraldine’s were frights;</div>
- <div class="i2">And I trow,</div>
- <div>The damsel, deftly shod,</div>
- <div>Has dutifully trod</div>
- <div class="i2">Until now.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Come, Gerry, since it suits</div>
- <div>Such a pretty Puss (in Boots)</div>
- <div class="i2">These to don;</div>
- <div>Set this dainty hand awhile</div>
- <div>On my shoulder, dear, and I’ll</div>
- <div class="i2">Put them on.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON A SENSE OF HUMOUR</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He cannot be complete in aught</div>
- <div class="i1">Who is not humorously prone;</div>
- <div>A man without a merry thought</div>
- <div class="i1">Can hardly have a funny-bone.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>SOME LADIES</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Some ladies now make pretty songs,</div>
- <div class="i1">And some make pretty nurses;</div>
- <div>Some men are great at righting wrongs</div>
- <div class="i1">And some at writing verses.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A TERRIBLE INFANT</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I recollect a nurse call’d Ann,</div>
- <div class="i1">Who carried me about the grass,</div>
- <div>And one fine day a fine young man</div>
- <div class="i1">Came up, and kiss’d the pretty lass.</div>
- <div>She did not make the least objection!</div>
- <div class="i3">Thinks I, “<i>Aha!</i></div>
- <div class="i1"><i>When I can talk I’ll tell Mamma</i>”</div>
- <div>&mdash;And that’s my earliest recollection.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_506">[506]</span></p>
-
-<p>Charles Stuart Calverley is called the Prince of Parodists, but his
-genius deserves far higher praise than that.</p>
-
-<p>His serious work is of a high order but it is for his humorous verse
-that he is most loved and praised.</p>
-
-<p>His parodies while showing the best and finest burlesque qualities, are
-also poems in themselves, and are of an exquisite wit and a spontaneous
-humor rarely excelled.</p>
-
-<p>One of the best is the ballad in which Rossetti’s manner is parodied in
-very spirit.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>BALLAD</i></h4>
- <h5 class="smaller">PART I</h5>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The auld wife sat at her ivied door,</div>
- <div class="i1">(<i>Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese</i>)</div>
- <div>A thing she had frequently done before;</div>
- <div class="i1">And her spectacles lay on her apron’d knees.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The piper he piped on the hilltop high,</div>
- <div class="i1">(<i>Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese</i>)</div>
- <div>Till the cow said “I die,” and the goose asked “Why?”</div>
- <div class="i1">And the dog said nothing, but search’d for fleas.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The farmer he strode through the square farmyard;</div>
- <div class="i1">(<i>Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese</i>)</div>
- <div>His last brew of ale was a trifle hard&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">The connection of which the plot one sees.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The farmer’s daughter hath frank blue eyes;</div>
- <div class="i1">(<i>Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese</i>)</div>
- <div>She hears the rooks caw in the windy skies.</div>
- <div class="i1">As she sits at her lattice and shells her peas.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The farmer’s daughter hath ripe red lips;</div>
- <div class="i1">(<i>Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese</i>)</div>
- <div>If you try to approach her, away she skips</div>
- <div class="i1">Over tables and chairs with apparent ease.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_507">[507]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The farmer’s daughter hath soft brown hair;</div>
- <div class="i1">(<i>Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese</i>)</div>
- <div>And I met with a ballad, I can’t say where,</div>
- <div class="i1">Which wholly consisted of lines like these.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5 class="smaller">PART II</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>She sat with her hands ’neath her dimpled cheeks,</div>
- <div class="i1">(<i>Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese</i>)</div>
- <div>And spake not a word. While a lady speaks</div>
- <div class="i1">There is hope, but she didn’t even sneeze.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>She sat, with her hands ’neath her crimson cheeks;</div>
- <div class="i1">(<i>Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese</i>)</div>
- <div>She gave up mending her father’s breeks,</div>
- <div class="i1">And let the cat roll in her new chemise.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>She sat with her hands ’neath her burning cheeks,</div>
- <div class="i1">(<i>Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese</i>)</div>
- <div>And gazed at the piper for thirteen weeks;</div>
- <div class="i1">Then she follow’d him o’er the misty leas.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Her sheep follow’d her, as their tails did them,</div>
- <div class="i1">(<i>Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese</i>)</div>
- <div>And this song is consider’d a perfect gem,</div>
- <div class="i1">And as to the meaning, it’s what you please.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Equally marvelous in its assured touch and utter lack of mere burlesque
-exaggeration is his parody of Browning.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE COCK AND THE BULL</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You see this pebble-stone? It’s a thing I bought</div>
- <div>Of a bit of a chit of a boy i’ the mid o’ the day.</div>
- <div>I like to dock the smaller parts o’ speech,</div>
- <div>As we curtail the already cur-tail’d cur&mdash;</div>
- <div>(You catch the paronomasia, play ’po’ words?)</div>
- <div>Did, rather, i’ the pre-Landseerian days.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_508">[508]</span></div>
- <div>Well, to my muttons. I purchased the concern,</div>
- <div>And clapt it i’ my poke, having given for same</div>
- <div>By way o’ chop, swop, barter or exchange&mdash;</div>
- <div>“Chop” was my snickering dandiprat’s own term&mdash;</div>
- <div>One shilling and fourpence, current coin o’ the realm.</div>
- <div>O-n-e one, and f-o-u-r four</div>
- <div>Pence, one and fourpence&mdash;you are with me, sir?&mdash;</div>
- <div>What hour it skills not: ten or eleven o’ the clock,</div>
- <div>One day (and what a roaring day it was</div>
- <div>Go shop or sight-see&mdash;bar a spit o’ rain!)</div>
- <div>In February, eighteen, sixty-nine,</div>
- <div>Alexandria Victoria, Fidei&mdash;</div>
- <div>Hm&mdash;hm&mdash;how runs the jargon? being on the throne.</div>
- <div>Such, sir, are all the facts, succinctly put,</div>
- <div>The basis or substratum&mdash;what you will&mdash;</div>
- <div>Of the impending eighty thousand lines.</div>
- <div>“Not much in ’em either,” quoth perhaps simple Hodge.</div>
- <div>But there’s a superstructure. Wait a bit.</div>
- <div>Mark first the rationale of the thing:</div>
- <div>Hear logic rivel and levigate the deed.</div>
- <div>That shilling&mdash;and for matter o’ that, the pence&mdash;</div>
- <div>I had o’ course upo’ me&mdash;wi’ me say&mdash;</div>
- <div>(<i>Mecum’s</i> the Latin, make a note o’ that)</div>
- <div>When I popp’d pen i’ stand, scratch’d ear, wiped snout,</div>
- <div>(Let everybody wipe his own himself)</div>
- <div>Sniff’d&mdash;tch!&mdash;at snuff-box; tumbled up, teheed,</div>
- <div>Haw-haw’d (not hee-haw’d, that’s another guess thing),</div>
- <div>Then fumbled at and stumbled out of, door.</div>
- <div>I shoved the timber ope wi’ my omoplat;</div>
- <div>And <i>in vestibulo</i>, i’ the lobby to wit</div>
- <div>(Iacobi Facciolati’s rendering, sir),</div>
- <div>Donn’d galligaskins, antigropeloes,</div>
- <div>And so forth; and, complete with hat and gloves,</div>
- <div>One on and one a-dangle i’ my hand,</div>
- <div>And ombrifuge (Lord love you!), case o’ rain,</div>
- <div>I flopp’d forth, ’sbuddikins! on my own ten toes</div>
- <div>(I do assure you there be ten of them),</div>
- <div>And went clump-clumping up hill and down dale<span class="pagenum" id="Page_509">[509]</span></div>
- <div>To find myself o’ the sudden i’ front o’ the boy.</div>
- <div>But case I hadn’t ’em on me, could I ha’ bought</div>
- <div>This sort-o’-kind-o’-what-you-might-call toy,</div>
- <div>This pebble thing, o’ the boy-thing? Q. E. D.</div>
- <div>That’s proven without aid from mumping Pope,</div>
- <div>Sleek proporate or bloated Cardinal.</div>
- <div>(Isn’t it, old Fatchaps? You’re in Euclid now.)</div>
- <div>So, having the shilling&mdash;having i’ fact a lot&mdash;</div>
- <div>And pence and halfpence, ever so many o’ them,</div>
- <div>I purchased, as I think I said before,</div>
- <div>The pebble (<i>lapis, lapidis,-di,-dem,-de&mdash;</i></div>
- <div>What nouns ’crease short i’ the genitive, Fatchaps, eh?)</div>
- <div>O’ the boy, a bare-legg’d beggarly son of a gun,</div>
- <div>For one and fourpence. Here we are again.</div>
- <div>Now Law steps in, bigwigg’d, voluminous-jaw’d;</div>
- <div>Investigates and re-investigates.</div>
- <div>Was the transaction illegal? Law shakes head</div>
- <div>Perpend, sir, all the bearings of the case.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At first the coin was mine, the chattel his.</div>
- <div>But now (by virtue of the said exchange</div>
- <div>And barter) <i>vice versa</i> all the coin,</div>
- <div><i>Per juris operationem</i>, vests</div>
- <div>I’ the boy and his assigns till ding o’ doom;</div>
- <div>(<i>In sæcula sæculo-o-o-rum</i>;</div>
- <div>I think I hear the Abate mouth out that.)</div>
- <div>To have and hold the same to him and them.</div>
- <div><i>Confer</i> some idiot on Conveyancing.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Whereas the pebble and every part thereof,</div>
- <div>And all that appertaineth thereunto,</div>
- <div><i>Quodcunque pertinet ad eam rem</i></div>
- <div>(I fancy, sir, my Latin’s rather pat),</div>
- <div>Or shall, will, may, might, can, could, would or should</div>
- <div>(<i>Subaudi cætera</i>&mdash;clap we to the close&mdash;</div>
- <div>For what’s the good of Law in a case o’ the kind),<span class="pagenum" id="Page_510">[510]</span></div>
- <div>Is mine to all intents and purposes.</div>
- <div>This settled, I resume the thread o’ the tale.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now for a touch o’ the vendor’s quality.</div>
- <div>He says a gen’lman bought a pebble of him</div>
- <div>(This pebble i’ sooth, sir, which I hold i’ my hand),</div>
- <div>And paid for’t, <i>like</i> a gen’lman, on the nail.</div>
- <div>“Did I o’ercharge him a ha’penny? Devil a bit.</div>
- <div>Fiddlepin’s end! Get out, you blazing ass!</div>
- <div>Gabble o’ the goose. Don’t bugaboo-baby <i>me</i>!</div>
- <div>Go double or quits? Yah! tittup! what’s the odds?”</div>
- <div>There’s the transaction view’d i’ the vendor’s light.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Next ask that dumpled hag, stood snuffling by,</div>
- <div>With her three frowsy blowsy brats o’ babes,</div>
- <div>The scum o’ the kennel, cream o’ the filth-heap&mdash;Faugh!</div>
- <div>Aie, aie, aie, aie! οτοτοτοτοτοι</div>
- <div>(’Stead which we blurt out Hoighty toighty now),</div>
- <div>And the baker and candlestickmaker, and Jack and Jill,</div>
- <div>Blear’d Goody this and queasy Gaffer that.</div>
- <div>Ask the schoolmaster. Take schoolmaster first.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He saw a gentleman purchase of a lad</div>
- <div>A stone, and pay for it <i>rite</i>, on the square,</div>
- <div>And carry it off <i>per saltum</i>, jauntily,</div>
- <div><i>Propria quae maribus</i>, gentleman’s property now</div>
- <div>(Agreeably to the law explain’d above),</div>
- <div><i>In proprium usum</i>, for his private ends,</div>
- <div>The boy he chuck’d a brown i’ the air, and bit</div>
- <div>I’ the face the shilling; heaved a thumping stone</div>
- <div>At a lean hen that ran cluck clucking by</div>
- <div>(And hit her, dead as nail i’ post o’ door),</div>
- <div>Then <i>abiit</i>&mdash;what’s the Ciceronian phrase?&mdash;</div>
- <div><i>Excessit</i>, <i>evasit</i>, <i>erupit</i>&mdash;off slogs boy;</div>
- <div>Off like bird, <i>avi similis</i>&mdash;you observed</div>
- <div>The dative? Pretty i’ the Mantuan!)&mdash;<i>Anglice</i></div>
- <div>Off in three flea skips. <i>Hactenus</i>, so far,</div>
- <div>So good, <i>tam bene</i>. <i>Bene</i>, <i>satis</i>, <i>male</i>,&mdash;</div>
- <div>Where was I with my trope ’bout one in a quag?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_511">[511]</span></div>
- <div>I did once hitch the syntax into verse:</div>
- <div><i>Verbum personale</i>, a verb personal,</div>
- <div><i>Concordat</i>&mdash;ay, “agrees,” old Fatchaps&mdash;<i>cum</i></div>
- <div><i>Nominativo</i>, with its nominative,</div>
- <div><i>Genere</i>, i’ point o’ gender, <i>numero</i>,</div>
- <div>O’ number, <i>et persona</i>, and person. <i>Ut</i>,</div>
- <div>Instance: <i>Sol ruit</i>, down flops sun, <i>et</i>, and,</div>
- <div><i>Montes umbrantur</i>, out flounce mountains. Pah!</div>
- <div>Excuse me, sir, I think I’m going mad.</div>
- <div>You see the trick on ’t though, and can yourself</div>
- <div>Continue the discourse <i>ad libitum</i>.</div>
- <div>It takes up about eighty thousand lines,</div>
- <div>A thing imagination boggles at;</div>
- <div>And might, odds-bobs, sir! in judicious hands,</div>
- <div>Extend from here to Mesopotamy.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>While the style of Jean Ingelow is thus genially made fun of.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>LOVERS, AND A REFLECTION</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In moss-prankt dells which the sunbeams flatter</div>
- <div class="i1">(And heaven it knoweth what that may mean;</div>
- <div>Meaning, however, is no great matter)</div>
- <div class="i1">Where woods are a-tremble, with rifts atween;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Through God’s own heather we wonned together,</div>
- <div class="i1">I and my Willie (O love my love):</div>
- <div>I need hardly remark it was glorious weather,</div>
- <div class="i1">And flitterbats wavered alow, above:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Boats were curtseying, rising, bowing</div>
- <div class="i1">(Boats in that climate are so polite),</div>
- <div>And sands were a ribbon of green endowing,</div>
- <div class="i1">And O the sun-dazzle on bark and bight!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Through the rare red heather we danced together,</div>
- <div class="i1">(O love my Willie!) and smelt for flowers:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_512">[512]</span></div>
- <div>I must mention again it was glorious weather,</div>
- <div class="i1">Rhymes are so scarce in this world of ours:&mdash;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>By rises that flushed with their purple favors,</div>
- <div class="i1">Through becks that brattled o’er grasses sheen,</div>
- <div>We walked or waded, we two young shavers,</div>
- <div class="i1">Thanking our stars we were both so green.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>We journeyed in parallels, I and Willie,</div>
- <div class="i1">In “fortunate parallels!” Butterflies,</div>
- <div>Hid in weltering shadows of daffodilly</div>
- <div class="i1">Or marjoram, kept making peacock’s eyes:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Song-birds darted about, some inky</div>
- <div class="i1">As coal, some snowy (I ween) as curds;</div>
- <div>Or rosy as pinks, or as roses pinky&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">They reck of no eerie To-come, those birds!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But they skim over bents which the mill-stream washes,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or hang in the lift ’neath a white cloud’s hem;</div>
- <div>They need no parasols, no galoshes;</div>
- <div class="i1">And good Mrs. Trimmer she feedeth them.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then we thrid God’s cowslips (as erst his heather)</div>
- <div class="i1">That endowed the wan grass with their golden blooms;</div>
- <div>And snapt&mdash;(it was perfectly charming weather)&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Our fingers at Fate and her goddess-glooms:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And Willie ’gan sing&mdash;(O, his notes were fluty;</div>
- <div class="i1">Wafts fluttered them out to the white-winged sea)&mdash;</div>
- <div>Something made up of rhymes that have done much duty,</div>
- <div class="i1">Rhymes (better to put it) of “ancientry”:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Bowers of flowers encountered showers</div>
- <div class="i1">In William’s carol (O love my Willie!)</div>
- <div>When he bade sorrow borrow from blithe To-morrow</div>
- <div class="i1">I quite forget what&mdash;say a daffodilly:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_513">[513]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A nest in a hollow, “with buds to follow,”</div>
- <div class="i1">I think occurred next in his nimble strain;</div>
- <div>And clay that was “kneaden” of course in Eden&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">A rhyme most novel, I do maintain:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mists, bones, the singer himself, love-stories,</div>
- <div class="i1">And all least furlable things got “furled”;</div>
- <div>Not with any design to conceal their glories,</div>
- <div class="i1">But simply and solely to rhyme with “world.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>O, if billows and pillows and hours and flowers,</div>
- <div class="i1">And all the brave rhymes of an elder day,</div>
- <div>Could be furled together this genial weather,</div>
- <div class="i1">And carted, or carried on wafts away,</div>
- <div>Nor ever again trotted out&mdash;ah me!</div>
- <div>How much fewer volumes of verse there’d be!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ODE TO TOBACCO</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thou who, when fears attack,</div>
- <div>Bid’st them avaunt, and Black</div>
- <div>Care, at the horseman’s back</div>
- <div class="i2">Perching, unseatest;</div>
- <div>Sweet when the morn is gray;</div>
- <div>Sweet, when they’ve cleared away</div>
- <div>Lunch; and at close of day</div>
- <div class="i2">Possibly sweetest:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I have a liking old</div>
- <div>For thee, though manifold</div>
- <div>Stories, I know, are told,</div>
- <div class="i2">Not to thy credit;</div>
- <div>How one (or two at most)</div>
- <div>Drops make a cat a ghost&mdash;</div>
- <div>Useless, except to roast&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i2">Doctors have said it:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_514">[514]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>How they who use fusees</div>
- <div>All grow by slow degrees</div>
- <div>Brainless as chimpanzees,</div>
- <div class="i2">Meagre as lizards;</div>
- <div>Go mad, and beat their wives;</div>
- <div>Plunge (after shocking lives)</div>
- <div>Razors and carving-knives</div>
- <div class="i2">Into their gizzards.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Confound such knavish tricks!</div>
- <div>Yet know I five or six</div>
- <div>Smokers who freely mix</div>
- <div class="i2">Still with their neighbors;</div>
- <div>Jones&mdash;(who, I’m glad to say,</div>
- <div>Asked leave of Mrs. J.)&mdash;</div>
- <div>Daily absorbs a clay</div>
- <div class="i2">After his labors.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Cats may have had their goose</div>
- <div>Cooked by tobacco-juice;</div>
- <div>Still why deny its use</div>
- <div class="i2">Thoughtfully taken?</div>
- <div>We’re not as tabbies are:</div>
- <div>Smith, take a fresh cigar!</div>
- <div>Jones, the tobacco-jar!</div>
- <div class="i2">Here’s to thee, Bacon!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Charles Lutwidge Dodgson is better known as Lewis Carroll, though
-during his lifetime, the author of <i>Alice</i> was extremely careful
-to preserve a decided distinction between the College Don and the
-writer of nonsense.</p>
-
-<p>Lewis Carroll was the first to produce coherent humor in the form of
-sheer nonsense, and his work, often imitated, has never been equaled.</p>
-
-<p>Beside the <i>Alice</i> books he wrote several volumes only a degree
-less wise and witty in the nonsense vein.</p>
-
-<p>But few selections can be given.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_515">[515]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>JABBERWOCKY</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">(From <i>Through the Looking-Glass</i>)</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves</div>
- <div class="i1">Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;</div>
- <div>All mimsy were the borogoves,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the mome raths outgrabe.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Beware the Jabberwock, my son!</div>
- <div class="i1">The jaws that bite, the claws that catch</div>
- <div>Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun</div>
- <div class="i1">The frumious Bandersnatch!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He took his vorpal sword in hand:</div>
- <div class="i1">Long time the manxome foe he sought&mdash;</div>
- <div>So rested he by the Tumtum tree,</div>
- <div class="i1">And stood awhile in thought.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And, as in uffish thought he stood,</div>
- <div class="i1">The Jabberwock, with eyes of flame,</div>
- <div>Came whiffling through the tulgey wood,</div>
- <div class="i1">And burbled as it came!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One, two! One, two! And through and through</div>
- <div class="i1">The vorpal blade went snicker-snack!</div>
- <div>He left it dead, and with its head</div>
- <div class="i1">He went galumphing back.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“And hast thou slain the Jabberwock?</div>
- <div class="i1">Come to my arms, my beamish boy!</div>
- <div>O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!”</div>
- <div class="i1">He chortled in his joy.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves</div>
- <div class="i1">Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;</div>
- <div>All mimsy were the borogoves,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the mome raths outgrabe.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_516">[516]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>WAYS AND MEANS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I’ll tell thee everything I can;</div>
- <div class="i1">There’s little to relate.</div>
- <div>I saw an aged aged man,</div>
- <div class="i1">A-sitting on a gate.</div>
- <div>“Who are you, aged man?” I said,</div>
- <div class="i1">“And how is it you live?”</div>
- <div>His answer trickled through my head</div>
- <div class="i1">Like water through a sieve.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He said, “I look for butterflies</div>
- <div class="i1">That sleep among the wheat:</div>
- <div>I make them into mutton-pies,</div>
- <div class="i1">And sell them in the street.</div>
- <div>I sell them unto men,” he said,</div>
- <div class="i1">“Who sail on stormy seas;</div>
- <div>And that’s the way I get my bread&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">A trifle, if you please.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But I was thinking of a plan</div>
- <div class="i1">To dye one’s whiskers green,</div>
- <div>And always use so large a fan</div>
- <div class="i1">That they could not be seen.</div>
- <div>So, having no reply to give</div>
- <div class="i1">To what the old man said,</div>
- <div>I cried, “Come, tell me how you live!”</div>
- <div class="i1">And thumped him on the head.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>His accents mild took up the tale;</div>
- <div class="i1">He said, “I go my ways</div>
- <div>And when I find a mountain-rill</div>
- <div class="i1">I set it in a blaze;</div>
- <div>And thence they make a stuff they call</div>
- <div class="i1">Rowland’s Macassar Oil&mdash;</div>
- <div>Yet twopence-halfpenny is all</div>
- <div class="i1">They give me for my toil.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_517">[517]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But I was thinking of a way</div>
- <div class="i1">To feed oneself on batter,</div>
- <div>And so go on from day to day</div>
- <div class="i1">Getting a little fatter.</div>
- <div>I shook him well from side to side,</div>
- <div class="i1">Until his face was blue;</div>
- <div>“Come, tell me how you live,” I cried,</div>
- <div class="i1">“And what it is you do!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He said, “I hunt for haddock’s eyes</div>
- <div class="i1">Among the heather bright,</div>
- <div>And work them into waistcoat-buttons</div>
- <div class="i1">In the silent night.</div>
- <div>And these I do not sell for gold</div>
- <div class="i1">Or coin of silvery shine,</div>
- <div>But for a copper halfpenny</div>
- <div class="i1">And that will purchase nine.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I sometimes dig for buttered rolls,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or set limed twigs for crabs;</div>
- <div>I sometimes search the grassy knolls</div>
- <div class="i1">For wheels of Hansom cabs.</div>
- <div>And that’s the way” (he gave a wink)</div>
- <div class="i1">“By which I get my wealth&mdash;</div>
- <div>And very gladly will I drink</div>
- <div class="i1">Your Honor’s noble health.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I heard him then, for I had just</div>
- <div class="i1">Completed my design</div>
- <div>To keep the Menai Bridge from rust</div>
- <div class="i1">By boiling it in wine.</div>
- <div>I thanked him much for telling me</div>
- <div class="i1">The way he got his wealth,</div>
- <div>But chiefly for his wish that he</div>
- <div class="i1">Might drink my noble health.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And now if e’er by chance I put</div>
- <div class="i1">My fingers into glue,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_518">[518]</span></div>
- <div>Or madly squeeze a right-hand foot</div>
- <div class="i1">Into a left-hand shoe,</div>
- <div>Or if I drop upon my toe</div>
- <div class="i1">A very heavy weight,</div>
- <div>I weep, for it reminds me so</div>
- <div>Of that old man I used to know&mdash;</div>
- <div>Whose look was mild, whose speech was slow,</div>
- <div>Whose hair was whiter than the snow,</div>
- <div>Whose face was very like a crow,</div>
- <div>With eyes, like cinders, all aglow,</div>
- <div>Who seemed distracted with his woe,</div>
- <div>Who rocked his body to and fro,</div>
- <div>And muttered mumblingly, and low,</div>
- <div>As if his mouth were full of dough,</div>
- <div>Who snorted like a buffalo&mdash;</div>
- <div>That summer evening, long ago,</div>
- <div>A-sitting on a gate.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>SOME HALLUCINATIONS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He thought he saw an Elephant,</div>
- <div class="i1">That practised on a fife:</div>
- <div>He looked again, and found it was</div>
- <div class="i1">A letter from his wife.</div>
- <div>“At length I realize,” he said,</div>
- <div class="i1">“The bitterness of Life!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He thought he saw a Buffalo</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon the chimney-piece:</div>
- <div>He looked again, and found it was</div>
- <div class="i1">His Sister’s Husband’s Niece.</div>
- <div>“Unless you leave this house,” he said,</div>
- <div class="i1">“I’ll send for the Police!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He thought he saw a Rattlesnake</div>
- <div class="i1">That questioned him in Greek:</div>
- <div>He looked again, and found it was</div>
- <div class="i1">The Middle of Next Week.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_519">[519]</span></div>
- <div>“The one thing I regret,” he said,</div>
- <div class="i1">“Is that it cannot speak!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He thought he saw a Banker’s Clerk</div>
- <div class="i1">Descending from the ’bus:</div>
- <div>He looked again, and found it was</div>
- <div class="i1">A Hippopotamus:</div>
- <div>“If this should stay to dine,” he said,</div>
- <div class="i1">“There won’t be much for us!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Edward Lear, contemporary of Lewis Carroll, is the only peer of the
-great writer of nonsense.</p>
-
-<p>Lear’s nonsense is in different vein, but his verses are equally facile
-and felicitous and his prose quite as delightfully extravagant.</p>
-
-<p>If Carroll’s imagination was more exquisitely fanciful, Lear’s had
-a broader scope, and both writers are masters of that peculiar
-combination of paradox and reasoning that makes for delightful surprise.</p>
-
-<p>Lear was the first to make popular the style of stanza since called
-a Limerick, though the derivation of this name has never been
-satisfactorily determined.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There was an old man of Thermopylæ,</div>
- <div>Who never did anything properly;</div>
- <div class="i2">But they said: “If you choose</div>
- <div class="i2">To boil eggs in your shoes,</div>
- <div>You cannot remain in Thermopylæ.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There was an Old Man who said, “Hush!</div>
- <div>I perceive a young bird in this bush!”</div>
- <div class="i2">When they said, “Is it small?”</div>
- <div class="i2">He replied, “Not at all;</div>
- <div>It is four times as big as the bush!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There was an Old Man who supposed</div>
- <div>That the street door was partially closed;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_520">[520]</span></div>
- <div class="i2">But some very large Rats</div>
- <div class="i2">Ate his coats and his hats,</div>
- <div>While that futile Old Gentleman dozed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There was an Old Man of Leghorn,</div>
- <div>The smallest that ever was born;</div>
- <div class="i2">But quickly snapt up he</div>
- <div class="i2">Was once by a Puppy,</div>
- <div>Who devoured that Old Man of Leghorn.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There was an Old Man of Kamschatka</div>
- <div>Who possessed a remarkably fat Cur;</div>
- <div class="i2">His gait and his waddle</div>
- <div class="i2">Were held as a model</div>
- <div>To all the fat dogs in Kamschatka.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE TWO OLD BACHELORS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Two old Bachelors were living in one house</div>
- <div>One caught a Muffin, the other caught a Mouse.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Said he who caught the Muffin to him who caught the Mouse,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“This happens just in time, for we’ve nothing in the house,</div>
- <div>Save a tiny slice of lemon and a teaspoonful of honey,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And what to do for dinner,&mdash;since we haven’t any money?</div>
- <div>And what can we expect if we haven’t any dinner</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But to lose our teeth and eyelashes and keep on growing thinner?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Said he who caught the Mouse to him who caught the Muffin,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“We might cook this little Mouse if we only had some Stuffin’!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">If we had but Sage and Onions we could do extremely well,</div>
- <div>But how to get that Stuffin’ it is difficult to tell!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And then these two old Bachelors ran quickly to the town</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And asked for Sage and Onions as they wandered up and down;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">They borrowed two large Onions, but no Sage was to be found</div>
- <div>In the Shops or in the Market or in all the Gardens round.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_521">[521]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But some one said, “A hill there is, a little to the north,</div>
- <div>And to its purpledicular top a narrow way leads forth;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And there among the rugged rocks abides an ancient Sage,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">An earnest Man, who reads all day a most perplexing page.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Climb up and seize him by the toes,&mdash;all studious as he sits,&mdash;</div>
- <div>And pull him down, and chop him into endless little bits!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Then mix him with your Onion (cut up likewise into scraps),</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And your Stuffin’ will be ready, and very good&mdash;perhaps.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And then these two old Bachelors, without loss of time,</div>
- <div>The nearly purpledicular crags at once began to climb;</div>
- <div>And at the top among the rocks, all seated in a nook,</div>
- <div>They saw that Sage a-reading of a most enormous book.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“You earnest Sage!” aloud they cried, “your book you’ve read enough in!</div>
- <div>We wish to chop you into bits and mix you into Stuffin’!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">But that old Sage looked calmly up, and with his awful book</div>
- <div>At those two Bachelors’ bald heads a certain aim he took;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And over crag and precipice they rolled promiscuous down,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">At once they rolled, and never stopped in lane or field or town;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And when they reached their house, they found (besides their want of Stuffin’)</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The Mouse had fled&mdash;and previously had eaten up the Muffin.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">They left their home in silence by the once convivial door;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And from that hour those Bachelors were never heard of more.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Algernon Charles Swinburne, whose marvelous mastery of the lyric is
-well known, is not so noted as a humorist.</p>
-
-<p>Yet his parodies are among the finest in the language. His day was the
-Golden Age of Parody, and the writers who achieved it were true poets
-and true wits.</p>
-
-<p>This parody of Tennyson is alike a perfect mimicry of sound and sense.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_522">[522]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE HIGHER PANTHEISM IN A NUTSHELL</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One, who is not, we see: but one, whom we see not, is;</div>
- <div>Surely this is not that: but that is assuredly this.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">What, and wherefore, and whence? for under is over and under;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">If thunder could be without lightning, lightning could be without thunder.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Doubt is faith in the main: but faith, on the whole, is doubt;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">We cannot believe by proof: but could we believe without?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Why, and whither, and how? for barley and rye are not clover;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Neither are straight lines curves: yet over is under and over.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Two and two may be four: but four and four are not eight;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Fate and God may be twain: but God is the same thing as fate.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Ask a man what he thinks, and get from a man what he feels;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">God, once caught in the fact, shews you a fair pair of heels.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Body and spirit are twins: God only knows which is which;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The soul squats down in the flesh, like a tinker drunk in a ditch.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One and two are not one: but one and nothing is two;</div>
- <div>Truth can hardly be false, if falsehood cannot be true.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Once the mastodon was: pterodactyls were common as cocks;</div>
- <div>Then the mammoth was God: now is He a prize ox.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Parallels all things are: yet many of these are askew.</div>
- <div>You are certainly I: but certainly I am not you.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Springs the rock from the plain, shoots the stream from the rock;</div>
- <div>Cocks exist for the hen: but hens exist for the cock.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_523">[523]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>God, whom we see not, is: and God, who is not, we see;</div>
- <div>Fiddle, we know, is diddle: and diddle, we take it, is dee.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Swinburne’s parody of his own work is beautifully done in</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>NEPHELIDIA</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">From the depth of the dreamy decline of the dawn through a notable nimbus of nebulous moonshine,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Pallid and pink as the palm of the flag-flower that flickers with fear of the flies as they float,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Are they looks of our lovers that lustrously lean from a marvel of mystic miraculous moonshine,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">These that we feel in the blood of our blushes that thicken and threaten with throbs through the throat?</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Thicken and thrill as a theatre thronged at appeal of an actor’s appalled agitation,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Fainter with fear of the fires of the future than pale with the promise of pride in the past;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Flushed with the famishing fulness of fever that reddens with radiance of rathe recreation,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Gaunt as the ghastliest of glimpses that gleam through the gloom of the gloaming when ghosts go aghast?</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Nay, for the nick of the tick of the time is a tremulous touch on the temples of terror,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Strained as the sinews yet strenuous with strife of the dead who is dumb as the dust-heaps of death;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Surely no soul is it, sweet as the spasm of erotic emotional exquisite error,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Bathed in the balms of beatified bliss, beatific itself by beatitude’s breath.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Surely no spirit or sense of a soul that was soft to the spirit and soul of our senses</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Sweetens the stress of surprising suspicion that sobs in the semblance and sound of a sigh;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Only this oracle opens Olympian, in mystical moods and triangular tenses,&mdash;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_524">[524]</span></div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">“Life is the lust of a lamp for the light that is dark till the dawn of the day when we die.”</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Mild is the mirk and monotonous music of memory, melodiously mute as it may be,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">While the hope in the heart of a hero is bruised by the breach of men’s rapiers, resigned to the rod;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Made meek as a mother whose bosom-beats bound with the bliss-bringing bulk of a balm-breathing baby,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">As they grope through the grave-yard of creeds, under skies growing green at a groan for the grimness of God.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Blank is the book of his bounty beholden of old, and its binding is blacker than bluer:</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Out of blue into black is the scheme of the skies, and their dews are the wine of the bloodshed of things:</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Till the darkling desire of delight shall be free as a fawn that is freed from the fangs that pursue her,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Till the heart-beats of hell shall be hushed by a hymn from the hunt that has harried the kennel of kings.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Henry Austin Dobson, better known without his first name, was a
-skillful writer of beautiful <i>vers de société</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He also wrote much in the French Forms and seemed to find them in no
-way trammeling.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ON A FAN</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">THAT BELONGED TO THE MARQUISE DE POMPADOUR</span></h4>
-<h5 class="p1">(Ballade)</h5>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Chicken-skin, delicate, white,</div>
- <div class="i1">Painted by Carlo Vanloo,</div>
- <div>Loves in a riot of light,</div>
- <div class="i1">Roses and vaporous blue;</div>
- <div class="i1">Hark to the dainty <i>frou-frou</i></div>
- <div>Picture above, if you can,</div>
- <div class="i1">Eyes that could melt as the dew,&mdash;</div>
- <div>This was the Pompadour’s fan!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_525">[525]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>See how they rise at the sight,</div>
- <div class="i1">Thronging the <i>Œil de Bœuf</i> through,</div>
- <div>Courtiers as butterflies bright,</div>
- <div class="i1">Beauties that Fragonard drew,</div>
- <div class="i1"><i>Talon-rouge</i>, falaba, queue,</div>
- <div>Cardinal, duke,&mdash;to a man,</div>
- <div class="i1">Eager to sigh or to sue,&mdash;</div>
- <div>This was the Pompadour’s fan!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ah, but things more than polite</div>
- <div class="i1">Hung on this toy, <i>voyez-vous</i></div>
- <div>Matters of state and of might,</div>
- <div class="i1">Things that great ministers do;</div>
- <div class="i1">Things that, maybe, overthrew</div>
- <div>Those in whose brains they began;&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Here was the sign and the cue,&mdash;</div>
- <div>This was the Pompadour’s fan!</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5 class="p1">Envoy</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Where are the secrets it knew?</div>
- <div class="i1">Weavings of plot and of plan?</div>
- <div>&mdash;But where is the Pompadour, too?</div>
- <div class="i1"><i>This</i> was the Pompadour’s <i>fan</i>!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE ROUNDEAU</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You bid me try, Blue-eyes, to write</div>
- <div>A Rondeau. What! forthwith?&mdash;tonight?</div>
- <div class="i1">Reflect? Some skill I have, ’tis true;</div>
- <div class="i1">But thirteen lines!&mdash;and rhymed on two!&mdash;</div>
- <div>“Refrain,” as well. Ah, hapless plight!</div>
- <div>Still there are five lines&mdash;ranged aright.</div>
- <div>These Gallic bonds, I feared, would fright</div>
- <div class="i1">My easy Muse. They did, till you&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i10">You bid me try!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_526">[526]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>That makes them eight.&mdash;The port’s in sight;</div>
- <div>’Tis all because your eyes are bright!</div>
- <div class="i1">Now just a pair to end in “oo,”&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">When maids command, what can’t we do?</div>
- <div>Behold! The Rondeau&mdash;tasteful, light&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i10">You bid me try!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Andrew Lang was perhaps the most versatile writer among English bookmen
-of his day. Verse or prose, religious research or translations, to each
-and all he gives his individual touch,&mdash;light, airy, humorous.</p>
-
-<p>Fairies, Dreams and Ghosts are all his happy hunting ground, and he was
-one of the first to experiment with the old French Forms, in which he
-gave his own delightful fancy free play, while adhering strictly to the
-inflexible rules.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>BALLAD OF THE PRIMITIVE JEST</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I am an ancient Jest!</div>
- <div>Paleolithic man</div>
- <div>In his arboreal nest</div>
- <div>The sparks of fun would fan;</div>
- <div>My outline did he plan,</div>
- <div>And laughed like one possessed,</div>
- <div>’Twas thus my course began,</div>
- <div>I am a Merry Jest.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I am an early Jest!</div>
- <div>Man delved and built and span;</div>
- <div>Then wandered South and West</div>
- <div>The peoples Aryan,</div>
- <div><i>I</i> journeyed in their van;</div>
- <div>The Semites, too, confessed,&mdash;</div>
- <div>From Beersheba to Dan,&mdash;</div>
- <div>I am a Merry Jest.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I am an ancient Jest,</div>
- <div>Through all the human clan,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_527">[527]</span></div>
- <div>Red, black, white, free, oppressed,</div>
- <div>Hilarious I ran!</div>
- <div>I’m found in Lucian,</div>
- <div>In Poggio, and the rest,</div>
- <div>I’m dear to Moll and Nan!</div>
- <div>I am a Merry Jest!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Prince, you may storm and ban&mdash;</div>
- <div>Joe Millers <i>are</i> a pest,</div>
- <div>Suppress me if you can!</div>
- <div>I am a Merry Jest!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>BALLADE OF LITERARY FAME</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Oh, where are the endless Romances</div>
- <div>Our grandmothers used to adore?</div>
- <div>The knights with their helms and their lances,</div>
- <div>Their shields and the favours they wore?</div>
- <div>And the monks with their magical lore?</div>
- <div>They have passed to Oblivion and <i>Nox</i>,</div>
- <div>They have fled to the shadowy shore,&mdash;</div>
- <div>They are all in the Fourpenny Box!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And where the poetical fancies</div>
- <div>Our fathers rejoiced in, of yore?</div>
- <div>The lyric’s melodious expanses,</div>
- <div>The epics in cantos a score,</div>
- <div>They have been and are not: no more</div>
- <div>Shall the shepherds drive silvery flocks,</div>
- <div>Nor the ladies their languors deplore,&mdash;</div>
- <div>They are all in the Fourpenny Box!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And the music! The songs and the dances?</div>
- <div>The tunes that time may not restore?</div>
- <div>And the tomes where Divinity prances?</div>
- <div>And the pamphlets where heretics roar?</div>
- <div>They have ceased to be even a bore,&mdash;</div>
- <div>The Divine, and the Sceptic who mocks,&mdash;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_528">[528]</span></div>
- <div>They are “cropped,” they are “foxed” to the core,</div>
- <div>They are all in the Fourpenny Box!</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5 class="p1">Envoy</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Suns beat on them; tempests downpour,</div>
- <div>On the chest without cover or locks,</div>
- <div>Where they lie by the Bookseller’s door,&mdash;</div>
- <div>They are <i>all</i> in the Fourpenny Box!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>William Schwenck Gilbert began as a youth his humorous contributions to
-magazines, which included the immortal <i>Bab Ballads</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Ten years later he joined forces with the composer, Arthur Sullivan,
-and the result of this collaboration was the well known series of
-operas of which <i>Trial By Jury</i> was the first.</p>
-
-<p>Gilbert is second to none in humorous paradoxical thought and sprightly
-and clever versification. His themes, subtle and fantastic, are worked
-out with a serious absurdity as truly witty as it is charming.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE MIGHTY MUST</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Come mighty Must!</div>
- <div class="i1">Inevitable Shall!</div>
- <div>In thee I trust.</div>
- <div class="i1">Time weaves my coronal!</div>
- <div>Go mocking Is!</div>
- <div class="i1">Go disappointing Was!</div>
- <div>That I am this</div>
- <div class="i1">Ye are the cursed cause!</div>
- <div>Yet humble second shall be first,</div>
- <div class="i3">I ween;</div>
- <div>And dead and buried be the curst</div>
- <div class="i3">Has Been!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Of weak Might Be!</div>
- <div class="i1">Oh, May, Might, Could, Would, Should!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_529">[529]</span></div>
- <div>How powerless ye</div>
- <div class="i1">For evil or for good!</div>
- <div>In every sense</div>
- <div class="i1">Your moods I cheerless call,</div>
- <div>Whate’er your tense</div>
- <div class="i1">Ye are imperfect, all!</div>
- <div>Ye have deceived the trust I’ve shown</div>
- <div class="i3">In ye!</div>
- <div>Away! The Mighty Must alone</div>
- <div class="i3">Shall be!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO THE TERRESTRIAL GLOBE</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">By a Miserable Wretch.</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Roll on, thou ball, roll on!</div>
- <div>Through pathless realms of Space</div>
- <div class="i3">Roll on!</div>
- <div>What though I’m in a sorry case?</div>
- <div>What though I cannot meet my bills?</div>
- <div>What though I suffer toothache’s ills?</div>
- <div>What though I swallow countless pills?</div>
- <div class="i1">Never <i>you</i> mind!</div>
- <div class="i3">Roll on!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Roll on, thou ball, roll on!</div>
- <div>Through seas of inky air,</div>
- <div class="i3">Roll on!</div>
- <div>It’s true I have no shirts to wear;</div>
- <div>It’s true my butcher’s bill is due;</div>
- <div>It’s true my prospects all look blue&mdash;</div>
- <div>But don’t let that unsettle you:</div>
- <div class="i1">Never <i>you</i> mind!</div>
- <div class="i3">Roll on!</div>
- <div class="right">(<i>It rolls on</i>).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>GENTLE ALICE BROWN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">It was a robber’s daughter, and her name was Alice Brown,</div>
- <div>Her father was the terror of a small Italian town;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_530">[530]</span></div>
- <div>Her mother was a foolish, weak, but amiable old thing;</div>
- <div>But it isn’t of her parents that I’m going for to sing.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As Alice was a-sitting at her window-sill one day</div>
- <div>A beautiful young gentleman he chanced to pass that way;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">She cast her eyes upon him, and he looked so good and true,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">That she thought, “I could be happy with a gentleman like you!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">And every morning passed her house that cream of gentlemen;</div>
- <div>She knew she might expect him at a quarter unto ten,</div>
- <div>A sorter in the Custom House it was his daily road</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">(The Custom House was fifteen minutes’ walk from her abode).</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But Alice was a pious girl and knew it was not wise</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">To look at strange young sorters with expressive purple eyes,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">So she sought the village priest to whom her family confessed&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The priest by whom their little sins were carefully assessed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">“Oh holy father,” Alice said, “’twould grieve you, would it not?</div>
- <div>To discover that I was a most disreputable lot!</div>
- <div>Of all unhappy sinners I’m the most unhappy one!”</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The padre said “Whatever have you been and gone and done?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I have helped mamma to steal a little kiddy from its dad,</div>
- <div>I’ve assisted dear papa in cutting up a little lad.</div>
- <div>I’ve planned a little burglary and forged a little cheque,</div>
- <div>And slain a little baby for the coral on its neck!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">The worthy pastor heaved a sigh, and dropped a silent tear&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And said “You mustn’t judge yourself too heavily, my dear&mdash;</div>
- <div>It’s wrong to murder babies, little corals for to fleece;</div>
- <div>But sins like these one expiates at half-a-crown apiece.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">“Girls will be girls&mdash;you’re very young and flighty in your mind;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Old heads upon young shoulders we must not expect to find:</div>
- <div>We mustn’t be too hard upon these little girlish tricks&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Let’s see&mdash;five crimes at half a crown&mdash;exactly twelve-and six.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">“Oh father,” little Alice cried, “your kindness makes me weep,</div>
- <div>You do these little things for me so singularly cheap&mdash;</div>
- <div>Your thoughtful liberality I never can forget;</div>
- <div>But, oh, there is another crime I haven’t mentioned yet!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">“A pleasant-looking gentleman, with pretty purple eyes,&mdash;</div>
- <div>I’ve noticed at my window, as I’ve sat a-catching flies;</div>
- <div>He passes by it every day as certain as can be&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">I blush to say I’ve winked at him, and he has winked at me!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">“For shame,” said Father Paul, “my erring daughter! On my word</div>
- <div>This is the most distressing news that I have ever heard.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Why, naughty girl, your excellent papa has pledged your hand</div>
- <div>To a promising young robber, the lieutenant of his band!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">“This dreadful piece of news will pain your worthy parents so!</div>
- <div>They are the most remunerative customers I know;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">For many, many years they’ve kept starvation from my doors,</div>
- <div>I never knew so criminal a family as yours!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“The common country folk in this insipid neighbourhood</div>
- <div>Have nothing to confess, they’re so ridiculously good;</div>
- <div>And if you marry anyone respectable at all,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Why, you’ll reform, and what will then become of Father Paul?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">The worthy priest, he up and drew his cowl upon his crown,</div>
- <div>And started off in haste to tell the news to Robber Brown;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">To tell him how his daughter, who was now for marriage fit,</div>
- <div>Had winked upon a sorter, who reciprocated it.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Good Robber Brown he muffled up his anger pretty well,</div>
- <div>He said, “I have a notion, and that notion I will tell;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_532">[532]</span></div>
- <div>I will nab this gay young sorter, terrify him into fits,</div>
- <div>And get my gentle wife to chop him into little bits.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I’ve studied human nature, and I know a thing or two;</div>
- <div>Though a girl may fondly love a living gent, as many do,</div>
- <div>A feeling of disgust upon her senses there will fall</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">When she looks upon his body chopped particularly small.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He traced that gallant sorter to a still suburban square;</div>
- <div>He watched his opportunity and seized him unaware;</div>
- <div>He took a life preserver and he hit him on the head,</div>
- <div>And Mrs. Brown dissected him before she went to bed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And pretty little Alice grew more settled in her mind,</div>
- <div>She never more was guilty of a weakness of the kind,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Until at length good Robber Brown bestowed her pretty hand</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">On the promising young robber, the lieutenant of his band.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Francis C. Burnand, writer of many comedies and burlesques, was a long
-time editor of <i>Punch</i> and wrote much of his best work for that
-paper.</p>
-
-<p>One of his most delightful songs, so successfully sung by the Vokes
-family is:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TRUE TO POLL</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I’ll sing you a song, not very long,</div>
- <div class="i1">But the story somewhat new</div>
- <div class="i1">Of William Kidd, who, whatever he did,</div>
- <div class="i2">To his Poll was always true.</div>
- <div>He sailed away in a galliant ship</div>
- <div class="i1">From the port of old Bris<i>tol</i>,</div>
- <div class="i3">And the last words he uttered,</div>
- <div class="i3">As his hankercher he fluttered,</div>
- <div class="i1">Were, “My heart is true to Poll.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i4h">His heart was true to Poll,</div>
- <div class="i4h">His heart was true to Poll.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_533">[533]</span></div>
- <div class="i4">It’s no matter what you do</div>
- <div class="i4">If your heart be only true:</div>
- <div class="i3">And his heart <i>was</i> true to Poll.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Twas a wreck. Willi<i>am</i>, on shore he swam,</div>
- <div class="i1">And looked about for an inn;</div>
- <div>When a noble savage lady, of a colour rather shady,</div>
- <div class="i1">Came up with a kind of grin:</div>
- <div>“Oh, marry <i>me</i>, and a king you’ll be,</div>
- <div class="i1">And in a palace loll;</div>
- <div class="i3">Or we’ll eat you willy-nilly.”</div>
- <div class="i3">So he gave his <i>hand</i>, did Billy,</div>
- <div class="i1">But his <i>heart</i> was true to Poll.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Away a twelvemonth sped, and a happy life he led</div>
- <div class="i1">As the King of the Kikeryboos;</div>
- <div>His paint was red and yellar, and he used a big umbrella,</div>
- <div class="i1">And he wore a pair of over-<i>shoes</i>!</div>
- <div>He’d corals and knives, and twenty-six wives,</div>
- <div class="i1">Whose beauties I cannot here extol;</div>
- <div class="i3">One day they all revolted,</div>
- <div class="i3">So he back to Bristol bolted,</div>
- <div class="i1">For his <i>heart</i> was true to Poll.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i4">His heart was true to Poll,</div>
- <div class="i4">His heart was true to Poll.</div>
- <div class="i4h">It’s no matter what you do,</div>
- <div class="i4h">If your heart be only true:</div>
- <div class="i4">And his <i>heart</i> was true to Poll.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>William Ernest Henley, though better known for his serious work, waxed
-humorous, especially when making excursions into the artificial verse
-forms.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>VILLANELLE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now ain’t they utterly too-too</div>
- <div class="i1">(She ses, my Missus mine, ses she)</div>
- <div>Them flymy little bits of Blue.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_534">[534]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Joe, just you kool ’em&mdash;nice and skew</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon our old meogginee,</div>
- <div>Now ain’t they utterly too-too?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They’re better than a pot’n’ a screw,</div>
- <div class="i1">They’re equal to a Sunday spree,</div>
- <div>Them flymy little bits of Blue!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Suppose I put ’em up the flue,</div>
- <div class="i1">And booze the profits, Joe? Not me.</div>
- <div>Now ain’t they utterly too-too?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I do the ’Igh Art fake, I do.</div>
- <div class="i1">Joe, I’m consummate; and I <i>see</i></div>
- <div>Them flymy little bits of Blue.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Which, Joe, is why I ses to you&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Æsthetic-like, and limp, and free&mdash;</div>
- <div>Now <i>ain’t</i> they utterly too-too,</div>
- <div>Them flymy little bits of Blue?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Robert Louis Stevenson’s humor consists in an extravagance and
-whimsicality of thought and expression and is usually subservient to a
-greater intent.</p>
-
-<p>His delightful <i>Child’s Verses</i> show quiet roguery and humorous
-conceits.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The lovely cow, all red and white,</div>
- <div class="i1">I love with all my heart;</div>
- <div>She gives me milk with all her might</div>
- <div class="i1">To eat on apple tart.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The world is so full of a number of things,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m sure we should all be as happy as kings.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>This original style of Juvenile verse, often imitated, has rarely been
-successful in the hands of lesser artists.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_535">[535]</span></p>
-
-<p>James Matthew Barrie, one of the finest English humorists, may not be
-quoted successfully because his work is only found in sustained stories
-or plays, and few brief extracts will bear separation from their
-contexts.</p>
-
-<p>A short passage from <i>A Window in Thrums</i> will hint at the
-delightfulness of Barrie’s humor.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>A HUMOURIST ON HIS CALLING</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Tammas put his foot on the pail.</p>
-
-<p>“I tak no credit,” he said modestly, on the evening, I remember, of
-Willie Pyatt’s funeral, “in bein’ able to speak wi’ a sort o’ faceelity
-on topics ’at I’ve made my ain.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” said T’nowhead, “but it’s no faceelity o’ speakin’ ’at taks me.
-There’s Davit Lunan ’at can speak like as if he had learned if aff a
-paper, an’ yet I canna thole ’im.”</p>
-
-<p>“Davit,” said Hendry, “doesna speak in a wy ’at a body can follow ’im.
-He doesna gae even on. Jess says he’s juist like a man aye at the
-cross-roads, an’ no sure o’ his way. But the stock has words, an’ no
-ilka body has that.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I was bidden to put Tammas’s gift in a word,” said T’nowhead, “I
-would say ’at he had a wy. That’s what I would say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, I suppose I have,” Tammas admitted, “but, wy or no wy, I couldna
-put a point on my words if it wasna for my sense o’ humour. Lads,
-humour’s what gies the nip to speakin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s what maks ye a sarcesticist, Tammas,” said Hendry; “but what I
-wonder at is yer sayin’ the humorous things sae aisy-like. Some says ye
-mak them up aforehand, but I ken that’s no true.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, only is’t no true,” said Tammas, “but it couldna be true. Them ’at
-says sic things, an’ weel I ken you’re meanin’ Davit Lunan, hasna nae
-idea o’ what humour is. It’s a thing ’at spouts oot o’ its ain accord.
-Some o’ the maist humorous things I’ve ever said cam oot, as a body may
-say, by themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose that’s the case,” said T’nowhead; “an’ yet it maun be you
-’at brings them up?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_536">[536]</span></p>
-
-<p>“There’s no nae doubt about its bein’ the case,” said Tammas; “for
-I’ve watched mysel’ often. There was a vera guid instance occurred
-sune after I married Easie. The earl’s son met me one day, aboot that
-time, i’ the Tenements, an’ he didna ken ’at Chirsty was deid, an’ I’d
-married again. ‘Well, Haggart,’ he says, in his frank wy, ‘and how is
-your wife?’ ‘She’s vera weel, sir,’ I maks answer, ‘but she’s no the
-ane you mean.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Na, he meant Chirsty,” said Hendry.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that a’ the story?” asked T’nowhead</p>
-
-<p>Tammas had been looking at us queerly.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no nane o’ ye lauchin’,” he said, “but I can assure ye the
-earl’s son gaed east the toon lauchin’ like onything.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what was’t he lauched at?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ou,” said Tammas, “a humourist doesna tell whaur the humour comes in.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but when you said that, did ye mean it to be humourous?”</p>
-
-<p>“Am no sayin’ I did, but as I’ve been tellin’ ye humour spouts oot by
-itsel’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, but do ye ken noo what the earl’s son gaed awa lauchin’ at?”</p>
-
-<p>Tammas hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“I dinna exactly see’t,” he confessed, “but that’s no an oncommon
-thing. A humourist would often no ken ’at he was are if it wasna by the
-wy he maks other fowk lauch. A body canna be expeckit baith to mak the
-joke an’ to see’t. Na, that would be doin’ twa fowks’ wark.”</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, that’s reasonable enough, but I’ve often seen ye lauchin’,” said
-Hendry, “lang afore other fowk lauched.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nae doubt,” Tammas explained, “an’ that’s because humour has twa
-sides, juist like a penny piece. When I say a humorous thing mysel’ I’m
-dependent on other fowk to tak note o’ the humour o’t, bein’ mysel’
-taen up wi’ the makkin’ o’t. Aye, but there’s things I see an’ hear at’
-maks me laucht, an’ that’s the other side o’ humour.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never heard it put sae plain afore,” said T’nowhead,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_537">[537]</span> “an’, sal, am
-no nane sure but what am a humourist too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Na, na, no you, T’nowhead,” said Tammas hotly.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Sir Owen Seaman, present editor of <i>Punch</i>, is also one of the
-finest parodists of all time. His humorous verse of all varieties is in
-the first rank.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A NOCTURNE AT DANIELI’S</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">(Suggested by Browning’s <i>A Toccata of Galuppi’s</i>.)</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>Caro mio, Pulcinello</i>, kindly hear my wail of woe</div>
- <div>Lifted from a noble structure&mdash;late Palazzo Dandolo.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">This is Venice, you will gather, which is full of precious “stones,”</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Tintorettos, picture-postcards, and remains of Doges’ bones.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Not of these am I complaining; they are mostly seen by day,</div>
- <div>And they only try your patience in an inoffensive way.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But at night, when over Lido rises Dian (that’s the moon),</div>
- <div>And the vicious <i>vaporetti</i> cease to vex the still lagoon;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">When the final <i>trovatore</i>, singing something old and cheap,</div>
- <div>Hurls his <i>tremolo crescendo</i> full against my beauty sleep;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">When I hear the Riva’s loungers in debate beneath my bower</div>
- <div>Summing up (about 1.30) certain questions of the hour;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_538">[538]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Then across my nervous system falls the shrill mosquito’s boom,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And it’s “O, to be in England,” where the may is on the bloom.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I admit the power of Music to inflate the savage breast&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">There are songs devoid of language which are quite among the best;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But the present orchestration, with its poignant oboe part,</div>
- <div>Is, in my obscure opinion, barely fit to rank as Art.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Will it solace me to-morrow, being hit in either eye,</div>
- <div>To be told that this is nothing to the season in July?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Shall I go for help to Ruskin? Would it ease my pimply brow</div>
- <div>If I found the doges suffered much as I am suffering now?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If identical probosces pinked the lovers who were bored</div>
- <div>By the sentimental tinkling of Galuppi’s clavichord?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">That’s from Browning (Robert Browning)&mdash;I have left his works at home,</div>
- <div>And the poem I allude to isn’t in the Tauchnitz tome;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">But, if memory serves me rightly, he was very much concerned</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">At the thought that in the sequel Venice reaped what Venice earned.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_539">[539]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Was he thinking of mosquitoes? Did he mean <i>their</i> poisoned crop?</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Was it through ammonia tincture that “the kissing had to stop”?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">As for later loves&mdash;for Venice never quite mislaid her spell&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Madame Sand and dear De Musset occupied my own hotel!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>On the very floor below me, I have heard the patron say,</div>
- <div>They were put in No. 13 (No. 36, to-day).</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">But they parted&mdash;“<i>elle et lui</i>” did&mdash;and it now occurs to me</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">That mosquitoes came between them in this “kingdom by the sea.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Poor dead lovers, and such brains, too! What am I that I should swear</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">When the creatures munch my forehead, taking more than I can spare?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Should I live to meet the morning, should the climate readjust</div>
- <div>Any reparable fragments left upon my outer crust,</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Why, at least I still am extant, and a dog that sees the sun</div>
- <div>Has the pull of Danieli’s den of “lions,” dead and done.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Courage! I will keep my vigil on the balcony till day</div>
- <div>Like a knight in full pyjamas who would rather run away.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_540">[540]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Courage! let me ope the casement, let the shutters be withdrawn;</div>
- <div>Let scirocco, breathing on me, check a tendency to yawn;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">There’s the sea! and&mdash;<i>Ecco l’alba!</i> Ha! (in other words) the Dawn!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-
-<h4><i>TO JULIA UNDER LOCK AND KEY</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">(A form of betrothal gift in America is an anklet secured by a padlock,
-of which the other party keeps the key.)</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When like a bud my Julia blows</div>
- <div>In lattice-work of silken hose,</div>
- <div>Pleasant I deem it is to note</div>
- <div>How, ’neath the nimble petticoat,</div>
- <div>Above her fairy shoe is set</div>
- <div>The circumvolving zonulet.</div>
- <div>And soothly for the lover’s ear</div>
- <div>A perfect bliss it is to hear</div>
- <div>About her limb so lithe and lank</div>
- <div>My Julia’s ankle-bangle clank.</div>
- <div>Not rudely tight, for ’twere a sin</div>
- <div>To corrugate her dainty skin;</div>
- <div>Nor yet so large that it might fare</div>
- <div>Over her foot at unaware;</div>
- <div>But fashioned nicely with a view</div>
- <div>To let her airy stocking through:</div>
- <div>So as, when Julia goes to bed,</div>
- <div>Of all her gear disburdenèd,</div>
- <div>This ring at least she shall not doff</div>
- <div>Because she cannot take it off.</div>
- <div>And since thereof I hold the key,</div>
- <div>She may not taste of liberty,</div>
- <div>Not though she suffer from the gout,</div>
- <div>Unless I choose to let her out.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_541">[541]</span></p>
-
-<h4><i>AT THE SIGN OF THE COCK</i><br />
-<span class="subhed">(FRENCH STYLE, 1898)</span></h4>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p1">(<i>Being an Ode in further “Contribution to the Song of French
-History,” dedicated, without malice or permission, to Mr. George
-Meredith</i>)</p>
-</div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-
-<h5>I</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Rooster her sign,</div>
- <div>Rooster her pugnant note, she struts</div>
- <div>Evocative, amazon spurs aprick at heel;</div>
- <div>Nid-nod the authentic stump</div>
- <div>Of the once ensanguined comb vermeil as wine;</div>
- <div>With conspuent doodle-doo</div>
- <div>Hails breach o’ the hectic dawn of yon New Year,</div>
- <div>Last issue up to date</div>
- <div>Of quiverful Fate</div>
- <div>Evolved spontaneous; hails with tonant trump</div>
- <div>The spiriting prime o’ the clashed carillon-peal;</div>
- <div>Ruffling her caudal plumes derisive of scuts;</div>
- <div>Inconscient how she stalks an immarcessibly absurd</div>
- <div>Bird.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>II</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mark where her Equatorial Pioneer</div>
- <div>Delirant on the tramp goes littoralwise.</div>
- <div>His Flag at furl, portmanteaued; drains to the dregs</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The penultimate brandy-bottle, coal-on-the-head-piece gift</div>
- <div>Of who avenged the Old Sea-Rover’s smirch.</div>
- <div>Marchant he treads the all-along of inarable drift</div>
- <div>On dubiously connivent legs,</div>
- <div>The facile prey of predatory flies;</div>
- <div>Panting for further; sworn to lurch</div>
- <div>Empirical on to the Menelik-buffered, enhavened blue,</div>
- <div>Rhyming&mdash;see Cantique I.&mdash;with doodle-doo.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>III</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Infuriate she kicked against Imperial fact;</div>
- <div>Vulnant she felt</div>
- <div>What pin-stab should have stained Another’s pelt</div>
- <div>Puncture her own Colonial lung-balloon,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_542">[542]</span></div>
- <div>Volant to nigh meridian. Whence rebuffed,</div>
- <div>The perjured Scythian she lacked</div>
- <div>At need’s pinch, sick with spleen of the rudely cuffed</div>
- <div>Below her breath she cursed; she cursed the hour</div>
- <div>When on her spring for him the young Tyrannical broke</div>
- <div>Amid the unhallowed wedlock’s vodka-shower,</div>
- <div>She passionate, he dispassionate; tricked</div>
- <div>Her wits to eye-blind; borrowed the ready as for dower;</div>
- <div>Till from the trance of that Hymettus-moon</div>
- <div>She woke,</div>
- <div>A nuptial-knotted derelict;</div>
- <div>Pensioned with Rescripts other aid declined</div>
- <div>By the plumped leech saturate urging Peace</div>
- <div>In guise of heavy-armed Gospeller to men,</div>
- <div>Tyrannical unto fraternal equal liberal, her. Not she;</div>
- <div>Not till Alsace her consanguineous find</div>
- <div>What red deteutonising artillery</div>
- <div>Shall shatter her beer-reek alien police</div>
- <div>The just-now pluripollent; not till then.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>IV</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>More pungent yet the esoteric pain</div>
- <div>Squeezing her pliable vitals nourishes feud</div>
- <div>Insanely grumous, grumously insane.</div>
- <div>For lo!</div>
- <div>Past common balmly on the Bordereau,</div>
- <div>Churns she the skim o’ the gutter’s crust</div>
- <div>With Anti-Judaic various carmagnole,</div>
- <div>Whooped praise of the Anti-just;</div>
- <div>Her boulevard brood</div>
- <div>Gyratory in convolvements militant-mad;</div>
- <div>Theatrical of faith in the Belliform,</div>
- <div>Her Og,</div>
- <div>Her Monstrous. Fled what force she had</div>
- <div>To buckle the jaw-gape, wide agog</div>
- <div>For the Preconcerted One,</div>
- <div>The Anticipated, ripe to clinch the whole;</div>
- <div>Queen-bee to hive the hither and thither volant swarm.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_543">[543]</span></div>
- <div>Bides she his coming; adumbrates the new</div>
- <div>Expurgatorial Divine,</div>
- <div>Her final effulgent Avatar,</div>
- <div>Postured outside a trampling mastodon</div>
- <div>Black as her Baker’s charger; towering; visibly gorged</div>
- <div>With blood of traitors. Knee-grip stiff,</div>
- <div>Spine straightened, on he rides;</div>
- <div>Embossed the Patriot’s brow with hieroglyph</div>
- <div>Of martial <i>dossiers</i>, nothing forged</div>
- <div>About him save his armour. So she bides</div>
- <div>Voicing his advent indeterminably far,</div>
- <div>Rooster her sign,</div>
- <div>Rooster her conspuent doodle-doo.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>V</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Behold her, pranked with spurs for bloody sport,</div>
- <div>How she acclaims,</div>
- <div>A crapulous chanticleer,</div>
- <div>Breach of the hectic dawn of yon New Year.</div>
- <div>Not yet her fill of rumours sucked;</div>
- <div>Inebriate of honour; blushfully wroth;</div>
- <div>Tireless to play her old primeval games;</div>
- <div>Her plumage preened the yet unplucked</div>
- <div>Like sails of a galleon, rudder hard amort</div>
- <div>With crepitant mast</div>
- <div>Fronting the hazard to dare of a dual blast</div>
- <div>The intern and the extern, blizzards both.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Anthony C. Deane is also among the best of the modern parodists.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>HERE IS THE TALE</i><br />
-<span class="subhed2">(AFTER RUDYARD KIPLING)</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>Here is the tale&mdash;and you must make the most of it:</i></div>
- <div class="i1"><i>Here is the rhyme&mdash;ah, listen and attend:</i></div>
- <div><i>Backwards&mdash;forwards&mdash;read it all and boast of it</i></div>
- <div class="i1"><i>If you are anything the wiser at the end!</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_544">[544]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Now Jack looked up&mdash;it was time to sup, and the bucket was yet to fill,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And Jack looked round for a space and frowned, then beckoned his sister Jill,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And twice he pulled his sister’s hair, and thrice he smote her side;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“Ha’ done, ha’ done with your impudent fun&mdash;ha’ done with your games!” she cried;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“You have made mud-pies of a marvellous size&mdash;finger and face are black,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">You have trodden the Way of the Mire and Clay&mdash;now up and wash you, Jack!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Or else, or ever we reach our home, there waiteth an angry dame&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Well you know the weight of her blow&mdash;the supperless open shame!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Wash, if you will, on yonder hill&mdash;wash, if you will, at the spring,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Or keep your dirt, to your certain hurt, and an imminent walloping!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">“You must wash&mdash;you must scrub&mdash;you must scrape!” growled Jack, “you must traffic with cans and pails,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Nor keep the spoil of the good brown soil in the rim of your finger-nails!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The morning path you must tread to your bath&mdash;you must wash ere the night descends,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And all for the cause of conventional laws and the soapmakers’ dividends!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But if ’tis sooth that our meal in truth depends on our washing, Jill,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">By the sacred right of our appetite&mdash;haste&mdash;haste to the top of the hill!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">They have trodden the Way of the Mire and Clay, they have toiled and travelled far,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">They have climbed to the brow of the hill-top now, where the bubbling fountains are,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_545">[545]</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent">They have taken the bucket and filled it up&mdash;yea, filled it up to the brim;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But Jack he sneered at his sister Jill, and Jill she jeered at him:</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“What, blown already!” Jack cried out (and his was a biting mirth!)</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“You boast indeed of your wonderful speed&mdash;but what is the boasting worth?</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Now, if you can run as the antelope runs and if you can turn like a hare,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Come, race me, Jill, to the foot of the hill&mdash;and prove your boasting fair!”</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“Race? What is a race” (and a mocking face had Jill as she spake the word)</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“Unless for a prize the runner tries? The truth indeed ye heard,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">For I can run as the antelope runs, and I can turn like a hare:&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The first one down wins half-a-crown&mdash;and I will race you there!”</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“Yea, if for the lesson that you will learn (the lesson of humbled pride)</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The price you fix at two-and-six, it shall not be denied;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Come, take your stand at my right hand, for here is the mark we toe:</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Now, are you ready, and are you steady? Gird up your petticoats! Go!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">And Jill she ran like a winging bolt, a bolt from the bow released,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But Jack like a stream of the lightning gleam, with its pathway duly greased;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">He ran down hill in front of Jill like a summer-lightning flash&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Till he suddenly tripped on a stone, or slipped, and fell to the earth with a crash.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Then straight did rise on his wondering eyes the constellations fair,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Arcturus and the Pleiades, the Greater and Lesser Bear,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The swirling rain of a comet’s train he saw, as he swiftly fell&mdash;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_546">[546]</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And Jill came tumbling after him with a loud triumphant yell:</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“You have won, you have won, the race is done! And as for the wager laid&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">You have fallen down with a broken crown&mdash;the half-crown debt is paid!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">They have taken Jack to the room at the back where the family medicines are,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And he lies in bed with a broken head in a halo of vinegar;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">While, in that Jill had laughed her fill as her brother fell to earth,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">She had felt the sting of a walloping&mdash;she hath paid the price of her mirth!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>Here is the tale&mdash;and now you have the whole of it,</i></div>
- <div><i>Here is the story, well and wisely-planned,</i></div>
- <div><i>Beauty&mdash;Duty&mdash;these make up the soul of it&mdash;</i></div>
- <div><i>But, ah, my little readers, will you mark and understand?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch, writing often over the pseudonym of Q, is
-most versatile and talented. He, too, loved to dally with the muse of
-Imitation.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>DE TEA FABULA</i><br />
-<span class="subhed2"><i>Plain Language from Truthful James</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Do I sleep? Do I dream?</div>
- <div class="i1">Am I hoaxed by a scout?</div>
- <div>Are things what they seem,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or is Sophists about?</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Is our το τι ηυ ειναι a failure, or is Robert Browning played out?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Which expressions like these</div>
- <div class="i1">May be fairly applied</div>
- <div>By a party who sees</div>
- <div class="i1">A Society skied<span class="pagenum" id="Page_547">[547]</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Upon tea that the Warden of Keble had biled with legitimate pride.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Twas November the third,</div>
- <div class="i1">And I says to Bill Nye,</div>
- <div>“Which it’s true what I’ve heard:</div>
- <div class="i1">If you’re, so to speak, fly,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">There’s a chance of some tea and cheap culture, the sort recommended as High.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Which I mentioned its name,</div>
- <div class="i1">And he ups and remarks:</div>
- <div>“If dress-coats is the game</div>
- <div class="i1">And pow-wow in the Parks,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Then I’m nuts on Sordello and Hohenstiel-Schwangau and similar Snarks.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now the pride of Bill Nye</div>
- <div class="i1">Cannot well be express’d;</div>
- <div>For he wore a white tie</div>
- <div class="i1">And a cut-away vest:</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Says I, “Solomon’s lilies ain’t in it, and they was reputed well dress’d.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But not far did we wend,</div>
- <div class="i1">When we saw Pippa pass</div>
- <div>On the arm of a friend</div>
- <div class="i1">&mdash;Dr. Furnivall ’t was,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And he wore in his hat two half-tickets for London, return, second-class.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Well,” I thought, “this is odd.”</div>
- <div class="i1">But we came pretty quick</div>
- <div>To a sort of a quad</div>
- <div class="i1">That was all of red brick,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And I says to the porter,&mdash;“R. Browning: free passes; and kindly look slick.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_548">[548]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But says he, dripping tears</div>
- <div class="i1">In his check handkerchief,</div>
- <div>“That symposium’s career’s</div>
- <div class="i1">Been regrettably brief,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">For it went all its pile upon crumpets and busted on gunpowder leaf!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then we tucked up the sleeves</div>
- <div class="i1">Of our shirts (that were biled),</div>
- <div>Which the reader perceives</div>
- <div class="i1">That our feelings were riled,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And we went for that man till his mother had doubted the traits of her child.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Which emotions like these</div>
- <div class="i1">Must be freely indulged</div>
- <div>By a party who sees</div>
- <div class="i1">A Society bulged</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">On a reef the existence of which its prospectus had never divulged.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But I ask,&mdash;Do I dream?</div>
- <div class="i1">Has it gone up the spout?</div>
- <div>Are things what they seem,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or is Sophists about?</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Is our τὸ τι ἦυ εἶναι a failure, or is Robert Browning played out?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>James Kenneth Stephen, like so many of the English minor poets,
-expresses his humorous vein best in parody.</p>
-
-<p>Stephen’s light verse belongs mostly to his undergraduate days.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A SONNET</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Two voices are there: one is of the deep;</div>
- <div>It learns the storm-cloud’s thunderous melody,</div>
- <div>Now roars, now murmurs with the changing sea,</div>
- <div>Now bird-like pipes, now closes soft in sleep:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_549">[549]</span></div>
- <div>And one is of an old half-witted sheep</div>
- <div>Which bleats articulate monotony.</div>
- <div>And indicates that two and one are three,</div>
- <div>That grass is green, lakes damp, and mountains steep:</div>
- <div>And, Wordsworth, both are thine: at certain times</div>
- <div>Forth from the heart of thy melodious rhymes,</div>
- <div>The form and pressure of high thoughts will burst:</div>
- <div>At other times&mdash;good Lord! I’d rather be</div>
- <div>Quite unacquainted with the A B C</div>
- <div>Than write such hopeless rubbish as thy worst.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A THOUGHT</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If all the harm that women have done</div>
- <div>Were put in a bundle and rolled into one,</div>
- <div class="i2">Earth would not hold it,</div>
- <div class="i2">The sky could not enfold it,</div>
- <div>It could not be lighted nor warmed by the sun;</div>
- <div class="i2">Such masses of evil</div>
- <div class="i2">Would puzzle the devil,</div>
- <div>And keep him in fuel while Time’s wheels run.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But if all the harm that’s been done by men</div>
- <div>Were doubled, and doubled, and doubled again,</div>
- <div>And melted and fused into vapour, and then</div>
- <div>Were squared and raised to the power of ten,</div>
- <div>There wouldn’t be nearly enough, not near,</div>
- <div>To keep a small girl for the tenth of a year.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE MILLENNIUM</i><br />
-<span class="subhed2">TO R. K.</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>As long I dwell on some stupendous</i></div>
- <div><i>And tremendous (Heaven defend us!)</i></div>
- <div><i>Monstr’-inform’-ingens-horrendous</i></div>
- <div><i>Demoniaco-seraphic</i></div>
- <div><i>Penman’s latest piece of graphic.</i></div>
- <div class="right smcap">Robert Browning.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_550">[550]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Will there never come a season</div>
- <div class="i1">Which shall rid us from the curse</div>
- <div>Of a prose which knows no reason</div>
- <div class="i1">And an unmelodious verse:</div>
- <div>When the world shall cease to wonder</div>
- <div class="i1">At the genius of an Ass,</div>
- <div>And a boy’s eccentric blunder</div>
- <div class="i1">Shall not bring success to pass:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When mankind shall be delivered</div>
- <div class="i1">From the clash of magazines,</div>
- <div>And the inkstand shall be shivered</div>
- <div class="i1">Into countless smithereens:</div>
- <div>When there stands a muzzled stripling,</div>
- <div class="i1">Mute, beside a muzzled bore:</div>
- <div>When the Rudyards cease from Kipling</div>
- <div class="i1">And the Haggards Ride no more?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>SCHOOL</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If there is a vile, pernicious,</div>
- <div class="i1">Wicked and degraded rule,</div>
- <div>Tending to debase the vicious,</div>
- <div class="i1">And corrupt the harmless fool;</div>
- <div>If there is a hateful habit</div>
- <div class="i1">Making man a senseless tool,</div>
- <div>With the feelings of a rabbit</div>
- <div class="i1">And the wisdom of a mule;</div>
- <div>It’s the rule which inculcates,</div>
- <div>It’s the habit which dictates</div>
- <div>The wrong and sinful practice of going into school.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If there’s anything improving</div>
- <div class="i1">To an erring sinner’s state,</div>
- <div>Which is useful in removing</div>
- <div class="i1">All the ills of human fate;</div>
- <div>If there’s any glorious custom</div>
- <div class="i1">Which our faults can dissipate,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_551">[551]</span></div>
- <div>And can casually thrust ’em</div>
- <div class="i1">Out of sight and make us great;</div>
- <div>It’s the plan by which we shirk</div>
- <div>Half our matu-ti-nal work,</div>
- <div>The glorious institution of always being late.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Barry Pain, journalist and author, following the trend of the hour,
-produced this amusing set of parodies.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE POETS AT TEA</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <h5 class="p1">1&mdash;(<i>Macaulay, who made it</i>)</h5>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Pour, varlet, pour the water,</div>
- <div class="i1">The water steaming hot!</div>
- <div>A spoonful for each man of us,</div>
- <div class="i1">Another for the pot!</div>
- <div>We shall not drink from amber,</div>
- <div class="i1">Nor Capuan slave shall mix</div>
- <div>For us the snows of Athos</div>
- <div class="i1">With port at thirty-six;</div>
- <div>Whiter than snow the crystals,</div>
- <div class="i1">Grown sweet ’neath tropic fires,</div>
- <div>More rich the herbs of China’s field,</div>
- <div>The pasture-lands more fragrance yield;</div>
- <div>For ever let Britannia wield</div>
- <div class="i1">The tea-pot of her sires!</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>2&mdash;(<i>Tennyson, who took it hot</i>)</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I think that I am drawing to an end:</div>
- <div>For on a sudden came a gasp for breath.</div>
- <div>And stretching of the hands, and blinded eyes,</div>
- <div>And a great darkness falling on my soul.</div>
- <div>O Hallelujah!... Kindly pass the milk.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>3&mdash;(<i>Swinburne, who let it get cold</i>)</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As the sin that was sweet in the sinning</div>
- <div class="i1">Is foul in the ending thereof,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_552">[552]</span></div>
- <div>As the heat of the summer’s beginning</div>
- <div class="i1">Is past in the winter of love:</div>
- <div>O purity, painful and pleading!</div>
- <div class="i1">O coldness, ineffably gray!</div>
- <div>Oh, hear us, our handmaid unheeding,</div>
- <div class="i1">And take it away!</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>4&mdash;(<i>Cowper, who thoroughly enjoyed it</i>)</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The cosy fire is bright and gay,</div>
- <div>The merry kettle boils away</div>
- <div class="i2">And hums a cheerful song.</div>
- <div>I sing the saucer and the cup;</div>
- <div>Pray, Mary, fill the tea-pot up,</div>
- <div class="i2">And do not make it strong.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>5&mdash;(<i>Browning, who treated it allegorically</i>)</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tut! Bah! We take as another case&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Pass the bills on the pills on the window-sill; notice the capsule</div>
- <div>(A sick man’s fancy, no doubt, but I place</div>
- <div class="i1">Reliance on trade-marks, Sir)&mdash;so perhaps you’ll</div>
- <div>Excuse the digression&mdash;this cup which I hold</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Light-poised&mdash;Bah, it’s spilt in the bed!&mdash;well, let’s on go&mdash;</div>
- <div>Hold Bohea and sugar, Sir; if you were told</div>
- <div class="i1">The sugar was salt, would the Bohea be Congo?</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>6&mdash;(<i>Wordsworth, who gave it away</i>)</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Come, little cottage girl, you seem</div>
- <div class="i1">To want my cup of tea;</div>
- <div>And will you take a little cream?</div>
- <div class="i1">Now tell the truth to me.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>She had a rustic, woodland grin,</div>
- <div class="i1">Her cheek was soft as silk,</div>
- <div>And she replied, “Sir, please put in</div>
- <div class="i1">A little drop of milk.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_553">[553]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Why, what put milk into your head?</div>
- <div class="i1">’Tis cream my cows supply”;</div>
- <div>And five times to the child I said,</div>
- <div class="i1">“Why, pig-head, tell me, why?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“You call me pig-head,” she replied;</div>
- <div class="i1">“My proper name is Ruth.</div>
- <div>I called that milk”&mdash;she blushed with pride&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">“You bade me speak the truth.”</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>7&mdash;(<i>Poe, who got excited over it</i>)</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Here’s a mellow cup of tea, golden tea!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">What a world of rapturous thought its fragrance brings to me!</div>
- <div class="i1">Oh, from out the silver cells</div>
- <div class="i1">How it wells!</div>
- <div class="i1">How it smells!</div>
- <div class="i1">Keeping tune, tune, tune</div>
- <div>To the tintinnabulation of the spoon.</div>
- <div>And the kettle on the fire</div>
- <div>Boils its spout off with desire,</div>
- <div>With a desperate desire</div>
- <div>And a crystalline endeavour</div>
- <div>Now, now to sit, or never,</div>
- <div>On the top of the pale-faced moon,</div>
- <div>But he always came home to tea, tea, tea, tea, tea,</div>
- <div class="i2">Tea to the n&mdash;th.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>8&mdash;(<i>Rossetti, who took six cups of it</i>)</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The lilies lie in my lady’s bower</div>
- <div>(O weary mother, drive the cows to roost),</div>
- <div>They faintly droop for a little hour;</div>
- <div>My lady’s head droops like a flower.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>She took the porcelain in her hand</div>
- <div>(O weary mother, drive the cows to roost);</div>
- <div>She poured; I drank at her command;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_554">[554]</span></div>
- <div>Drank deep, and now&mdash;you understand!</div>
- <div>(O weary mother, drive the cows to roost.)</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>9&mdash;(<i>Burns, who liked it adulterated</i>)</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Weel, gin ye speir, I’m no inclined,</div>
- <div>Whusky or tay&mdash;to state my mind,</div>
- <div class="i2">Fore ane or ither;</div>
- <div class="i1">For, gin I tak the first, I’m fou,</div>
- <div class="i1">And gin the next, I’m dull as you,</div>
- <div class="i2">Mix a’ thegither.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>10&mdash;(<i>Walt Whitman, who didn’t stay more than a minute</i>)</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One cup for myself-hood,</div>
- <div>Many for you. Allons, camerados, we will drink together,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">O hand-in-hand! That tea-spoon, please, when you’ve done with it.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">What butter-colour’d hair you’ve got. I don’t want to be personal.</div>
- <div>All right, then, you needn’t. You’re a stale-cadaver.</div>
- <div>Eighteen-pence if the bottles are returned.</div>
- <div>Allons, from all bat-eyed formula.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>F. Anstey (pen name of J. B. Guthrie) wrote many novels and short skits
-as well as verses. Like many of his contemporaries he is especially
-happy in a parody vein.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>SELECT PASSAGES FROM A COMING POET</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
-
-<h5 class="p1"><i>Disenchantment</i></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My Love has sicklied unto Loath,</div>
- <div class="i1">And foul seems all that fair I fancied&mdash;</div>
- <div>The lily’s sheen’s a leprous growth,</div>
- <div class="i1">The very buttercups are rancid.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>Abasement</i></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>With matted head a-dabble in the dust,</div>
- <div class="i1">And eyes tear-sealèd in a saline crust<span class="pagenum" id="Page_555">[555]</span></div>
- <div>I lie all loathly in my rags and rust&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Yet learn that strange delight may lurk in self-disgust.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>Stanza Written in Depression Near Dulwich</i></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The lark soars up in the air;</div>
- <div class="i1">The toad sits tight in his hole;</div>
- <div>And I would I were certain which of the pair</div>
- <div class="i1">Were the truer type of my soul!</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>To My Lady</i></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Twine, lanken fingers, lily-lithe,</div>
- <div class="i1">Gleam, slanted eyes, all beryl-green,</div>
- <div>Pout, blood-red lips that burst a-writhe,</div>
- <div class="i1">Then&mdash;kiss me, Lady Grisoline!</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>The Monster</i></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Uprears the monster now his slobberous head,</div>
- <div class="i1">Its filamentous chaps her ankles brushing;</div>
- <div>Her twice-five roseal toes are cramped in dread,</div>
- <div class="i1">Each maidly instep mauven-pink is flushing.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>A Trumpet Blast</i></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Pale Patricians, sunk in self-indulgence,</div>
- <div class="i1">Blink your blearèd eyes. Behold the Sun&mdash;</div>
- <div>Burst proclaim in purpurate effulgence,</div>
- <div class="i1">Demos dawning, and the Darkness done!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Hilaire Belloc, in addition to wiser matters, wrote most amusing
-nonsense animal verses.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE PYTHON</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A python I should not advise,&mdash;</div>
- <div>It needs a doctor for its eyes,</div>
- <div class="i1">And has the measles yearly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_556">[556]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>However, if you feel inclined</div>
- <div>To get one (to improve your mind,</div>
- <div class="i1">And not from fashion merely),</div>
- <div>Allow no music near its cage;</div>
- <div>And when it flies into a rage</div>
- <div class="i1">Chastise it most severely.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I had an Aunt in Yucatan</div>
- <div>Who bought a Python from a man</div>
- <div class="i1">And kept it for a pet.</div>
- <div>She died because she never knew</div>
- <div>These simple little rules and few;&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">The snake is living yet.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE BISON</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Bison is vain, and (I write it with pain)</div>
- <div class="i1">The Door-mat you see on his head</div>
- <div>Is not, as some learned professors maintain,</div>
- <div>The opulent growth of a genius’ brain;</div>
- <div class="i1">But is sewn on with needle and thread.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE MICROBE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Microbe is so very small</div>
- <div>You cannot make him out at all,</div>
- <div>But many sanguine people hope</div>
- <div>To see him through a microscope.</div>
- <div>His jointed tongue that lies beneath</div>
- <div>A hundred curious rows of teeth;</div>
- <div>His seven tufted tails with lots</div>
- <div>Of lovely pink and purple spots</div>
- <div>On each of which a pattern stands,</div>
- <div class="i1">Composed of forty separate bands;</div>
- <div class="i2">His eyebrows of a tender green;</div>
- <div class="i3">All these have never yet been seen&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i4">But Scientists, who ought to know,</div>
- <div class="i4h">Assure us that they must be so....</div>
- <div class="i5">Oh! let us never, never doubt</div>
- <div class="i5h">What nobody is sure about!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_557">[557]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE FROG</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Be kind and tender to the Frog,</div>
- <div class="i1">And do not call him names,</div>
- <div>As “Slimy-Skin,” or “Polly-wog,”</div>
- <div class="i1">Or likewise, “Uncle James,”</div>
- <div>Or “Gape-a-grin,” or “Toad-gone-wrong,”</div>
- <div class="i1">Or “Billy-Bandy-knees”;</div>
- <div>The Frog is justly sensitive</div>
- <div class="i1">To epithets like these.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>No animal will more repay,</div>
- <div class="i1">A treatment kind and fair,</div>
- <div>At least, so lonely people say</div>
- <div>Who keep a frog (and, by the way,</div>
- <div class="i1">They are extremely rare).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Gilbert K. Chesterton, England’s great humorist of today, is cleverly
-gay in his French Forms.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A BALLADE OF SUICIDE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The gallows in my garden, people say,</div>
- <div>Is new and neat and adequately tall.</div>
- <div>I tie the noose on in a knowing way</div>
- <div>As one that knots his necktie for a ball;</div>
- <div>But just as all the neighbours&mdash;on the wall&mdash;</div>
- <div>Are drawing a long breath to shout “Hurray!”</div>
- <div>The strangest whim has seized me.... After all</div>
- <div>I think I will not hang myself to-day.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>To-morrow is the time I get my pay&mdash;</div>
- <div>My uncle’s sword is hanging in the hall&mdash;</div>
- <div>I see a little cloud all pink and grey&mdash;</div>
- <div>Perhaps the rector’s mother will <i>not</i> call&mdash;</div>
- <div>I fancy that I heard from Mr. Gall</div>
- <div>That mushrooms could be cooked another way&mdash;</div>
- <div>I never read the works of Juvenal&mdash;</div>
- <div>I think I will not hang myself to-day.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_558">[558]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The world will have another washing day;</div>
- <div>The decadents decay; the pedants pall;</div>
- <div>And H. G. Wells has found that children play,</div>
- <div>And Bernard Shaw discovered that they squall;</div>
- <div>Rationalists are growing rational&mdash;</div>
- <div>And through thick woods one finds a stream astray,</div>
- <div>So secret that the very sky seems small&mdash;</div>
- <div>I think I will not hang myself to-day.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>Envoi</i></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Prince, I can hear the trump of Germinal,</div>
- <div>The tumbrils toiling up the terrible way;</div>
- <div>Even today your royal head may fall&mdash;</div>
- <div>I think I will not hang myself to-day.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A BALLADE OF AN ANTI-PURITAN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They spoke of Progress spiring round,</div>
- <div>Of Light and Mrs. Humphry Ward&mdash;</div>
- <div>It is not true to say I frowned,</div>
- <div>Or ran about the room and roared;</div>
- <div>I might have simply sat and snored&mdash;</div>
- <div>I rose politely in the club</div>
- <div>And said, “I feel a little bored;</div>
- <div>Will someone take me to a pub?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The new world’s wisest did surround</div>
- <div>Me; and it pains me to record</div>
- <div>I did not think their views profound,</div>
- <div>Or their conclusions well assured;</div>
- <div>The simple life I can’t afford,</div>
- <div>Besides, I do not like the grub&mdash;</div>
- <div>I want a mash and sausage, “scored”&mdash;</div>
- <div>Will someone take me to a pub?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I know where Men can still be found,</div>
- <div>Anger and clamorous accord,</div>
- <div>And virtues growing from the ground,</div>
- <div>And fellowship of beer and board,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_559">[559]</span></div>
- <div>And song, that is a sturdy cord,</div>
- <div>And hope, that is a hardy shrub,</div>
- <div>And goodness, that is God’s last word&mdash;</div>
- <div>Will someone take me to a pub?</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>Envoi</i></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Prince, Bayard would have smashed his sword</div>
- <div>To see the sort of knights you dub&mdash;</div>
- <div>Is that the last of them&mdash;O Lord!</div>
- <div>Will someone take me to a pub?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_560">[560]</span></p>
-
-<h3>FRENCH HUMOR</h3></div>
-
-
-<p>Voltaire, the assumed name of François Marie Arouet, was one of the
-most famous of French writers. Plays, fiction, criticism and letters
-are among his celebrated works.</p>
-
-<p>We can quote but a short bit from his novel of <i>Candide</i>:</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The tutor Pangloss was the oracle of the house, and little Candide
-listened to his lessons with all the ready faith natural to his age and
-disposition.</p>
-
-<p>Pangloss used to teach the science of
-metaphysico-theologo-cosmologo-noodleology. He demonstrated most
-admirably that there is no effect without a cause, and that, in this
-best of all possible worlds, the castle of my lord baron was the most
-magnificent of castles, and my lady the best of all possible baronesses.</p>
-
-<p>“It has been proved,” said he, “that things cannot be otherwise than
-they are; for, everything being made for a certain end, the end for
-which everything is made is necessarily the best end. Observe how noses
-were made to carry spectacles, and spectacles we have accordingly. Our
-legs are clearly intended for shoes and stockings, so we have them.
-Stone has been formed to be hewn and dressed for building castles, so
-my lord has a very fine one, for it is meet that the greatest baron in
-the province should have the best accommodation. Pigs were made to be
-eaten, and we eat pork all the year round. Consequently those who have
-asserted that all is well have said what is silly; they should have
-said of everything that is, that it is the best that could possibly be.”</p>
-
-<p>Candide listened attentively, and innocently believed all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_561">[561]</span> that he
-heard; for he thought Mlle. Cunégonde extremely beautiful, though he
-never had the boldness to tell her so. He felt convinced that, next
-to the happiness of being born Baron of Thundertentronckh, the second
-degree of happiness was to be Mlle. Cunégonde, the third to see her
-every day, and the fourth to hear Professor Pangloss, the greatest
-philosopher in the province, and therefore in all the world.</p>
-
-<p>One day Mlle. Cunégonde, while taking a walk near the castle, in the
-little wood which was called the park, saw through the bushes Dr.
-Pangloss giving a lesson in experimental physics to her mother’s
-chambermaid, a little brunette, very pretty and very willing to learn.
-As Mlle. Cunégonde had a great taste for science, she watched with
-breathless interest the repeated experiments that were carried on under
-her eyes; she clearly perceived that the doctor had sufficient reason
-for all he did; she saw the connection between causes and effects, and
-returned home much agitated, though very thoughtful, and filled with
-a yearning after scientific pursuits, for sharing in which she wished
-that young Candide might find sufficient reason in her, and that she
-might find the same in him.</p>
-
-<p>She met Candide as she was on her way back to the castle, and blushed;
-the youth blushed likewise. She bade him good morning in a voice
-that struggled for utterance; and Candide answered her without well
-knowing what he was saying. Next day, as the company were leaving the
-table after dinner, Cunégonde and Candide found themselves behind a
-screen. Cunégonde let fall her handkerchief; Candide picked it up; she
-innocently took hold of his hand, and the young man, as innocently,
-kissed hers with an ardor, a tenderness, and a grace quite peculiar;
-their lips met and their eyes sparkled. His lordship, the Baron of
-Thundertentronckh, happened to pass by the screen, and, seeing that
-particular instance of cause and effect, drove Candide out of the
-castle with vigorous kicks. Cunégonde swooned away, but, as soon as she
-recovered, my lady the baroness boxed her ears, and all was confusion
-and consternation in that most magnificent and most charming of all
-possible castles.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_562">[562]</span></p>
-
-<p>Marc Antoine Desaugiers was a Parisian song writer and author of
-vaudeville.</p>
-
-<p>His wit was cynical and his versification of a facile sort.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE ETERNAL YAWNER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ah! well-a-day, in all the earth</div>
- <div class="i1">What can one do?</div>
- <div>Where for amusement seek, or mirth?</div>
- <div>Ah! well-a-day, in all the earth</div>
- <div class="i1">What can one do</div>
- <div>To cease from yawning here below?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Of mortal man, what is the rôle?</div>
- <div class="i1">To bustle, eat, and labor ply;</div>
- <div class="i1">To plot, grow old, and then to die?</div>
- <div>Not very lively this, or droll.</div>
- <div class="i2">Ah! well-a-day, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>No wonder in my mind begets</div>
- <div class="i1">The sun, which poets call sublime;</div>
- <div class="i1">Not this the first or second time</div>
- <div>He rises, runs his race, and sets.</div>
- <div class="i2">Ah! well-a-day, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>To one dull course the seasons cling:</div>
- <div class="i1">For full five thousand years we view</div>
- <div class="i1">The summer following after spring,</div>
- <div>And winter autumn’s close pursue.</div>
- <div class="i2">Ah! well-a-day, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My watch (a friend of little use),</div>
- <div class="i1">Whose hands their tedious circuit ply,</div>
- <div class="i1">Tells me how slow the hours fly,</div>
- <div>Not how I may my hours amuse.</div>
- <div class="i2">Ah! well-a-day, etc.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_563">[563]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I half the world have traveled o’er,</div>
- <div class="i1">To see if men diversion found;</div>
- <div class="i1">But everywhere, on every ground,</div>
- <div>I saw what I had seen before.</div>
- <div class="i2">Ah! well-a-day, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In weariness which I abhorred,</div>
- <div class="i1">Wishing to know how sped the great,</div>
- <div class="i1">I dined with men of high estate,</div>
- <div>And murmured as I left their board,</div>
- <div class="i2">Ah! well-a-day, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Wishing to see if, when in love,</div>
- <div class="i1">Life some unworn amusement has,</div>
- <div class="i1">Love I attempted, but alas!</div>
- <div>Love in all climes the same doth prove.</div>
- <div class="i2">Ah! well-a-day, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thus being, at this early age,</div>
- <div class="i1">Of all things sick, both night and day,</div>
- <div class="i1">In hopes to be more blithe and gay</div>
- <div>I did in settled life engage.</div>
- <div class="i2">Ah! well-a-day, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The street where now my life I led,</div>
- <div class="i1">By neighborhood my steps brought on</div>
- <div class="i1">To th’ Institute and Odéon,</div>
- <div>Which every day I visited.</div>
- <div class="i2">Ah! well-a-day, etc.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>By writing this (hope quickly gone),</div>
- <div class="i1">To cheer my spirits I essayed;</div>
- <div class="i1">But yawned the while this song was made,</div>
- <div>And now I sing it, still I yawn:</div>
- <div class="i2">Ah! well-a-day, etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Pierre Jean de Béranger was one of France’s greatest lyric poets.
-His versatility compassed songs of every sort from political to
-bacchanalian, from amatory to philosophical.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_564">[564]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE EDUCATION OF YOUNG LADIES</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What! this Monsieur de Fénélon</div>
- <div class="i1">The girls pretend to school!</div>
- <div>Of Mass and needlework he prates;</div>
- <div class="i1">Mama, he’s but a fool.</div>
- <div>Balls, concerts, and the piece just out,</div>
- <div>Can teach us better far, no doubt:</div>
- <div>Tra la la la, tra la la la,</div>
- <div>Thus are young ladies taught, Mama!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Let others mind their work; I’ll play,</div>
- <div class="i1">Mama, the sweet duet,</div>
- <div>That for my master’s voice and mine</div>
- <div class="i1">Is from Armida set.</div>
- <div>If Rénaud felt love’s burning flame,</div>
- <div>I feel some shootings of the same:</div>
- <div>Tra la la la, tra la la la,</div>
- <div>Thus are young ladies taught, Mama!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Let others keep accounts; I’ll dance,</div>
- <div class="i1">Mama, an hour or two;</div>
- <div>And from my master learn a step</div>
- <div class="i1">Voluptuous and new.</div>
- <div>At this long skirt my feet rebel;</div>
- <div>To loop it up a bit were well.</div>
- <div>Tra la la la, tra la la la,</div>
- <div>Thus are young ladies taught, Mama!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Let others o’er my sister watch;</div>
- <div class="i1">Mama, I’d rather trace&mdash;</div>
- <div>I’ve wondrous talent&mdash;at the Louvre</div>
- <div class="i1">The Apollo’s matchless grace:</div>
- <div>Throughout his figure what a charm!</div>
- <div class="i1">’Tis naked, true&mdash;but that’s no harm</div>
- <div>Tra la la la, tra la la la,</div>
- <div>Thus are young ladies taught, Mama!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_565">[565]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mama, I must be married soon,</div>
- <div class="i1">Even fashion says no less;</div>
- <div>Besides, there is an urgent cause,</div>
- <div class="i1">I must, Mama, confess.</div>
- <div>The world my situation sees&mdash;</div>
- <div>But there they laugh at scrapes like these.</div>
- <div>Tra la la la, tra la la la,</div>
- <div>Thus are young ladies taught, Mama!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE DEAD ALIVE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When a bore gets hold of me,</div>
- <div class="i1">Dull and overbearing,</div>
- <div>Be so kind as pray for me,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m as dead as herring.</div>
- <div>When the thrusts of pleasure glib</div>
- <div class="i1">In my sides are sticking,</div>
- <div>Poking fun at every rib,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m alive and kicking.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When a snob his £ s. d.</div>
- <div class="i1">Jingles in his breeches,</div>
- <div>Be so kind as pray for me,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m as dead as ditches.</div>
- <div>When a birthday’s champagne-corks</div>
- <div class="i1">Round my ears are clicking,</div>
- <div>Marking time with well-oil’d works,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m alive and kicking.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Kings and their supremacy</div>
- <div class="i1">Occupy the table,</div>
- <div>Be so kind as pray for me,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m as dead as Abel.</div>
- <div>Talk about the age of wine</div>
- <div class="i1">(Bought by cash or ticking),</div>
- <div>So you bring a sample fine,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m alive and kicking.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_566">[566]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When a trip to Muscovy</div>
- <div class="i1">Tempts a conquest glutton,</div>
- <div>Be so kind as pray for me,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m as dead as mutton.</div>
- <div>Match me with a tippling foe,</div>
- <div class="i1">See who first wants picking</div>
- <div>From the dead man’s field below,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m alive and kicking.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When great scribes to poetry</div>
- <div class="i1">March, by notions big led,</div>
- <div>Be so kind as pray for me,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m as dead as pig-lead.</div>
- <div>When you start a careless song,</div>
- <div class="i1">Not at grammar sticking,</div>
- <div>Good to push the wine along.</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m alive and kicking.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When a bigot, half-hours three,</div>
- <div class="i1">Spouts in canting gloom’s tones,</div>
- <div>Be so kind as pray for me,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m as dead as tombstones.</div>
- <div>When in cloisters underground,</div>
- <div class="i1">Built of stone or bricking,</div>
- <div>Orders of the screw you found,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m alive and kicking.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Bourbons back in France we see</div>
- <div class="i1">(Sure we don’t much need ’em),</div>
- <div>Be so kind as pray for me,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m as dead as freedom.</div>
- <div>Bess returns, and still our throats</div>
- <div class="i1">Find us here a-slicking,</div>
- <div>Sitting free without our coats&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m alive and kicking.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Forced to leave this company,</div>
- <div class="i1">Bottle-wine and horn-ale,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_567">[567]</span></div>
- <div>Be so kind as pray for me,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m as dead as door-nail.</div>
- <div>Pledging, though, a quick return,</div>
- <div class="i1">Soon my anchor sticking</div>
- <div>On the shore for which I yearn&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m alive and kicking.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>A great name that ushers in the Nineteenth century is that of Honoré de
-Balzac, chief of the realistic school of French novelists. His humor is
-keen and is never lacking in his somewhat diversified writings.</p>
-
-<p>From his well known <i>Contes Drolatiques</i> we give two stories.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>A SLIGHT MISUNDERSTANDING</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Louis XI had given the Abbey of Turpenay to a gentleman who, enjoying
-the revenue, had called himself M. de Turpenay. It happened that the
-king being at Plessis-les-Tours, the real abbot, who was a monk, came
-and presented himself before the king, and presented a petition,
-remonstrating with him that, canonically and monastically, he was
-entitled to the abbey, and the usurping gentleman wronged him of his
-right, and therefore he called upon his Majesty to have justice done
-to him. Nodding his peruke, the king promised to render him contented.
-This monk, importunate as are all hooded animals, came often at the end
-of the king’s meals, who, bored with the holy water of the convent,
-called friend Tristan and said to him, “Old fellow, there is here a
-Turpenay who annoys me; rid the world of him for me.”</p>
-
-<p>Tristan, taking a frock for a monk, or a monk for a frock, came to
-this gentleman, whom all the court called M. de Turpenay, and, having
-accosted him, managed to lead him on one side, then, taking him by the
-button-hole, gave him to understand that the king desired he should
-die. He tried to resist, supplicating and supplicating to escape,
-but in no way could he obtain a hearing. He was delicately strangled
-between the head and shoulders, so that he expired; and, three hours
-afterwards, Tristan told the king that he was despatched. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_568">[568]</span> happened
-five days later, which is the space in which souls come back again,
-that the monk came into the room where the king was, and when he saw
-him he was much astonished. Tristan was present; the king called him,
-and whispered into his ear:</p>
-
-<p>“You have not done what I told you to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Saving your Majesty, I have done it. Turpenay is dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? I meant this monk.”</p>
-
-<p>“I understood the gentleman!”</p>
-
-<p>“What, it is done, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, your Majesty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, then”&mdash;turning toward the monk&mdash;“come here, monk.” The monk
-approached. The king said to him, “Kneel down.” The poor monk began to
-shiver in his shoes. But the king said to him, “Thank God that He has
-not willed that you should be executed as I had ordered. He who took
-your estates has been instead. God has done you justice. Go and pray to
-God for me, and don’t stir out of your convent.”</p>
-
-<p>This proves the good-heartedness of Louis XI. He might very well
-have hanged the monk, the cause of the error. As for the aforesaid
-gentleman, it was given out that he had died in the king’s service.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>INNOCENCE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">When Queen Catherine was princess royal, to make herself welcome to
-the king, her father-in-law, who at that time was very ill indeed, she
-presented him from time to time with Italian pictures, knowing that he
-liked them much, being a friend of Sire Raphael d’Urbino and of the
-Sires Primaticcio and Leonardo da Vinci, to whom he sent large sums
-of money. She obtained from her family a precious picture, painted by
-a Venetian named Titian (painter to the Emperor Charles, and in very
-high favor), in which there were portraits of Adam and Eve at the
-moment when God left them to wander about the terrestrial paradise.
-They were painted full height, in the costume of the period, in which
-it is difficult to make a mistake, because they were attired in their
-ignorance,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_569">[569]</span> and caparisoned with the divine grace which enveloped
-them&mdash;a difficult thing to execute on account of the color, but one
-in which the said Sire Titian excelled. The picture was put into the
-room of the poor king, who was then ill with the disease of which he
-eventually died. It had a great success at the Court of France, where
-every one wished to see it; but no one was able to until after the
-king’s death, since at his desire it was allowed to remain in his room
-as long as he lived.</p>
-
-<p>One day Catherine took with her to the king’s room her son Francis and
-little Margy, who began to talk at random, as children will. Now here,
-now there, these children had heard this picture of Adam and Eve spoken
-about, and had tormented their mother to take them to see it. Since
-the two little ones sometimes amused the old king, the princess royal
-complied with their request.</p>
-
-<p>“You wished to see Adam and Eve, who were our first parents; there they
-are,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>Then she left them in great astonishment before Titian’s picture, and
-seated herself by the bedside of the king, who delighted to watch the
-children.</p>
-
-<p>“Which of the two is Adam?” said Francis, nudging his sister Margaret’s
-elbow.</p>
-
-<p>“You silly,” replied she, “they would have to be dressed for one to
-know that!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Louis Charles Alfred de Musset was a celebrated French poet and man of
-letters. Though he died in early middle age, he left many volumes of
-wise and witty writings.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE SUPPER-PARTY OF THE THREE CAVALIERS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">“Be silent, all of you!” cried Mimi. “I want to talk a little now.
-Since the magnificent M. Marcel does not care for fables, I am going to
-relate a true story, <i>et quorum pars magna fui</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you speak Latin?” asked Eugène.</p>
-
-<p>“As you perceive,” Mlle. Pinson answered. “I have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_570">[570]</span> inherited that
-sentence from my uncle, who served under the great Napoleon, and who
-always repeated it before he gave us an account of a battle. If you
-don’t know the meaning of the words, I’ll teach you free of charge.
-They mean, ‘I give you my word of honor.’ Well, then, you are to know
-that one night last week I went with two of my friends, Blanchette and
-Rougette, to the Odéon theater&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Watch me cut the cake,” interrupted Marcel.</p>
-
-<p>“Cut ahead, but listen,” Mlle. Pinson continued. “As I was saying,
-I went with Blanchette and Rougette to the Odéon to see a tragedy.
-Rougette, as you know, has just lost her grandmother, and has inherited
-four hundred francs. We had taken a box, opposite to which, in the
-pit, sat three students. These young men liked our looks, and, on the
-pretext that we were alone and unprotected, invited us to supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Immediately?” asked Marcel. “That was gallant indeed. And you refused,
-I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>“By no means,” said Mimi. “We accepted the invitation, and in the
-intermission, without waiting for the end of the play, we all went off
-to Viot’s restaurant.”</p>
-
-<p>“With your cavaliers?”</p>
-
-<p>“With our cavaliers. The leader, of course, began by telling us that
-he had nothing, but such little obstacles did not disconcert us.
-We ordered everything we wanted. Rougette took pen and paper, and
-ordered a veritable marriage-feast: shrimps, an omelet with sugar,
-fritters, mussels, eggs with whipped cream&mdash;in fact, all the delicacies
-imaginable. To tell the truth, our young gentlemen pulled wry faces&mdash;&mdash;
-”</p>
-
-<p>“I have no doubt of it!” said Marcel.</p>
-
-<p>“We didn’t care. When everything was brought in we began to act the
-part of great ladies. We approved of nothing, but found everything
-disgusting. Hardly was any dish brought in but we sent it out again.
-‘Waiter, take this away; it’s intolerable; where did you get the
-horrible stuff?’ Our unknown gentlemen wanted to eat, but found it
-impossible. In a word, we supped as Sancho dined, and in our vigor
-nearly broke several dishes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nice conduct! And who was to pay for it all?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_571">[571]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That is precisely the question that our three unknown gentlemen
-asked one another. To judge by what we overheard of their whispered
-conversation, one of them owned six francs, the second a good deal
-less, and the third had only his watch, which he generously pulled
-out of his pocket. So the three unfortunates went up to the cashier,
-intending to gain a delay of some sort. What answer do you suppose they
-received?”</p>
-
-<p>“I imagine that you would be kept there, and your gentlemen sent to
-jail.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are wrong,” said Mlle. Pinson. “Before going in Rougette had
-taken her precautions, and had paid for everything in advance. You can
-imagine the scene when Viot answered, ‘Gentlemen, everything is paid.’
-Our three unknown gentlemen looked at us as never three dogs looked at
-three bishops, with pitiful stupefaction mixed with pure tenderness.
-But we, without seeming to notice anything unusual, went down-stairs
-and ordered a cab. ‘Dear Marquise,’ said Rougette to me, ‘we ought to
-take these gentlemen home.’ ‘Certainly, dear Countess,’ answered I. Our
-poor young gallants did not know what to say, they looked so sheepish.
-They wanted to get rid of our politeness, and asked not to be taken
-home, even refusing to give their address. No wonder, either, because
-they felt sure that they were having to do with great ladies, and they
-lived in Fish-Cat Street!”</p>
-
-<p>The two students, the friends of Marcel, who, up to this time, had done
-nothing but smoke their pipes and drink in silence, appeared little
-pleased with this story. Their faces grew red, and they seemed to know
-as much about this unfortunate supper as Mimi herself, at whom they
-glanced restlessly. Marcel, laughing, said:</p>
-
-<p>“Tell us who they were, Mlle. Mimi. Since it happened last week it does
-not matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never!” cried the girl. “Play a trick on a man&mdash;yes. But ruin his
-career&mdash;never!”</p>
-
-<p>“You are right,” said Eugène, “and are acting even more wisely than you
-yourself are aware of. There is not a single young fellow at college
-who has not some such mistake or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_572">[572]</span> folly behind him, and yet it is from
-among these very people that France draws her most distinguished men.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Marcel, “that’s true. There are peers of France who now
-dine at Flicoteau’s, but who once could not pay their bills. But,” he
-added, and winked, “haven’t you seen your unknown gentlemen again?”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you take us for?” answered Mlle. Pinson in a severe and almost
-offended tone. “You know Blanchette and Rougette, and do you suppose
-that I&mdash;&mdash;?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Marcel, “don’t be angry. But isn’t this a nice state
-of affairs? Here are three giddy girls, who may not be able to pay
-their next day’s dinner, and who throw away their money for the sake of
-mystifying three poor unoffending devils!”</p>
-
-<p>“But why did they invite us to supper?” asked Mlle. Pinson.&mdash;“<i>Mimi
-Pinson.</i>”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Charles Paul de Kock was a novelist and dramatist. A short quotation
-from <i>A Much Worried Gentleman</i> shows the ubiquitous mother-in-law
-jest.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THÉOPHILE’S MOTHER-IN-LAW</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">“Son-in-law, you will offer me your arm; your wife will take her
-cousin’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, mother-in-law.”</p>
-
-<p>“Furthermore, when we get to the caterer’s for dinner, you must not
-whisper to your wife. People might suspect something unrefined.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, mother-in-law.”</p>
-
-<p>“Neither must you kiss her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you object to me kissing my wife?”</p>
-
-<p>“Before people, yes. It’s very bad form. Haven’t you time enough for it
-at home?”</p>
-
-<p>“True.”</p>
-
-<p>“At table you will not sit next to your wife, but next to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s agreed.”</p>
-
-<p>“During the meal you will take care that no comic songs<span class="pagenum" id="Page_573">[573]</span> on your
-marriage are sung. Those who write them usually permit themselves
-indelicate jokes, so that the ladies are put out. That is the worst
-taste possible.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll see that none are sung.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will dance only once with your wife during the evening. Understand
-me&mdash;only once.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, why, why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because it is proper to let the bride accept the invitations of
-relatives, friends, and strangers.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I didn’t marry in order that my wife should dance with everybody
-except myself!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you wish to insinuate, son-in-law, that you can instruct me
-concerning the usages of polite society? You are beginning well.”</p>
-
-<p>“I assure you, mother-in-law, that I had no intention&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That will do. I accept your excuses. We now come to a more delicate
-matter, to&mdash;but, of course, you must understand me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I confess that I do not at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Listen, son-in-law. Some newly married young men, on their
-wedding-night, when the ball is at its gayest, take the liberty of
-carrying off their wives, and disappearing with them about twelve
-o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you object to that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fie, sir, fie! If you were to be guilty of such a thing, I would make
-your wife sue for a divorce the day after your marriage.”</p>
-
-<p>“Be easy, then; I will not disappear. But when may I go away with my
-wife?”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall take my daughter with me, and arrange an opportune time when
-the decencies of the situation may be observed.”</p>
-
-<p>“And who will take me?”</p>
-
-<p>“You will go alone, but you will not go, understand me well, until
-there isn’t a cat left at the ball.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be getting to bed very late, then. Some of the people will
-want square dances and country dances, and&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You will get to bed soon enough, son-in-law.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_574">[574]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But why all this, mother-in-law?”</p>
-
-<p>“That will do, M. Tamponnet! It is not becoming that this conversation
-be prolonged.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Alexandre Dumas, the Elder, was a noted novelist and dramatist. His
-output was enormous, and the wit, though always discernible, was
-subordinate to matters of heroism, adventure and the like.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>CHAPTER TOUCHING THE OLFACTORY ORGAN</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Has it ever occurred to you, dear reader, how admirable an organ the
-nose is?</p>
-
-<p>The nose; yes, the nose.</p>
-
-<p>And how useful an article this very nose is to every creature which, as
-Ovid says, lifts its face to heaven?</p>
-
-<p>Well, strange as it may seem, monstrous ingratitude that it is, no poet
-has yet thought of addressing an ode to the nose!</p>
-
-<p>So it has been left to me, who am not a poet, or who, at least, claim
-to rank only after our greatest poets, to conceive such an idea.</p>
-
-<p>Truly, the nose is unfortunate.</p>
-
-<p>So many things have been invented for the eyes:</p>
-
-<p>Songs and compliments and kaleidoscopes, pictures and scenery and
-spectacles.</p>
-
-<p>And for the ears:</p>
-
-<p>Ear-rings, of course, and <i>Robert the Devil</i>, <i>William Tell</i>,
-and <i>Fra Diavolo</i>, Stradivarius violins and Érard pianos and Sax
-trumpets.</p>
-
-<p>And for the mouth:</p>
-
-<p>Lent, plain cooking, <i>The Gastronomists’ Calendar</i>, <i>The
-Gormand’s Dictionary</i>. Soups of every kind have they made for it,
-from Russian broth to French cabbage-soup; dishes for it are connected
-with the reputations of the greatest men, from Soubise cutlets to
-Richelieu puddings; its lips have been compared to coral, its teeth to
-pearls, its breath to perfume. Before it have been set plumed peacocks
-and undrawn snipes; and, for the future, it has been promised whole
-roast larks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_575">[575]</span></p>
-
-<p>But what has been invented for the nose?</p>
-
-<p>Attar of roses and snuff.</p>
-
-<p>You have not done well, oh, my masters the philanthropists; oh, my
-brothers the poets!</p>
-
-<p>And yet how faithfully this limb&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“It is not a limb!” cry the scientists.</p>
-
-<p>I beg your pardon, gentlemen, and retract. This appendage&mdash;Ah yes, I
-was saying with what touching fidelity this appendage has done service
-for you.</p>
-
-<p>The eyes sleep, the mouth closes, the ears are deaf.</p>
-
-<p>The nose is always on duty.</p>
-
-<p>It watches over your repose and contributes to your health. Feet,
-hands, all other parts of the body are stupid. The hands are often
-caught in foolish acts; the feet stumble, and in their clumsiness allow
-the body to fall. And when they do, they get off free, and the poor
-nose is punished for their misdeeds.</p>
-
-<p>How often do you not hear it said: “Mr. So-and-So has broken his nose.”</p>
-
-<p>There have been a great many broken noses since the creation of the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>Can any one give a single instance of a nose broken through any fault
-of its own?</p>
-
-<p>No; but, nevertheless, the poor nose is always being scolded.</p>
-
-<p>Well, it endures it all with angelic patience. True, it sometimes has
-the impertinence to snore. But where and when did you ever hear it
-complain?...</p>
-
-<p>But let us forget for a moment the utility of the nose, and regard it
-only from the esthetic point of view.</p>
-
-<p>A cedar of Lebanon, it tramples underfoot the hyssop of the mustache;
-a central column, it provides a support for the double arch of the
-eyebrows. On its capital perches the eagle of thought. It is enwreathed
-with smiles. With what boldness did the nose of Ajax confront the storm
-when he said, “I will escape in spite of the gods.” With what courage
-did the nose of the great Condé&mdash;whose greatness really derived from
-his nose&mdash;with what courage did the nose of the great Condé enter
-before all others, before the great Condé himself, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_576">[576]</span> entrenchments
-of the Spanish at Lens and Rocroy, where their conqueror boldly
-flourished the staff of command? With what assurance was Dugazon’s
-nose thrust before the public, that nose which knew how to wriggle in
-forty-two different ways, and each way funnier than the last?</p>
-
-<p>No, I do not believe that the nose should be permitted to remain in the
-obscurity into which man’s ingratitude has hitherto forced it.</p>
-
-<p>I suggest as one reason why the nose has submitted to this injustice
-the fact that Occidental noses are so small.</p>
-
-<p>But the deuce is to pay if the noses of the West are the only noses.</p>
-
-<p>There are the Oriental noses, which are very handsome noses.</p>
-
-<p>Do you question the superiority of these noses to your own, gentlemen
-of Paris, of Vienna, of St. Petersburg?</p>
-
-<p>In that case, my Viennese friends, go by the Danube; you Parisians,
-take the steamer; Petersburgers, the sledge; and say these simple words:</p>
-
-<p>“To Georgia.”</p>
-
-<p>But I forewarn you of deep humiliation. Should you bring to Georgia one
-of the largest noses in Europe, at the gate of Tiflis they would gaze
-at you in astonishment and exclaim:</p>
-
-<p>“What a pity that this gentleman has lost his nose on the way.” ...</p>
-
-<p>Ah, sweet Heaven! those beautiful Georgian noses! Robust noses,
-magnificent noses!</p>
-
-<p>They are all shapes:</p>
-
-<p>Round, fat, long, large.</p>
-
-<p>There is every color:</p>
-
-<p>White, pink, crimson, violet.</p>
-
-<p>Some are set with rubies, others with pearls. I saw one set with
-turquoises.</p>
-
-<p>In Georgia, Vakhtang IV abolished the fathom, the meter, and the yard,
-keeping only the nose.</p>
-
-<p>Goods are measured off by the nose.</p>
-
-<p>They say, “I bought seventeen noses of flannel for a dressing-gown,
-seven noses of cloth for a pair of breeches, a nose and a half of satin
-for a cravat.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_577">[577]</span></p>
-
-<p>Let us add, finally, that the Georgian ladies find this more convenient
-than European measures.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Théophile Gautier, poet, artist and novelist was identified with the
-romantic movement in French literature.</p>
-
-<p>A charming art of description was his, as may be seen in the story of
-the <i>Lap Dog</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FANFRELUCHE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">To write in praise of this marvelous lap-dog, one should pluck a quill
-from the wing of Love himself; the hands of the Graces alone would be
-light enough to trace his picture; nor would the touch of Latour be too
-soft.</p>
-
-<p>His name was Fanfreluche, a pretty name for a dog, and one that he bore
-with honor.</p>
-
-<p>Fanfreluche was no larger than his mistress’s hand, and it is well
-known that the marquise has the smallest hand in the world; and yet he
-seemed larger to the eye, assuming almost the proportions of a small
-sheep, for he had silky hair a foot in length, and so fine and soft and
-lustrous that the tresses of Minette were a mere mop by contrast. When
-he presented his paw, and one pressed it a little, one was astonished
-to feel nothing at all. Fanfreluche was rather a ball of silk, from
-which two beautiful brown eyes and a little red nose glittered, than an
-actual dog. Such a dog could only have belonged to the mother of Love,
-who lost him in Cytherea, where the marquise, on one of her occasional
-visits, found him. Look for a moment at this fascinatingly exquisite
-face. Would not Roxalana herself have been jealous of that delicately
-tipped-up nose, divided in the middle by a little furrow just like Anne
-of Austria’s?</p>
-
-<p>What vivacity in that quick eye! And that double row of white teeth,
-no larger than grains of rice, which, at the least emotion, sparkled
-in all their brilliance&mdash;what duchess would not envy them? And this
-charming Fanfreluche, apart from his physical attractions, possessed
-a thousand social graces: he danced the minuet with exquisite grace,
-knew how to give<span class="pagenum" id="Page_578">[578]</span> his paw and tell the hour, capered before the queen
-and great ladies of France, and distinguished his right paw from his
-left. And Fanfreluche was learned, and knew more than the members of
-the Academy. If he was not a member of that body it was because he did
-not desire it, thinking, no doubt, to shine rather by his absence. The
-abbé declared that he was as strong as a Turk in the dead languages,
-and that, if he did not talk, it was from pure malice and to vex his
-mistress.</p>
-
-<p>Then, too, Fanfreluche had not the vivacity of common dogs. He was
-very dainty, and very hard to please. He absolutely refused to eat
-anything but little pies of calves’ brains made especially for him;
-he would drink nothing but cream from a little Japanese saucer. Only
-when his mistress dined in town would he consent to nibble at the wing
-of a chicken, and to take sweets for dessert; but he did not grant
-this favor to every one, and one had to have an excellent cook to gain
-it. Fanfreluche had only one little fault. But who is perfect in this
-world? He loved cherries in brandy and Spanish snuff, of which he took
-a little pinch from time to time. But the latter is a weakness he
-shared with the Prince of Condé.</p>
-
-<p>When he heard the cover of the general’s golden snuff-box click, it
-was a treat to see him sit up on his little hind legs and brush the
-carpet with his silken tail; and, if the marquise was engrossed in the
-pleasures of whist, and did not watch him closely, he would jump on the
-abbé’s lap, who fed him with brandied cherries. And Fanfreluche, whose
-head was not strong, would become as tipsy as a Swiss guard and two
-choristers, would perform the queerest little tricks on the carpet, and
-become extraordinarily ferocious on the subject of the calves of the
-chevalier, who, to preserve what little was left of them, would draw
-up his legs on his chair. Then Fanfreluche was no longer a little dog,
-but a little lion, and the marquise alone could manage him. His picture
-would not be complete without mentioning the droll little naughtinesses
-that he was guilty of before being stowed away into his muff, and put
-to bed in his niche of rosewood, padded with white satin and edged with
-blue silk cord.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_579">[579]</span></p>
-
-<p>Henri Murger, a noted litterateur, wrote on themes both gloomy and
-merry. More than most, he ran the gamut from grave to gay, from lively
-to severe.</p>
-
-<p>Among his best known works are his Bohemian Life Sketches. From the
-subjoined bit, it may be seen that boresome parties obtain in all times
-and nations.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>AN EVENING RECEPTION</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Toward the end of the month of December the messengers of Bidault’s
-agency received for distribution about a hundred copies of a circular
-of which we certify the following to be a true and genuine copy:</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Messieurs Rodolphe and Marcel request the honor of your company at a
-reception, on Christmas Eve, Saturday next. There is going to be some
-fun.</p>
-
-<p>P. S. We only live once!</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>Program</i></h5>
-
-
-<p class="center">I</p>
-
-<p>7 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> The rooms will open: lively and animated conversation.</p>
-
-<p>8 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> The ingenious authors of <i>The Mountain in Labor</i>,
-a comedy rejected by the Odéon, will take a turn round the rooms.</p>
-
-<p>8.30 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> M. Alexandre Schaunard, the distinguished artist,
-will execute his Imitative Symphony for the piano, called <i>The
-Influence of Blue in Art</i>.</p>
-
-<p>9 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> First reading of a memoir on the abolition of the
-penalty of tragedy.</p>
-
-<p>9.30 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> M. Gustave Colline, hyperphysical philosopher, and
-M. Schaunard will commence a debate on comparative philosophy and
-metapolitics. In order to prevent any possible collision, the two
-disputants will be tied together.</p>
-
-<p>10 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> M. Tristan, a literary man, will relate the story
-of his first love. M. Alexandre Schaunard will play a pianoforte
-accompaniment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_580">[580]</span></p>
-
-<p>10.30 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> Second reading of the memoir on the abolition of
-the penalty of tragedy.</p>
-
-<p>11 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> <i>The Story of a Cassowary Hunt</i>, by a foreign
-prince.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">II</p>
-
-<p>At midnight M. Marcel, historical painter, will make a white chalk
-drawing, with his eyes bandaged. Subject: The interview between
-Napoleon and Voltaire in the Champs Élysées. At the same time M.
-Rodolphe will improvise a parallel between the author of <i>Zaïre</i>
-and the author of <i>The Battle of Austerlitz</i>.</p>
-
-<p>12.30 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> M. Gustave Colline, in modest undress, will give a
-revival of the athletic sports of the Fourth Olympiad.</p>
-
-<p>1 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> Third reading of the memoir on the abolition of the
-penalty of tragedy, followed by a collection in aid of authors of
-tragedies likely to be thrown out of employment.</p>
-
-<p>2 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> Sports and quadrilles, which will be kept up till
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>6 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> Rise of the sun upon the scene. Final chorus.</p>
-
-<p>The ventilators will be open during the whole of the reception.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>N. B. Any person attempting to read or recite poetry will be
-immediately ejected from the rooms and taken into custody; you are also
-requested not to take away candle-ends.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Victor Marie Hugo, celebrated poet, novelist and dramatist, was a
-recognized leader of the Romantic school of Nineteenth century France.</p>
-
-<p>Quotation from his works is hard to do in brief, but an amusing story
-is given from <i>Tales of a Grandfather</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE GOOD FLEA AND THE WICKED KING</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Once upon a time there was a wicked king, who made his people very
-unhappy. Everybody detested him, and those whom he had put in prison
-and beheaded would have liked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_581">[581]</span> to whip him. But how? He was the
-strongest, he was the master, he did not have to give account to any
-one, and when he was told his subjects were not content, he replied:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what of it? I don’t care a rap!” Which was an ugly answer.</p>
-
-<p>As he continued to act like a king, and as every day he became a little
-more wicked than the day before, this set a certain little flea to
-thinking over the matter. It was a little bit of a flea, who was of no
-consequence at all, but full of good sentiments. This is not the nature
-of fleas in general; but this one had been very well brought up; it bit
-people with moderation, and only when it was very hungry.</p>
-
-<p>“What if I were to bring the king to reason?” it said to itself. “It is
-not without danger. But no matter&mdash;I will try.”</p>
-
-<p>That night the wicked king, after having done all sorts of naughty
-things during the day, was calmly going to sleep when he felt what
-seemed to be the prick of a pin.</p>
-
-<p>“Bite!”</p>
-
-<p>He growled, and turned over on the other side.</p>
-
-<p>“Bite! Bite! Bite!”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is it that bites me so?” cried the king in a terrible voice.</p>
-
-<p>“It is I,” replied a very little voice.</p>
-
-<p>“You? Who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“A little flea who wishes to correct you.”</p>
-
-<p>“A flea? Just you wait! Just you wait, and you shall see!”</p>
-
-<p>And the king sprang from his bed, twisted his coverings, and shook the
-sheets, all of which was quite useless, for the good flea had hidden
-itself in the royal beard.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” said the king, “it has gone now, and I shall be able to get a
-sound sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>But scarcely had he laid his head on the pillow, when&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Bite!”</p>
-
-<p>“How? What? Again?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bite! Bite!”</p>
-
-<p>“You dare to return, you abominable little flea? Think for a moment
-what you are doing! You are no bigger than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_582">[582]</span> a grain of sand, and you
-dare to bite one of the greatest kings on earth!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what of it? I don’t care a rap!” answered the flea in the very
-words of the king.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, if I only had you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but you haven’t got me!”</p>
-
-<p>The wicked king did not sleep all that night, and he arose the next
-morning in a killing ill humor. He resolved to destroy his enemy.
-By his orders, they cleaned the palace from top to bottom, and
-particularly his bedroom; his bed was made by ten old women very
-skilful in the art of catching fleas. But they caught nothing, for the
-good flea had hidden itself under the collar of the king’s coat.</p>
-
-<p>That night, this frightful tyrant, who was dying for want of sleep, lay
-back on both his ears, though this is said to be very difficult. But he
-wished to sleep double, and he knew no better way. I wish you may find
-a better. Scarcely had he put out his light, when he felt the flea on
-his neck.</p>
-
-<p>“Bite! Bite!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, zounds! What is this?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is I&mdash;the flea of yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what do you want, you rascal&mdash;you tiny pest?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you to obey me, and to make your people happy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ho, there, my soldiers, my captain of the guard, my ministers, my
-generals! Everybody! The whole lot of you!”</p>
-
-<p>The whole lot of them came in. The king was in a rage, which made
-everybody tremble. He found fault with all the servants of the palace.
-Everybody was in consternation. During this time the flea, quite calm,
-kept itself hid in the king’s nightcap.</p>
-
-<p>The guards were doubled; laws and decrees were made; ordinances were
-published against all fleas; there were processions and public prayers
-to ask of Heaven the extermination of the flea, and sound sleep for the
-king. It was all of no avail. The wretched king could not lie down,
-even on the grass, without being attacked by his obstinate enemy, the
-good flea, who did not let him sleep a single minute.</p>
-
-<p>“Bite! Bite!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_583">[583]</span></p>
-
-<p>It would take too long to tell the many hard knocks the king gave
-himself in trying to crush the flea; he was covered with bruises and
-contusions. As he could not sleep, he wandered about like an uneasy
-spirit. He grew thinner. He would certainly have died if, at last, he
-had not made up his mind to obey the good flea.</p>
-
-<p>“I surrender,” he said at last, when it began to bite him again. “I ask
-for quarter. I will do what you wish.”</p>
-
-<p>“So much the better. On that condition only shall you sleep,” replied
-the flea.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you. What must I do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Make your people happy!”</p>
-
-<p>“I have never learned how. I do not know how&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing more easy: you have only to go away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Taking my treasures with me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Without taking anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I shall die if I have no money,” said the king.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what of it? I don’t care!” replied the flea.</p>
-
-<p>But the flea was not hard-hearted, and it let the king fill his pockets
-with money before he went away. And the people were able to be very
-happy by setting up a republic.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Alphonse Daudet, humorist and story writer, created the character of
-Tartarin, a gasconading humbug, and a satire on the typical character
-attributed to Southern France.</p>
-
-<p>A bit from <i>Tartarin in the Alps</i> will show the type of humor.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>WILLIAM TELL</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The party of travelers now came to the Lake of Lucerne, with its dark
-waters overshadowed by high and menacing mountains. To their right they
-saw that Ruetli meadow where Melchthal, Fuerst, and Stauffacher had
-sworn the oath to deliver their country.</p>
-
-<p>Tartarin, deeply moved, took off his cap, and even threw it into the
-air three times to render homage to the shades of the departed heroes.
-Some of the tourists mistook this for a salutation, and bowed in
-return. At last they reached Tell’s Chapel. This chapel is situated at
-the edge of the lake, on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_584">[584]</span> the very rock upon which, during the storm,
-William Tell jumped from Gessler’s boat. And it was a delicious emotion
-to Tartarin, while he followed the travelers along the lake, to tread
-this historic ground, to recall and revive the various scenes of this
-great drama, which he knew as well as his own biography.</p>
-
-<p>For William Tell had always been his ideal man. When at Bézuquet’s
-pharmacy the game of Preferences was being played, and each one wrote
-on his slip of paper the name of the poet, the tree, the odor, the
-hero, and the woman that he preferred to all others of their kind, one
-slip invariably bore this inscription:</p>
-
-<p>“Favorite tree?&mdash;The baobab.</p>
-
-<p>“Favorite odor?&mdash;Gunpowder.</p>
-
-<p>“Favorite author?&mdash;Fenimore Cooper.</p>
-
-<p>“Who would you like to have been?&mdash;William Tell.”</p>
-
-<p>And then everybody would exclaim, “That’s Tartarin!”</p>
-
-<p>Imagine, then, how happy he was, and how his heart beat when he stood
-before the chapel commemorative of the gratitude of a whole nation. It
-seemed to him as if William Tell must come in person to open the door,
-still dripping from the waters of the lake, and holding in his hand his
-bolts and crossbow.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t come in here. I’m working. This is not the day on which tourists
-are allowed,” sounded a strong voice from the interior, reechoing
-against the walls.</p>
-
-<p>“M. Astier-Réhu, of the French Academy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Herr Professor Doctor Schwanthaler!”</p>
-
-<p>“Tartarin of Tarascon!”</p>
-
-<p>The painter, who was standing on a scaffolding within, stretched out
-half of his body clad in his working-blouse, and holding his palette in
-his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“My pupil will come down and open the door for you, gentlemen,” he said
-in a respectful tone.</p>
-
-<p>“I was sure of it; of course,” said Tartarin to himself, “I have only
-to mention my name.”</p>
-
-<p>For all that, he had the good taste to fall into line and modestly
-enter the chapel behind the others.</p>
-
-<p>The painter, a splendid fellow, with a magnificent golden<span class="pagenum" id="Page_585">[585]</span> head of
-an artist of the Renaissance, received his visitors on the wooden
-staircase which led to the temporary scaffolding from which the mural
-paintings were being done. All the frescos, representing scenes from
-Tell’s life, were complete, except the one in which the scene of
-the apple at Altorf was to be shown. Upon that the painter was now
-working....</p>
-
-<p>“I find it all very characteristically done,” said the great
-Astier-Réhu.</p>
-
-<p>And Schwanthaler, folding his arms, recited two of Schiller’s verses,
-half of which was lost in his beard. Then the ladies delivered their
-opinions, and for some minutes one would have thought oneself in a
-confectioner’s shop. “Beautiful!” they cried. “Lovely! Exquisite!
-Delicious!”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly came a voice, tearing the silence like a trumpet’s blare:</p>
-
-<p>“Badly shouldered, that blunderbuss, I tell you! He never held it in
-that way!”</p>
-
-<p>Imagine the stupefaction of the painter when this tourist, stick in
-hand and bundle on his back, undertook to demonstrate to him as clearly
-as that two and two are four, that the position of Tell in the picture
-was incorrect.</p>
-
-<p>“And I understand these matters, I would have you know!”</p>
-
-<p>“And who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who am I?” said our Tarasconian hero, deeply astonished. And so it
-was not at his name that the door had opened. Drawing himself up, he
-answered, “Ask the panthers of Zaccar, or the lions of Atlas, and
-perhaps they will answer you.”</p>
-
-<p>Every one drew away from Tartarin in fright and consternation.</p>
-
-<p>“But then,” asked the painter, “in what respect is Tell’s position
-incorrect?”</p>
-
-<p>“Look at me!”</p>
-
-<p>Falling back with a double step that made the planks creak, Tartarin,
-using his cane to represent the “blunderbuss,” threw himself into
-position.</p>
-
-<p>“Superb! He is right! Don’t move!” cried the painter. Then to his pupil:</p>
-
-<p>“Quick, bring me paper and charcoal!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_586">[586]</span></p>
-
-<h3>GERMAN HUMOR</h3></div>
-
-
-<p>Christian F. Gellert, a German poet of the early Eighteenth century,
-was also a lecturer and professor of philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>His literary fame rests upon his sacred songs and his fables. One of
-the latter we quote.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE PATIENT CURED</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A man long plagued with aches in joint and limb</div>
- <div>Did all his neighbors recommended him,</div>
- <div>But, despite that, could nowise gain</div>
- <div>Deliverance from his pain.</div>
- <div>An ancient dame, to whom he told his case,</div>
- <div>Cut an oracular grimace,</div>
- <div>And thus announced a magic remedy:</div>
- <div>“You must,” said she,</div>
- <div>Mysteriously hissing in his ear,</div>
- <div>And calling him “My dear,”</div>
- <div>“Sit on a good man’s grave at early light,</div>
- <div>And with the dew fresh-fallen over night</div>
- <div>Thrice bathe your hands, your knee-joints thrice:</div>
- <div>’Twill cure you in a trice.</div>
- <div>Remember her who gave you this advice.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The patient did just as the grandam said.</div>
- <div>(What will not mortals do to be</div>
- <div>Relieved of misery?)</div>
- <div>He went right early to the burying-ground,</div>
- <div>And on a tombstone&mdash;’twas the first he found&mdash;</div>
- <div>These words, delighted, read:</div>
- <div>“Stranger, what man he was who sleeps below,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_587">[587]</span></div>
- <div>This monument and epitaph may show.</div>
- <div>The wonder of his time was he,</div>
- <div>The pattern of most genuine piety;</div>
- <div>And that thou all in a few words may’st learn,</div>
- <div>Him church and school and town and country mourn.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Here the poor cripple takes his seat,</div>
- <div>And bathes his hands, his joints, his feet;</div>
- <div>But all his labor’s worse than vain:</div>
- <div>It rather aggravates his pain.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>With troubled mind he grasps his staff,</div>
- <div>Turns from the good man’s grave, and creeps</div>
- <div>On to the next, where lowly sleeps</div>
- <div>One honored by no epitaph.</div>
- <div>Scarce had he touched the nameless stone,</div>
- <div>When lo! each racking pain had flown;</div>
- <div>His useless staff forgotten on the ground,</div>
- <div>He leaves this holy grave, erect and sound.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Ah!” he exclaimed, “is there no line to tell</div>
- <div>Who was this holy man that makes me well?”</div>
- <div>Just then the sexton did appear,</div>
- <div>Of him he asked, “Pray, who lies buried here?”</div>
- <div>The sexton waited long, and seemed quite shy</div>
- <div>Of making any sort of a reply.</div>
- <div>“Well,” he began at last with mournful sigh,</div>
- <div>“The Lord forgive him, ’twas a man</div>
- <div>Placed by all honest circles under ban;</div>
- <div>Whom scarcely they allowed a decent grave;</div>
- <div>Whose soul naught but a miracle might save;</div>
- <div>A heretic, and, what is worse,</div>
- <div>Wrote plays and verse!</div>
- <div>In short, to speak my full conviction,</div>
- <div>And without fear of contradiction,</div>
- <div>He was an innovator and a scound&mdash;”</div>
- <div>“No!” cried the man. “No, I’ll be bound!</div>
- <div>Not so, though all the world the lie repeat!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_588">[588]</span></div>
- <div>But that chap there, who sleeps hard by us,</div>
- <div>Whom you and all the world call pious,</div>
- <div>He was, for sure, a scoundrel and a cheat!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Gotthold Ephraim Lessing was a celebrated German dramatist and critic.
-His collected works fill many volumes.</p>
-
-<p>We quote a few of his Fables and Epigrams.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE RAVEN</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The raven remarked that the eagle sat thirty days upon her eggs. “That,
-undoubtedly,” said she, “is the reason why the young of the eagle are
-so all-seeing and strong. Good! I will do the same.”</p>
-
-<p>And, since then, the raven actually sits thirty days upon
-her eggs; but, as yet, she has hatched nothing but miserable
-ravens.&mdash;<i>Fables.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE DECORATED BOW</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A man had an excellent bow of ebony, with which he shot very far and
-very sure, and which he valued at a great price. But once, after
-considering it attentively, he said:</p>
-
-<p>“A little too rude still! Your only ornament is your polish. It is a
-pity! However, that can be remedied,” thought he. “I will go and let a
-first-rate artist carve something on the bow.”</p>
-
-<p>He went, and the artist carved an entire hunting-scene upon the bow.
-And what more fitting for a bow than a hunting-scene?</p>
-
-<p>The man was delighted. “You deserve this embellishment, my beloved
-bow.” So saying, he wished to try it.</p>
-
-<p>He drew the string. The bow broke!&mdash;<i>Fables.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>EPIGRAMS</i></h4>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>From the grave where dead Gripeall, the miser, reposes,</div>
- <div>What a villainous odor invades all our noses!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_589">[589]</span></div>
- <div>It can’t be his <i>body</i> alone&mdash;in the hole</div>
- <div>They have certainly buried the usurer’s <i>soul</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>While Fell was reposing himself on the hay,</div>
- <div>A reptile conceal’d bit his leg as he lay;</div>
- <div>But all venom himself, of the wound he made light,</div>
- <div>And got well, while the scorpion died of the bite.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So vile your grimace, and so croaking your speech,</div>
- <div class="i1">One scarcely can tell if you’re laughing or crying;</div>
- <div>Were you fix’d on one’s funeral sermon to preach,</div>
- <div class="i1">The bare apprehension would keep one from dying.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Quoth gallant Fritz, “I ran away</div>
- <div>To fight again another day.”</div>
- <div>The meaning of his speech is plain,</div>
- <div>He only fled to fly again.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“How strange, a deaf wife to prefer!”</div>
- <div>“True, but she’s also dumb, good sir.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Rudolph Erich Raspe was a German author who was also an Archæologist of
-note.</p>
-
-<p>His best known work is the celebrated <i>History of Baron
-Münchausen</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>A HORSE TIED TO A STEEPLE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">I set off from Rome on a journey to Russia, in the midst of winter,
-from a just notion that frost and snow must of course improve the
-roads, which every traveler had described as uncommonly bad through
-the northern parts of Germany, Poland, Courland, and Livonia. I went
-on horseback, as the most convenient manner of traveling. I was but
-lightly clothed, and of this I felt the inconvenience the more I
-advanced northeast. What must not a poor old man have suffered in that
-severe weather and climate, whom I saw on a bleak common in Poland,
-lying on the road, helpless, shivering,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_590">[590]</span> and hardly having wherewithal
-to cover his nakedness? I pitied the poor soul. Though I felt the
-severity of the atmosphere myself, I threw my mantle over him, and
-immediately I heard a voice from the heavens, blessing me for that
-piece of charity, saying:</p>
-
-<p>“You will be rewarded, my son, for this in time.”</p>
-
-<p>I went on. Night and darkness overtook me. No village was to be seen.
-The country was covered with snow, and I was unacquainted with the road.</p>
-
-<p>Tired out, I alighted, and fastened my horse to something like the
-pointed stump of a tree which appeared above the snow. For the sake
-of safety I placed my pistols under my arm, and laid down on the
-snow, where I slept so soundly that I did not open my eyes till full
-daylight. It is not easy to conceive my astonishment at finding myself
-in the midst of a village, lying in a churchyard. Nor was my horse
-to be seen; but I heard him soon after neigh somewhere above me. On
-looking upward, I beheld him hanging by his bridle to the weathercock
-of the steeple. Matters were now quite plain to me. The village had
-been covered with snow overnight; a sudden change in the weather had
-taken place; I had sunk down to the churchyard while asleep at the same
-rate as the snow had melted away; and what in the dark I had taken to
-be a stump of a little tree appearing above the snow, to which I had
-tied my horse, proved to have been the cross or weathercock of the
-steeple!</p>
-
-<p>Without long consideration, I took one of my pistols, shot the
-bridle in two, brought down the horse, and proceeded on my
-journey.&mdash;<i>Adventures of Baron Münchausen.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>A RATHER LARGE WHALE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">I embarked at Portsmouth, in a first-rate English man-of-war of one
-hundred guns and fourteen hundred men, for North America. Nothing worth
-relating happened till we arrived within three hundred leagues of the
-river St. Lawrence, when the ship struck with amazing force against (as
-we supposed) a rock. However, upon heaving the lead, we could find no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_591">[591]</span>
-bottom, even with three hundred fathoms. What made this circumstance
-the more wonderful, and indeed beyond all comprehension, was, that
-the violence of the shock was such that we lost our rudder, broke our
-bowsprit in the middle, and split all our masts from top to bottom,
-two of which went by the board. A poor fellow, who was aloft furling
-the main-sheet, was flung at least three leagues from the ship; but
-he fortunately saved his life by laying hold of the tail of a large
-sea-gull, which brought him back and lodged him on the very spot whence
-he was thrown. Another proof of the violence of the shock was the force
-with which the people between decks were driven against the floors
-above them. My head particularly was pressed into my stomach, where it
-continued some months before it returned to its natural situation.</p>
-
-<p>While we were all in a state of astonishment at the general and
-unaccountable confusion in which we were involved, the whole was
-suddenly explained by the appearance of a large whale, which had been
-basking, asleep, within sixteen feet of the surface of the water. This
-animal was so much displeased with the disturbance which our ship had
-given him&mdash;for in our passage we had with our rudder scratched his
-nose&mdash;that he beat in all the gallery and part of the quarter-deck with
-his tail, and almost at the same instant took the main-sheet anchor,
-which was suspended, as it usually is, from the head, between his
-teeth, and ran away with the ship at least sixty leagues, at the rate
-of twelve leagues an hour, when, fortunately, the cable broke, and we
-lost both the whale and the anchor. However, upon our return to Europe,
-some months after, we found the same whale within a few leagues of the
-same spot, floating dead upon the water. It measured above half a mile
-in length. As we could take only a small quantity of such a monstrous
-animal on board, we got our boats out, and with much difficulty cut off
-his head, where, to our great joy, we found the anchor, and above forty
-fathoms of the cable, concealed on the left side of his mouth, just
-under his tongue. Perhaps this was the cause of his death, as that side
-of his tongue was much swelled with severe inflammation.</p>
-
-<p>This was the only extraordinary circumstance that happened<span class="pagenum" id="Page_592">[592]</span> on this
-voyage. One part of our distress, however, I had like to have forgot.
-While the whale was running away with the ship she sprang a leak, and
-the water poured in so fast that all our pumps could not keep us from
-sinking. It was, however, my good fortune to discover it first. I found
-a large hole about a foot in diameter, and you will naturally suppose
-this circumstance gives me infinite pleasure, when I inform you that
-this noble vessel was preserved, with all its crew, by a most happy
-thought of mine. In short I sat down over it, and could have covered
-it had it been even larger. Nor will you be surprised at this when I
-inform you that I am descended from Dutch parents.</p>
-
-<p>My situation, while I sat there, was rather cool, but the carpenter’s
-art soon relieved me.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Adventures of Baron Münchausen.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Matthias Claudius was another maker of Poetical Fables and Folk Songs.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE HEN AND THE EGG</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A famous hen’s my story’s theme,</div>
- <div>Who ne’er was known to tire</div>
- <div>Of laying eggs, but then she’d scream</div>
- <div>So loud o’er every egg, ’twould seem</div>
- <div>The house must be on fire.</div>
- <div>A turkey-cock, who ruled the walk,</div>
- <div>A wiser bird, and older,</div>
- <div>Could bear’t no more, so off did stalk</div>
- <div>Right to the hen, and told her:</div>
- <div>“Madam, that scream, I apprehend,</div>
- <div>Does not affect the matter;</div>
- <div>It surely helps the eggs no whit;</div>
- <div>So, lay your egg&mdash;and done with it!</div>
- <div>I pray you, madam, as a friend,</div>
- <div>Cease that superfluous clatter.</div>
- <div>You know not how’t goes through my head!”</div>
- <div>“Humph! Very likely!” madam said,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_593">[593]</span></div>
- <div>Then, proudly putting forth a leg:</div>
- <div>“Uneducated barnyard fowl,</div>
- <div>You know no more than any owl</div>
- <div>The noble privilege and praise</div>
- <div>Of authorship in modern days!</div>
- <div>I’ll tell you why I do it:</div>
- <div>First, you perceive, I lay my egg,</div>
- <div>And then&mdash;review it.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Friedrich von Schiller was among the most famous of Germany’s writers.
-Poet, dramatist and historian he left numerous works of varied value.</p>
-
-<p>His humor, like that of all his countrymen, is heavy and rather labored.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>PEGASUS IN THE YOKE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Into a public fair&mdash;a cattle-fair, in short,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Where other things are bought and sold&mdash;ah, sad to tell!</div>
- <div>A hungry poet one day brought</div>
- <div class="i1">The Muse’s Pegasus to sell.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Shrill neighed the hippogriff and clear,</div>
- <div class="i1">And pranced, and reared, displaying his proud frame,</div>
- <div>Till all exclaimed in wonder, who stood near,</div>
- <div class="i1">“The noble, royal beast! But what a shame</div>
- <div>His slender form by such a hateful pair</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Of wings is spoiled! He’d set off a fine post-team well.”</div>
- <div>“The race,” say others, “would be rare;</div>
- <div>But who’s go posting through the air?”</div>
- <div class="i1">And lose his money no one will.</div>
- <div>A farmer mustered courage, though, at length,</div>
- <div class="i1">“The wings, indeed,” he says, “will be no profit;</div>
- <div class="i1">But them one might tie down, or crop them off; it</div>
- <div>Then were a good horse for drawing&mdash;it has strength.</div>
- <div>I’ll give you twenty pounds, sir, win or lose.”</div>
- <div>The seller, too delighted to refuse,</div>
- <div>Cried out, “Agreed!” and eagerly the offer seized.</div>
- <div>Hans with his bargain trudged off home, well pleased.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_594">[594]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The noble beast was harnessed in,</div>
- <div class="i1">But felt th’ unwonted burden to be light,</div>
- <div class="i1">And off he set with appetite for flight,</div>
- <div>And soon his wild careering would begin,</div>
- <div>And hurled the cart in proudest rage</div>
- <div>Over a precipice’s edge.</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">“Well done!” thought Hans. “We wisdom from experience borrow;</div>
- <div>I’ll trust the mad beast with no loads again.</div>
- <div class="i1">I’ve passengers to take to-morrow;</div>
- <div>He shall be put in leader of the train.</div>
- <div>By using him, two horses I shall spare;</div>
- <div>He’ll learn in time the collar, too, to bear.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They went on well awhile. The horse was fleet,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And quickened up the rest; and arrow-swift the carriage flies.</div>
- <div>But now, what next? With look turned to the skies,</div>
- <div>And unaccustomed with firm hoof the ground to beat,</div>
- <div>He leaves the sure track of the wheels,</div>
- <div>True to the stronger nature which he feels,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And runs through marsh and moor, o’er planted field and plain;</div>
- <div>And the same fury seizes all the train.</div>
- <div>No call will help, no bridle hold them in,</div>
- <div>Till, to the mortal fright of all within,</div>
- <div>The coach, well shaken and well smashed, brings up</div>
- <div>In sad plight on a steep hill’s top.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“This is not quite the thing! No, no!”</div>
- <div class="i1">Says Hans, considering, with a frown.</div>
- <div>“In this way I shall never make it go.</div>
- <div class="i1">Let’s see if ’twill not tame the wild-fire down,</div>
- <div>To work him hard, and keep him low.”</div>
- <div>The trial’s made. The beast, so fair and trim,</div>
- <div>Before three days are gone looks gaunt and grim,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">And to a shadow shrunk. “I have it! I have found it now!”</div>
- <div>Cries Hans. “Come on, now. Yoke me him</div>
- <div class="i1">Beside my strongest ox before the plow.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_595">[595]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So said, so done. In droll procession now,</div>
- <div>See ox and wingèd horse before the plow.</div>
- <div>Unwilling steps the griffin, strains what little might</div>
- <div>Of longing’s left in him, to take his fond old flight.</div>
- <div>In vain: deliberately steps his neighbor,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And Phœbus’ high-souled steed must bend to his slow labor,</div>
- <div>Till now, by long resistance spent his force,</div>
- <div class="i1">His trembling limbs he can no longer trust,</div>
- <div>And, bowed with shame, the noble, godlike horse</div>
- <div class="i1">Falls to the ground, and rolls him in the dust.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“You cursèd beast!” Hans breaks out furious now,</div>
- <div class="i1">And scolds and blusters, while he lays the blows on;</div>
- <div>“You are too poor, then, even for the plow!</div>
- <div class="i1">You rascal, so my ignorance to impose on!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And while in this way angrily he goes on,</div>
- <div>And swings the lash, behold! upon the way</div>
- <div>A pleasant youth steps up so smart and gay.</div>
- <div class="i1">A harp shakes ringing in his hand,</div>
- <div>And through his glossy, parted hair</div>
- <div class="i1">Winds glittering a golden band.</div>
- <div>“Where now, friend, with that wondrous pair?”</div>
- <div class="i1">From far off to the boor he spoke.</div>
- <div>“The bird and ox together in that style?</div>
- <div class="i1">I pray you, man, why, what a yoke!</div>
- <div>But come, to try a little while,</div>
- <div class="i1">Will you entrust your horse to me?</div>
- <div class="i1">Look well: a wonder you shall see.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The hippogriff’s unyoked, and with a smile</div>
- <div class="i1">The youth springs lightsomely upon his back.</div>
- <div>Scarce feels the beast the master’s certain hand,</div>
- <div>But gnashes at his wings’ confining band,</div>
- <div class="i1">And mounts, with lightning-look, the airy track.</div>
- <div>No more the being that he was, but royally,</div>
- <div>A spirit now, a god, up mounteth he;</div>
- <div class="i1">Unfurls at once, as for their far storm-flight,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_596">[596]</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent">His splendid wings, and shoots to heaven with fierce, wild neigh;</div>
- <div>And ere the eye can follow him, away</div>
- <div class="i1">He melts into the clear blue height.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, the greatest name in German literature, is
-hardly to be classed among the humorists.</p>
-
-<p>But a short extract from his Reynard the Fox is quoted.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“But I am rather bad in my inside.</div>
- <div>By what I’ve eaten I am quite upset,</div>
- <div>And nowise fitted for a journey yet.”</div>
- <div>“What was it?” asked Sir Bruin, quite prepared,</div>
- <div>For Reynard had not thrown him off his guard.</div>
- <div class="i1">“Ah,” quoth the Fox, “what boots it to explain?</div>
- <div>E’en your kind pity could not ease my pain.</div>
- <div>Since flesh I have abjured, for my soul’s weal,</div>
- <div>I’m often sadly put to’t for a meal.</div>
- <div>I bear my wretched life as best I can;</div>
- <div>A hermit fares not like an alderman.</div>
- <div>But yesterday, as other viands failed,</div>
- <div>I ate some honey&mdash;see how I am swelled!</div>
- <div>Of that there’s always to be had enough.</div>
- <div>Would I had never touched the cursed stuff!</div>
- <div>I ate it out of sheer necessity;</div>
- <div>Physic is not so nauseous near to me.”</div>
- <div>“Honey!” exclaimed the Bear; “did you say honey!</div>
- <div>Would I could any get for love or money!</div>
- <div>How can you speak so ill of what’s so good?</div>
- <div>Honey has ever been my fav’rite food;</div>
- <div>It is so wholesome, and so sweet and luscious,</div>
- <div>I can’t conceive how you can call it nauseous.</div>
- <div>Do get me some o’t, and you may depend</div>
- <div>You’ll make me evermore your steadfast friend.”</div>
- <div class="i1">“You’re surely joking, uncle!” Reynard cried.</div>
- <div class="i1">“No, on my sacred word!” the Bear replied;</div>
- <div>“I’d not, though jokes as blackberries were rife,</div>
- <div>Joke upon such a subject for my life.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_597">[597]</span></div>
- <div class="i1">“Well, you surprise me!” said the knavish beast.</div>
- <div>“There’s no accounting, certainly, for taste;</div>
- <div>And one man’s meat is oft another’s poison.</div>
- <div>I’ll wager that you never set your eyes on</div>
- <div>Such store of honey as you soon shall spy</div>
- <div>At Gaffer Joiner’s, who lives here hard by.”</div>
- <div class="i1">In fancy o’er the treat did Bruin gloat,</div>
- <div>While his mouth fairly watered at the thought.</div>
- <div class="i1">“Oh, take me, take me there, dear coz,” quoth he,</div>
- <div>“And I will ne’er forget your courtesy!</div>
- <div>Oh, let me have a taste, if not my fill;</div>
- <div>Do, cousin.” Reynard grinned, and said, “I will.</div>
- <div>Honey you shall not long time be without.</div>
- <div>’Tis true just now I’m rather sore of foot;</div>
- <div>But what of that? The love I bear to you</div>
- <div>Shall make the road seem short, and easy too</div>
- <div>Not one of all my kith or kin is there</div>
- <div>Whom I so honor as th’ illustrious Bear.</div>
- <div>Come, then, and in return I know you’ll say</div>
- <div>A good word for me on the council day.</div>
- <div>You shall have honey to your heart’s content,</div>
- <div>And wax, too, if your fancy’s that way bent.”</div>
- <div>Whacks of a different sort the sly rogue meant.</div>
- <div class="i1">Off starts the wily Fox, in merry trim,</div>
- <div>And Bruin blindly follows after him.</div>
- <div>“If you have luck,” thought Reynard, with a titter,</div>
- <div>“I guess you’ll find our honey rather bitter.”</div>
- <div class="i1">When they at length reached Goodman Joiner’s yard,</div>
- <div>The joy that Bruin felt he might have spared.</div>
- <div>But hope, it seems, by some eternal rule,</div>
- <div>Beguiles the wisest as the merest fool.</div>
- <div class="i1">’Twas ev’ning now, and Reynard knew, he said,</div>
- <div>The goodman would be safe and sound in bed.</div>
- <div>A good and skilful carpenter was he;</div>
- <div>Within his yard there lay an old oak-tree,</div>
- <div>Whose gnarled and knotted trunk he had to split.</div>
- <div>A stout wedge had he driven into it;</div>
- <div>The cleft gaped open a good three foot wide;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_598">[598]</span></div>
- <div>Toward this spot the crafty Reynard hied.</div>
- <div>“Uncle,” quoth he, “your steps this way direct;</div>
- <div>You’ll find more honey here than you suspect.</div>
- <div>In at this fissure boldly thrust your pate;</div>
- <div>But I beseech you to be moderate.</div>
- <div>Remember, sweetest things the soonest cloy,</div>
- <div>And temperance enhances every joy.”</div>
- <div class="i1">“What!” said the Bear, a shock’d look as he put on</div>
- <div>Of self-restraint; “d’ye take me for a glutton?</div>
- <div>With thanks I use the gifts of Providence,</div>
- <div>But to abuse them count a grave offense.”</div>
- <div class="i1">And so Sir Bruin let himself be fooled&mdash;</div>
- <div>As strength will be whene’er by craft ’tis ruled.</div>
- <div>Into the cleft he thrust his greedy maw</div>
- <div>Up to the ears, and either foremost paw.</div>
- <div>Reynard drew near, and tugging might and main</div>
- <div>Pulled forth the wedge, and the trunk closed again.</div>
- <div>By head and foot was Bruin firmly caught,</div>
- <div>Nor threats nor flatt’ry could avail him aught.</div>
- <div>He howled, he raved, he struggled, and he tore,</div>
- <div>Till the whole place re-echoed with his roar,</div>
- <div>And Goodman Joiner, wakened by the rout,</div>
- <div>Jumped up, much wond’ring what ’twas all about.</div>
- <div>He seized his ax, that he might be prepared,</div>
- <div>And danger, if it came, might find him on his guard.</div>
- <div class="i1">Still howled the Bear, and struggled to get free</div>
- <div>From the accursed grip of that cleft tree.</div>
- <div>He strove and strained, but strained and strove in vain;</div>
- <div>His mightiest efforts but increased his pain;</div>
- <div>He thought he never should get loose again.</div>
- <div>And Reynard thought the same, for his own part,</div>
- <div>And wished it, too, devoutly from his heart</div>
- <div>And as the joiner coming he espied,</div>
- <div>Armed with his ax, the jesting ruffian cried:</div>
- <div class="i1">“Uncle, what cheer? Is th’ honey to your taste?</div>
- <div>Don’t eat too quick; there’s no such need of haste.</div>
- <div>The joiner’s coming, and I make no question,</div>
- <div>He brings you your dessert, to help digestion.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_599">[599]</span></div>
- <div class="i1">Then, deeming ’twas not longer safe to stay,</div>
- <div>To Malepartus back he took his way.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Carl Arnold Kortum, a German poet, wrote a long rigmarole of burlesque,
-called <i>The Jobsiad</i>. This was exceedingly popular and became a
-German classic. It is dull for the most part, but shows flashes of real
-drollery.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p2"><i>Contains the copy of a letter, which, among many others, the student
-Hieronimus did write to his parents:</i></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Dear and Honored Parents,</div>
- <div class="i12">I lately</div>
- <div>Have suffered for want of money greatly;</div>
- <div class="i1">Have the goodness, then, to send without fail,</div>
- <div class="i1">A trifle or two by return of mail.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I want about twenty or thirty ducats;</div>
- <div>For I have not at present a cent in my pockets;</div>
- <div class="i1">Things are so tight with us this way,</div>
- <div class="i1">Send me the money at once, I pray.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And everything is growing higher,</div>
- <div>Lodging and washing, and lights and fire,</div>
- <div class="i1">And incidental expenses every day&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Send me the ducats without delay.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You can hardly perceive the enormous expenses</div>
- <div>The college imposes on all pretenses,</div>
- <div class="i1">For text-books and lectures so much to pay&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">I wish the ducats were on their way!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I devote to my studies unremitting attention&mdash;</div>
- <div>One thing I must not forget to mention:</div>
- <div class="i1">The thirty ducats, pray send them straight</div>
- <div class="i1">For my purse is in a beggarly state.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_600">[600]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Boots and shoes, and stockings and breeches,</div>
- <div>Tailoring, washing, and extra stitches,</div>
- <div class="i1">Pen, ink and paper, are all so dear,</div>
- <div class="i1">I wish the thirty ducats were here!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The money&mdash;(I trust you will speedily send it!)</div>
- <div>I promise faithfully to spend it;</div>
- <div class="i1">Yes, dear parents, you never need fear,</div>
- <div class="i1">I live very strictly and frugally here.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When other students revel and riot,</div>
- <div>I steal away into perfect quiet,</div>
- <div class="i1">And shut myself up with my books and light</div>
- <div class="i1">In my study-chamber, till late at night.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Beyond the needful supply of my table,</div>
- <div>I spare, dear parents, all I am able;</div>
- <div class="i1">Take tea but rarely, and nothing more,</div>
- <div class="i1">For spending money afflicts me sore.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Other students, who’d fain be called <i>mellow</i>,</div>
- <div>Set me down for a niggardly fellow,</div>
- <div class="i1">And say: there goes the <i>dig</i>, just look!</div>
- <div class="i1">How like a parson he eyes his book!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>With jibes and jokes they daily beset me,</div>
- <div>But none of these things do I suffer to fret me;</div>
- <div class="i1">I smile at all they can do or say&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Don’t forget the ducats, I pray!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ten hours each day I spend at the college,</div>
- <div>Drinking at the fount of knowledge,</div>
- <div class="i1">And when the lectures come to an end,</div>
- <div class="i1">The rest in private study I spend.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Professors express great gratification</div>
- <div>Only they hope I will use moderation,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_601">[601]</span></div>
- <div class="i1">And not wear out in my studiis</div>
- <div class="i1">Philosophicis et theologicis.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>It would savor, dear parents, of self-laudation,</div>
- <div>To enter on an enumeration</div>
- <div class="i1">Of all my studies&mdash;in brief, there is none</div>
- <div class="i1">More exemplary than your dear son.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My head seems ready to burst asunder,</div>
- <div>Sometimes, with its learned load, and I wonder</div>
- <div class="i1">Where so much knowledge is packed away:</div>
- <div class="i1">(Apropos! don’t forget the ducats, I pray!)</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Yes, dearest parents, my devotion to study</div>
- <div>Consumes the best strength of mind and body,</div>
- <div class="i1">And generally even the night is spent</div>
- <div class="i1">In meditation deep and intent.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In the pulpit soon I shall take my station</div>
- <div>And try my hand at the preacher’s vocation</div>
- <div class="i1">Likewise I dispute in the college-hall</div>
- <div class="i1">On learned subjects with one and all.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But don’t forget to send me the ducats,</div>
- <div>For I long so much to replenish my pockets;</div>
- <div class="i1">The money one day shall be returned</div>
- <div class="i1">In the shape of a son right wise and learn’d.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then my <i>Privatissimum</i> (I’ve been thinking on it</div>
- <div>For a long time&mdash;and in fact begun it)</div>
- <div class="i1">Will cost me twenty Rix-dollars more,</div>
- <div class="i1">Please send with the ducats I mentioned before.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I also, dear parents, inform you sadly,</div>
- <div>I have torn my coat of late very badly,</div>
- <div class="i1">So please enclose with the rest in your note</div>
- <div class="i1">Twelve dollars to purchase a new coat.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_602">[602]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>New boots are also necessary,</div>
- <div>Likewise my night-gown is ragged, very;</div>
- <div class="i1">My hat and pantaloons, too, alas!</div>
- <div class="i1">And the rest of my clothes are going to grass.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now, as all these things are needed greatly,</div>
- <div>Please enclose me four Louis d’ors separately,</div>
- <div class="i1">Which, joined to the rest, perhaps will be</div>
- <div class="i1">Enough for the present emergency.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My recent sickness you may not have heard of;</div>
- <div>In fact, for some time, my life was despaired of,</div>
- <div class="i1">But I haste to assure you, on my word,</div>
- <div class="i1">That now my health is nearly restored.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Medicus, for services rendered,</div>
- <div>A bill of eighteen guilders has tendered,</div>
- <div class="i1">And then the apothecary’s will be,</div>
- <div class="i1">In round numbers, about twenty-three.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now that physician and apothecary</div>
- <div>May get their dues, it is necessary</div>
- <div class="i1">These forty-one guilders be added to the rest,</div>
- <div class="i1">But, as to my health, don’t be distressed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The nurse would also have some compensation,</div>
- <div>Who attended me in my critical situation,</div>
- <div class="i1">I, therefore, think it would be best</div>
- <div class="i1">To enclose seven guilders for her with the rest.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For citrons, jellies and things of that nature,</div>
- <div>To sustain and strengthen the feeble creature,</div>
- <div class="i1">The confectioner, too, has a small account,</div>
- <div class="i1">Eight guilders is about the amount.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>These various items of which I’ve made mention,</div>
- <div>Demand immediate attention;</div>
- <div class="i1">For order, to me, is very dear,</div>
- <div class="i1">And I carefully from debts keep clear.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_603">[603]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I also rely on your kind attention,</div>
- <div>To forward the ducats of which I made mention</div>
- <div class="i1">So soon as it can possibly be&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">One more small item occurs to me:&mdash;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Two weeks ago I unluckily stumbled,</div>
- <div>And down the length of the stairway tumbled,</div>
- <div class="i1">As in at the college door I went,</div>
- <div class="i1">Whereby my right arm almost double was bent.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Chirurgus who attended on the occasion,</div>
- <div>For his balsams, plasters and preparation</div>
- <div class="i1">Of spirits, and other things needless to name,</div>
- <div class="i1">Charges twelve dollars; please forward the same.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But, that your minds may be acquiescent,</div>
- <div>I am, thank God, now convalescent;</div>
- <div class="i1">Both shoulder and shin are in a very good way,</div>
- <div class="i1">And I go to lecture every day.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My stomach is still in a feeble condition,</div>
- <div>A circumstance owing, so thinks the physician,</div>
- <div class="i1">To sitting so much, when I read and write,</div>
- <div class="i1">And studying so long and so late at night.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He, therefore, earnestly advises</div>
- <div>Burgundy wine, with nutmeg and spices,</div>
- <div class="i1">And every morning, instead of tea,</div>
- <div class="i1">For the stomach’s sake, to drink sangaree.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Please send, agreeably to these advices,</div>
- <div>Two pistoles for the wine and spices,</div>
- <div class="i1">And be sure, dear parents, I only take</div>
- <div class="i1">Such things as these for the stomach’s sake.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Finally, a few small debts, amounting</div>
- <div>To thirty or forty guilders (loose counting),<span class="pagenum" id="Page_604">[604]</span></div>
- <div class="i1">Be pleased, in your letter, without fail,</div>
- <div class="i1">Dear parents, to enclose this bagatelle.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And could you, for sundries, send me twenty</div>
- <div>Or a dozen Louis d’or (that would be plenty),</div>
- <div class="i1">’Twould be a kindness seasonably done,</div>
- <div class="i1">And very acceptable to your son.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>This letter, dear parents, comes hoping to find you</div>
- <div>In usual health&mdash;I beg to remind you</div>
- <div class="i1">How much I am for money perplexed,</div>
- <div class="i1">Please, therefore, to remit in your next.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Herewith I close my letter, repeating</div>
- <div>To you and all my friendly greeting,</div>
- <div>And subscribe myself, without further fuss,</div>
- <div class="i6h">Your obedient son,</div>
- <div class="right smcap">Hieronimus.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I add in a postscript what I neglected</div>
- <div>To say, beloved and highly respected</div>
- <div class="i1">Parents, I beg most filially,</div>
- <div class="i1">That you’ll forward the money as soon as may be.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For I had, dear father (I say it weeping),</div>
- <div>Fourteen French Crowns laid by in safe keeping</div>
- <div class="i1">(As I thought) for a day of need&mdash;but the whole</div>
- <div class="i1">An anonymous person yesterday stole:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I know you’ll make good, unasked, each shilling,</div>
- <div>Your innocent son has lost by this villain;</div>
- <div class="i1">For a man so considerate must be aware</div>
- <div class="i1">That I such a loss can nowise bear.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Meanwhile, I’ll take care that, to-day or to-morrow,</div>
- <div>Mr. Anonymous shall, to his sorrow</div>
- <div class="i1">And your satisfaction, receive the reward</div>
- <div class="i1">Of his graceless trick with the hempen cord.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_605">[605]</span></p>
-
-<p>Adelbert von Chamisso, German author and poet, came of an old French
-family. His principal work is in prose, <i>The Wonderful History of
-Peter Schlemihl</i>, the man who sold his shadow.</p>
-
-<p>An amusing poem is in nonsense vein.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE PIGTAIL</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There lived a sage in days of yore,</div>
- <div>And he a handsome pigtail wore;</div>
- <div>But wondered much, and sorrowed more,</div>
- <div class="i2">Because it hung behind him.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He mused upon this curious case,</div>
- <div>And swore he’d change the pigtail’s place,</div>
- <div>And have it hanging at his face,</div>
- <div class="i2">Not dangling there behind him.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Says he, “The mystery I’ve found;</div>
- <div>I’ll turn me round.” He turned him round,</div>
- <div class="i2">But still it hung behind him.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then round, and round, and out, and in,</div>
- <div>All day the puzzled sage did spin;</div>
- <div>In vain&mdash;it mattered not a pin&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i2">The pigtail hung behind him.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And right, and left, and round about,</div>
- <div>And up, and down, and in, and out</div>
- <div>He turned. But still the pigtail stout</div>
- <div class="i2">Hung steadily behind him.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And though his efforts never slack,</div>
- <div>And though he twist, and whirl, and tack,</div>
- <div>Alas! still faithful to his back</div>
- <div class="i2">The pigtail hangs behind him!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_606">[606]</span></p>
-
-<p>Wilhelm Müller, a lyric poet of promise, died young. Many of his songs
-were set to music by Schubert. His humorous verse was rollicking and
-popular.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE DRUNKARD’S FANCY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Straight from the tavern door</div>
- <div class="i1">I am come here;</div>
- <div>Old road, how odd to me</div>
- <div class="i1">Thou dost appear!</div>
- <div>Right and left changing sides,</div>
- <div class="i1">Rising and sunk;</div>
- <div>Oh, I can plainly see,</div>
- <div class="i1">Road, thou art drunk!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Oh, what a twisted face</div>
- <div class="i1">Thou hast, oh, moon!</div>
- <div>One eye shut, t’other eye</div>
- <div class="i1">Wide as a spoon.</div>
- <div>Who could have dreamed of this?</div>
- <div class="i1">Shame on thee, shame!</div>
- <div>Thou hast been fuddling,</div>
- <div class="i1">Jolly old dame!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Look at the lamps again:</div>
- <div class="i1">See how they reel!</div>
- <div>Nodding and flickering</div>
- <div class="i1">Round as they wheel.</div>
- <div>Not one among them all</div>
- <div class="i1">Steady can go;</div>
- <div>Look at the drunken lamps</div>
- <div class="i1">All in a row.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>All in an uproar seem</div>
- <div class="i1">Great things and small;</div>
- <div>I am the only one</div>
- <div class="i1">Sober at all.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_607">[607]</span></div>
- <div>But there’s no safety here</div>
- <div class="i1">For sober men;</div>
- <div>So I’ll turn back to</div>
- <div class="i1">The tavern again.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The brothers, Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm, wrote much in collaboration
-beside their well-known <i>Märchen</i> or <i>Fairy Tales</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Their humor is of the heavier sort, but their versatile erudition found
-opportunities for witty conceits.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>EXCERPT FROM CLEVER GRETHEL</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">One day her master said to her, “Grethel, I have invited some friends
-to dinner to-day; cook me some of your best chickens.”</p>
-
-<p>“That I will, master,” she replied.</p>
-
-<p>So she went out, and killed two of the best fowls and prepared them for
-roasting.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon she placed them on the spit before the fire, and they
-were all ready, and beautifully hot and brown by the proper time, but
-the visitors had not arrived. So she went to her master, and said, “The
-fowls will be quite spoiled if I keep them at the fire any longer. It
-will be a pity and a shame if they are not eaten soon!”</p>
-
-<p>Then said her master, “I will go and fetch the visitors myself,” and
-away he went.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as his back was turned Grethel put the spit with the birds on
-one side, and thought, “I have been standing by the fire so long that
-it has made me quite thirsty. Who knows when they will come? While I
-am waiting I may as well run into the cellar and have a little drop.”
-So she seized a jug, and said, “All right, Grethel, you shall have a
-good draft. Wine is so tempting!” she continued, “and it does not do
-to spoil your draft.” And she drank without stopping till the jug was
-empty.</p>
-
-<p>After this she went into the kitchen, and placed the fowls again before
-the fire, basted them with butter, and rattled the spit round so
-furiously that they browned and frizzled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_608">[608]</span> with the heat. “They would
-never miss a little piece if they searched for it ever so carefully,”
-she said to herself. Then she dipped her finger in the dripping-pan
-to taste, and cried, “Oh, how nice these fowls are! It is a sin and a
-shame that there is no one here to eat them!”</p>
-
-<p>She ran to the window to see if her master and the guests were coming;
-but she could see no one. So she went and stood again by the fowls, and
-thought, “The wing of that fowl is a little burned. I had better eat it
-out of the way.” She cut it off as she thought this, and ate it up, and
-it tasted so nice that when she had finished it she thought, “I must
-have the other. Master will never notice that anything is missing.”</p>
-
-<p>After the two wings were eaten, Grethel again went to look for her
-master, but there were no signs of his appearance.</p>
-
-<p>“Who knows?” she said to herself; “perhaps the visitors are not coming
-at all, and they have kept my master to dinner, so he won’t be back.
-Hi, Grethel! there are lots of good things left for you; and that piece
-of fowl has made me thirsty. I must have another drink before I come
-back and eat up all these good things.”</p>
-
-<p>So she went into the cellar, took a large draft of wine, and returning
-to the kitchen, sat down and ate the remainder of the fowl with great
-relish.</p>
-
-<p>There was now only one fowl left, and as her master did not return,
-Grethel began to look at the other with longing eyes. At last she said,
-“Where one is, there the other must be; for the fowls belong to each
-other, and what is right for one is also fair and right for the other.
-I believe, too, I want some more to drink. It won’t hurt me.”</p>
-
-<p>The last draft gave her courage. She came back to the kitchen and let
-the second fowl go after the first.</p>
-
-<p>As she was enjoying the last morsel, home came her master.</p>
-
-<p>“Make haste, Grethel!” he cried. “The guests will be here in a few
-minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, master,” she replied. “It will soon be all ready.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the master saw that the cloth was laid and everything in
-order. So he took up the carving-knife with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_609">[609]</span> which he intended to carve
-the fowl, and went out to sharpen it on the stones in the passage.</p>
-
-<p>While he was doing so, the guests arrived and knocked gently and
-courteously at the house door. Grethel ran out to see who it was, and
-when she caught sight of the visitors she placed her finger on her
-lips, and whispered, “Hush! Hush! Go back again as quickly as you came!
-If my master should catch you it would be unfortunate. He did invite
-you to dinner this evening, but with no other intention than to cut off
-both the ears of each of you. Listen; you can hear him sharpening his
-knife.”</p>
-
-<p>The guests heard the sound, and hastened as fast as they could down the
-steps, and were soon out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>Grethel was not idle. She ran screaming to her master, and cried, “You
-have invited fine visitors, certainly!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hi! Why, Grethel, what do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” she exclaimed, “they came here just now, and have taken my two
-beautiful fowls from the dish that I was going to bring up for dinner,
-and have run away with them.”</p>
-
-<p>“What strange conduct!” said her master, who was so sorry to lose his
-nice dinner that he rushed out to follow the thieves. “If they had only
-left me one, or at least enough for my own dinner!” he cried, running
-after them. But the more he cried to them to stop the faster they
-ran; and when they saw him with the knife in his hand, and heard him
-say, “Only one! only one!”&mdash;he meant, if they had left him “only one
-fowl,” but they thought he spoke of “only one ear,” which he intended
-to cut off&mdash;they ran as if fire were burning around them, and were
-not satisfied till they found themselves safe at home with both ears
-untouched.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Friedrich Rückert was a prolific writer and left many volumes of his
-collected poems.</p>
-
-<p>A scathing bit of satire is here quoted.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ARTIST AND PUBLIC</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The dumb man asked the blind man:</div>
- <div class="i1">“Canst do a favor, pray?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_610">[610]</span></div>
- <div>Could I the harper find, man?</div>
- <div class="i1">Hast seen him pass to-day?</div>
- <div>I take, myself, small pleasure</div>
- <div class="i1">In harp-tones&mdash;almost none&mdash;</div>
- <div>Yet much I’d like a measure</div>
- <div class="i1">Played for my deaf young son.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The blind man quick made answer:</div>
- <div class="i1">“I saw him pass my gate;</div>
- <div>I’ll send my lame young man, sir,</div>
- <div class="i1">To overtake him straight.”</div>
- <div>At one look from his master,</div>
- <div class="i1">Away the cripple ran,</div>
- <div>And faster, ever faster,</div>
- <div class="i1">He chased the harper-man.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The harper came, elated,</div>
- <div class="i1">And straight to work he went;</div>
- <div>His arms were amputated;</div>
- <div class="i1">His toes to work he bent.</div>
- <div>All hearts his playing captured;</div>
- <div class="i1">The deaf man was all ear;</div>
- <div>The blind man gazed, enraptured;</div>
- <div class="i1">The dumb man shouted, “Hear!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The lame boy fell to dancing,</div>
- <div class="i1">And leaped with all his might;</div>
- <div>The scene was so entrancing,</div>
- <div class="i1">They stayed till late at night.</div>
- <div>And when the concert ended,</div>
- <div class="i1">The public, justly proud,</div>
- <div>The artist’s powers commended,</div>
- <div class="i1">Who, deeply grateful, bowed.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Heinrich Heine, the celebrated lyric poet, rarely showed any humor in
-his poetry. But some of his prose works are broadly ludicrous, and his
-observations witty and cynical.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_611">[611]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE TOWN OF GÖTTINGEN</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The town of Göttingen, famous by reason of its university and its
-sausages, belongs to the kingdom of Hanover, and contains 999
-fire-stations, divers churches, a lying-in hospital, an observatory,
-an academic prison, a library, and an underground tavern&mdash;where the
-beer is excellent. The brook that flows past the town is called the
-Leine, and serves for bathing in summer; the water is very cold, and
-at some places the brook is so wide that one cannot jump across it
-without some exertion. The town is very handsome, and pleases me best
-when my back is turned to it. It must be very old, for I remember that
-when I matriculated (and was soon afterward rusticated), five years
-ago, it had the same gray, ancient appearance, and was as thoroughly
-provided, as it is now, with poodle dogs, dissertations, laundresses,
-anthologies, roast pigeon, Guelph decorations, pipe-bowls, court
-councilors, privy councilors and silly counts....</p>
-
-<p>In general, the inhabitants of Göttingen may be divided into students,
-professors, Philistines, and cattle. The cattle class is numerically
-the strongest. To place on record here the names of all professors
-and students would take me too far afield, nor can I even, at this
-moment, remember the name of every student; while among the professors
-there are many who have as yet made none. The number of Philistines in
-Göttingen must be like that of the sands&mdash;or rather the mud&mdash;of the
-sea. Truly, when they appear in the morning with their dirty faces and
-their white bills at the gates of the academic court, one wonders how
-God could have had the heart to create such a pack of scoundrels!</p>
-
-<p>More thorough information concerning Göttingen is easily obtainable by
-reference to the “Topography” of the town, by K. F. H. Marx. Although
-I am under the deepest obligations to the author, who was my physician
-and did me many kindnesses, I cannot praise his work without reserve. I
-must blame him for not having opposed in terms sufficiently strong the
-heresy that the ladies of Göttingen have feet of spacious dimensions.
-I have been engaged for a long time upon a work<span class="pagenum" id="Page_612">[612]</span> which is to destroy
-this erroneous idea once and forever. For this purpose I have studied
-comparative anatomy, have made excerpts from the rarest books in the
-library, and have for hours and hours observed the feet of the passing
-ladies in Weender Street. In my learned treatise I intend to deal with
-the subject as follows:</p>
-
-<ul class="smaller">
- <li>1. Of Feet in General.</li>
- <li>2. Of the Feet of the Ancients.</li>
- <li>3. Of the Feet of Elephants.</li>
- <li>4. Of the Feet of the Fair Inhabitants of Göttingen.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">5. Summing up of Opinions delivered upon Feet in Göttingen Taverns.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">6. Connection and Comparison of Feet with Calves, Knees, etc.</li>
- <li class="hangingindent">7. Facsimile Charts (if sheets of paper sufficiently large are obtainable) of Specimen Feet of Göttingen Ladies.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I am the most peaceable of mortals. My wishes are: A modest dwelling, a
-thatched roof, but a good bed, good fare, milk and butter (the latter
-very fresh), flowers at the window, and a few fine trees before my
-gate. And if the Lord would fill the cup of my happiness, He would let
-me live to see the day when six or seven of my enemies are hung on the
-trees. With softened heart I would then forgive them all the evil they
-have done me. Yes, one must forgive one’s enemies, but not before they
-are hung.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A. If I were of the race of Christ, I should boast of it, and not be
-ashamed.</p>
-
-<p>B. So would I, if Christ were the only member of the race. But so many
-miserable scamps belong to it that one hesitates to acknowledge the
-relationship.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Gervinus, the literary historian, set himself the following problem: To
-repeat in a long and witless book what Heinrich Heine said in a short
-and witty one. He solved the problem.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_613">[613]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>De mortuis nil nisi bene</i>. One should speak only evil of the
-living.</p>
-
-<p>Heinrich Hoffman, a Frankfort doctor, wrote the popular tales for
-children about Struwelpeter, which are nursery classics in many
-languages. These stories have an added interest from the clever
-illustrations by their author.</p>
-
-<p>Wilhelm Busch, also a comic artist, born near Hanover, is the creator
-of the Max and Maurice stories and pictures.</p>
-
-<p>He was a well-known contributor to the <i>Fliegende Blätter</i>, the
-popular comic paper of Germany.</p>
-
-<p>A distinct type of German humor is found in their Student Songs. These,
-oftener than not, are in praise of merrymaking and good cheer.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>POPE AND SULTAN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Pope he leads a happy life;</div>
- <div>He fears not married care nor strife;</div>
- <div>He drinks the best of Rhenish wine&mdash;</div>
- <div>I would the Pope’s gay lot were mine.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><span class="allsmcap">CHORUS</span></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He drinks the best of Rhenish wine&mdash;</div>
- <div>I would the Pope’s gay lot were mine.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But then, all happy’s not his life;</div>
- <div>He has not maid nor blooming wife,</div>
- <div>Nor child has he to raise his hope&mdash;</div>
- <div>I would not wish to be the Pope.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Sultan better pleases me;</div>
- <div>His is a life of jollity;</div>
- <div>His wives are many as his will&mdash;</div>
- <div>I would the Sultan’s throne then fill.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_614">[614]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But even he’s a wretched man;</div>
- <div>He must obey his Alcoran;</div>
- <div>And dares not drink one drop of wine&mdash;</div>
- <div>I would not change his lot for mine.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So, then, I’ll hold my lowly stand,</div>
- <div>And live in German fatherland;</div>
- <div>I’ll kiss my maiden fair and fine,</div>
- <div>And drink the best of Rhenish wine.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Whene’er my maiden kisses me,</div>
- <div>I’ll think that I the Sultan be;</div>
- <div>And when my cheery glass I tope,</div>
- <div>I’ll fancy then I am the Pope.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>CREDO</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For the sole edification</div>
- <div>Of this decent congregation,</div>
- <div>Goodly people, by your grant</div>
- <div>I will sing a holy chant,</div>
- <div class="i2">I will sing a holy chant.</div>
- <div>If the ditty sound but oddly,</div>
- <div>’Twas a father, wise and godly,</div>
- <div class="i2">Sang it so long ago.</div>
- <div>Then sing as Martin Luther sang:</div>
- <div>“Who loves not woman, wine, and song,</div>
- <div>Remains a fool his whole life long!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He, by custom patriarchal,</div>
- <div>Loved to see the beaker sparkle;</div>
- <div>And he thought the wine improved,</div>
- <div>Tasted by the lips he loved,</div>
- <div class="i2">By the kindly lips he loved.</div>
- <div>Friends, I wish this custom pious</div>
- <div>Duly were observed by us,</div>
- <div class="i2">To combine love, song, wine,</div>
- <div>And sing as Martin Luther sang,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_615">[615]</span></div>
- <div>As Doctor Martin Luther sang:</div>
- <div>“Who loves not woman, wine and song,</div>
- <div>Remains a fool his whole life long!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Who refuses this our <i>Credo</i>,</div>
- <div>And who will not sing as we do,</div>
- <div>Were he holy as John Knox,</div>
- <div>I’d pronounce him heterodox,</div>
- <div class="i2">I’d pronounce him heterodox,</div>
- <div>And from out this congregation,</div>
- <div>With a solemn commination,</div>
- <div class="i2">Banish quick the heretic,</div>
- <div>Who’ll not sing as Luther sang,</div>
- <div>As Doctor Martin Luther sang:</div>
- <div>“Who loves not woman, wine and song,</div>
- <div>Remains a fool his whole life long!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_616">[616]</span></p>
-
-<h3>ITALIAN HUMOR</h3></div>
-
-<p>The humorists of Italy in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries are
-few and far between. Carlo Goldoni and Count Carlo Gozzi were both
-dramatists, the latter also a novelist, whose works show humor, but are
-not available for quotation.</p>
-
-<p>Count Giacomo Leopardi, though himself a gloomy sort of person, left
-some satirical writings tinged with wit.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE ACADEMY OF SYLLOGRAPHS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The Academy of Syllographs, hold that it would be in the highest
-degree expedient that men should retire as far as possible from the
-conduct of the business of the world, and should gradually give
-place to mechanical agency for the direction of human affairs.
-Accordingly, resolved to contribute as far as lies in its power to this
-consummation, it has determined to offer three prizes, to be awarded to
-the persons who shall invent the best examples of the three machines
-now to be described.</p>
-
-<p>The scope and object of the first of these automata shall be to
-represent the person and discharge the functions of a friend who shall
-not calumniate or jeer at his absent associate; who shall not fail to
-take his part when he hears him censured or ridiculed; who shall not
-prefer a reputation for wit, and the applause of men, to his duty to
-friendship; who shall never, from love of gossip or mere ostentation
-of superior knowledge, divulge a secret committed to his keeping; who
-shall not abuse the intimacy or confidence of his fellow in order to
-supplant or surpass him; who shall harbor no envy against his friend;
-who shall guard his interests and help to repair his losses, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_617">[617]</span>
-shall be prompt to answer his call, and minister to his needs more
-substantially than by empty professions.</p>
-
-<p>In the construction of this piece of mechanism it will be well to
-study, among other things, the treatise on friendship by Cicero, as
-well as that of Madame de Lambert. The Academy is of opinion that the
-manufacture of such a machine ought not to prove impracticable or even
-particularly difficult, for, besides the automata of Regiomontanus
-and Vaucanson, there was at one time exhibited in London a mechanical
-figure which drew portraits, and wrote to dictation; while there have
-been more than one example of such machines capable of playing at
-chess. Now, in the opinion of many philosophers human life is but a
-game; nay, some hold that it is more shallow and more frivolous than
-many other games, and that the principles of chess, for example, are
-more in accordance with reason, and that its various moves are more
-governed by wisdom, than are the actions of mankind; while we have it
-on the authority of Pindar that human action is no more substantial
-than the shadow of a dream; and this being so, the intelligence of an
-automaton ought to prove quite equal to the discharge of the functions
-which have just been described.</p>
-
-<p>As to the power of speech, it seems unreasonable to doubt that men
-should have the power of communicating it to machines constructed by
-themselves, seeing that this may be said to have been established by
-sundry precedents, such, for example, as in the case of the statue
-of Memnon, and of the human head manufactured by Albertus Magnus,
-which actually became so loquacious that Saint Thomas Aquinas, losing
-all patience with it, smashed it to pieces. Then, too, there was the
-instance of the parrot Ver-Vert, though it was a living creature; but
-if it could be taught to converse reasonably how much more may it be
-supposed that a machine devised by the mind of man, and constructed
-by his hands, should do as much; while it would have this advantage
-that it might be made less garrulous than this parrot, or the head of
-Albertus, and therefore it need not irritate its acquaintances and
-provoke them to smash it.</p>
-
-<p>The inventor of the best example of such a machine shall<span class="pagenum" id="Page_618">[618]</span> be decorated
-with a gold medallion of four hundred sequins in weight, bearing on its
-face the images of Pylades and Orestes, and on the reverse the name of
-the successful competitor, surrounded by the legend, <span class="smcap">First Realizer
-of the Fables of Antiquity</span>.</p>
-
-<p>The second machine called for by the Academy is to be an artificial
-steam man, so constructed and regulated as to perform virtuous and
-magnanimous actions. The Academy is of opinion that in the absence of
-all other adequate motive power to that end, the properties of steam
-might prove effective to inspire an automaton, and direct it to the
-attainment of virtue and true glory. The inventor who shall undertake
-the construction of such a machine should study the poets and the
-writers of romance, who will best guide him as to the qualities and
-functions most essential to such a piece of mechanism. The prize shall
-be a gold medal weighing four hundred and fifty sequins, bearing on its
-obverse a figure symbolical of the golden age, and on its reverse the
-name of the inventor.</p>
-
-<p>The third automaton should be so constituted as to perform the duties
-of woman such as she was conceived by the Count Baldassar Castiglione,
-and described by him in his treatise entitled <i>The Courtier</i>, as
-well as by other writers in other works on the subject, which will be
-readily found, and which, as well as that of the count, will have to
-be carefully consulted and followed. The construction of a machine
-of this nature, too, ought not to appear impossible to the inventors
-of our time, when they reflect on the fact that in the most ancient
-times, and times destitute of science, Pygmalion was able to fabricate
-for himself, with his own hands, a wife of such rare gifts that she
-has never since been equaled down to the present day. The successful
-inventor of this machine shall be rewarded with a gold medal weighing
-five hundred sequins, bearing on one face the figure of the Arabian
-Phenix of Metastasio, couched on a tree of a European species, while
-its other side will bear the name of the inventor, with the title,
-<span class="smcap">Inventor of Faithful Women and of Conjugal Happiness</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, the Academy has resolved that the funds necessary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_619">[619]</span> to defray
-the expenses incidental to this competition shall be supplemented by
-all that was found in the purse of Diogenes, its first secretary,
-together with one of the three golden asses which were the property
-of three of its former members&mdash;namely, Apuleius, Firenzuola, and
-Machiavelli, but which came into the possession of the Academy by the
-last wills and testaments of the aforementioned, as duly recorded in
-its minutes.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Antonio Ghislanzoni, an Italian journalist was possessed of a sort of
-humor that would be a credit to any nation. It is not far removed from
-the style of the early American jocularists.</p>
-
-<p>Ghislanzoni was an opera singer, but, losing his voice, he quitted the
-stage, and founded a comic paper, <i>L’Uomo di Pietra.</i></p>
-
-<p>His paper on Musical Instruments is so entertaining we quote it all.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>ON MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS</i></h4>
-
-
-<h5 class="p1"><i>The Clarinet</i></h5>
-
-<p>This instrument consists of a severe cold in the head, contained in a
-tube of yellow wood.</p>
-
-<p>The clarinet was not invented by the Conservatory, but by Fate.</p>
-
-<p>A chiropodist may be produced by study and hard work; but the
-clarinet-player is born, not made.</p>
-
-<p>The citizen predestined to the clarinet has an intelligence which is
-almost obtuse up to the age of eighteen&mdash;a period of incubation, when
-he begins to feel in his nose the first thrills of his fatal vocation.</p>
-
-<p>After that his intellect&mdash;limited even then&mdash;ceases its development
-altogether; but his nasal organ, in revenge, assumes colossal
-dimensions.</p>
-
-<p>At twenty he buys his first clarinet for fourteen francs; and three
-months later his landlord gives him notice. At twenty-five he is
-admitted into the band of the National Guard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_620">[620]</span></p>
-
-<p>He dies of a broken heart on finding that not one of his three sons
-shows the slightest inclination for the instrument through which he has
-blown all his wits.</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>The Trombone</i></h5>
-
-<p>The man who plays on this instrument is always one who seeks oblivion
-in its society&mdash;oblivion of domestic troubles, or consolation for love
-betrayed.</p>
-
-<p>The man who has held a metal tube in his mouth for six months finds
-himself proof against every illusion.</p>
-
-<p>At the age of fifty he finds that, of all human passions and feelings,
-nothing is left him but an insatiable thirst.</p>
-
-<p>Later on, if he wants to obtain the position of porter in a gentleman’s
-house, or aspires to the hand of a woman with a delicate ear, he tries
-to lay aside his instrument, but the taste for loud notes and strong
-liquors only leaves him with life.</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>The Harmoniflute</i></h5>
-
-<p>This instrument, on account of the nature of its monotonous sounds and
-its tremendous plaintiveness, acts on the nerves of those who hear it,
-and predisposes to melancholy those who play it.</p>
-
-<p>The harmoniflautist is usually tender and lymphatic of constitution,
-with blue eyes, and eats only white meats and farinaceous food.</p>
-
-<p>If a man, he is called Oscar; those of the other sex are named Adelaide.</p>
-
-<p>At home, he or she is in the habit of bringing out the instrument at
-dessert, and dinner being over, and the spirits of the family therefore
-more or less cheerfully disposed, will entertain the company with the
-“Miserere” in <i>Il Trovatore</i>, or some similar melody.</p>
-
-<p>The harmoniflautist weeps easily. After practising on the instrument
-for fifteen years or so, he or she dissolves altogether, and is
-converted into a brook.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_621">[621]</span></p>
-
-
-<h5><i>The Organ</i></h5>
-
-<p>This complicated and majestic instrument is of a clerical character,
-and destined, by its great volume of sound, to drown the flat singing
-of clergy and congregation in church.</p>
-
-<p>The organist is usually a person sent into the world for the purpose
-of making a great noise without undue expenditure of strength, one who
-wants to blow harder than others without wearing out his own bellows.</p>
-
-<p>At forty he becomes the intimate friend of the parish priest, and the
-most influential person connected with the church. By dint of repeating
-the same refrains every day at matins and vespers, he acquires a
-knowledge of Latin, and gets all the anthems, hymns, and masses by
-heart. At fifty he marries a devout spinster recommended by the priest.</p>
-
-<p>He makes a kind and good-tempered husband, his only defect in that
-capacity being his habit of dreaming out loud on the eve of every
-church festival. On Easter Eve, for instance, he nearly always
-awakens his wife by intoning, with the full force of his lungs,
-<i>Resurrexit</i>. The good woman, thus abruptly aroused, never fails
-to answer him with the orthodox <i>Alleluia</i>.</p>
-
-<p>At the age of sixty he becomes deaf, and then begins to think his own
-playing perfection. At seventy he usually dies of a broken heart,
-because the new priest, who knows not Joseph, instead of asking him
-to dine at the principal table with the clergy and other church
-authorities, has relegated him to an inferior place, and the society of
-the sacristan and the grave-digger.</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>The Flute</i></h5>
-
-<p>The unhappy man who succumbs to the fascinations of this instrument is
-never one who has attained the full development of his intellectual
-faculties. He always has a pointed nose, marries a short-sighted woman,
-and dies run over by an omnibus.</p>
-
-<p>The flute is the most deadly of all instruments. It requires<span class="pagenum" id="Page_622">[622]</span> a
-peculiar conformation and special culture of the thumb-nail, with a
-view to those holes which have to be only half closed.</p>
-
-<p>The man who plays the flute frequently adds to his other infirmities a
-mania for keeping tame weasels, turtle-doves, or guinea-pigs.</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>The Violoncello</i></h5>
-
-<p>To play the ’cello, you require to have long, thin fingers; but it is
-still more indispensable to have very long hair falling over a greasy
-coat-collar.</p>
-
-<p>In case of fire, the ’cellist who sees his wife and his ’cello in
-danger will save the latter first.</p>
-
-<p>His greatest satisfaction, as a general thing, is that of “making
-the strings weep.” Sometimes, indeed, he succeeds in making his wife
-and family do the same thing in consequence of a diet of excessive
-frugality. Sometimes, too, he contrives to make people laugh or yawn,
-but this, according to him, is the result of atmospheric influences.</p>
-
-<p>He can express, through his loftily attuned strings, all possible
-griefs and sorrows, except those of his audience and his creditors.</p>
-
-
-<h5><i>The Drum</i></h5>
-
-<p>An immense apparatus of wood and sheepskin, full of air and of sinister
-presages. In melodrama the roll of the drum serves to announce the
-arrival of a fatal personage, an agent of Destiny, in most cases an
-ill-used husband. Sometimes this funereal rumbling serves to describe
-silence&mdash;sometimes to indicate the depths of the operatic heroine’s
-despair.</p>
-
-<p>The drummer is a serious man, possessed with the sense of his high
-dramatic mission. He is able, however, to conceal his conscious pride,
-and sleep on his instrument when the rest of the orchestra is making
-all the noise it can. In such cases he commissions the nearest of his
-colleagues to awaken him at the proper moment.</p>
-
-<p>On awaking, he seizes the two drumsticks and begins to beat; but,
-should his neighbor forget to rouse him, he prolongs<span class="pagenum" id="Page_623">[623]</span> his slumbers
-till the fall of the curtain. Then he shakes himself, perceives that
-the opera is over, and rubs his eyes. If it happens that the conductor
-reprimands him for his remissness at the <i>attack</i>, he shrugs his
-shoulders and replies, “Never mind, the tenor died, all the same. A
-roll of the drum, more or less, what difference would it have made?”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Edmondo de Amicis, soldier and writer of books of travel, often gives
-amusing descriptions of scenes or incidents.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>TOOTH FOR TOOTH</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">An English merchant of Mogador was returning to the city on the evening
-of a market-day, at the moment when the gate by which he was entering
-was barred by a crowd of country people driving camels and asses.
-Although the Englishman called out as loud as he could, “Make way!”
-an old woman was struck by his horse and knocked down, falling with
-her face upon a stone. Ill fortune would have it that in the fall she
-broke her last two front teeth. She was stunned for an instant, and
-then rose convulsed with rage, and broke out into insults and ferocious
-maledictions, following the Englishman to his door. She then went
-before the governor, and demanded that in virtue of the law of talion
-he should order the English merchant’s two front teeth to be broken.
-The governor tried to pacify her, and advised her to pardon the injury;
-but she would listen to nothing, and he sent her away with a promise
-that she should have justice, hoping that when her anger should be
-exhausted she would herself desist from her pursuit. But, three days
-having passed, the old woman came back more furious than ever, demanded
-justice, and insisted that a formal sentence should be pronounced
-against the Christian.</p>
-
-<p>“Remember,” said she to the governor, “thou didst promise me!”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” responded the governor; “dost thou take me for a Christian,
-that I should be the slave of my word?”</p>
-
-<p>Every day for a month the old woman, athirst for vengeance,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_624">[624]</span> presented
-herself at the door of the citadel, and yelled and cursed and made such
-a noise, that the governor, to be rid of her, was obliged to yield.
-He sent for the merchant, explained the case, the right which the law
-gave the woman, the duty imposed upon himself, and begged him to put an
-end to the matter by allowing two of his teeth to be removed&mdash;any two,
-although in strict justice they should be two incisors. The Englishman
-refused absolutely to part with incisors, or eye-teeth, or molars; and
-the governor was obliged to send the old woman packing, ordering the
-guard not to let her put her foot in the palace again.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said she, “since there are none but degenerate Mussulmans
-here, since justice is refused to a Mussulman woman against an infidel
-dog, I will go to the sultan, and we shall see whether the prince of
-the faithful will deny the law of the Prophet.”</p>
-
-<p>True to her determination, she started on her journey alone, with an
-amulet in her bosom, a stick in her hand, and a bag round her neck, and
-made on foot the hundred miles which separate Mogador from the sacred
-city of the empire. Arrived at Fez, she sought and obtained audience of
-the sultan, laid her case before him, and demanded the right accorded
-by the Koran, the application of the law of retaliation. The sultan
-exhorted her to forgive. She insisted. All the serious difficulties
-which opposed themselves to the satisfaction of her petition were laid
-before her. She remained inexorable. A sum of money was offered her,
-with which she could live in comfort for the rest of her days. She
-refused it.</p>
-
-<p>“What do I want with your money?” said she; “I am old, and accustomed
-to live in poverty. What I want is the two teeth of the Christian. I
-want them; I demand them in the name of the Koran. The sultan, prince
-of the faithful, head of our religion, father of his subjects, cannot
-refuse justice to a true believer.”</p>
-
-<p>Her obstinacy put the sultan in a most embarrassing position. The
-law was formal, and her right incontestable; and the ferment of the
-populace, stirred up by the woman’s fanatical declamations, rendered
-refusal perilous. The sultan,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_625">[625]</span> who was Abd-er-Rahman, wrote to the
-English consul, asking as a favor that he would induce his countryman
-to allow two of his teeth to be broken. The merchant answered the
-consul that he would never consent. Then the sultan wrote again, saying
-that if he would consent he would grant him, in compensation, any
-commercial privilege that he chose to ask. This time, touched in his
-purse, the merchant yielded. The old woman left Fez, blessing the name
-of the pious Abd-er-Rahman, and went back to Mogador, where, in the
-presence of many people, the two teeth of the Nazarene were broken.
-When she saw them fall to the ground she gave a yell of triumph,
-and picked them up with a fierce joy. The merchant, thanks to the
-privileges accorded him, made in the two following years so handsome a
-fortune that he went back to England toothless, but happy.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_626">[626]</span></p>
-
-<h3>SPANISH HUMOR</h3></div>
-
-
-<p>The only illustrious name of a writer of humor in Spain in the
-eighteenth century is that of the justly celebrated Thomas Yriarte.</p>
-
-<p>He is best known to English readers through his Literary Fables, which
-have been frequently translated.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE ASS AND THE FLUTE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You must know that this ditty,</div>
- <div class="i1">This little romance,</div>
- <div>Be it dull, be it witty,</div>
- <div class="i1">Arose from mere chance.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Near a certain inclosure,</div>
- <div class="i1">Not far from my manse,</div>
- <div>An ass, with composure,</div>
- <div class="i1">Was passing by chance.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As he went along prying,</div>
- <div class="i1">With sober advance,</div>
- <div>A shepherd’s lute lying,</div>
- <div class="i1">He found there by chance.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Our amateur started,</div>
- <div class="i1">And eyed it askance,</div>
- <div>Drew nearer, and snorted</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon it by chance.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The breath of the brute, sir,</div>
- <div class="i1">Drew music for once;</div>
- <div>It entered the flute, sir,</div>
- <div class="i1">And blew it by chance.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_627">[627]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Ah!” cried he, in wonder,</div>
- <div class="i1">How comes this to pass?</div>
- <div>Who will now dare to slander</div>
- <div class="i1">The skill of an ass?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And asses in plenty</div>
- <div class="i1">I see at a glance,</div>
- <div>Who, one time in twenty,</div>
- <div class="i1">Succeed by mere chance.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE EGGS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Beyond the sunny Philippines</div>
- <div>An island lies, whose name I do not know;</div>
- <div>But that’s of little consequence, if so</div>
- <div>You understand that there they had no hens;</div>
- <div>Till, by a happy chance, a traveler,</div>
- <div>After a while, carried some poultry there.</div>
- <div>Fast they increased as any one could wish;</div>
- <div>Until fresh eggs became the common dish.</div>
- <div>But all the natives ate them boiled&mdash;they say&mdash;</div>
- <div>Because the stranger taught no other way.</div>
- <div>At last the experiment by one was tried&mdash;</div>
- <div>Sagacious man!&mdash;of having his eggs fried.</div>
- <div>And, O! what boundless honors for his pains,</div>
- <div>His fruitful and inventive fancy gains!</div>
- <div>Another, now, to have them baked devised&mdash;</div>
- <div>Most happy thought!&mdash;and still another, spiced.</div>
- <div>Who ever thought eggs were so delicate!</div>
- <div>Next, some one gave his friends an omelette:</div>
- <div>“Ah!” all exclaimed, “what an ingenious feat!”</div>
- <div>But scarce a year went by, an artiste shouts,</div>
- <div>“I have it now&mdash;ye’re all a pack of louts!&mdash;</div>
- <div>With nice tomatoes all my eggs are stewed.”</div>
- <div>And the whole island thought the mode so good,</div>
- <div>That they would so have cooked them to this day,</div>
- <div>But that a stranger wandered out that way,</div>
- <div>Another dish the gaping natives taught,</div>
- <div>And showed them eggs cooked <i>à la Huguenot</i>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_628">[628]</span></div>
- <div>Successive cooks thus proved their skill diverse;</div>
- <div>But how shall I be able to rehearse</div>
- <div>All of the new, delicious condiments</div>
- <div>That luxury, from time to time, invents?</div>
- <div>Soft, hard, and dropped, and now with sugar sweet,</div>
- <div>And now boiled up with milk, the eggs they eat;</div>
- <div>In sherbet, in preserves; at last they tickle</div>
- <div>Their palates fanciful with eggs in pickle.</div>
- <div>All had their day&mdash;the last was still the best.</div>
- <div>But a grave senior thus, one day, addressed</div>
- <div>The epicures: “Boast, ninnies, if you will,</div>
- <div>These countless prodigies of gastric skill&mdash;</div>
- <div>But blessings on the man who brought the hens!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Beyond the sunny Philippines</div>
- <div>Our crowd of modern authors need not go</div>
- <div>New-fangled modes of cooking eggs to show.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE COUNTRY SQUIRE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A country squire, of greater wealth than wit</div>
- <div class="i1">(For fools are often bless’d with fortune’s smile),</div>
- <div>Had built a splendid house, and furnish’d it</div>
- <div class="i15">In splendid style.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“One thing is wanted,” said a friend; “for, though</div>
- <div class="i1">The rooms are fine, the furniture profuse,</div>
- <div>You lack a library, dear sir, for show,</div>
- <div class="i15">If not for use.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“’Tis true; but, zounds!” replied the squire with glee,</div>
- <div class="i1">“The lumber-room in yonder northern wing</div>
- <div>(I wonder I ne’er thought of it) will be</div>
- <div class="i15">The very thing.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I’ll have it fitted up without delay</div>
- <div class="i1">With shelves and presses of the newest mode</div>
- <div>And rarest wood, befitting every way</div>
- <div class="i15">A squire’s abode.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_629">[629]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“And when the whole is ready, I’ll despatch</div>
- <div class="i1">My coachman&mdash;a most knowing fellow&mdash;down,</div>
- <div>To buy me, by admeasurement, a batch</div>
- <div class="i15">Of books in town.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But ere the library was half supplied</div>
- <div class="i1">With all its pomp of cabinet and shelf,</div>
- <div>The booby Squire repented him, and cried,</div>
- <div class="i15">Unto himself:&mdash;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“This room is much more roomy than I thought;</div>
- <div class="i1">Ten thousand volumes hardly would suffice</div>
- <div>To fill it, and would cost, however bought,</div>
- <div class="i15">A plaguy price.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Now, as I only want them for their looks,</div>
- <div class="i1">It might, on second thoughts, be just as good,</div>
- <div>And cost me next to nothing, if the books</div>
- <div class="i15">Were made of wood.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“It shall be so. I’ll give the shaven deal</div>
- <div class="i1">A coat of paint&mdash;a colourable dress,</div>
- <div>To look like calf or vellum and conceal</div>
- <div class="i15">Its nakedness.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“And gilt and letter’d with the author’s name,</div>
- <div class="i1">Whatever is most excellent and rare</div>
- <div>Shall be, or seem to be (’tis all the same)</div>
- <div class="i15">Assembled there.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The work was done; the simulated hoards</div>
- <div class="i1">Of wit and wisdom round the chamber stood,</div>
- <div>In bindings some; and some, of course, in <i>boards</i>,</div>
- <div class="i15 hangingindent">Where all were wood.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>From bulky folios down to slender twelves,</div>
- <div class="i1">The choicest tomes in many an even row,</div>
- <div>Display’d their letter’d backs upon the shelves,</div>
- <div class="i15">A goodly show.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>With such a stock, which seemingly surpass’d</div>
- <div class="i1">The best collection ever form’d in Spain,</div>
- <div>What wonder if the owner grew at last</div>
- <div class="i15">Supremely vain?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What wonder, as he paced from shelf to shelf,</div>
- <div class="i1">And conn’d their titles, that the Squire began,</div>
- <div>Despite his ignorance, to think himself</div>
- <div class="i15">A learned man?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Let every amateur, who merely looks</div>
- <div class="i1">To backs and bindings, take the hint and sell</div>
- <div>His costly library; for painted books</div>
- <div class="i15 hangingindent">Would serve as well.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>There were other Spaniards, doubtless, who possessed humor or wit, but
-the only available translations of their plays or stories are too long
-for quotation.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_631">[631]</span></p>
-
-<h3>RUSSIAN HUMOR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>A glance at Russia in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries shows
-the great popularity of the Fable as a means of expressing the wit and
-wisdom of the philosophers.</p>
-
-<p>The two greatest Fabulists were Ivan Chemnitzer or Khemnitzer and Ivan
-Kryloff.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander Griboyedoff was a writer of comedies.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Ivan Chemnitzer</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>THE PHILOSOPHER</i></span></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A certain rich man, who had heard it was an advantage to have been at
-school abroad, sent his son to study in foreign parts. The son, who
-was an utter fool, came back more stupid than ever, having been taught
-all sorts of elaborate explanations of the simplest things by a lot of
-academical windbags. He expressed himself only in scientific terms, so
-that no one understood him, and everyone became very tired of him.</p>
-
-<p>One day, while walking along a road, and gazing at the sky in
-speculating upon some problem of the universe to which the answer had
-never been found (because there was none), the young man stepped over
-the edge of a deep ditch. His father, who chanced to be near by, ran
-to get a rope. The son, however, sitting at the bottom of the ditch,
-began to meditate on the cause of his fall. He concluded that <i>an
-earthquake had superinduced a momentary displacement of his corporeal
-axis, thus destroying his equilibrium, and, in obedience to the law of
-gravity as established by Newton, precipitating him downward until he
-encountered an immovable obstacle</i>&mdash;namely, the bottom of the ditch.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_632">[632]</span></p>
-
-<p>When his father arrived with the rope, the following dialogue took
-place between them:</p>
-
-<p>“I have brought a rope to pull you out with. There, now, hold on tight
-to that end, and don’t let go while I pull.”</p>
-
-<p>“A rope? Please inform me what a rope is before you pull.”</p>
-
-<p>“A rope is a thing to get people out of ditches with, when they have
-fallen in and can’t get out by themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how is it that no mechanical device has been constructed for that
-purpose?”</p>
-
-<p>“That would take time; but you will not have to wait until then. Now,
-then&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Time? Please explain first what you mean by time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Time is something that I am not going to waste on a fool like you. So
-you may stay where you are until I come back.”</p>
-
-<p>Upon which the man went off, and left his foolish son to himself.</p>
-
-<p>Now, would it not be a good thing if all eloquent windbags were
-gathered together and thrown into the ditch, to keep him company? Yes,
-surely. Only it would take a much larger ditch than that to hold them.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>The Fables.</i></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE LION’S COUNCIL OF STATE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A Lion held a court for state affairs.</div>
- <div>Why? That is not your business, sir&mdash;’twas theirs.</div>
- <div>He called the elephants for councilors. Still</div>
- <div>The council-board was incomplete,</div>
- <div>And the king deemed it fit</div>
- <div>With asses all the vacancies to fill.</div>
- <div>Heaven help the state, for lo! the bench of asses</div>
- <div>The bench of elephants by far surpasses.</div>
- <div>“He was a fool, th’ aforesaid king,” you’ll say;</div>
- <div>“Better have kept those places vacant, surely,</div>
- <div>Than to have filled ’em up so very poorly.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Oh, no, that’s not the royal way;</div>
- <div>Things have been done for ages thus, and we</div>
- <div>Have a deep reverence for antiquity.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_633">[633]</span></div>
- <div>Naught worse, sir, than to be, or to appear,</div>
- <div>Wiser and better than our fathers were!</div>
- <div>The list must be complete, e’en though you make it</div>
- <div>Complete with asses&mdash;for the lion saw</div>
- <div>Such had through all the ages been the law.</div>
- <div>He was no radical to break it;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Besides,” said he, “my elephants’ good sense</div>
- <div>Will soon my asses’ ignorance diminish,</div>
- <div>For wisdom has a mighty influence.”</div>
- <div>They made a pretty finish!</div>
- <div>The asses’ folly soon obtained the sway:</div>
- <div>The elephants became as dull as they!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><span class="smcap">Ivan Krylov</span><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>THE SWAN, THE PIKE, AND THE CRAB</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Whene’er companions don’t agree,</div>
- <div class="i1">They work without accord;</div>
- <div>And naught but trouble doth result,</div>
- <div class="i1">Although they all work hard.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One day a swan, a pike, a crab,</div>
- <div class="i1">Resolved a load to haul;</div>
- <div>All three were harnessed to the cart,</div>
- <div class="i1">And pulled together all.</div>
- <div>But though they pulled with all their might,</div>
- <div>The cart-load on the bank stuck tight.</div>
- <div>The swan pulled upward to the skies;</div>
- <div class="i1">The crab did backward crawl;</div>
- <div>The pike made for the water straight&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">It proved no use at all!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now, which of them was most to blame,</div>
- <div class="i1">’Tis not for me to say;</div>
- <div>But this I know: the load is there</div>
- <div class="i1">Unto this very day.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_634">[634]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE MUSICIANS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The tricksy monkey, the goat, the ass, and bandy-legged Mishka, the
-bear, determined to play a quartet. They provided themselves with the
-necessary instruments&mdash;two fiddles, an alto, and a bass. Then they all
-settled down under a large tree, with the object of dazzling the world
-by their artistic performance. They fiddled away lustily for some time,
-but only succeeded in making a noise, and no music.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop, my friends!” said the monkey, “this will not do; our music does
-not sound as it ought. It is plain that we are in the wrong positions.
-You, Mishka, take your bass and face the alto; I will go opposite the
-second fiddle. Then we shall play altogether differently, so that the
-very hills and forests will dance.”</p>
-
-<p>So they changed places, and began over again. But they produced only
-discords, as before.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a moment!” exclaimed the ass; “I know what the matter is. We must
-get in a row, and then we shall play in tune.”</p>
-
-<p>This advice was acted upon. The four animals placed themselves in a
-straight line, and struck up once more.</p>
-
-<p>The quartet was as unmusical as ever. Then they stopped again, and
-began squabbling and wrangling about the proper positions to be taken.
-It happened that a nightingale came flying by that way, attracted by
-their din. They begged the nightingale to solve their difficulty for
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“Pray be so kind,” they said, “as to stay a moment, so that we may get
-our quartet in order. We have music and we have instruments; only tell
-us how to place ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>To which the nightingale replied:</p>
-
-<p>“To be a musician, one must have a better ear and more intelligence
-than any of you. Place yourselves any way you like; it will make no
-difference. You will never become musicians.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Fedor Dostoevsky was a celebrated Russian novelist and journalist.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_635">[635]</span></p>
-
-<p>We quote a small extract, which, it may be, depends in part for its fun
-on its excellent English rendition of the German patter.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>FROM KARLCHEN, THE CROCODILE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">At this moment an appalling, I may even say supernatural, shriek
-suddenly shook the room. Not knowing what to think, I stood for a
-moment rooted to the spot; then, hearing Elyona Ivanovna shrieking,
-too, I turned hastily round; and what did I see! I saw&mdash;oh, heavens!&mdash;I
-saw the unhappy Ivan Matvyeich in the fearful jaws of the crocodile,
-seized across the middle, lifted horizontally in the air, and kicking
-despairingly. Then&mdash;a moment&mdash;and he was gone!</p>
-
-<p>I cannot even attempt to describe the agitation of Elyona Ivanovna.
-After her first cry she stood for some time as petrified, and stared
-at the scene before her, as if indifferently, though her eyes were
-starting out of her head; then she suddenly burst into a piercing
-shriek. I caught her by the hands. At this moment the keeper, who
-until now had also stood petrified with horror, clasped his hands, and
-raising his eyes to heaven cried aloud:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my crocodile! Oh, mein allerliebstes Karlchen! Mutter! Mutter!
-Mutter!”</p>
-
-<p>At this cry the back door opened, and “Mutter,” a red-cheeked, untidy,
-elderly woman in a cap, rushed with a yell toward her son.</p>
-
-<p>Then began an awful tumult. Elyona Ivanovna, beside herself, reiterated
-one single phrase, “Cut it! Cut it!” and rushed from the keeper to the
-“Mutter,” and back to the keeper, imploring them (evidently in a fit
-of frenzy) to “cut” something or some one for some reason. Neither the
-keeper nor “Mutter” took any notice of either of us; they were hanging
-over the tank, and shrieking like stuck pigs.</p>
-
-<p>“He is gone dead; he vill sogleich burst, because he von ganz official
-of der government eat up haf!” cried the keeper.</p>
-
-<p>“Unser Karlchen, unser allerliebstes Karlchen wird sterben!” wailed the
-mother.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_636">[636]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ve are orphans, vitout bread!” moaned the keeper.</p>
-
-<p>“Cut it! Cut it! Cut it open!” screamed Elyona Ivanovna, hanging on to
-the German’s coat.</p>
-
-<p>“He did teaze ze crocodile! Vy your man teaze ze crocodile?” yelled the
-German, wriggling away. “You vill pay me if Karlchen wird bersten! Das
-war mein Sohn, das war mein einziger Sohn!”</p>
-
-<p>“Cut it!” shrieked Elyona Ivanovna.</p>
-
-<p>“How! You vill dat my crocodile shall be die? No, your man shall be
-die first, and denn my crocodile. Mein Vater show von crocodile, mein
-Grossvater show von crocodile, mein Sohn shall show von crocodile, and
-I shall show von crocodile. All ve shall show crocodile. I am ganz
-Europa famous, and you are not ganz Europa famous, and you do be me von
-fine pay shall!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ja, ja!” agreed the woman savagely; “ve you not let out; fine ven
-Karlchen vill bersten.”</p>
-
-<p>“For that matter,” I put in calmly, in the hope of getting Elyona
-Ivanovna home without further ado, “there’s no use in cutting it open,
-for in all probability our dear Ivan Matvyeich is now soaring in the
-empyrean.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear,” remarked at this moment the voice of Ivan Matvyeich, with
-startling suddenness, “my advice, my dear, is to act through the bureau
-of police, for the German will not comprehend the truth without the
-assistance of the police.”</p>
-
-<p>These words, uttered with firmness and gravity, and expressing
-astonishing presence of mind, at first so much amazed us that we could
-not believe our ears. Of course, however, we instantly ran to the
-crocodile’s tank and listened to the speech of the unfortunate captive
-with a mixture of reverence and distrust. His voice sounded muffled,
-thin, and even squeaky, as though coming from a long distance.</p>
-
-<p>“Ivan Matvyeich, my dearest, are you alive?” lisped Elyona Ivanovna.</p>
-
-<p>“Alive and well,” answered Ivan Matvyeich; “and, thanks to the
-Almighty, swallowed whole without injury. I am only disturbed by
-doubt as to how the superior authorities will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_637">[637]</span> regard this episode;
-for, after having taken a ticket to go abroad, to go into a crocodile
-instead is hardly sensible.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my dear, don’t worry about sense now; first of all we must somehow
-or other dig you out,” interrupted Elyona Ivanovna.</p>
-
-<p>“Tig!” cried the German. “I not vill let you to tig ze crocodile! Now
-shall bery mush Publikum be come, and I shall fifety copeck take, and
-Karlchen shall leave off to burst.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gott sei Dank!” added the mother.</p>
-
-<p>“They are right,” calmly remarked Ivan Matvyeich; “the economic
-principle before everything.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Nikolai Nekrasov wrote light verse of a whimsical trend.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A MORAL MAN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A strictly moral man have I been ever,</div>
- <div>And never injured anybody&mdash;never.</div>
- <div>I lent my friend a sum he could not pay;</div>
- <div>I jogged his memory in a friendly way,</div>
- <div>Then took the law of him th’ affair to end;</div>
- <div>The law to prison sent my worthy friend.</div>
- <div>He died there&mdash;not a farthing for poor me!</div>
- <div>I am not angry, though I’ve cause to be;</div>
- <div>His debt that very moment I forgave,</div>
- <div>And shed sad tears of sorrow o’er his grave.</div>
- <div>A strictly moral man have I been ever,</div>
- <div>And never injured anybody&mdash;never.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I sent a serf of mine to learn the dressing</div>
- <div>Of meat. He learned it&mdash;a good cook’s a blessing&mdash;</div>
- <div>But strangely did neglect his occupation,</div>
- <div>And gained a taste not suited to his station:</div>
- <div>He liked to read, to reason, to discuss.</div>
- <div>I, tired of scolding, without further fuss</div>
- <div>Had the rogue flogged&mdash;all for the love of him.</div>
- <div>He went and drowned himself&mdash;what a strange whim!</div>
- <div>A strictly moral man have I been ever,</div>
- <div>And never injured anybody&mdash;never.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_638">[638]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My silly daughter fell in love, one day,</div>
- <div>And with a tutor wished to run away.</div>
- <div>I threatened curses, and pronounced my ban;</div>
- <div>She yielded, and espoused a rich old man.</div>
- <div>Their house was splendid, brimming o’er with wealth,</div>
- <div>But suddenly the poor child lost her health,</div>
- <div>And in a year consumption wrought her doom;</div>
- <div>She left us mourning o’er her early tomb.</div>
- <div>A strictly moral man have I been ever,</div>
- <div>And never injured anybody&mdash;never.</div>
- </div>
-
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Ivan Turgenieff, the celebrated novelist, wrote also delightfully witty
-<i>Poems in Prose</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>BENEFICENCE AND GRATITUDE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">One day the Supreme Being took it into His head to give a great banquet
-in His azure palace.</p>
-
-<p>All the virtues were invited. Men He did not ask&mdash;only ladies.</p>
-
-<p>There was a large number of them, great and small. The lesser virtues
-were more agreeable and genial than the great ones; but they all
-appeared to be in good-humor, and chatted amiably together, as was only
-becoming for near relations and friends.</p>
-
-<p>But the Supreme Being noticed two charming ladies who seemed to be
-totally unacquainted.</p>
-
-<p>The Host gave one of the ladies His arm, and led her up to the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Beneficence!” He said, indicating the first.</p>
-
-<p>“Gratitude!” He added, indicating the second.</p>
-
-<p>Both the virtues were amazed beyond expression. Ever since the world
-had stood&mdash;and it had been standing a long time&mdash;this was the first
-time they had met.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>PRAYER</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Whatever a man prays for, he prays for a miracle. Every prayer reduces
-itself to this: “Great God, grant that twice two be not four.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_639">[639]</span></p>
-
-<p>Anton Chekov, writer of humorous stories, is also happy in epigrammatic
-wit.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>PROVERBIAL WISDOM</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">The worst brandy is better than water.</p>
-
-<p>The path to the law court is wide; the path away from it is narrow.</p>
-
-<p>Even when drowning, a man wants company.</p>
-
-<p>Cherish your wife as you would your salvation, and beat her as you
-would your coat.</p>
-
-<p>A bad peace is superior to a good quarrel.</p>
-
-<p>Spare the peasant your lash, but not his rubles.</p>
-
-<p>Poverty is not a sin, but it’s a great deal worse.</p>
-
-<p>In a storm, pray to the Lord and keep on rowing as hard as you can.</p>
-
-<p>A sparrow is small; still, it’s a bird.</p>
-
-<p>If your wife were a guitar, you could hang her up after playing.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Casting about for other foreign countries that might offer bits of
-humor written in the eighteenth or nineteenth century, we come across
-this from a Polish author named Kajetan Wengierski.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE DREAM-WIFE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Strangely ’wildered must I seem;</div>
- <div>I was married&mdash;in a dream.</div>
- <div>Oh, the ecstasy of bliss!</div>
- <div>Brother, what a joy is this!</div>
- <div>Think about it, and confess</div>
- <div>’Tis a storm of happiness,</div>
- <div>And the memory is to me</div>
- <div>Sunbeams. But fifteen was she:</div>
- <div>Cheeks of roses red and white;</div>
- <div>Mouth like Davia’s; eyes of light,</div>
- <div>Fiery, round, of raven hue,</div>
- <div>Swimming, but coquettish too;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_640">[640]</span></div>
- <div>Ivory teeth; lips fresh as dew;</div>
- <div>Bosom beauteous; hand of down;</div>
- <div>Fairy foot. She stood alone</div>
- <div>In her graces. She was mine,</div>
- <div>And I drank her charms divine.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing1">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Yet, in early years our schemes</div>
- <div>Are, alas! but shadowy dreams.</div>
- <div>For a season they deceive,</div>
- <div>Then our souls in darkness leave.</div>
- <div>Oft the bowl the water bears,</div>
- <div>But ’tis useless soon with years;</div>
- <div>First it cracks, and then it leaks,</div>
- <div>And at last&mdash;at last it breaks.</div>
- <div>All things with beginning tend</div>
- <div>To their melancholy end:</div>
- <div>So her beauty fled.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing1">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then did anger, care, and malice</div>
- <div>Mingle up their bitter chalice.</div>
- <div>Riches like the whirlwind flew,</div>
- <div>Honors, gifts, and friendships too;</div>
- <div>And my lovely wife, so mild,</div>
- <div>Fortune’s frail and flattered child,</div>
- <div>Spent our wealth, as if the day</div>
- <div>Ne’er would dim or pass away;</div>
- <div>And&mdash;oh, monstrous thought!&mdash;the fair</div>
- <div>Scratched my eyes and tore my hair.</div>
- <div>Naught but misery was our guest.</div>
- <div>Then I sought the parish priest:</div>
- <div>“Father, grant me a divorce.</div>
- <div>Nay, you’ll grant it me, of course;</div>
- <div>Reasons many can be given&mdash;</div>
- <div>Reasons both of earth and heaven.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_641">[641]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I know all you wish to say.</div>
- <div>Have you wherewithal to pay?</div>
- <div>Money is a thing, of course&mdash;</div>
- <div>Money may obtain divorce.”</div>
- <div>“Reverend father, hear me, please ye&mdash;</div>
- <div>’Tis not an affair so easy.”</div>
- <div>“Silence, child! Where money’s needed,</div>
- <div>Eloquence is superseded.”</div>
- <div>Then I talked of morals, but</div>
- <div>The good father’s ears were shut.</div>
- <div>With a fierce and frowning look</div>
- <div>Off he drove me&mdash;And I woke.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>And lacking adequate translation for any more of the humorous
-literature of far away lands, we conclude this portion of our Outline
-with some Epigrams of the people of Hayti.</p>
-
-<p>You can’t catch a flea with one finger.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The snake that wants to live does not keep to the highroad.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>You should never blame the owner of a goat for claiming it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The ears do not weigh more than the head.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Wait till you are across the river before you call the alligator names.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If the tortoise that comes up from the bottom of the water tells you an
-alligator is blind, you may believe him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A frog in want of a shirt will ask for a pair of drawers.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The ox never says “Thank you” to the pasture.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Joke with a monkey as much as you please, but don’t play with its tail.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_642">[642]</span></p>
-
-<p>What business have eggs dancing with stones?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If you insist on punishing an enemy, do not make him fetch water in a
-basket.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The wild hog knows what tree he is rubbing against.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Hang your knapsack where you can reach it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The pumpkin vine does not yield calabashes.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Every jack-knife found on the highway will be lost on the highway.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>All wood is wood, but deal is not cedar.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is the frog’s own tongue that betrays him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The spoon goes to the tray’s house, but the tray never goes to the
-spoon’s house.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If you want your eggs hatched, sit on them yourself.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_643">[643]</span></p>
-
-<h3>AMERICAN HUMOR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>There may have been previous mute, inglorious Miltons, but doubtless
-the first American to be recognized as a true humorist was Benjamin
-Franklin.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, one of the foremost essayists of the present day opines that
-the reason Franklin was not called upon to write the Declaration of
-Independence was because he was too fond of his joke.</p>
-
-<p>“They were acute,” our essayist remarks, “those leaders of the
-Continental Congress, and they knew that every man has the defect
-of his qualities, and that a humorist is likely to be lacking in
-reverence, and that the writer of the Declaration of Independence had a
-theme which demanded most reverential treatment.”</p>
-
-<p>It is generally conceded that the Americans are a humorous nation, is
-even said that we have a way of living humorously, and are conscious of
-the fact.</p>
-
-<p>Aside from the annual work known as <i>Poor Richard’s Almanack</i>,
-Franklin wrote much prose and verse of a witty character.</p>
-
-<p>A letter of his gave rise to the well known saying, “He paid too much
-for his whistle.”</p>
-
-<p>Part of the letter is here given.</p>
-
-<p>“When I was a child of seven years old, my friends on a holiday filled
-my pocket with coppers. I went directly to a shop where they sold toys
-for children; and, being charmed with the sound of a <i>whistle</i>
-that I met by the way in the hands of another boy, I voluntarily
-offered and gave all my money for one. I then came home, and went
-whistling all over the house, much pleased with my <i>whistle</i>,
-but disturbing all the family. My brothers and sisters and cousins,
-understanding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_644">[644]</span> the bargain I had made, told me I had given four times
-as much for it as it was worth; put me in mind what good things I might
-have bought with the rest of the money, and laughed at me so much for
-my folly, that I cried with vexation; and the reflection gave me more
-chagrin than the <i>whistle</i> gave me pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>“This, however, was afterward of use to me, the impression continuing
-on my mind, so that often, when I was tempted to buy some unnecessary
-thing, I said to myself, <i>Don’t give too much for the whistle</i>;
-and I saved my money.</p>
-
-<p>“As I grew up, came into the world, and observed the actions of men,
-I thought I met with many, very many, who <i>gave too much for the
-whistle</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“When I saw one too ambitious to court favor, sacrificing his time in
-attendance on levees, his repose, his liberty, his virtue, and perhaps
-his friends, to attain it, I have said to myself, <i>This man gives too
-much for his whistle</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“When I saw another fond of popularity, constantly employing himself
-in political bustles, neglecting his own affairs and ruining them by
-that neglect, <i>He pays, indeed</i>, said I, <i>too much for his
-whistle</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“If I knew a miser, who gave up any kind of a comfortable living,
-all the pleasure of doing good to others, all the esteem of his
-fellow-citizens, and the joys of benevolent friendship, for the sake of
-accumulating wealth, <i>Poor man</i>, said I, <i>you pay too much for
-your whistle</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“When I met with a man of pleasure, sacrificing every laudable
-improvement of the mind, or of his fortune, to mere corporal
-sensations, and ruining his health in their pursuit, <i>Mistaken
-man</i>, said I, <i>you are providing pain for yourself instead of
-pleasure! you give too much for your whistle</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“If I see one fond of appearance, or fine clothes, fine houses,
-fine furniture, fine equipages, all above his fortune, for which he
-contracts debts, and ends his career in a prison, <i>Alas!</i> say I,
-<i>he has paid dear, very dear, for his whistle</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“When I see a beautiful, sweet-tempered girl married to an ill-natured
-brute of a husband, <i>What a pity</i>, say I, <i>that she should pay
-so much for a whistle</i>!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_645">[645]</span></p>
-
-<p>“In short, I conceive that great part of the miseries of mankind are
-brought upon them by the false estimates they have made of the value of
-things, and by their <i>giving too much for their whistles</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Yet I ought to have charity for these unhappy people, when I consider,
-that with all this wisdom of which I am boasting, there are certain
-things in the world so tempting, for example, the apples of King John,
-which happily are not to be bought; for if they were put up to sale by
-auction, I might very easily be led to ruin myself in the purchase, and
-find that I had once more given too much for the <i>whistle</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Adieu, my dear friend, and believe me ever yours, very sincerely and
-with unalterable affection.”</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min smcap">B. Franklin.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>PAPER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Some wit of old&mdash;such wits of old there were&mdash;</div>
- <div>Whose hints show’d meaning, whose allusions care,</div>
- <div>By one brave stroke to mark all human kind,</div>
- <div>Call’d clear blank paper every infant mind;</div>
- <div>Where still, as opening sense her dictates wrote,</div>
- <div>Fair virtue put a seal, or vice a blot.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The thought was happy, pertinent, and true;</div>
- <div>Methinks a genius might the plan pursue.</div>
- <div>I (can you pardon my presumption?) I&mdash;</div>
- <div>No wit, no genius, yet for once will try.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Various the papers various wants produce,</div>
- <div>The wants of fashion, elegance, and use.</div>
- <div>Men are as various; and if right I scan,</div>
- <div>Each sort of <i>paper</i> represents some man.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Pray note the fop&mdash;half powder and half lace&mdash;</div>
- <div>Nice as a band-box were his dwelling-place:</div>
- <div>He’s the <i>gilt paper</i>, which apart you store,</div>
- <div>And lock from vulgar hands in the ’scrutoire.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_646">[646]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mechanics, servants, farmers, and so forth,</div>
- <div>Are <i>copy-paper</i>, of inferior worth;</div>
- <div>Less prized, more useful, for your desk decreed,</div>
- <div>Free to all pens, and prompt at every need.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The wretch, whom avarice bids to pinch and spare,</div>
- <div>Starve, cheat, and pilfer, to enrich an heir,</div>
- <div>Is coarse <i>brown paper!</i> such as pedlars choose</div>
- <div>To wrap up wares, which better men will use.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Take next the miser’s contrast, who destroys</div>
- <div>Health, fame, and fortune, in a round of joys.</div>
- <div>Will any paper match him? Yes, throughout,</div>
- <div>He’s true <i>sinking-paper</i>, past all doubt.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The retail politician’s anxious thought</div>
- <div>Deems <i>this</i> side always right, and <i>that</i> stark naught;</div>
- <div>He foams with censure; with applause he raves&mdash;</div>
- <div>A dupe to rumors, and a tool of knaves;</div>
- <div>He’ll want no type his weakness to proclaim,</div>
- <div>While such a thing as <i>foolscap</i> has a name.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The hasty gentleman, whose blood runs high,</div>
- <div>Who picks a quarrel, if you step awry,</div>
- <div>Who can’t a jest, or hint, or look endure:</div>
- <div>What is he? What? <i>Touch-paper</i> to be sure.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What are our poets, take them as they fall,</div>
- <div>Good, bad, rich, poor, much read, not read at all?</div>
- <div>Them and their works in the same class you’ll find;</div>
- <div>They are the mere <i>waste-paper</i> of mankind.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Observe the maiden, innocently sweet,</div>
- <div>She’s fair <i>white-paper</i>, an unsullied sheet;</div>
- <div>On which the happy man, whom fate ordains,</div>
- <div>May write his <i>name</i>, and take her for his pains.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_647">[647]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One instance more, and only one I’ll bring;</div>
- <div>’Tis the <i>great man</i> who scorns a little thing,</div>
- <div>Whose thoughts, whose deeds, whose maxims are his own,</div>
- <div>Form’d on the feelings of his heart alone:</div>
- <div>True genuine <i>royal-paper</i> is his breast:</div>
- <div>Of all the kinds most precious, purest, best.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Francis Hopkinson, a writer of miscellaneous essays, wrote “The Battle
-of the Keys,” which was founded upon a real historic incident.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE BATTLE OF THE KEYS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Gallants attend and hear a friend</div>
- <div class="i1">Trill forth harmonious ditty,</div>
- <div>Strange things I’ll tell which late befell</div>
- <div class="i1">In Philadelphia city.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Twas early day, as poets say,</div>
- <div class="i1">Just when the sun was rising,</div>
- <div>A soldier stood on a log of wood,</div>
- <div class="i1">And saw a thing surprising.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As in amaze he stood and gazed,</div>
- <div class="i1">The truth can’t be denied, sir,</div>
- <div>He spied a score of kegs or more</div>
- <div class="i1">Come floating down the tide, sir.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A sailor, too, in jerkin blue,</div>
- <div class="i1">This strange appearance viewing,</div>
- <div>First damned his eyes, in great surprise,</div>
- <div class="i1">Then said, “Some mischief’s brewing.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“These kegs, I’m told, the rebles hold,</div>
- <div class="i1">Packed up like pickled herring;</div>
- <div>And they’re come down to attack the town,</div>
- <div class="i1">In this new way of ferrying.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_648">[648]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The soldier flew, the sailor too,</div>
- <div class="i1">And scared almost to death, sir,</div>
- <div>Wore out their shoes, to spread the news,</div>
- <div class="i1">And ran till out of breath, sir.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now up and down throughout the town,</div>
- <div class="i1">Most frantic scenes were acted;</div>
- <div>And some ran here, and others there,</div>
- <div class="i1">Like men almost distracted.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Some “fire” cried, which some denied,</div>
- <div class="i1">But said the earth had quaked;</div>
- <div>And girls and boys, with hideous noise,</div>
- <div class="i1">Ran through the streets half-naked.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Sir William he, snug as a flea,</div>
- <div class="i1">Lay all this time a-snoring,</div>
- <div>Nor dreamed of harm as he lay warm,</div>
- <div class="i1">In bed with Mrs. Loring.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now in a fright he starts upright,</div>
- <div class="i1">Awaked by such a clatter;</div>
- <div>He rubs both eyes, and boldly cries,</div>
- <div class="i1">“For God’s sake, what’s the matter?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At his bedside he then espied,</div>
- <div class="i1">Sir Erskine at command, sir,</div>
- <div>Upon one foot he had one boot,</div>
- <div class="i1">And th’ other in his hand, sir.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Arise, arise!” Sir Erskine cries,</div>
- <div class="i1">“The rebels&mdash;more’s the pity,</div>
- <div>Without a boat are all afloat,</div>
- <div class="i1">And ranged before the city.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“The motley crew, in vessels new,</div>
- <div class="i1">With Satan for their guide, sir,</div>
- <div>Packed up in bags, or wooden kegs,</div>
- <div class="i1">Come driving down the tide, sir.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_649">[649]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Therefore prepare for bloody war,</div>
- <div class="i1">The kegs must all be routed,</div>
- <div>Or surely we despised shall be,</div>
- <div class="i1">And British courage doubted.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The royal band now ready stand,</div>
- <div class="i1">All ranged in dead array, sir,</div>
- <div>With stomach stout to see it out,</div>
- <div class="i1">And make a bloody day, sir.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The cannons roar from shore to shore,</div>
- <div class="i1">The small arms make a rattle;</div>
- <div>Since wars began I’m sure no man</div>
- <div class="i1">E’er saw so strange a battle.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The rebel dales, the rebel vales,</div>
- <div class="i1">With rebel trees surrounded,</div>
- <div>The distant woods, the hills and floods,</div>
- <div class="i1">With rebel echoes sounded.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The fish below swam to and fro,</div>
- <div class="i1">Attacked from every quarter;</div>
- <div>Why sure, thought they, the devil’s to pay</div>
- <div class="i1">’Mongst folks above the water.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The kegs, ’tis said, though strongly made</div>
- <div class="i1">Of rebel staves and hoops, sir,</div>
- <div>Could not oppose their powerful foes,</div>
- <div class="i1">And conquering British troops, sir.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>From morn to night these men of might</div>
- <div class="i1">Displayed amazing courage;</div>
- <div>And when the sun was fairly down,</div>
- <div class="i1">Retired to sup their porridge.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A hundred men with each a pen,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or more, upon my word, sir,</div>
- <div>It is most true would be too few,</div>
- <div class="i1">Their valor to record, sir.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_650">[650]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Such feats did they perform that day,</div>
- <div class="i1">Against these wicked kegs, sir,</div>
- <div>That, years to come, if they get home,</div>
- <div class="i1">They’ll make their boasts and brags, sir.</div>
- <div class="right">&mdash;<i>Miscellaneous Essays and Occasional Writings.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Elizabeth Graeme Ferguson, one of the earliest women writers of our
-country, like many of her contemporaries, kept the style and effect of
-English poetry. Her lines on the Country Parson, show a fine vein of
-satire.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE COUNTRY PARSON</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>How happy is the country parson’s lot!</div>
- <div>Forgetting bishops, as by them forgot;</div>
- <div>Tranquil of spirit, with an easy mind,</div>
- <div>To all his vestry’s votes he sits resigned:</div>
- <div>Of manners gentle, and of temper even,</div>
- <div>He jogs his flocks, with easy pace, to heaven.</div>
- <div>In Greek and Latin, pious books he keeps;</div>
- <div>And, while his clerk sings psalms, he&mdash;soundly sleeps.</div>
- <div>His garden fronts the sun’s sweet orient beams,</div>
- <div>And fat church-wardens prompt his golden dreams.</div>
- <div>The earliest fruit, in his fair orchard, blooms;</div>
- <div>And cleanly pipes pour out tobacco’s fumes.</div>
- <div>From rustic bridegroom oft he takes the ring;</div>
- <div>And hears the milkmaid plaintive ballads sing.</div>
- <div>Back-gammon cheats whole winter nights away,</div>
- <div>And Pilgrim’s Progress helps a rainy day.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>President John Quincy Adams so far relaxed from his political
-dignity as to write light verse.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO SALLY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The man in righteousness arrayed,</div>
- <div class="i1">A pure and blameless liver,</div>
- <div>Needs not the keen Toledo blade,</div>
- <div class="i1">Nor venom-freighted quiver.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_651">[651]</span></div>
- <div>What though he winds his toilsome way</div>
- <div class="i1">O’er regions wild and weary&mdash;</div>
- <div>Through Zara’s burning desert stray,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or Asia’s jungles dreary:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What though he plough the billowy deep</div>
- <div class="i1">By lunar light, or solar,</div>
- <div>Meet the resistless Simoon’s sweep,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or iceberg circumpolar!</div>
- <div>In bog or quagmire deep and dank</div>
- <div class="i1">His foot shall never settle;</div>
- <div>He mounts the summit of Mont Blanc,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or Popocatapetl.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>On Chimborazo’s breathless height</div>
- <div class="i1">He treads o’er burning lava;</div>
- <div>Or snuffs the Bohan Upas blight,</div>
- <div class="i1">The deathful plant of Java.</div>
- <div>Through every peril he shall pass,</div>
- <div class="i1">By Virtue’s shield protected;</div>
- <div>And still by Truth’s unerring glass</div>
- <div class="i1">His path shall be directed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Else wherefore was it, Thursday last,</div>
- <div class="i1">While strolling down the valley,</div>
- <div>Defenceless, musing as I passed</div>
- <div class="i1">A canzonet to Sally,</div>
- <div>A wolf, with mouth-protruding snout,</div>
- <div class="i1">Forth from the thicket bounded&mdash;</div>
- <div>I clapped my hands and raised a shout&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">He heard&mdash;and fled&mdash;confounded.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Tangier nor Tunis never bred</div>
- <div class="i1">An animal more crabbed;</div>
- <div>Nor Fez, dry-nurse of lions, fed</div>
- <div class="i1">A monster half so rabid;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_652">[652]</span></div>
- <div>Nor Ararat so fierce a beast</div>
- <div class="i1">Has seen since days of Noah;</div>
- <div>Nor stronger, eager for a feast,</div>
- <div class="i1">The fell constrictor boa.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Oh! place me where the solar beam</div>
- <div class="i1">Has scorched all verdure vernal;</div>
- <div>Or on the polar verge extreme,</div>
- <div class="i1">Blocked up with ice eternal&mdash;</div>
- <div>Still shall my voice’s tender lays</div>
- <div class="i1">Of love remain unbroken;</div>
- <div>And still my charming Sally praise,</div>
- <div class="i1">Sweet smiling and sweet spoken.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>About this time, Clement C. Moore wrote the Christmas story which has
-since become a national classic.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A VISIT FROM ST. NICHOLAS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">’Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house</div>
- <div>Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse;</div>
- <div>The stockings were hung by the chimney with care,</div>
- <div>In hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there;</div>
- <div>The children were nestled all snug in their beds,</div>
- <div>While visions of sugar-plums danced in their heads;</div>
- <div>And mamma in her ’kerchief, and I in my cap</div>
- <div>Had just settled our brains for a long winter’s nap,</div>
- <div>When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter,</div>
- <div>I sprang from the bed to see what was the matter.</div>
- <div>Away to the window I flew like a flash,</div>
- <div>Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash.</div>
- <div>The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow</div>
- <div>Gave the lustre of mid-day to objects below,</div>
- <div>When, what to my wondering eyes should appear,</div>
- <div>But a miniature sleigh, and eight tiny reindeer,</div>
- <div>With a little old driver, so lively and quick,</div>
- <div>I knew in a moment it must be St. Nick.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_653">[653]</span></div>
- <div>More rapid than eagles his coursers they came,</div>
- <div>And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name;</div>
- <div>“Now, <i>Dasher!</i> now, <i>Dancer!</i> now, <i>Prancer</i> and <i>Vixen!</i></div>
- <div>On, <i>Comet!</i> on, <i>Cupid!</i> on, <i>Dunder</i> and <i>Blitzen!</i></div>
- <div>To the top of the porch! to the top of the wall!</div>
- <div>Now dash away! dash away! dash away all!”</div>
- <div>As dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly,</div>
- <div>When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky;</div>
- <div>So up to the house-top the coursers they flew,</div>
- <div>With the sleigh full of Toys, and St. Nicholas too.</div>
- <div>And then, in a twinkling, I heard on the roof</div>
- <div>The prancing and pawing of each little hoof.</div>
- <div>As I drew in my head, and was turning around,</div>
- <div>Down the chimney St. Nicholas came with a bound.</div>
- <div>He was dressed all in fur, from his head to his foot,</div>
- <div>And his clothes were all tarnished with ashes and soot;</div>
- <div>A bundle of Toys he had flung on his back,</div>
- <div>And he looked like a pedler just opening his pack.</div>
- <div>His eyes&mdash;how they twinkled! his dimples how merry!</div>
- <div>His cheeks were like roses, his nose like a cherry!</div>
- <div>His droll little mouth was drawn up like a bow,</div>
- <div>And the beard of his chin was as white as the snow;</div>
- <div>The stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth,</div>
- <div>And the smoke it encircled his head like a wreath;</div>
- <div>He had a broad face and a little round belly,</div>
- <div>That shook when he laughed, like a bowlful of jelly.</div>
- <div>He was chubby and plump, a right jolly old elf,</div>
- <div>And I laughed when I saw him, in spite of myself;</div>
- <div>A wink of his eye and a twist of his head,</div>
- <div>Soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread;</div>
- <div>He spoke not a word, but went straight to his work,</div>
- <div>And filled all the stockings; then turned with a jerk,</div>
- <div>And laying his finger aside of his nose,</div>
- <div>And giving a nod, up the chimney he rose;</div>
- <div>He sprang to his sleigh, to his team gave a whistle,</div>
- <div>And away they all flew like the down of a thistle.</div>
- <div>But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight,</div>
- <div><i>“Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good-night</i>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_654">[654]</span></p>
-
-<p>Washington Irving, though his work is besprinkled with humor cannot be
-quoted at length.</p>
-
-<p>A bit of his gay verse is given.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A CERTAIN YOUNG LADY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There’s a certain young lady,</div>
- <div>Who’s just in her heyday,</div>
- <div class="i1">And full of all mischief, I ween;</div>
- <div class="i2">So teasing! so pleasing!</div>
- <div class="i2">Capricious! delicious!</div>
- <div class="i1">And you know very well whom I mean.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>With an eye dark as night,</div>
- <div>Yet than noonday more bright,</div>
- <div class="i1">Was ever a black eye so keen?</div>
- <div class="i2">It can thrill with a glance,</div>
- <div class="i2">With a beam can entrance,</div>
- <div class="i1">And you know very well whom I mean.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>With a stately step&mdash;such as</div>
- <div>You’d expect in a duchess&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">And a brow might distinguish a queen,</div>
- <div class="i2">With a mighty proud air,</div>
- <div class="i2">That says “touch me who dare,”</div>
- <div class="i1">And you know very well whom I mean.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>With a toss of the head</div>
- <div>That strikes one quite dead,</div>
- <div class="i1">But a smile to revive one again;</div>
- <div class="i2">That toss so appalling!</div>
- <div class="i2">That smile so enthralling!</div>
- <div class="i1">And you know very well whom I mean.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Confound her! devil take her!&mdash;</div>
- <div>A cruel heart-breaker&mdash;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_655">[655]</span></div>
- <div class="i1">But hold! see that smile so serene.</div>
- <div class="i2">God love her! God bless her!</div>
- <div class="i2">May nothing distress her!</div>
- <div class="i1">You know very well whom I mean.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Heaven help the adorer</div>
- <div>Who happens to bore her,</div>
- <div class="i1">The lover who wakens her spleen;</div>
- <div class="i2">But too blest for a sinner</div>
- <div class="i2">Is he who shall win her,</div>
- <div class="i1">And you know very well whom I mean.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>William Cullen Bryant, like most of the New England poets, was not
-often humorous in his work. Perhaps the nearest he came to it was in
-his <i>Lines to a Mosquito</i>.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO A MOSQUITO</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Fair insect! that with threadlike legs spread out,</div>
- <div class="i1">And blood-extracting bill and filmy wing,</div>
- <div>Dost murmur, as thou slowly sail’st about,</div>
- <div class="i1">In pitiless ears, full many a plaintive thing,</div>
- <div>And tell how little our large veins should bleed,</div>
- <div>Would we but yield them to thy bitter need?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Unwillingly, I own, and, what is worse,</div>
- <div class="i1">Full angrily men harken to thy plaint;</div>
- <div>Thou gettest many a brush and many a curse,</div>
- <div class="i1">For saying thou art gaunt and starved and faint.</div>
- <div>Even the old beggar, while he asks for food,</div>
- <div>Would kill thee, hapless stranger, if he could.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I call thee stranger, for the town, I ween,</div>
- <div class="i1">Has not the honor of so proud a birth&mdash;</div>
- <div>Thou com’st from Jersey meadows, fresh and green,</div>
- <div class="i1">The offspring of the gods, though born on earth;</div>
- <div>For Titan was thy sire, and fair was she,</div>
- <div>The ocean nymph that nursed thy infancy.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_656">[656]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Beneath the rushes was thy cradle swung,</div>
- <div class="i1">And when at length thy gauzy wings grew strong,</div>
- <div>Abroad to gentle airs their folds were flung,</div>
- <div class="i1">Rose in the sky, and bore thee soft along;</div>
- <div>The south wind breathed to waft thee on thy way,</div>
- <div>And danced and shone beneath the billowy bay.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Calm rose afar the city spires, and thence</div>
- <div class="i1">Came the deep murmur of its throng of men,</div>
- <div>And as its grateful odors met thy sense,</div>
- <div class="i1">They seemed the perfumes of thy native fen.</div>
- <div>Fair lay its crowded streets, and at the sight</div>
- <div>Thy tiny song grew shriller with delight.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At length thy pinion fluttered in Broadway&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Ah, there were fairy steps, and white necks kissed</div>
- <div>By wanton airs, and eyes whose killing ray</div>
- <div class="i1">Shone through the snowy veils like stars through mist;</div>
- <div>And fresh as morn, on many a cheek and chin,</div>
- <div>Bloomed the bright blood through the transparent skin.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Sure these were sights to tempt an anchorite!</div>
- <div class="i1">What! do I hear thy slender voice complain?</div>
- <div>Thou wailest when I talk of beauty’s light,</div>
- <div class="i1">As if it brought the memory of pain.</div>
- <div>Thou art a wayward being&mdash;well&mdash;come near,</div>
- <div>And pour thy tale of sorrow in mine ear.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What say’st thou, slanderer! rouge makes thee sick?</div>
- <div class="i1">And China Bloom at best is sorry food?</div>
- <div>And Rowland’s Kalydor, if laid on thick,</div>
- <div class="i1">Poisons the thirsty wretch that bores for blood.</div>
- <div>Go! ’Twas a just reward that met thy crime&mdash;</div>
- <div>But shun the sacrilege another time.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>That bloom was made to look at&mdash;not to touch;</div>
- <div class="i1">To worship&mdash;not approach&mdash;that radiant white;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_657">[657]</span></div>
- <div>And well might sudden vengeance light on such</div>
- <div class="i1">As dared, like thee, most impiously to bite.</div>
- <div>Thou shouldst have gazed at distance and admired&mdash;</div>
- <div>Murmur’d thy admiration and retired.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thou’rt welcome to the town&mdash;but why come here</div>
- <div class="i1">To bleed a brother poet, gaunt like thee?</div>
- <div>Alas! the little blood I have is dear,</div>
- <div class="i1">And thin will be the banquet drawn from me.</div>
- <div>Look round&mdash;the pale-eyed sisters in my cell,</div>
- <div>Thy old acquaintance, Song and Famine, dwell.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Try some plump alderman, and suck the blood</div>
- <div class="i1">Enrich’d by gen’rous wine and costly meat;</div>
- <div>On well-filled skins, sleek as thy native mud,</div>
- <div class="i1">Fix thy light pump, and press thy freckled feet.</div>
- <div>Go to the men for whom, in ocean’s halls,</div>
- <div>The oyster breeds and the green turtle sprawls.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There corks are drawn, and the red vintage flows,</div>
- <div class="i1">To fill the swelling veins for thee, and now</div>
- <div>The ruddy cheek, and now the ruddier nose</div>
- <div class="i1">Shall tempt thee, as thou flittest round the brow;</div>
- <div>And when the hour of sleep its quiet brings,</div>
- <div>No angry hand shall rise to brush thy wings.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Fitz-Greene Halleck wrote much in collaboration with Joseph Rodman
-Drake, and it is often difficult to separate their work.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ODE TO FORTUNE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Fair lady with the bandaged eye!</div>
- <div class="i1">I’ll pardon all thy scurvy tricks,</div>
- <div>So thou wilt cut me, and deny</div>
- <div class="i1">Alike thy kisses and thy kicks:</div>
- <div>I’m quite contented as I am,</div>
- <div class="i1">Have cash to keep my duns at bay,</div>
- <div>Can choose between beefsteaks and ham,</div>
- <div class="i1">And drink Madeira every day.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_658">[658]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My station is the middle rank,</div>
- <div class="i1">My fortune&mdash;just a competence&mdash;</div>
- <div>Ten thousand in the Franklin Bank,</div>
- <div class="i1">And twenty in the six per cents;</div>
- <div>No amorous chains my heart enthrall,</div>
- <div class="i1">I neither borrow, lend, nor sell;</div>
- <div>Fearless I roam the City Hall,</div>
- <div class="i1">And bite my thumb at Sheriff Bell.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The horse that twice a week I ride</div>
- <div class="i1">At Mother Dawson’s eats his fill;</div>
- <div>My books at Goodrich’s abide,</div>
- <div class="i1">My country-seat is Weehawk hill;</div>
- <div>My morning lounge is Eastburn’s shop,</div>
- <div class="i1">At Poppleton’s I take my lunch,</div>
- <div>Niblo prepares my mutton-chop,</div>
- <div class="i1">And Jennings makes my whiskey-punch.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When merry, I the hours amuse</div>
- <div class="i1">By squibbing Bucktails, Guards, and Balls,</div>
- <div>And when I’m troubled with the blues</div>
- <div class="i1">Damn Clinton and abuse cards:</div>
- <div>Then, Fortune, since I ask no prize,</div>
- <div class="i1">At least preserve me from thy frown!</div>
- <div>The man who don’t attempt to rise</div>
- <div class="i1">’Twere cruelty to tumble down.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Albert Gorton Greene also wrote in the manner of his English forebears,
-indeed, his <i>Old Grimes</i> is quite in line with Tom Hood or
-Goldsmith.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>OLD CHIMES</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Old Grimes is dead; that good old man</div>
- <div class="i1">We never shall see more:</div>
- <div>He used to wear a long, black coat,</div>
- <div class="i1">All buttoned down before.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_659">[659]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>His heart was open as the day,</div>
- <div class="i1">His feelings all were true;</div>
- <div>His hair was some inclined to gray&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">He wore it in a queue.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Whene’er he heard the voice of pain,</div>
- <div class="i1">His breast with pity burn’d;</div>
- <div>The large, round head upon his cane</div>
- <div class="i1">From ivory was turn’d.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Kind words he ever had for all;</div>
- <div class="i1">He knew no base design:</div>
- <div>His eyes were dark and rather small,</div>
- <div class="i1">His nose was aquiline.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He lived at peace with all mankind.</div>
- <div class="i1">In friendship he was true:</div>
- <div>His coat had pocket-holes behind,</div>
- <div class="i1">His pantaloons were blue.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Unharm’d, the sin which earth pollutes</div>
- <div class="i1">He pass’d securely o’er,</div>
- <div>And never wore a pair of boots</div>
- <div class="i1">For thirty years or more.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But good old Grimes is now at rest,</div>
- <div class="i1">Nor fears misfortune’s frown:</div>
- <div>He wore a double-breasted vest&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">The stripes ran up and down.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He modest merit sought to find,</div>
- <div class="i1">And pay it its desert:</div>
- <div>He had no malice in his mind,</div>
- <div class="i1">No ruffles on his shirt.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>His neighbors he did not abuse&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Was sociable and gay:</div>
- <div>He wore large buckles on his shoes</div>
- <div class="i1">And changed them every day.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_660">[660]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>His knowledge, hid from public gaze,</div>
- <div class="i1">He did not bring to view,</div>
- <div>Nor made a noise, town-meeting days,</div>
- <div class="i1">As many people do.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>His worldly goods he never threw</div>
- <div class="i1">In trust to fortune’s chances,</div>
- <div>But lived (as all his brothers do)</div>
- <div class="i1">In easy circumstances.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thus undisturb’d by anxious cares,</div>
- <div class="i1">His peaceful moments ran;</div>
- <div>And everybody said he was</div>
- <div class="i1">A fine old gentleman.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Ralph Waldo Emerson is seldom humorous or even in lighter vein. His
-Fable about the squirrel shows a graceful wit.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>FABLE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The mountain and the squirrel</div>
- <div>Had a quarrel,</div>
- <div>And the former called the latter “Little Prig”;</div>
- <div>Bun replied,</div>
- <div>“You are doubtless very big;</div>
- <div>But all sorts of things and weather</div>
- <div>Must be taken in together,</div>
- <div>To make up a year</div>
- <div>And a sphere,</div>
- <div>And I think it no disgrace</div>
- <div>To occupy my place.</div>
- <div>If I’m not so large as you,</div>
- <div>You are not so small as I,</div>
- <div>And not half so spry.</div>
- <div>I’ll not deny you make</div>
- <div>A very pretty squirrel track;</div>
- <div>Talents differ; all is well and wisely put;</div>
- <div>If I cannot carry forests on my back,</div>
- <div>Neither can you crack a nut.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_661">[661]</span></p>
-
-<p>Nathaniel Parker Willis was a popular writer of society satire in both
-prose and verse.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>LOVE IN A COTTAGE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They may talk of love in a cottage,</div>
- <div class="i1">And bowers of trellised vine&mdash;</div>
- <div>Of nature bewitchingly simple,</div>
- <div class="i1">And milkmaids half-divine;</div>
- <div>They may talk of the pleasure of sleeping</div>
- <div class="i1">In the shade of a spreading tree,</div>
- <div>And a walk in the fields at morning,</div>
- <div class="i1">By the side of a footstep free!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But give me a sly flirtation</div>
- <div class="i1">By the light of a chandelier&mdash;</div>
- <div>With music to play in the pauses,</div>
- <div class="i1">And nobody very near;</div>
- <div>Or a seat on a silken sofa,</div>
- <div class="i1">With a glass of pure old wine,</div>
- <div>And mama too blind to discover</div>
- <div class="i1">The small white hand in mine.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Your love in a cottage is hungry,</div>
- <div class="i1">Your vine is a nest for flies&mdash;</div>
- <div>Your milkmaid shocks the Graces,</div>
- <div class="i1">And simplicity talks of pies!</div>
- <div>You lie down to your shady slumber</div>
- <div class="i1">And wake with a bug in your ear,</div>
- <div>And your damsel that walks in the morning</div>
- <div class="i1">Is shod like a mountaineer.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>True love is at home on a carpet,</div>
- <div class="i1">And mightily likes his ease&mdash;</div>
- <div>And true love has an eye for a dinner,</div>
- <div class="i1">And starves beneath shady trees.</div>
- <div>His wing is the fan of a lady.</div>
- <div class="i1">His foot’s an invisible thing,</div>
- <div>And his arrow is tipp’d with a jewel</div>
- <div class="i1">And shot from a silver string.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_662">[662]</span></p>
-
-<p>Seba Smith, among the first to break away from English traditions,
-wrote over the pen name of Major Jack Downing. He was a pioneer in the
-matter of dialect writing and the first to poke fun at New England
-speech and manners.</p>
-
-<p>Follows a part of his skit called</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>MY FIRST VISIT TO PORTLAND</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">After I had walked about three or four hours, I come along towards the
-upper end of the town, where I found there were stores and shops of all
-sorts and sizes. And I met a feller, and says I,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“What place is this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, this,” says he, “is Huckler’s Row.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” says I, “are these the stores where the traders in Huckler’s
-Row keep?”</p>
-
-<p>And says he, “Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” says I to myself, “I have a pesky good mind to go in
-and have a try with one of these chaps, and see if they can twist my
-eye-teeth out. If they can get the best end of a bargain out of me,
-they can do what there ain’t a man in our place can do; and I should
-just like to know what sort of stuff these ’ere Portland chaps are made
-of.” So in I goes into the best-looking store among ’em. And I see some
-biscuit lying on the shelf, and says I,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Mister, how much do you ax apiece for them ’ere biscuits?”</p>
-
-<p>“A cent apiece,” says he.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” says I, “I shan’t give you that, but, if you’ve a mind to, I’ll
-give you two cents for three of them, for I begin to feel a little as
-though I would like to take a bite.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” says he, “I wouldn’t sell ’em to anybody else so, but, seeing
-it’s you, I don’t care if you take ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>I knew he lied, for he never seen me before in his life. Well, he
-handed down the biscuits, and I took ’em, and walked round the store
-awhile, to see what else he had to sell. At last says I,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Mister, have you got any good cider?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_663">[663]</span></p>
-
-<p>Says he, “Yes, as good as ever ye see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” says I, “what do you ax a glass for it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Two cents,” says he.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” says I, “seems to me I feel more dry than I do hungry now.
-Ain’t you a mind to take these ’ere biscuits again and give me a glass
-of cider?” and says he:</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care if I do.”</p>
-
-<p>So he took and laid ’em on the shelf again and poured out a glass of
-cider. I took the glass of cider and drinkt it down and, to tell you
-the truth about it, it was capital good cider Then says I:</p>
-
-<p>“I guess it’s about time for me to be a-going,” and so I stept along
-toward the door; but he ups and says, says he:</p>
-
-<p>“Stop, mister, I believe you haven’t paid me for the cider.’</p>
-
-<p>“Not paid you for the cider!” says I; “what do you mean by that? Didn’t
-the biscuits that I give you just come to the cider?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, ah, right!” says he.</p>
-
-<p>So I started to go again, but before I had reached the door he says,
-says he:</p>
-
-<p>“But stop, mister, you didn’t pay me for the biscuit.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” says I, “do you mean to impose upon me? Do you think I am going
-to pay you for the biscuits, and let you keep them, too? Ain’t they
-there now on your shelf? What more do you want? I guess, sir, you don’t
-whittle me in that way.”</p>
-
-<p>So I turned about and marched off and left the feller staring and
-scratching his head as tho’ he was struck with a dunderment.</p>
-
-<p>Howsomeever, I didn’t want to cheat him, only jest to show ’em it
-wa’n’t so easy a matter to pull my eye-teeth out; so I called in next
-day and paid him two cents.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>And now humor began to creep into the newspapers, and it came about
-that American humorists, almost without exception, have been newspaper
-men.</p>
-
-<p>Following Seba Smith’s plan each author created a character,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_664">[664]</span> usually
-of homely type, and through him as a mouthpiece gave to the world his
-own wit and wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Frances Miriam Whitcher wrote the Widow Bedott papers, and
-Frederick Swartout Cozzens the Sparrowgrass Papers, but best known
-today is the Mrs. Partington, the American Mrs. Malaprop, created by
-Benjamin Penhallow Shillaber.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>AFTER A WEDDING</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">“I like to tend weddings,” said Mrs. Partington, as she came back
-from a neighboring church where one had been celebrated, and hung
-up her shawl, and replaced the black bonnet in her long-preserved
-band-box. “I like to see young people come together with the promise
-to love, cherish, and nourish each other. But it is a solemn thing,
-is matrimony&mdash;a very solemn thing&mdash;where the pasture comes into the
-chancery, with his surplus on, and goes through with the cerement of
-making ’em man and wife. It ought to be husband and wife; for it ain’t
-every husband that turns out a man. I declare I shall never forget how
-I felt when I had the nuptial ring put on to my finger, when Paul said,
-‘With my goods I thee endow.’ He used to keep a dry-goods store then,
-and I thought he was going to give me all there was in it. I was young
-and simple, and didn’t know till arterwards that it only meant one
-calico gound in a year. It is a lovely sight to see the young people
-plighting their trough, and coming up to consume their vows.”</p>
-
-<p>She bustled about and got tea ready, but abstractedly she put on the
-broken teapot, that had lain away unused since Paul was alive, and
-the teacups, mended with putty, and dark with age, as if the idea had
-conjured the ghost of past enjoyment to dwell for the moment in the
-home of present widowhood.</p>
-
-<p>A young lady, who expected to be married on Thanksgiving night,
-wept copiously at her remarks, but kept on hemming the veil that
-was to adorn her brideship, and Ike sat pulling bristles out of the
-hearth-brush in expressive silence.</p>
-
-<p>Yet not all the wits of the day were newspaper men, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_665">[665]</span> Oliver Wendell
-Holmes left his essays and novels now and then to give his native humor
-full play.</p>
-
-<p>The “Deacon’s Masterpiece,” often called “The One Hoss Shay” is a
-classic, and many short poems are among our best witty verses, while
-Holmes’ genial humor pervades his Breakfast Table books.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE HEIGHT OF THE RIDICULOUS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I wrote some lines once on a time,</div>
- <div class="i1">In wondrous merry mood,</div>
- <div>And thought, as usual, men would say</div>
- <div class="i1">They were exceeding good.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They were so queer, so very queer,</div>
- <div class="i1">I laughed as I would die;</div>
- <div>Albeit, in the general way,</div>
- <div class="i1">A sober man am I.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I called my servant, and he came;</div>
- <div class="i1">How kind it was of him,</div>
- <div>To mind a slender man like me,</div>
- <div class="i1">He of the mighty limb!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“These to the printer,” I exclaimed,</div>
- <div class="i1">And, in my humorous way,</div>
- <div>I added (as a trifling jest),</div>
- <div class="i1">“There’ll be the devil to pay.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He took the paper, and I watched,</div>
- <div class="i1">And saw him peep within;</div>
- <div>At the first line he read, his face</div>
- <div class="i1">Was all upon the grin.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He read the next: the grin grew broad,</div>
- <div class="i1">And shot from ear to ear;</div>
- <div>He read the third: a chuckling noise</div>
- <div class="i1">I now began to hear.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_666">[666]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The fourth: he broke into a roar;</div>
- <div class="i1">The fifth: his waistband split;</div>
- <div>The sixth: he burst five buttons off,</div>
- <div class="i1">And tumbled in a fit.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ten days and nights, with sleepless eye,</div>
- <div class="i1">I watched that wretched man,</div>
- <div>And since, I never dare to write</div>
- <div class="i1">As funny as I can.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ÆSTIVATION</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In candent ire the solar splendor flames;</div>
- <div>The foles, languescent, pend from arid rames;</div>
- <div>His humid front the cive, anheling, wipes,</div>
- <div>And dreams of erring on ventiferous ripes.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>How dulce to vive occult to mortal eyes,</div>
- <div>Dorm on the herb with none to supervise,</div>
- <div>Carp the suave berries from the crescent vine,</div>
- <div>And bibe the flow from longicaudate kine.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>To me also, no verdurous visions come</div>
- <div>Save you exiguous pool’s confervascum,&mdash;</div>
- <div>No concave vast repeats the tender hue</div>
- <div>That laves my milk-jug with celestial blue.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Me wretched! Let me curr to quercine shades!</div>
- <div>Effund your albid hausts, lactiferous maids!</div>
- <div>Oh, might I vole to some umbrageous chump,&mdash;</div>
- <div>Depart,&mdash;be off,&mdash;excede,&mdash;evade,&mdash;erump!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is charged with the perpetration of certain
-nonsense verses. His authorship of these has been stoutly denied as
-well as positively asseverated.</p>
-
-<p>The two poems in question are appended, and if Longfellow did write
-them they are in no wise to his discredit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_667">[667]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THERE WAS A LITTLE GIRL</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There was a little girl,</div>
- <div>And she had a little curl</div>
- <div class="i1">Right in the middle of her forehead.</div>
- <div>When she was good</div>
- <div>She was very, very good,</div>
- <div class="i1">And when she was bad she was horrid.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One day she went upstairs,</div>
- <div>When her parents, unawares,</div>
- <div class="i1">In the kitchen were occupied with meals</div>
- <div>And she stood upon her head</div>
- <div>In her little trundle-bed,</div>
- <div class="i1">And then began hooraying with her heels.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Her mother heard the noise,</div>
- <div>And she thought it was the boys</div>
- <div class="i1">A-playing at a combat in the attic;</div>
- <div>But when she climbed the stair,</div>
- <div>And found Jemima there,</div>
- <div class="i1">She took and she did spank her most emphatic.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MR. FINNEY’S TURNIP</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mr. Finney had a turnip</div>
- <div class="i1">And it grew and it grew;</div>
- <div>And it grew behind the barn,</div>
- <div class="i1">And that turnip did no harm.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There it grew and it grew</div>
- <div class="i1">Till it could grow no taller;</div>
- <div>Then his daughter Lizzie picked it</div>
- <div class="i1">And put it in the cellar.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There it lay and it lay</div>
- <div class="i1">Till it began to rot;</div>
- <div>And his daughter Susie took it</div>
- <div class="i1">And put it in the pot.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_668">[668]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And they boiled it and boiled it</div>
- <div class="i1">As long as they were able,</div>
- <div>And then his daughters took it</div>
- <div class="i1">And put it on the table.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mr. Finney and his wife</div>
- <div class="i1">They sat down to sup;</div>
- <div>And they ate and they ate</div>
- <div class="i1">And they ate that turnip up.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>James Thomas Fields, an acknowledged humorist, wrote mostly homely
-narrative wit.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE ALARMED SKIPPER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Many a long, long year ago,</div>
- <div class="i1">Nantucket skippers had a plan</div>
- <div>Of finding out, though “lying low,”</div>
- <div class="i1">How near New York their schooners ran.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They greased the lead before it fell,</div>
- <div class="i1">And then, by sounding through the night,</div>
- <div>Knowing the soil that stuck, so well,</div>
- <div class="i1">They always guessed their reckoning right.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A skipper gray, whose eyes were dim,</div>
- <div class="i1">Could tell, by <i>tasting</i>, just the spot;</div>
- <div>And so below he’d “dowse the glim,”&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">After, of course, his “something hot.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Snug in his berth at eight o’clock</div>
- <div class="i1">This ancient skipper might be found;</div>
- <div>No matter how his craft would rock,</div>
- <div class="i1">He slept,&mdash;for skippers’ naps are sound!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The watch on deck would now and then</div>
- <div class="i1">Run down and wake him, with the lead;</div>
- <div>He’d up, and taste, and tell the men</div>
- <div class="i1">How many miles they went ahead.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_669">[669]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One night ’twas Jotham Marden’s watch,</div>
- <div class="i1">A curious wag,&mdash;the peddler’s son,&mdash;</div>
- <div>And so he mused (the wanton wretch),</div>
- <div class="i1">“To-night I’ll have a grain of fun.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“We’re all a set of stupid fools</div>
- <div class="i1">To think the skipper knows by <i>tasting</i></div>
- <div>What ground he’s on: Nantucket schools</div>
- <div class="i1">Don’t teach such stuff, with all their basting!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And so he took the well-greased lead</div>
- <div class="i1">And rubbed it o’er a box of earth</div>
- <div>That stood on deck,&mdash;a parsnip-bed,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">And then he sought the skipper’s berth.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Where are we now, sir? Please to taste.”</div>
- <div class="i1">The skipper yawned, put out his tongue,</div>
- <div>Then oped his eyes in wondrous haste,</div>
- <div class="i1">And then upon the floor he sprung!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The skipper stormed, and tore his hair,</div>
- <div class="i1">Thrust on his boots, and roared to Marden,</div>
- <div>“<i>Nantucket’s sunk, and here we are</i></div>
- <div class="i1"><i>Right over old Marm Hackett’s garden!</i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>John Godfrey Saxe has been called the American Tom Hood. His verses are
-among our very best humorous poems.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MY FAMILIAR</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Again I hear that creaking step!&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">He’s rapping at the door!&mdash;</div>
- <div>Too well I know the boding sound</div>
- <div class="i1">That ushers in a bore.</div>
- <div>I do not tremble when I meet</div>
- <div class="i1">The stoutest of my foes,</div>
- <div>But heaven defend me from the friend</div>
- <div class="i1">Who comes,&mdash;but never goes!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_670">[670]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He drops into my easy-chair</div>
- <div class="i1">And asks about the news;</div>
- <div>He peers into my manuscript,</div>
- <div class="i1">And gives his candid views;</div>
- <div>He tells me where he likes the line,</div>
- <div class="i1">And where he’s forced to grieve;</div>
- <div>He takes the strangest liberties,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">But never takes his leave!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He reads my daily paper through</div>
- <div class="i1">Before I’ve seen a word;</div>
- <div>He scans the lyric (that I wrote)</div>
- <div class="i1">And thinks it quite absurd;</div>
- <div>He calmly smokes my last cigar,</div>
- <div class="i1">And coolly asks for more;</div>
- <div>He opens everything he sees&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Except the entry door!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He talks about his fragile health,</div>
- <div class="i1">And tells me of his pains;</div>
- <div>He suffers from a score of ills</div>
- <div class="i1">Of which he ne’er complains;</div>
- <div>And how he struggled once with death</div>
- <div class="i1">To keep the fiend at bay;</div>
- <div>On themes like those away he goes&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">But never goes away!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He tells me of the carping words</div>
- <div class="i1">Some shallow critic wrote;</div>
- <div>And every precious paragraph</div>
- <div class="i1">Familiarly can quote;</div>
- <div>He thinks the writer did me wrong;</div>
- <div class="i1">He’d like to run him through!</div>
- <div>He says a thousand pleasant things&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">But never says “Adieu!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Whene’er he comes&mdash;that dreadful man&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Disguise it as I may,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_671">[671]</span></div>
- <div>I know that, like an autumn rain,</div>
- <div class="i1">He’ll last throughout the day.</div>
- <div>In vain I speak of urgent tasks;</div>
- <div class="i1">In vain I scowl and pout;</div>
- <div>A frown is no extinguisher&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">It does not put him out!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I mean to take the knocker off,</div>
- <div class="i1">Put crape upon the door,</div>
- <div>Or hint to John that I am gone</div>
- <div class="i1">To stay a month or more.</div>
- <div>I do not tremble when I meet</div>
- <div class="i1">The stoutest of my foes,</div>
- <div>But Heaven defend me from the friend</div>
- <div class="i1">Who never, never goes!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Henry Wheeler Shaw, creator of the character of Josh Billings, was a
-philosopher and essayist as well as a funny man.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless his work has lived largely because of its amusing
-misspelling, but there is much wisdom to be found in his wit.</p>
-
-<p>The following essays are given only in part.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>TIGHT BOOTS</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">I would jist like to kno who the man waz who fust invented <i>tite
-boots</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He must hav bin a narrow and kontrakted kuss.</p>
-
-<p>If he still lives, i hope he haz repented ov hiz sin, or iz enjoying
-grate agony ov sum kind.</p>
-
-<p>I hay bin in a grate menny tite spots in mi life, but generally could
-manage to make them average; but thare iz no sich thing az making a
-pair of tite boots average.</p>
-
-<p>Enny man who kan wear a pair ov tite boots, and be humble, and
-penitent, and not indulge profane literature, will make a good husband.</p>
-
-<p>Oh! for the pen ov departed Wm. Shakspear, to write an anethema aginst
-tite boots, that would make anshunt Rome<span class="pagenum" id="Page_672">[672]</span> wake up, and howl agin az she
-did once before on a previous ockashun.</p>
-
-<p>Oh! for the strength ov Herkules, to tare into shu strings all the tite
-boots ov creashun, and skatter them tew the 8 winds ov heaven.</p>
-
-<p>Oh! for the buty ov Venus, tew make a bigg foot look hansum without a
-tite boot on it.</p>
-
-<p>Oh! for the payshunce ov Job, the Apostle, to nuss a tite boot and bles
-it, and even pra for one a size smaller and more pinchfull.</p>
-
-<p>Oh! for a pair of boots bigg enuff for the foot ov a mountain.</p>
-
-<p>I have been led into the above assortment ov <i>Oh’s!</i> from having
-in my posseshun, at this moment, a pair ov number nine boots, with a
-pair ov number eleven feet in them.</p>
-
-<p>Mi feet are az uneasy az a dog’s noze the fust time he wears a muzzle.</p>
-
-<p>I think mi feet will eventually choke the boots to deth.</p>
-
-<p>I liv in hopes they will.</p>
-
-<p>I suppozed i had lived long enuff not to be phooled agin in this way,
-but i hav found out that an ounce ov vanity weighs more than a pound ov
-reazon, espeshily when a man mistakes a bigg foot for a small one.</p>
-
-<p>Avoid tite boots, mi friend, az you would the grip of the devil; for
-menny a man haz cought for life a fust rate habit for swareing bi
-encouraging hiz feet to hurt hiz boots.</p>
-
-<p>I hav promised mi two feet, at least a dozen ov times during mi
-checkured life, that they never should be strangled agin, but i find
-them to-day az phull ov pain az the stummuk ake from a suddin attak ov
-tite boots.</p>
-
-<p>But this iz solemly the last pair ov tite boots i will ever wear; i
-will hereafter wear boots az bigg az mi feet, if i have to go barefoot
-to do it.</p>
-
-<p>I am too old and too respektable to be a phool enny more.</p>
-
-<p>Eazy boots iz <i>one</i> of the luxurys ov life, but i forgit what the
-other luxury iz, but i don’t kno az i care, provided i kan git rid ov
-this pair ov tite boots.</p>
-
-<p>Enny man kan hav them for seven dollars, just half what<span class="pagenum" id="Page_673">[673]</span> they kost, and
-if they don’t make his feet ake wuss than an angle worm in hot ashes,
-he needn’t pay for them.</p>
-
-<p>Methuseles iz the only man, that i kan kall to mind now who could hav
-afforded to hav wore tite boots, and enjoyed them, he had a grate deal
-ov waste time tew be miserable in but life now days, iz too short, and
-too full ov aktual bizzness to phool away enny ov it on tite boots.</p>
-
-<p>Tite boots are an insult to enny man’s understanding.</p>
-
-<p>He who wears tite boots will hav too acknowledge the corn.</p>
-
-<p>Tite boots hav no bowells or mersy, their insides are wrath and
-promiskious cussing.</p>
-
-<p>Beware ov tite boots.&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>A HEN</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A hen is a darn phool, they was born so bi natur.</p>
-
-<p>When natur undertakes tew make a phool, she hits the mark the fust time.</p>
-
-<p>Most all the animile kritters hav instinkt, which is wuth more to them
-than reason would be, for instinkt don’t make enny blunders.</p>
-
-<p>If the animiles had reason, they would akt just as ridikilus as we men
-folks do.</p>
-
-<p>But a hen don’t seem tew hav even instinkt, and was made expressly for
-a phool.</p>
-
-<p>I hav seen a hen fly out ov a good warm shelter, on the 15th ov
-January, when the snow was 3 foot high, and lite on the top ov a stun
-wall, and coolly set thare, and freeze tew deth.</p>
-
-<p>Noboddy but a darn phool would do this, unless it was tew save a bet.</p>
-
-<p>I hav saw a human being do similar things, but they did it tew win a
-bet.</p>
-
-<p>To save a bet, is self-preservashun, and self-preservashun, is the fust
-law ov natur, so sez Blakstone, and he is the best judge ov law now
-living.</p>
-
-<p>If i couldn’t be Josh Billings, i would like, next in suit tew be
-Blakstone, and compoze sum law.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_674">[674]</span></p>
-
-<p>Not so far removed from the Josh Billings type of humor is the work
-of James Russell Lowell. His well known <i>Biglow Papers</i> exploit
-in perfection the back country New England politics as well as native
-character.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>WHAT MR. ROBINSON THINKS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Guvener B. is a sensible man;</div>
- <div class="i1">He stays to his home an’ looks arter his folks;</div>
- <div>He draws his furrer ez straight ez he can,</div>
- <div class="i1">An’ into nobody’s tater-patch pokes;</div>
- <div class="i6h">But John P.</div>
- <div class="i6h">Robinson he</div>
- <div>Sez he wunt vote fer Guvener B.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My ain’t it terrible? Wut shall we du?</div>
- <div class="i1">We can’t never choose him, o’ course,&mdash;thet’s flat;</div>
- <div>Guess we shall hev to come round (don’t you?)</div>
- <div class="i1">An’ go in fer thunder an’ guns, an’ all that;</div>
- <div class="i6h">Fer John P.</div>
- <div class="i6h">Robinson he</div>
- <div>Sez he wunt vote fer Guvener B.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Gineral C. is a dreffle smart man:</div>
- <div class="i1">He’s ben on all sides thet give places or pelf;</div>
- <div>But consistency still was a part of his plan,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">He’s ben true to <i>one</i> party,&mdash;an’ thet is himself;&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i6h">So John P.</div>
- <div class="i6h">Robinson he</div>
- <div>Sez he shall vote fer Gineral C.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Gineral C. he goes in fer the war;</div>
- <div class="i1">He don’t vally principle more’n an old cud;</div>
- <div>Wut did God make us raytional creeturs fer,</div>
- <div class="i1">But glory an’ gunpowder, plunder an’ blood?</div>
- <div class="i6h">So John P.</div>
- <div class="i6h">Robinson he</div>
- <div>Sez he shall vote fer Gineral C.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_675">[675]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>We were gettin’ on nicely up here to our village,</div>
- <div class="i1">With good old idees o’ wut’s right an’ wut ain’t,</div>
- <div>We kind o’ thought Christ went agin’ war an’ pillage,</div>
- <div class="i1">An’ thet eppyletts worn’t the best mark of a saint;</div>
- <div class="i6h">But John P.</div>
- <div class="i6h">Robinson he</div>
- <div>Sez this kind o’ thing’s an exploded idee.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The side of our country must ollers be took,</div>
- <div class="i1">An’ Presidunt Polk, you know, <i>he</i> is our country,</div>
- <div>An’ the angel thet writes all our sins in a book</div>
- <div class="i1">Puts the <i>debit</i> to him, an’ to us the <i>per contry</i>!</div>
- <div class="i6h">An’ John P.</div>
- <div class="i6h">Robinson he</div>
- <div>Sez this is his view o’ the thing to a T.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Parson Wilbur he calls all these argimunts lies;</div>
- <div class="i1">Sez they’re nothin’ on airth but jest <i>fee</i>, <i>faw</i>, <i>fum</i>;</div>
- <div>An’ thet all this big talk of our destinies</div>
- <div class="i1">Is half on it ign’ance, an’ t’other half rum;</div>
- <div class="i6h">But John P.</div>
- <div class="i6h">Robinson he</div>
- <div>Sez it ain’t no sech thing; an’, of course, so must we.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Parson Wilbur sez <i>he</i> never heerd in his life</div>
- <div class="i1">Thet th’ Apostles rigged out in their swaller-tail coats,</div>
- <div>An’ marched round in front of a drum an’ a fife,</div>
- <div class="i1">To git some on ’em office, an’ some on ’em votes;</div>
- <div class="i6h">But John P.</div>
- <div class="i6h">Robinson he</div>
- <div>Sez they didn’t know everythin’ down in Judee.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Wall, it’s a marcy we’ve gut folks to tell us</div>
- <div class="i1">The rights an’ the wrongs o’ these matters, I vow,&mdash;</div>
- <div>God sends country lawyers, an’ other wise fellers,</div>
- <div class="i1">To start the world’s team wen it gits in a slough;</div>
- <div class="i6h">Fer John P.</div>
- <div class="i6h">Robinson he</div>
- <div>Sez the world’ll go right, ef he hollers out Gee!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_676">[676]</span></p>
-
-<p>Phoebe Cary, though a hymn writer of repute, did some extremely clever
-parodies. This work of hers is little known.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>I REMEMBER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I remember, I remember,</div>
- <div class="i1">The house where I was wed,</div>
- <div>And the little room from which that night</div>
- <div class="i1">My smiling bride was led.</div>
- <div>She didn’t come a wink too soon,</div>
- <div class="i1">Nor make too long a stay;</div>
- <div>But now I often wish her folks</div>
- <div class="i1">Had kept the girl away!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I remember, I remember,</div>
- <div class="i1">Her dresses, red and white,</div>
- <div>Her bonnets and her caps and cloaks,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">They cost an awful sight!</div>
- <div>The “corner lot” on which I built,</div>
- <div class="i1">And where my brother met</div>
- <div>At first my wife, one washing-day,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">That man is single yet!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I remember, I remember,</div>
- <div class="i1">Where I was used to court,</div>
- <div>And thought that all of married life</div>
- <div class="i1">Was just such pleasant sport:&mdash;</div>
- <div>My spirit flew in feathers then,</div>
- <div class="i1">No care was on my brow;</div>
- <div>I scarce could wait to shut the gate,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">I’m not so anxious now!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I remember, I remember,</div>
- <div class="i1">My dear one’s smile and sigh;</div>
- <div>I used to think her tender heart</div>
- <div class="i1">Was close against the sky.</div>
- <div>It was a childish ignorance,</div>
- <div class="i1">But now it soothes me not</div>
- <div>To know I’m farther off from Heaven</div>
- <div class="i1">Than when she wasn’t got!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_677">[677]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>“THERE’S A BOWER OF BEAN-VINES”</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There’s a bower of bean-vines in Benjamin’s yard,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the cabbages grow round it, planted for greens;</div>
- <div>In the time of my childhood ’twas terribly hard</div>
- <div class="i1">To bend down the bean-poles, and pick off the beans.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>That bower and its products I never forget,</div>
- <div class="i1">But oft, when my landlady presses me hard,</div>
- <div>I think, are the cabbages growing there yet,</div>
- <div class="i1">Are the bean-vines still bearing in Benjamin’s yard?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>No, the bean-vines soon withered that once used to wave,</div>
- <div class="i1">But some beans had been gathered, the last that hung on;</div>
- <div>And a soup was distilled in a kettle, that gave</div>
- <div class="i1">All the fragrance of summer when summer was gone.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thus memory draws from delight, ere it dies,</div>
- <div class="i1">An essence that breathes of it awfully hard;</div>
- <div>As thus good to my taste as ’twas then to my eyes,</div>
- <div class="i1">Is that bower of bean-vines in Benjamin’s yard.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>JACOB</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He dwelt among “Apartments let,”</div>
- <div class="i1">About five stories high;</div>
- <div>A man, I thought, that none would get,</div>
- <div class="i1">And very few would try.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A boulder, by a larger stone</div>
- <div class="i1">Half hidden in the mud,</div>
- <div>Fair as a man when only one</div>
- <div class="i1">Is in the neighborhood.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He lived unknown, and few could tell</div>
- <div class="i1">When Jacob was not free;</div>
- <div>But he has got a wife&mdash;and O!</div>
- <div class="i1">The difference to me!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_678">[678]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>REUBEN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>That very time I saw, (but thou couldst not),</div>
- <div>Walking between the garden and the barn,</div>
- <div>Reuben, all armed; a certain aim he took</div>
- <div>At a young chicken, standing by a post,</div>
- <div>And loosed his bullet smartly from his gun,</div>
- <div>As he would kill a hundred thousand hens.</div>
- <div>But I might see young Reuben’s fiery shot</div>
- <div>Lodged in the chaste board of the garden fence,</div>
- <div>And the domesticated fowl passed on,</div>
- <div>In henly meditation, bullet free.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Edward Everett Hale, George William Curtis, Richard Grant White and
-Donald G. Mitchell (Ik Marvel) wrote about this time, but their prose
-articles are too long to quote in full and not adapted to condensation.</p>
-
-<p>Again the newspaper writers forge to the front and in George Horatio
-Derby we find “the Father of” the new school of American humor. His
-sketches, over the name of John Phoenix, began to appear about the
-middle of the Nineteenth century and were later collected under the
-titles of Phoenixiana and Squibob Papers.</p>
-
-<p>A fragment of one is given.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The dentist went to work, and in three days he invented an instrument
-which he was confident would pull anything. It was a combination of the
-lever, pulley, wheel and axle, inclined plane, wedge, and screw. The
-castings were made, and the machine put up in the office, over an iron
-chair rendered perfectly stationary by iron rods going down into the
-foundations of the granite building. In a week old Byles returned; he
-was clamped into the iron chair, the forceps connected with the machine
-attached firmly to the tooth, and Tushmaker, stationing himself in the
-rear, took hold of a lever four feet in length. He turned it slightly.
-Old Byles gave a groan and lifted his right leg. Another turn, another
-groan, and up went the leg again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_679">[679]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What do you raise your leg for?” asked the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t help it,” said the patient.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” rejoined Tushmaker, “that tooth is bound to come out now.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned the lever clear round with a sudden jerk, and snapped old
-Byles’ head clean and clear from his shoulders, leaving a space of four
-inches between the severed parts!</p>
-
-<p>They had a <i>post-mortem</i> examination&mdash;the roots of the tooth were
-found extending down the right side, through the right leg, and turning
-up in two prongs under the sole of the right foot!</p>
-
-<p>“No wonder,” said Tushmaker, “he raised his right leg.”</p>
-
-<p>The jury thought so, too, but they found the roots much decayed; and
-five surgeons swearing that mortification would have ensued in a few
-months, Tushmaker was clear on a verdict of “justifiable homicide.”</p>
-
-<p>He was a little shy of that instrument for some time afterward; but one
-day an old lady, feeble and flaccid, came in to have a tooth drawn, and
-thinking it would come out very easy Tushmaker concluded, just by way
-of variety, to try the machine. He did so, and at the first turn drew
-the old lady’s skeleton completely and entirely from her body, leaving
-her a mass of quivering jelly in her chair! Tushmaker took her home in
-a pillow-case.</p>
-
-<p>The woman lived-seven years after that, and they called her the
-“India-Rubber Woman.” She had suffered terribly with the rheumatism,
-but after this occurrence never had a pain in her bones. The dentist
-kept them in a glass case. After this, the machine was sold to the
-contract or of the Boston Custom-House, and it was found that a child
-of three years of age could, by a single turn of the screw, raise a
-stone weighing twenty-three tons. Smaller ones were made on the same
-principle and sold to the keepers of hotels and restaurants. They were
-used for boning turkeys. There is no moral to this story whatever,
-and it is possible that the circumstances may have become slightly
-exaggerated. Of course, there can be no doubt of the truth of the main
-incidents.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_680">[680]</span></p>
-
-<p>Charles Godfrey Leland, a humorist of Philadelphia, wrote almost
-entirely in a broken German dialect. His Hans Breitmann ballads are
-still among the famous examples of American humor.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>BALLAD</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Der noble Ritter Hugo</div>
- <div class="i1">Von Schwillensaufenstein</div>
- <div>Rode out mit shpeer and helmet,</div>
- <div class="i1">Und he coom to de panks of de Rhine.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Und oop dere rose a meer maid,</div>
- <div class="i1">Vod hadn’t got nodings on,</div>
- <div>Und she say, “Oh, Ritter Hugo,</div>
- <div class="i1">Vhere you goes mit yourself alone?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Und he says, “I rides in de creenwood</div>
- <div class="i1">Mit helmet und mit shpeer,</div>
- <div>Till I cooms into em Gasthaus,</div>
- <div class="i1">Und dere I trinks some beer.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Und den outshpoke de maiden</div>
- <div class="i1">Vot hadn’t got nodings on:</div>
- <div>“I ton’t dink mooch of beoplesh</div>
- <div class="i1">Dat goes mit demselfs alone.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“You’d petter coom down in de wasser,</div>
- <div class="i1">Vere dere’s heaps of dings to see,</div>
- <div>Und have a shplendid tinner</div>
- <div class="i1">Und drafel along mit me.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Dere you sees de fisch a-schwimmin,</div>
- <div class="i1">Und you catches dem efery one”&mdash;</div>
- <div>So sang dis wasser maiden</div>
- <div class="i1">Vot hadn’t got nodings on.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Dere ish drunks all full mit money</div>
- <div class="i1">In ships dat vent down of old;</div>
- <div>Und you helpsh yourself, by dunder!</div>
- <div class="i1">To shimmerin crowns of gold.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_681">[681]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Shoost look at dese shpoons und vatches!</div>
- <div class="i1">Shoost see dese diamant rings!</div>
- <div>Coom down und full your bockets,</div>
- <div class="i1">Und I’ll giss you like averydings.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Vot you vantsh mit your schnapps und lager?</div>
- <div class="i1">Coom down into der Rhine!</div>
- <div>Der ish pottles der Kaiser Charlemagne</div>
- <div class="i1">Vonce filled mit gold-red wine!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>Dat</i> fetched him&mdash;he shtood all shpellpound;</div>
- <div class="i1">She pooled his coat-tails down,</div>
- <div>She drawed him oonder der wasser,</div>
- <div class="i1">De maiden mit nodings on.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>William Allen Butler is remembered chiefly by his long humorous poem of
-Miss Flora M’Flimsey, or, as it is entitled, <i>Nothing To Wear</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Charles Graham Halpine wrote in an Irish brogue the adventures of
-Private Miles O’Reilly.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>John T. Trowbridge and Charles Dudley Warner are among the famous
-Nineteenth Century writers but their works are not adapted to quotation.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Which brings us to Mark Twain.</p>
-
-<p>Samuel Langhorne Clemens is too well known both by his works and by his
-life to need any word of comment. His whole career, as printer, pilot,
-lecturer and writer is an open and conned book to all.</p>
-
-<p>Difficult indeed it is to quote from his volumes of fun, but we append
-a short extract from <i>The Jumping Frog of Calaveras County</i>.</p>
-
-<p>... Smiley was monstrous proud of his frog, and well he might be, for
-fellers that had traveled and been everywheres all said he laid over
-any frog that ever <i>they</i> see.</p>
-
-<p>Well, Smiley kep’ the beast in a little lattice box, and he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_682">[682]</span> used to
-fetch him down-town sometimes and lay for a bet. One day a feller&mdash;a
-stranger in the camp, he was&mdash;come acrost him with his box, and says:</p>
-
-<p>“What might it be that you’ve got in the box?”</p>
-
-<p>And Smiley says, sorter indifferent-like, “It might be a parrot, or it
-might be a canary, maybe, but it ain’t&mdash;it’s only just a frog.”</p>
-
-<p>And the feller took it, and looked at it careful, and turned it round
-this way and that, and says, “H’m&mdash;so ’tis. Well what’s <i>he</i> good
-for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” Smiley says, easy and careless, “he’s good enough for
-<i>one</i> thing, I should judge&mdash;he can outjump any frog in Calaveras
-County.”</p>
-
-<p>The feller took the box again, and took another long, particular look,
-and give it back to Smiley, and says, very deliberate, “Well,” he says,
-“I don’t see no p’ints about that frog that’s any better’n any other
-frog.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you don’t,” Smiley says. “Maybe you understand frogs and maybe
-you don’t understand ’em; maybe you’ve had experience, and maybe you
-ain’t only a amature, as it were. Anyways, I’ve got <i>my</i> opinion
-and I’ll resk forty dollars that he can outjump any frog in Calaveras
-County.”</p>
-
-<p>And the feller studied a minute, and then says, kinder sad like, “Well,
-I’m only a stranger here, and I ain’t got no frog; but if I had a frog
-I’d bet you.”</p>
-
-<p>And then Smiley says, “That’s all right&mdash;that’s all right&mdash;if you’ll
-hold my box a minute I’ll go and get you a frog.” And so the feller
-took the box, and put up his forty dollars along with Smiley’s, and set
-down to wait.</p>
-
-<p>So he set there a good while thinking and thinking to himself, and
-then he got the frog out and prized his mouth open and took a teaspoon
-and filled him full of quail shot&mdash;filled him pretty near up to his
-chin&mdash;and set him on the floor. Smiley he went to the swamp and slopped
-around in the mud for a long time, and finally he ketched a frog, and
-fetched him in, and give him to this feller, and says:</p>
-
-<p>“Now, if you’re ready, set him alongside of Dan’l, with his forepaws
-just even with Dan’l’s, and I’ll give the word.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_683">[683]</span> Then he says,
-“One&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;<i>git</i>.” and him and the feller touched up the
-frogs from behind, and the new frog hopped off lively, but Dan’l give a
-heave, and hysted up his shoulders&mdash;so&mdash;like a Frenchman, but it warn’t
-no use&mdash;he couldn’t budge; he was planted as solid as a church, and he
-couldn’t no more stir than if he was anchored out. Smiley was a good
-deal surprised, and he was disgusted, too, but he didn’t have no idea
-what the matter was, of course.</p>
-
-<p>The feller took the money and started away; and when he was going out
-at the door, he sorter jerked his thumb over his shoulder&mdash;so&mdash;at
-Dan’l, and says again, very deliberate, “Well,” he says, “<i>I</i>
-don’t see no p’ints about that frog that’s any better’n any other frog.”</p>
-
-<p>Smiley he stood scratching his head and looking down at Dan’l a long
-time, and at last he says, “I do wonder what in the nation that frog
-throw’d off for&mdash;I wonder if there ain’t something the matter with
-him&mdash;e ’pears to look mighty baggy, somehow.” And he ketched Dan’l by
-the nap of the neck, and hefted him, and says, “Why blame my cats if he
-don’t weight five pound!” and turned him upside down and he belched out
-a double handful of shot. And then he see how it was, and he was the
-maddest man&mdash;he set the frog down and took out after that feller, but
-he never ketched him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>James Bayard Taylor and Thomas Bailey Aldrich, friends and congenial
-spirits, both despised American Dialect poetry.</p>
-
-<p>Their own work shows a facile wit and graceful fancy, but, with Edmund
-Clarence Stedman, they must be classed as writers of light verse rather
-than as humorists.</p>
-
-<p>Taylor was good at parody, and in his <i>Echo Club</i>, thus burlesques
-the style of Aldrich.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>PALABRAS GRANDIOSAS</i><br />
-<span class="subhed"><i>After T&mdash;&mdash; B&mdash;&mdash; A&mdash;&mdash;</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I lay i’ the bosom of the sun,</div>
- <div>Under the roses dappled and dun.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_684">[684]</span></div>
- <div>I thought of the Sultan Gingerbeer,</div>
- <div>In his palace beside the Bendemeer,</div>
- <div>With his Afghan guards and his eunuchs blind,</div>
- <div>And the harem that stretched for a league behind.</div>
- <div>The tulips bent i’ the summer breeze,</div>
- <div>Under the broad chrysanthemum trees,</div>
- <div>And the minstrel, playing his culverin,</div>
- <div>Made for mine ears a merry din.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If I were the Sultan, and he were I,</div>
- <div>Here i’ the grass he should loafing lie,</div>
- <div>And I should bestride my zebra steed,</div>
- <div>And the ride of the hunt of the centipede;</div>
- <div>While the pet of the harem, Dandeline,</div>
- <div>Should fill me a crystal bucket of wine,</div>
- <div>And the kislar aga, Up-to-Snuff,</div>
- <div>Should wipe my mouth when I sighed “Enough!”</div>
- <div>And the gay court-poet, Fearfulbore,</div>
- <div>Should sit in the hall when the hunt was o’er,</div>
- <div>And chant me songs of silvery tone,</div>
- <div>Not from Hafiz, but&mdash;mine own!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ah, wee sweet love, beside me here,</div>
- <div>I am not the Sultan Gingerbeer,</div>
- <div>Nor you the odalisque Dandeline,</div>
- <div>Yet I am yourn, and you are mine!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>David Ross Locke, who wrote over the name of Petroleum V. Nasby, was a
-humorist of the newspapers. He achieved no success until he began to
-misspell his words, when he at once leaped into popularity.</p>
-
-<p>But the Prince of Misspellers, excepting always Josh Billings, was
-Artemus Ward, the pseudonym of Charles Farrar Browne.</p>
-
-<p>The trick of misspelling and the use of excessive exaggeration were his
-stock in trade, added to a certain plaintiveness and abounding good
-humor.</p>
-
-<p>Browne was the only one of this group of American humorists,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_685">[685]</span> whose
-work was read in England, and he lectured over there with pronounced
-success.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>ON “FORTS”</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Every man has got a Fort. It’s sum men’s fort to do one thing, and
-some other men’s fort to do another, while there is numeris shiftliss
-critters goin’ round loose whose fort is not to do nothin’.</p>
-
-<p>Shakspeer rote good plase, but he wouldn’t hav succeeded as a
-Washington coorespondent of a New York daily paper. He lacked the
-rekesit fancy and imagginashun.</p>
-
-<p>That’s so!</p>
-
-<p>Old George Washington’s Fort was not to hev eny public man of the
-present day resemble him to eny alarmin extent. Whare bowts can
-George’s ekal be found? I ask, &amp; boldly answer no whares, or any whare
-else.</p>
-
-<p>Old man Townsin’s Fort was to maik Sassyperiller. “Goy to the world!
-anuther life saived!” (Cotashun from Townsin’s advertisement.)</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus Field’s Fort is to lay a sub-machine telegraf under the boundin
-billers of the Oshun, and then have it Bust.</p>
-
-<p>Spaldin’s Fort is to maik Prepared Gloo, which mends every thing.
-Wonder ef it will mend a sinner’s wickid waze. (Impromptoo goak.)</p>
-
-<p>Zoary’s Fort is to be a femaile circus feller.</p>
-
-<p>My Fort is the grate moral show bizniss &amp; ritin choice famerly
-literatoor for the noospapers. That’s what’s the matter with <i>me</i>.</p>
-
-<p>&amp;., &amp;., &amp;. So I mite go on to a indefinit extent.</p>
-
-<p>Twict I’ve endevered to do things which thay wasn’t my Fort. The fust
-time was when I undertuk to lick a owdashus cuss who cut a hole in my
-tent &amp; krawld threw. Sez I, “My jentle Sir, go out or I shall fall on
-to you putty hevy.” Sez he, “Wade in, Old wax figgers,” whereupon I
-went for him, but he cawt me powerful on the bed &amp; knockt me threw the
-tent into a cow pastur. He pursood the attach &amp; flung me into a mud
-puddle. As I arose &amp; rung out my drencht garmints I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_686">[686]</span> koncluded fitin
-wasn’t my Fort. Ile now rize the kurtin upon Seen 2nd: It is rarely
-seldum that I seek consolation in the Flowin Bole. But in a certain
-town in Injianny in the Faul of 18&mdash;, my orgin grinder got sick with
-the fever &amp; died. I never felt so ashamed in my life, &amp; I thowt I’d
-hist in a few swallers of suthin strengthnin. Konsequents was I histid
-in so much I dident zackly know whare bowts I was. I turned my livin
-wild beasts of Pray loose into the streets and spilt all my wax wurks.
-I then bet I cood play hoss. So I hitched myself to a Kanawl bote,
-there bein two other hosses hicht on also, one behind and anuther ahead
-of me. The driver hollerd for us to git up, and we did. But the hosses
-bein onused to sich a arrangemunt begun to kick &amp; squeal and rair up.
-Konsequents was I fownd myself in the Kanawl with the other hosses,
-kickin &amp; yellin like a tribe of Cusscaroorus savvijis. I was rescood, &amp;
-as I was bein carrid to the tavern on a hemlock Bored I sed in a feeble
-voise, “Boys, playin hoss isn’t my Fort.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Morul.</i>&mdash;Never don’t do nothin which isn’t your Fort, for ef you
-do you’ll find yourself splashin round in the Kanawl, figgeratively
-speakin.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Frank R. Stockton was a nobleman among the humorists.</p>
-
-<p>His quiet and often subtle humor, his delightful style and his
-unique originality made all his stories a joy and some masterpieces.
-No quotations can be given, for any Stockton story must be read in
-its entirety. <i>The Lady and the Tiger</i> is doubtless the most
-celebrated one, but many others are even more clever and unusual.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Francis Bret Harte, famed for his short stories, also wrote humorous
-verse. <i>The Heathen Chinee</i> is a byword in all households, and
-<i>Truthful James</i> is nearly as well known.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE SOCIETY UPON THE STANISLAUS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">I reside at Table Mountain, and my name is Truthful James;</div>
- <div>I am not up to small deceit, or any sinful games;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_687">[687]</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And I’ll tell in simple language what I know about the row</div>
- <div>That broke up our Society upon the Stanislow.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But first I would remark, that it is not a proper plan</div>
- <div>For any scientific gent to whale his fellow man,</div>
- <div>And, if a member don’t agree with his peculiar whim,</div>
- <div>To lay for that same member for to “put a head” on him.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now, nothing could be finer or more beautiful to see</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Than the first six months’ proceedings of that same society,</div>
- <div>Till Brown of Calaveras brought a lot of fossil bones</div>
- <div>That he found within a tunnel near the tenement of Jones.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then Brown he read a paper, and he reconstructed there,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">From those same bones an animal that was extremely rare,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And Jones then asked the chair for a suspension of the rules</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Till he could prove that those same bones was one of his lost mules.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Then Brown he smiled a bitter smile, and said he was at fault;</div>
- <div>It seemed he had been trespassing on Jones’s family vault</div>
- <div>He was a most sarcastic man, this quiet Mr. Brown,</div>
- <div>And on several occasions he had cleaned out the town.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now, I hold it is not decent for a scientific gent</div>
- <div>To say another is an ass&mdash;at least, to all intent;</div>
- <div>Nor should the individual who happens to be meant</div>
- <div>Reply by heaving rocks at him to any great extent.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Then Abner Dean of Angel’s raised a point of order&mdash;when</div>
- <div>A chunk of old red sandstone took him in the abdomen,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And he smiled a kind of sickly smile, and curled up on the floor,</div>
- <div>And the subsequent proceedings interested him no more.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For, in less time than I write it, every member did engage</div>
- <div>In a warfare with the remnants of a paleozoic age;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_688">[688]</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And the way they heaved those fossils in their anger was a sin,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Till the skull of an old mammoth caved the head of Thompson in.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And this is all I have to say of these improper games,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">For I live at Table Mountain, and my name is Truthful James;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And I’ve told in simple language what I know about the row</div>
- <div>That broke up our Society upon the Stanislow.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TO THE PLIOCENE SKULL</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Speak, O man less recent!</div>
- <div class="i3">Fragmentary fossil!</div>
- <div>Primal pioneer of pliocene formation,</div>
- <div>Hid in lowest drifts below the earliest stratum</div>
- <div class="i3">Of volcanic tufa!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Older than the beasts, the oldest Palæotherium;</div>
- <div>Older than the trees, the oldest Cryptogami;</div>
- <div>Older than the hills, those infantile eruptions</div>
- <div class="i3">Of earth’s epidermis!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Eo&mdash;Mio&mdash;Plio&mdash;Whatsoe’er the ’cene’ was</div>
- <div>That those vacant sockets filled with awe and wonder&mdash;</div>
- <div>Whether shores Devonian or Silurian beaches&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i3">Tell us thy strange story!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Or has the professor slightly antedated</div>
- <div>By some thousand years thy advent on this planet,</div>
- <div>Giving thee an air that’s somewhat better fitted</div>
- <div class="i3">For cold-blooded creatures?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Wert thou true spectator of that mighty forest</div>
- <div>When above thy head the stately Sigillaria</div>
- <div>Reared its columned trunks in that remote and distant</div>
- <div class="i3">Carboniferous epoch?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Tell us of that scene&mdash;the dim and watery woodland</div>
- <div>Songless, silent, hushed, with never bird or insect;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_689">[689]</span></div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Veiled with spreading fronds and screened with tall clubmosses,</div>
- <div class="i3">Lycopodiacea,</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>When beside thee walked the solemn Plesiosaurus,</div>
- <div>And around thee crept the festive Ichthyosaurus,</div>
- <div>While from time to time above thee flew and circled</div>
- <div class="i3">Cheerful Pterodactyls.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Tell us of thy food&mdash;those half-marine refections,</div>
- <div>Crinoids on the shell and brachipods <i>au naturel</i>&mdash;</div>
- <div>Cuttle-fish to which the <i>pieuvre</i> of Victor Hugo</div>
- <div class="i3">Seems a periwinkle.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Speak, thou awful vestige of the earth’s creation,</div>
- <div>Solitary fragment of remains organic!</div>
- <div>Tell the wondrous secret of thy past existence&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i3">Speak! thou oldest primate!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Even as I gazed, a thrill of the maxilla,</div>
- <div>And a lateral movement of the condyloid process,</div>
- <div>With post-pliocene sounds of healthy mastication,</div>
- <div class="i3">Ground the teeth together.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And, from that imperfect dental exhibition,</div>
- <div>Stained with expressed juices of the weed Nicotian,</div>
- <div>Came these hollow accents, blent with softer murmurs</div>
- <div class="i3">Of expectoration:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Which my name is Bowers, and my crust was busted</div>
- <div>Falling down a shaft in Calaveras county,</div>
- <div>But I’d take it kindly if you’d send the pieces</div>
- <div class="i3">Home to old Missouri!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Pioneering in the West marked a distinct epoch in American humor. Bret
-Harte owed his meteoric success largely to the fact of his utilizing
-the background of the Golden West. And<span class="pagenum" id="Page_690">[690]</span> so did Joaquin Miller, John Hay
-and Edward Rowland Sill.</p>
-
-<p>The Pike County Ballads of John Hay were national favorites.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>LITTLE BREECHES</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I don’t go much on religion,</div>
- <div class="i1">I never ain’t had no show;</div>
- <div>But I’ve got a middlin’ tight grip, sir,</div>
- <div class="i1">On the handful o’ things I know.</div>
- <div>I don’t pan out on the prophets</div>
- <div class="i1">And free-will and that sort of thing&mdash;</div>
- <div>But I b’lieve in God and the angels,</div>
- <div class="i1">Ever sence one night last spring.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I come into town with some turnips,</div>
- <div class="i1">And my little Gabe come along&mdash;</div>
- <div>No four-year-old in the county</div>
- <div class="i1">Could beat him for pretty and strong,</div>
- <div>Peart and chipper and sassy,</div>
- <div class="i1">Always ready to swear and fight&mdash;</div>
- <div>And I’d larnt him to chaw terbacker</div>
- <div class="i1">Jest to keep his milk-teeth white.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The snow come down like a blanket</div>
- <div class="i1">As I passed by Taggart’s store;</div>
- <div>I went in for a jug of molasses</div>
- <div class="i1">And left the team at the door.</div>
- <div>They scared at something and started&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">I heard one little squall,</div>
- <div>And hell-to-split over the prairie</div>
- <div class="i1">Went team, Little Breeches and all.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Hell-to-split over the prairie!</div>
- <div class="i1">I was almost froze with skeer;</div>
- <div>But we rousted up some torches,</div>
- <div class="i1">And sarched for ’em far and near.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_691">[691]</span></div>
- <div>At last we struck horses and wagon,</div>
- <div class="i1">Snowed under a soft white mound,</div>
- <div>Upsot, dead beat&mdash;but of little Gabe</div>
- <div class="i1">Nor hide nor hair was found.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And here all hope soured on me,</div>
- <div class="i1">Of my fellow-critter’s aid&mdash;</div>
- <div>I jest flopped down on my marrow-bones,</div>
- <div class="i1">Crotch-deep in the snow, and prayed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing1">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>By this, the torches was played out,</div>
- <div class="i1">And me and Isrul Parr</div>
- <div>Went off for some wood to a sheepfold</div>
- <div class="i1">That he said was somewhar thar.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>We found it at last, and a little shed</div>
- <div class="i1">Where they shut up the lambs at night.</div>
- <div>We looked in and seen them huddled thar,</div>
- <div class="i1">So warm and sleepy and white;</div>
- <div>And THAR sot Little Breeches, and chirped,</div>
- <div class="i1">As peart as ever you see:</div>
- <div>“I want a chaw of terbacker,</div>
- <div class="i1">And that’s what’s the matter of me.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>How did he git thar? Angels.</div>
- <div class="i1">He could never have walked in that storm;</div>
- <div>They jest scooped down and toted him</div>
- <div class="i1">To whar it was safe and warm.</div>
- <div>And I think that saving a little child,</div>
- <div class="i1">And bringing him to his own,</div>
- <div>Is a derned sight better business</div>
- <div class="i1">Then loafing around The Throne.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Joaquin Miller, whose true name was Cincinnatus Hiner Miller, was
-called the Poet of the Sierras.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_692">[692]</span></p>
-
-<p>He seldom wrote in humorous vein, but some of his verse must fall into
-that category.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
-<h4><i>THAT GENTLE MAN FROM BOSTON TOWN</i><br />
-<span class="subhed2">AN IDYL OF OREGON</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Two webfoot brothers loved a fair</div>
- <div class="i1">Young lady, rich and good to see;</div>
- <div>And oh, her black abundant hair!</div>
- <div class="i1">And oh, her wondrous witchery!</div>
- <div>Her father kept a cattle farm,</div>
- <div>These brothers kept her safe from harm:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>From harm of cattle on the hill;</div>
- <div class="i1">From thick-necked bulls loud bellowing</div>
- <div>The livelong morning, loud and shrill,</div>
- <div class="i1">And lashing sides like anything;</div>
- <div>From roaring bulls that tossed the sand</div>
- <div>And pawed the lilies from the land.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There came a third young man. He came</div>
- <div class="i1">From far and famous Boston town.</div>
- <div>He was not handsome, was not “game,”</div>
- <div class="i1">But he could “cook a goose” as brown</div>
- <div>As any man that set foot on</div>
- <div>The sunlit shores of Oregon.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>This Boston man he taught the school,</div>
- <div class="i1">Taught gentleness and love alway,</div>
- <div>Said love and kindness, as a rule,</div>
- <div class="i1">Would ultimately “make it pay.”</div>
- <div>He was so gentle, kind, that he</div>
- <div>Could make a noun and verb agree.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So when one day the brothers grew</div>
- <div class="i1">All jealous and did strip to fight,</div>
- <div>He gently stood between the two,</div>
- <div class="i1">And meekly told them ’twas not right.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_693">[693]</span></div>
- <div>“I have a higher, better plan,”</div>
- <div>Outspake this gentle Boston man.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“My plan is this: Forget this fray</div>
- <div class="i1">About that lily hand of hers;</div>
- <div>Go take your guns and hunt all day</div>
- <div class="i1">High up yon lofty hill of firs,</div>
- <div>And while you hunt, my loving doves,</div>
- <div>Why, I will learn which one she loves.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The brothers sat the windy hill,</div>
- <div class="i1">Their hair shone yellow, like spun gold,</div>
- <div>Their rifles crossed their laps, but still</div>
- <div class="i1">They sat and sighed and shook with cold.</div>
- <div>Their hearts lay bleeding far below;</div>
- <div>Above them gleamed white peaks of snow.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Their hounds lay couching, slim and neat;</div>
- <div class="i1">A spotted circle in the grass.</div>
- <div>The valley lay beneath their feet;</div>
- <div class="i1">They heard the wide-winged eagles pass.</div>
- <div>The eagles cleft the clouds above;</div>
- <div>Yet what could they but sigh and love?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“If I could die,” the elder sighed,</div>
- <div class="i1">“My dear young brother here might wed.”</div>
- <div>“Oh, would to Heaven I had died!”</div>
- <div class="i1">The younger sighed, with bended head.</div>
- <div>Then each looked each full in the face</div>
- <div>And each sprang up and stood in place.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“If I could die,”&mdash;the elder spake,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">“Die by your hand, the world would say</div>
- <div>’Twas accident;&mdash;and for her sake,</div>
- <div class="i1">Dear brother, be it so, I pray.”</div>
- <div>“Not that!” the younger nobly said;</div>
- <div>Then tossed his gun and turned his head.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_694">[694]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And fifty paces back he paced!</div>
- <div class="i1">And as he paced he drew the ball;</div>
- <div>Then sudden stopped and wheeled and faced</div>
- <div class="i1">His brother to the death and fall!</div>
- <div>Two shots rang wild upon the air!</div>
- <div>But lo! the two stood harmless there!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>An eagle poised high in the air;</div>
- <div class="i1">Far, far below the bellowing</div>
- <div>Of bullocks ceased, and everywhere</div>
- <div class="i1">Vast silence sat all questioning.</div>
- <div>The spotted hounds ran circling round</div>
- <div>Their red, wet noses to the ground.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And now each brother came to know</div>
- <div class="i1">That each had drawn the deadly ball;</div>
- <div>And for that fair girl far below</div>
- <div class="i1">Had sought in vain to silent fall.</div>
- <div>And then the two did gladly “shake,”</div>
- <div>And thus the elder bravely spake:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Now let us run right hastily</div>
- <div class="i1">And tell the kind schoolmaster all!</div>
- <div>Yea! yea! and if she choose not me,</div>
- <div class="i1">But all on you her favors fall,</div>
- <div>This valiant scene, till all life ends,</div>
- <div>Dear brother, binds us best of friends.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The hounds sped down, a spotted line,</div>
- <div class="i1">The bulls in tall, abundant grass,</div>
- <div>Shook back their horns from bloom and vine,</div>
- <div class="i1">And trumpeted to see them pass&mdash;</div>
- <div>They loved so good, they loved so true,</div>
- <div>These brothers scarce knew what to do.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They sought the kind schoolmaster out</div>
- <div class="i1">As swift as sweeps the light of morn;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_695">[695]</span></div>
- <div>They could but love, they could not doubt</div>
- <div class="i1">This man so gentle, “in a horn,”</div>
- <div>They cried, “Now whose the lily hand&mdash;</div>
- <div>That lady’s of this webfoot land?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They bowed before that big-nosed man,</div>
- <div class="i1">That long-nosed man from Boston town;</div>
- <div>They talked as only lovers can,</div>
- <div class="i1">They talked, but he could only frown;</div>
- <div>And still they talked, and still they plead;</div>
- <div>It was as pleading with the dead.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At last this Boston man did speak&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">“Her father has a thousand ceows,</div>
- <div>An hundred bulls, all fat and sleek;</div>
- <div class="i1">He also had this ample heouse.”</div>
- <div>The brothers’ eyes stuck out thereat,</div>
- <div>So far you might have hung your hat.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I liked the looks of this big heouse&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">My lovely boys, won’t you come in?</div>
- <div>Her father has a thousand ceows,</div>
- <div class="i1">He also had a heap of tin.</div>
- <div>The guirl? Of yes, the guirl, you see&mdash;</div>
- <div>The guirl, just neow she married me.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Robert Henry Newell, a popular journalist and humorist, wrote over the
-name of Orpheus C. Kerr. His best known work is the Orpheus C. Kerr
-Papers, but as a parodist he gives us these burlesque National Hymns.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>I<br />
-<span class="subhed2">BY H&mdash;Y W. L-NGF&mdash;&mdash; W</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Back in the years when Phlagstaff, the Dane, was monarch</div>
- <div class="i1">Over the sea-ribb’d land of the fleet-footed Norsemen,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Once there went forth young Ursa to gaze at the heavens&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Ursa&mdash;the noblest of all the Vikings and horsemen.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_696">[696]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Musing, he sat in his stirrups and viewed the horizon,</div>
- <div class="i1">Where the Aurora lapt stars in a North-polar manner,</div>
- <div>Wildly he started,&mdash;for there in the heavens before him</div>
- <div class="i1">Flutter’d and flam’d the original Star Spangled Banner.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>II<br />
-<span class="subhed2">BY J-HN GR&mdash;NL&mdash;F WH&mdash;T&mdash;R</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My Native Land, thy Puritanic stock</div>
- <div>Still finds its roots firm-bound in Plymouth Rock,</div>
- <div>And all thy sons unite in one grand wish&mdash;</div>
- <div>To keep the virtues of Preservèd Fish.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Preservèd Fish, the Deacon stern and true,</div>
- <div>Told our New England what her sons should do,</div>
- <div>And if they swerve from loyalty and right,</div>
- <div>Then the whole land is lost indeed in night.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>III<br />
-<span class="subhed2">BY DR. OL-V-R W-ND-L H-LMES</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A diagnosis of our hist’ry proves</div>
- <div>Our native land a land its native loves;</div>
- <div>Its birth a deed obstetric without peer,</div>
- <div>Its growth a source of wonder far and near.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>To love it more behold how foreign shores</div>
- <div>Sink into nothingness beside its stores;</div>
- <div>Hyde Park at best&mdash;though counted ultra-grand&mdash;</div>
- <div>The “Boston Common” of Victoria’s land.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>IV<br />
-<span class="subhed2">BY R-LPH W-LDO EM-R&mdash;N</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Source immaterial of material naught,</div>
- <div>Focus of light infinitesimal,</div>
- <div>Sum of all things by sleepless Nature wrought,</div>
- <div>Of which the normal man is decimal.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_697">[697]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Refract, in prism immortal, from thy stars</div>
- <div class="i1">To the stars bent incipient on our flag,</div>
- <div>The beam translucent, neutrifying death,</div>
- <div class="i1">And raise to immortality the rag.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>V<br />
-<span class="subhed2">By W-LL&mdash;M C-LL-N B-Y-NT</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The sun sinks softly to his Ev’ning Post,</div>
- <div class="i1">The sun swells grandly to his morning crown;</div>
- <div>Yet not a star our Flag of Heav’n has lost,</div>
- <div class="i1">And not a sunset stripe with him goes down.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So thrones may fall, and from the dust of those</div>
- <div class="i1">New thrones may rise, to totter like the last;</div>
- <div>But still our Country’s nobler planet glows</div>
- <div class="i1">While the eternal stars of Heaven are fast.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>VI<br />
-<span class="subhed2">By N. P. W-LL-S</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One hue of our Flag is taken</div>
- <div class="i1">From the cheeks of my blushing Pet,</div>
- <div>And its stars beat time and sparkle</div>
- <div class="i1">Like the studs on her chemisette.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Its blue is the ocean shadow</div>
- <div class="i1">That hides in her dreamy eyes,</div>
- <div>It conquers all men, like her,</div>
- <div class="i1">And still for a Union flies.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>VII<br />
-<span class="subhed2">BY TH-M-S B-IL-Y ALD&mdash;CH</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The little brown squirrel hops in the corn,</div>
- <div class="i1">The cricket quaintly sings,</div>
- <div>The emerald pigeon nods his head,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the shad in the river springs,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_698">[698]</span></div>
- <div>The dainty sunflow’r hangs its head</div>
- <div class="i1">On the shore of the summer sea;</div>
- <div>And better far that I were dead,</div>
- <div class="i1">If Maud did not love me.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I love the squirrel that hops in the corn,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the cricket that quaintly sings;</div>
- <div>And the emerald pigeon that nods his head,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the shad that gaily springs.</div>
- <div>I love the dainty sunflow ’r, too.</div>
- <div class="i1">And Maud with her snowy breast;</div>
- <div>I love them all;&mdash;but I love&mdash;I love&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">I love my country best.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Edward Rowland Sill, writing of the West for many years, wrote
-delightful humor on other subjects as well.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>EVE’s DAUGHTER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I waited in the little sunny room:</div>
- <div class="i1">The cool breeze waved the window-lace at play,</div>
- <div>The white rose on the porch was all in bloom,</div>
- <div class="i1">And out upon the bay</div>
- <div>I watched the wheeling sea-birds go and come.</div>
- <div>“Such an old friend&mdash;she would not make me stay</div>
- <div class="i1">While she bound up her hair.” I turned, and lo,</div>
- <div>Danæ in her shower! and fit to slay</div>
- <div class="i1">All a man’s hoarded prudence at a blow:</div>
- <div>Gold hair, that streamed away</div>
- <div class="i1">As round some nymph a sunlit fountain’s flow.</div>
- <div class="i1">“She would not make me wait!”&mdash;but well I know</div>
- <div>She took a good half-hour to loose and lay</div>
- <div class="i1">Those locks in dazzling disarrangement so!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Newspaper humor of this period included the <i>Danbury News Man</i>,
-<i>Peck’s Bad Boy</i> and <i>Eli Perkins</i> (Melville D. Landon).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_699">[699]</span></p>
-
-<p>Charles E. Carryl, though his books are called Juveniles, wrote
-delicious nonsense, approaching nearer to Lewis Carroll than any other
-American writer.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE WALLOPING WINDOW-BLIND</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A capital ship for an ocean trip</div>
- <div class="i1">Was the “Walloping Window-blind”&mdash;</div>
- <div>No gale that blew dismayed her crew</div>
- <div class="i1">Or troubled the captain’s mind.</div>
- <div>The man at the wheel was taught to feel</div>
- <div class="i1">Contempt for the wildest blow,</div>
- <div>And it often appeared, when the weather had cleared,</div>
- <div class="i1">That he’d been in his bunk below.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The boatswain’s mate was very sedate,</div>
- <div class="i1">Yet fond of amusement, too;</div>
- <div>And he played hop-scotch with the starboard watch,</div>
- <div class="i1">While the captain tickled the crew.</div>
- <div>And the gunner we had was apparently mad,</div>
- <div class="i1">For he sat on the after rail,</div>
- <div>And fired salutes with the captain’s boots,</div>
- <div class="i1">In the teeth of the booming gale.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The captain sat in a commodore’s hat</div>
- <div class="i1">And dined in a royal way</div>
- <div>On toasted pigs and pickles and figs</div>
- <div class="i1">And gummery bread each day.</div>
- <div>But the cook was Dutch and behaved as such:</div>
- <div class="i1">For the food he gave the crew</div>
- <div>Was a number of tons of hot-cross buns</div>
- <div class="i1">Chopped up with sugar and glue.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And we all felt ill as mariners will,</div>
- <div class="i1">On a diet that’s cheap and rude;</div>
- <div>And we shivered and shook as we dipped the cook</div>
- <div class="i1">In a tub of his gluesome food.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_700">[700]</span></div>
- <div>Then nautical pride we laid aside,</div>
- <div class="i1">And we cast the vessel ashore</div>
- <div>On the Gulliby Isles, where the Poohpooh smiles,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the Anagazanders roar.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Composed of sand was that favored land,</div>
- <div class="i1">And trimmed with cinnamon straws;</div>
- <div>And pink and blue was the pleasing hue</div>
- <div class="i1">Of the Tickletoeteaser’s claws.</div>
- <div>And we sat on the edge of a sandy ledge</div>
- <div class="i1">And shot at the whistling bee;</div>
- <div>And the Binnacle-bats wore water-proof hats</div>
- <div class="i1">As they danced in the sounding sea.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>On rubagub bark, from dawn to dark,</div>
- <div class="i1">We fed, till we all had grown</div>
- <div>Uncommonly shrunk,&mdash;when a Chinese junk</div>
- <div class="i1">Came by from the torriby zone.</div>
- <div>She was stubby and square, but we didn’t much care,</div>
- <div class="i1">And we cheerily put to sea;</div>
- <div>And we left the crew of the junk to chew</div>
- <div class="i1">The bark of the rubagub tree.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Robert Jones Burdette, known as the Burlington Hawkeye Man, was one of
-the prototypes of our present day newspaper columnists.</p>
-
-<p>His witty verse and prose has lived, and he ranks with the humorists of
-our land.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>WHAT WILL WE DO?</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What will we do when the good days come&mdash;</div>
- <div>When the prima donna’s lips are dumb.</div>
- <div>And the man who reads us his “little things”</div>
- <div>Has lost his voice like the girl who sings;</div>
- <div>When stilled is the breath of the cornet-man,</div>
- <div>And the shrilling chords of the quartette clan;</div>
- <div>When our neighbours’ children have lost their drums&mdash;</div>
- <div>Oh, what will we do when the good time comes?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_701">[701]</span></div>
- <div>Oh, what will we do in that good, blithe time,</div>
- <div>When the tramp will work&mdash;oh, thing sublime!</div>
- <div>And the scornful dame who stands on your feet</div>
- <div>Will “Thank you, sir,” for the proffered seat;</div>
- <div>And the man you hire to work by the day,</div>
- <div>Will allow you to do his work your way;</div>
- <div>And the cook who trieth your appetite</div>
- <div>Will steal no more than she thinks is right;</div>
- <div>When the boy you hire will call you “Sir,”</div>
- <div>Instead of “Say” and “Guverner”;</div>
- <div>When the funny man is humorsome&mdash;</div>
- <div>How can we stand the millennium?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4>“<i>SOLDIER, REST!</i>”</h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A Russian sailed over the blue Black Sea</div>
- <div class="i1">Just when the war was growing hot,</div>
- <div>And he shouted, “I’m Tjalikavakeree&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Karindabrolikanavandorot&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i5h">Schipkadirova&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i5h">Ivandiszstova&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i6h">Sanilik&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i6h">Danilik&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i5h">Varagobhot!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A Turk was standing upon the shore</div>
- <div class="i1">Right where the terrible Russian crossed;</div>
- <div>And he cried, “Bismillah! I’m Abd el Kor&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Bazaroukilgonautoskobrosk&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i5h">Getzinpravadi&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i5h">Kilgekosladji&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i6h">Grivido&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i6h">Blivido&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i5h">Jenikodosk!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So they stood like brave men, long and well,</div>
- <div class="i1">And they called each other their proper names,</div>
- <div>Till the lockjaw seized them, and where they fell</div>
- <div class="i1">They buried them both by the Irdosholames&mdash;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_702">[702]</span></div>
- <div class="i5h">Kalatalustchuk&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i5h">Mischaribustchup&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i6h">Bulgari&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i6h">Dulgari&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i5h">Sagharimainz.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Marietta Holley wrote with shrewd observation and much homely common
-sense. Her books about Betsey Bobbet and Josiah Allen’s Wife were best
-sellers in the seventies or thereabouts.</p>
-
-<p>Like many of her contemporaries for her fun she depended largely on
-misspelling.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here Betsey interrupted me. “The deah editah of the <i>Augah</i> has
-no need to advise me to read Tuppah, for he is indeed my most favorite
-authar. You have devorhed him haven’t you, Josiah Allen’s wife?”</p>
-
-<p>“Devoured who?” says I, in a tone pretty near as cold as a cold icicle.</p>
-
-<p>“Mahtan Fahqueah Tuppah, that sweet authar,” says she.</p>
-
-<p>“No, mam,” says I shortly; “I hain’t devoured Martin Farquhar Tupper,
-nor no other man. I hain’t a cannibal.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you understand me not; I meant, devorhed his sweet tender lines.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hain’t devoured his tenderlines, nor nothin’ relatin’ to him,” and I
-made a motion to lay the paper down, but Betsey urged me to go on, and
-so I read:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>GUSHINGS OF A TENDAH SOUL</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“‘Oh, let who will,</div>
- <div class="i1">Oh, let who can,</div>
- <div>Be tied onto</div>
- <div class="i1">A horrid male man.’</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Thus said I ere</div>
- <div class="i1">My tendah heart was touched;</div>
- <div>Thus said I ere</div>
- <div class="i1">My tendah feelings gushed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_703">[703]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“But oh, a change</div>
- <div class="i1">Hath swept ore me,</div>
- <div>As billows sweep</div>
- <div class="i1">The ‘deep blue sea.’</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“A voice, a noble form</div>
- <div class="i1">One day I saw;</div>
- <div>An arrow flew,</div>
- <div class="i1">My heart is nearly raw.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“His first pardner lies</div>
- <div class="i1">Beneath the turf;</div>
- <div>He is wondering now</div>
- <div class="i1">In sorrow’s briny surf.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Two twins, the little</div>
- <div class="i1">Death cherub creechahs,</div>
- <div>Now wipe the teahs</div>
- <div class="i1">From off his classic feachahs.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Oh, sweet lot, worthy</div>
- <div class="i1">Angel arisen,</div>
- <div>To wipe teahs</div>
- <div class="i1">From eyes like hisen.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>“What think you of it?” says she, as I finished readin’.</p>
-
-<p>I looked right at her ’most a minute with a majestic look. In spite
-of her false curls and her new white ivory teeth, she is a humbly
-critter. I looked at her silently while she sot and twisted her long
-yellow bunnet-strings, and then I spoke out. “Hain’t the editor of the
-<i>Augur</i> a widower with a pair of twins?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” says she, with a happy look.</p>
-
-<p>Then says I, “If the man hain’t a fool, he’ll think you are one....
-There is a time for everything, and the time to hunt affinity is before
-you are married; married folks hain’t no right to hunt it,” says I
-sternly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_704">[704]</span></p>
-
-<p>“We kindred soles soah above such petty feelin’s&mdash;we soah far above
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hain’t much of a soarer,” says I, “and I don’t pretend to be; and
-to tell you the truth,” says I, “I am glad I hain’t.” “The editah of
-the <i>Augah</i>,” says she, and she grasped the paper offen the stand
-and folded it up, and presented it at me like a spear, “the editah of
-this paper is a kindred sole; he appreciates me, he undahstands me, and
-will not our names in the pages of this very papah go down to posterety
-togathah?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then,” says I, drove out of all patience with her, “I wish you was
-there now, both of you. I wish,” says I, lookin’ fixedly on her, “I
-wish you was both of you in posterity now.”</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet’s.</i></p>
-
-<p>George Thomas Lanigan wrote clever verse, of which <i>The Akhoond of
-Swat</i> is among the best.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A THRENODY</i><br />
-<span class="subhed2">“The Akhoond of Swat is dead,”&mdash;<i>London Papers of January 22, 1878</i>.</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">What, what, what,</div>
- <div>What’s the news from Swat?</div>
- <div class="i2">Sad news,</div>
- <div class="i2">Bad news,</div>
- <div>Cometh by cable led</div>
- <div>Through the Indian Ocean’s bed,</div>
- <div>Through the Persian Gulf, the Red</div>
- <div class="i2">Sea and the Med-</div>
- <div class="i2">Iterranean: he’s dead,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">The Akhoond is dead!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">For the Akhoond I mourn.</div>
- <div class="i2">Who wouldn’t?</div>
- <div>He strove to disregard the message stern,</div>
- <div class="i2">But he Akhoondn’t.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">Dead, dead, dead;</div>
- <div class="i2">(Sorrow, Swats!)</div>
- <div>Swats wha hae wi’ Akhoond bled,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_705">[705]</span></div>
- <div>Swats wham he hath often led</div>
- <div>Onward to a gory bed,</div>
- <div class="i2">Or to victory,</div>
- <div class="i2">As the case might be,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i3">Sorrow, Swats!</div>
- <div class="i2">Tears shed,</div>
- <div>Shed tears like water,</div>
- <div class="i1">Your great Akhoond is dead!</div>
- <div>That’s Swat’s the matter!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mourn, city of Swat,</div>
- <div>Your great Akhoond is not,</div>
- <div>But laid ’mid worms to rot,&mdash;</div>
- <div>His mortal part alone: his soul was caught</div>
- <div class="i1">(Because he was a good Akhoond)</div>
- <div class="i1">Up to the bosom of Mahound.</div>
- <div>Though earthly walls his frame surround</div>
- <div>(Forever hallowed be the ground),</div>
- <div>And sceptics mock the lowly mound</div>
- <div>And say, “He’s now of no Akhoond!”</div>
- <div class="i1">His soul is in the skies,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The azure skies that bend above his loved metropolis of Swat;</div>
- <div class="i1">He sees, with larger, other eyes,</div>
- <div class="i1">Athwart all earthly mysteries;</div>
- <div>He knows what’s Swat.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Let Swat bury the great Akhoond</div>
- <div class="i1">With a noise of mourning and of lamentation!</div>
- <div>Let Swat bury the great Akhoond</div>
- <div class="i1">With the noise of the mourning of the Swattish nation!</div>
- <div class="i2">Fallen is at length</div>
- <div class="i2">Its tower of strength.</div>
- <div class="i2">Its sun is dimmed ere it had nooned,</div>
- <div class="i2">Dead lies the great Akhoond,</div>
- <div class="i2">The great Akhoond of Swat,</div>
- <div class="i2">Is not!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Lanigan also wrote Fables, which he signed G. Washington Æsop.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_706">[706]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE OSTRICH AND THE HEN</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">An Ostrich and a Hen chanced to occupy adjacent apartments, and the
-former complained loudly that her rest was disturbed by the cackling
-of her humble neighbor. “Why is it,” she finally asked the Hen, “that
-you make such an intolerable noise?” The Hen replied, “Because I have
-laid an egg.” “Oh, no,” said the Ostrich, with a superior smile, “it is
-because you are a Hen and don’t know any better.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Moral.</i>&mdash;The moral of the foregoing is not very clear, but it
-contains some reference to the Agitation for Female Suffrage.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE KIND-HEARTED SHE-ELEPHANT</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">A kind-hearted She-Elephant, while walking through the Jungle where the
-Spicy Breezes blow soft o’er Ceylon’s Isle, heedlessly set foot upon a
-Partridge, which she crushed to death within a few inches of the Nest
-containing its Callow Brood. “Poor little things!” said the generous
-Mammoth. “I have been a Mother myself, and my affection shall atone for
-the Fatal Consequences of my neglect.” So saying, she sat down upon the
-Orphaned Birds.</p>
-
-<p><i>Moral.</i>&mdash;The above Teaches us What Home is Without a Mother;
-also, that it is not every Person who should be entrusted with the Care
-of an Orphan Asylum.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>James Jeffrey Roche wrote delightful verse, which is properly classed
-as <i>Vers de Société</i>, but which shows more wit than much of that
-type.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE V-A-S-E</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>From the madding crowd they stand apart,</div>
- <div>The maidens four and the Work of Art;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And none might tell, from sight alone,</div>
- <div>In which had Culture ripest grown&mdash;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Gotham Million, fair to see,</div>
- <div>The Philadelphia Pedigree,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_707">[707]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Boston Mind of azure hue,</div>
- <div>Or the soulful Soul from Kalamazoo&mdash;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For all loved Art in a seemly way,</div>
- <div>With an earnest soul and a capital A.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing1">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Long they worshiped; but no one broke</div>
- <div>The sacred stillness, until up spoke</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Western one from the nameless place,</div>
- <div>Who blushing said, “What a lovely vace!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Over three faces a sad smile flew,</div>
- <div>And they edged away from Kalamazoo.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But Gotham’s haughty soul was stirred</div>
- <div>To crush the stranger with one small word.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Deftly hiding reproof in praise,</div>
- <div>She cries, “’Tis, indeed, a lovely vaze!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But brief her unworthy triumph when</div>
- <div>The lofty one from the house of Penn,</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>With the consciousness of two grandpapas,</div>
- <div>Exclaims, “It is quite a lovely vahs!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And glances round with an anxious thrill,</div>
- <div>Awaiting the word of Beacon Hill.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But the Boston maid smiles courteouslee,</div>
- <div>And gently murmurs, “Oh, pardon me!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“I did not catch your remark, because</div>
- <div>I was so entranced with that lovely vaws!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i4"><i>Dies erit praegelida</i></div>
- <div class="i4"><i>Sinistra quum Bostonia.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_708">[708]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A BOSTON LULLABY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Baby’s brain is tired of thinking</div>
- <div class="i1">On the Wherefore and the Whence;</div>
- <div>Baby’s precious eyes are blinking</div>
- <div class="i1">With incipient somnolence.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Little hands are weary turning</div>
- <div class="i1">Heavy leaves of lexicon;</div>
- <div>Little nose is fretted learning</div>
- <div class="i1">How to keep its glasses on.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Baby knows the laws of nature</div>
- <div class="i1">Are beneficent and wise;</div>
- <div>His medulla oblongata</div>
- <div class="i1">Bids my darling close his eyes,</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And his pneumogastrics tell him</div>
- <div class="i1">Quietude is always best</div>
- <div>When his little cerebellum</div>
- <div class="i1">Needs recuperative rest.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Baby must have relaxation,</div>
- <div class="i1">Let the world go wrong or right.</div>
- <div>Sleep, my darling, leave Creation</div>
- <div class="i1">To its chances for the night.</div>
- </div>
-
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Joel Chandler Harris is in a class by himself. Although he wrote other
-things, he will always be remembered for the immortal Uncle Remus
-stories. <i>The Tar Baby</i> and <i>Brer Rabbit</i> are known and loved
-of all American families. A short bit is given from:</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE SAD END OF BRER WOLF</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">“Bimeby, one day w’en Brer Rabbit wuz fixin’ fer ter call on Miss Coon,
-he heered a monst’us fussen clatter up de big road, en ’mos’ ’fo’ he
-could fix his years fer ter lissen, Brer Wolf run in de do’. De little
-Rabbits dey went inter dere<span class="pagenum" id="Page_709">[709]</span> hole in de cellar, dey did, like blowin’
-out a cannle. Brer Wolf wuz far’ly kiver’d wid mud, en mighty nigh
-outer win’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, do pray save me, Brer Rabbit!’ sez Brer Wolf, sezee. ‘Do, please,
-Brer Rabbit! de dogs is atter me, en dey’ll t’ar me up. Don’t you year
-um comin’? Oh, do please save me Brer Rabbit! Hide me some’rs whar de
-dogs won’t git me.’</p>
-
-<p>“No quicker sed dan done.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Jump in dat big chist dar, Brer Wolf,’ sez Brer Rabbit sezee; ‘jump
-in dar en make yo’se’f at home.’</p>
-
-<p>“In jump Brer Wolf, down come de lid, en inter de hasp went de hook, en
-dar Mr. Wolf wuz. Den Brer Rabbit went ter de lookin’-glass, he did, en
-wink at hisse’f, en den he draw’d de rockin’-cheer in front er de fier,
-he did, en tuck a big chaw terbarker.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tobacco, Uncle Remus?” asked the little boy incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>“Rabbit terbarker, honey. You know dis yer life ev’lastin’ w’at Miss
-Sally puts ’mong de cloze in de trunk; well, dat’s rabbit terbarker.
-Den Brer Rabbit sot dar long time, he did, turnin’ his mine over en
-wukken’ his thinkin’ masheen. Bimeby he got up, en sorter stir ’roun’.
-Den Brer Wolf open up:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Is de dogs all gone, Brer Rabbit?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Seem like I hear one un um smellin’ roun’ de chimbly cornder des now.’</p>
-
-<p>“Den Brer Rabbit git de kittle en fill it full er water, en put it on
-de fier.</p>
-
-<p>“‘W’at you doin’ now, Brer Rabbit?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’m fixin’ fer ter make you a nice cup er tea, Brer Wolf.’</p>
-
-<p>“Den Brer Rabbit went ter de cubberd, en git de gimlet, en commence for
-ter bo’ little holes in de chist-lid.</p>
-
-<p>“‘W’at you doin’ now, Brer Rabbit?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’m a-bo’in’ little holes so you kin get bref, Brer Wolf.’</p>
-
-<p>“Den Brer Rabbit went out en git some mo’ wood, en fling it on de fier.</p>
-
-<p>“‘W’at you doin’ now, Brer Rabbit?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’m a-chunkin’ up de fier so you won’t git cole, Brer Wolf.’</p>
-
-<p>“Den Brer Rabbit went down inter de cellar en fotch out all his
-chilluns.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_710">[710]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘W’at you doin’ now, Brer Rabbit?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’m a-tellin’ my chilluns w’at a nice man you is, Brer Wolf.’</p>
-
-<p>“En de chilluns, dey had ter put der han’s on her moufs fer ter keep
-fum laffin’. Den Brer Rabbit he got de kittle en commenced fer to po’
-de hot water on de chist-lid.</p>
-
-<p>“‘W’at dat I hear, Brer Rabbit?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You hear de win’ a-blowin’, Brer Wolf.’</p>
-
-<p>“Den de water begin fer ter sif’ thoo.</p>
-
-<p>“‘W’at dat I feel, Brer Rabbit?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You feels de fleas a-bitin’, Brer Wolf.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Dey er bitin’ mighty hard, Brer Rabbit.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Tu’n over on de udder side, Brer Wolf.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘W’at dat I feel now, Brer Rabbit?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Still you feels de fleas, Brer Wolf.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Dey er eatin’ me up, Brer Rabbit,’ en dem wuz de las’ words er Brer
-Wolf, kase de scaldin’ water done de bizness.</p>
-
-<p>“Den Brer Rabbit call in his nabers, he did, en dey hilt a reg’lar
-juberlee; en ef you go ter Brer Rabbit’s house right now, I dunno but
-w’at you’ll fine Brer Wolf’s hide hangin’ in de back-po’ch, en all
-bekaze he wuz so bizzy wid udder fo’kses doin’s.”</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;<i>From Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings.</i></p>
-
-<p>Eugene Field, beside being the greatest of newspaper paragraphers was
-a versatile writer of all sorts, from Christmas Hymns to the most
-flippant themes.</p>
-
-<p>His own personal charm imbued his work, and whether writing <i>Echoes
-of Horace</i> or appalling tales of <i>Little Willie</i>, he was always
-original and truly funny.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE DINKEY-BIRD</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In an ocean, ’way out yonder</div>
- <div class="i1">(As all sapient people know),</div>
- <div>Is the land of Wonder-Wander,</div>
- <div class="i1">Whither children love to go;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_711">[711]</span></div>
- <div>It’s their playing, romping, swinging,</div>
- <div class="i1">That give great joy to me</div>
- <div>While the Dinkey-Bird goes singing</div>
- <div class="i1">In the Amfalula-tree!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There the gum-drops grow like cherries,</div>
- <div class="i1">And taffy’s thick as peas,&mdash;</div>
- <div>Caramels you pick like berries</div>
- <div class="i1">When, and where, and how you please:</div>
- <div>Big red sugar-plums are clinging</div>
- <div class="i1">To the cliffs beside that sea</div>
- <div>Where the Dinkey-Bird is singing</div>
- <div class="i1">In the Amfalula-tree.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So when children shout and scamper</div>
- <div class="i1">And make merry all the day,</div>
- <div>When there’s naught to put a damper</div>
- <div class="i1">To the ardor of their play;</div>
- <div>When I hear their laughter ringing,</div>
- <div class="i1">Then I’m sure as sure can be</div>
- <div>That the Dinkey-Bird is singing</div>
- <div class="i1">In the Amfalula-tree.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For the Dinkey-Bird’s bravuras</div>
- <div class="i1">And staccatos are so sweet&mdash;</div>
- <div>His roulades, appogiaturas,</div>
- <div class="i1">And robustos so complete,</div>
- <div>That the youth of every nation&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Be they near or far away&mdash;</div>
- <div>Have especial delectation</div>
- <div class="i1">In that gladsome roundelay.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Their eyes grow bright and brighter,</div>
- <div class="i1">Their lungs begin to crow,</div>
- <div>Their hearts get light and lighter,</div>
- <div class="i1">And their cheeks are all aglow;</div>
- <div>For an echo cometh bringing</div>
- <div class="i1">The news to all and me.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_712">[712]</span></div>
- <div>That the Dinkey-Bird is singing</div>
- <div class="i1">In the Amfalula-tree.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I’m sure you’d like to go there</div>
- <div class="i1">To see your feathered friend&mdash;</div>
- <div>And so many goodies grow there</div>
- <div class="i1">You would like to comprehend!</div>
- <div><i>Speed, little dreams, your winging</i></div>
- <div class="i1"><i>To that land across the sea</i></div>
- <div><i>Where the Dinkey-Bird is singing</i></div>
- <div class="i1"><i>In the Amfalula-Tree!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE LITTLE PEACH</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A little peach in the orchard grew,</div>
- <div>A little peach of emerald hue:</div>
- <div>Warmed by the sun, and wet by the dew,</div>
- <div class="i12">It grew.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One day, walking the orchard through,</div>
- <div>That little peach dawned on the view</div>
- <div>Of Johnny Jones and his sister Sue&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i12">Those two.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Up at the peach a club they threw:</div>
- <div>Down from the limb on which it grew,</div>
- <div>Fell the little peach of emerald hue&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i12">Too true!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>John took a bite, and Sue took a chew,</div>
- <div>And then the trouble began to brew,&mdash;</div>
- <div>Trouble the doctor couldn’t subdue,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i12">Paregoric too.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Under the turf where the daisies grew,</div>
- <div>They planted John and his sister Sue;</div>
- <div>And their little souls to the angels flew&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i12">Boo-hoo!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_713">[713]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But what of the peach of emerald hue,</div>
- <div>Warmed by the sun, and wet by the dew?</div>
- <div>Ah, well! its mission on earth is through&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i12">Adieu!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-<h4><i>GOOD JAMES AND NAUGHTY REGINALD</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">Once upon a Time there was a Bad boy whose Name was Reginald and there
-was a Good boy whose Name was James. Reginald would go Fishing when his
-Mamma told him Not to, and he Cut off the Cat’s Tail with the Bread
-Knife one Day, and then told Mamma the Baby had Driven it in with the
-Rolling Pin, which was a Lie. James was always Obedient, and when his
-Mamma told him not to Help an old Blind Man across the street or Go
-into a Dark Room where the Boogies were, he always Did What She said.
-That is why they Called him Good James. Well, by and by, along Came
-Christmas. Mamma said, You have been so Bad, my son Reginald, you will
-not Get any Presents from Santa Claus this Year; but you, my Son James,
-will get Oodles of Presents, because you have Been Good. Will you
-Believe it, Children, that Bad boy Reginald said he didn’t Care a Darn
-and he Kicked three Feet of Veneering off the Piano just for Meanness.
-Poor James was so sorry for Reginald that he cried for Half an Hour
-after he Went to Bed that Night. Reginald lay wide Awake until he saw
-James was Asleep and then he Said if these people think they can Fool
-me, they are Mistaken. Just then Santa Claus came down the Chimney. He
-had lots of Pretty Toys in a Sack on his Back. Reginald shut his Eyes
-and Pretended to be Asleep. Then Santa Claus Said, Reginald is Bad and
-I will not Put any nice Things in his Stocking. But as for you, James,
-I will Fill your Stocking Plumb full of Toys, because You are Good.
-So Santa Claus went to Work and Put, Oh! heaps and Heaps of Goodies
-in James’ stocking but not a Sign of a Thing in Reginald’s stocking.
-And then he Laughed to himself and Said, I guess Reginald will be
-sorry to-morrow because he Was so Bad. As he said this he Crawled up
-the chimney and rode off in his Sleigh. Now you can Bet your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_714">[714]</span> Boots
-Reginald was no Spring Chicken. He just Got right Straight out of Bed
-and changed all those Toys and Truck from James’ stocking into his own.
-Santa Claus will Have to Sit up all Night, said He, when he Expects to
-get away with my Baggage. The next morning James got out of Bed and
-when He had Said his Prayers he Limped over to his Stocking, licking
-his chops and Carrying his Head as High as a Bull going through a Brush
-Fence. But when he found there was Nothing in his stocking and that
-Reginald’s Stocking was as Full as Papa Is when he comes home Late from
-the Office, he Sat down on the Floor and began to Wonder why on Earth
-he had Been such a Good boy. Reginald spent a Happy Christmas and James
-was very Miserable. After all, Children, it Pays to be Bad, so Long as
-you Combine Intellect with Crime.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>From the Tribune Primer.</i></p>
-
-<p>Edgar Wilson Nye, known commonly as Bill Nye, wrote in prose and also
-made a success on the lecture platform, as well as in his newspaper
-work.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE GARDEN HOSE</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">It is now the proper time for the cross-eyed woman to fool with the
-garden hose. I have faced death in almost every form, and I do not know
-what fear is, but when a woman with one eye gazing into the zodiac
-and the other peering into the middle of next week, and wearing one
-of those floppy sun-bonnets, picks up the nozzle of the garden hose
-and turns on the full force of the institution, I fly wildly to the
-Mountains of Hepsidam.</p>
-
-<p>Water won’t hurt any one, of course, if care is used not to forget and
-drink any of it, but it is this horrible suspense and uncertainty about
-facing the nozzle of a garden hose in the hands of a cross-eyed woman
-that unnerves and paralyzes me.</p>
-
-<p>Instantaneous death is nothing to me. I am as cool and collected where
-leaden rain and iron hail are thickest as I would be in my own office
-writing the obituary of the man who steals my jokes. But I hate to be
-drowned slowly in my good<span class="pagenum" id="Page_715">[715]</span> clothes and on dry land, and have my dying
-gaze rest on a woman whose ravishing beauty would drive a narrow-gage
-mule into convulsions and make him hate himself t’death.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Richard Kendall Munkittrick wielded a graceful pen and his verses show
-an original wit.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>WHAT’S IN A NAME?</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In letters large upon a frame,</div>
- <div class="i1">That visitors might see,</div>
- <div>The painter placed his humble name,</div>
- <div class="i1">O’Callaghan McGee.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And from Beersheba unto Dan,</div>
- <div class="i1">The critics with a nod</div>
- <div>Exclaimed: “This painting Irishman</div>
- <div class="i1">Adores his native sod.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“His stout heart’s patriotic flame</div>
- <div class="i1">There’s naught on earth can quell</div>
- <div>He takes no wild romantic name</div>
- <div class="i1">To make his pictures sell!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then poets praised in sonnets neat</div>
- <div class="i1">His stroke so bold and free;</div>
- <div>No parlor wall was thought complete</div>
- <div class="i1">That hadn’t a McGee.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>All patriots before McGee</div>
- <div class="i1">Threw lavishly their gold;</div>
- <div>His works in the Academy</div>
- <div class="i1">Were very quickly sold.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>His “Digging Clams at Barnegat,”</div>
- <div class="i1">His “When the Morning Smiled,”</div>
- <div>His “Seven Miles from Ararat,”</div>
- <div class="i1">His “Portrait of a Child,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_716">[716]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Were purchased in a single day</div>
- <div class="i1">And lauded as divine.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing1">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>That night as in his <i>atelier</i></div>
- <div class="i1">The artist sipped his wine,</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And looked upon his gilded frames,</div>
- <div class="i1">He grinned from ear to ear:</div>
- <div>“They little think my <i>real</i> name’s</div>
- <div class="i1">V. Stuyvesant De Vere!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Edward Waterman Townsend, varied the time-honored tradition of
-misspelling by introducing an example of Bowery slang. His <i>Chimmie
-Fadden</i> took a firm hold on the public notice and the vogue lasted
-for many years.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“Naw, I ain’t stringin’ ye. ‘Is Whiskers is de loidy’s fadder. Sure!</p>
-
-<p>“’E comes ter me room wid der loidy, ’is Whiskers does, an’ he says,
-says ’e, ‘Is dis Chimmie Fadden?’ says ’e.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yer dead on,’ says I.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Wot t’ell?’ ’e says, turning to ’is daughter. ‘Wot does de young man
-say?’ ’e says.</p>
-
-<p>“Den de loidy she kinder smiled&mdash;say, ye otter seed ’er smile. Say,
-it’s outter sight. Dat’s right. Well, she says: ‘I t’ink I understan’
-Chimmie’s langwudge,’ she says. ‘‘E means ’e’s de kid youse lookin’
-fer. ’E’s de very mug.’</p>
-
-<p>“Dat’s wot she says; somet’n like dat, only a felly can’t just remember
-’er langwudge.</p>
-
-<p>“Den ’is Whiskers gives me a song an’ dance ’bout me bein’ a brave
-young man fer t’umpin’ der mug wot insulted ’is daughter, an’ ’bout ’is
-heart bein’ all broke dat ’is daughter should be doin’ missioner work
-in de slums.</p>
-
-<p>“I says, ‘Wot tell’; but der loidy, she says, ‘Chimmie,’ says she, ‘me
-fadder needs a footman,’ she says, ‘an’ I taut you’d be de very mug fer
-de job,’ says she. See?</p>
-
-<p>“Say, I was all broke up, an’ couldn’t say nottin’, fer ’is Whiskers
-was so solemn. See?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_717">[717]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Wot’s yer lay now?’ says ’is Whiskers, or somet’n’ like dat.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, I could ’ave give ’im a string ’bout me bein’ a hard-workin’ boy,
-but I knowed der loidy was dead on ter me, so I only says, says I, ‘Wot
-t’ell?’ says I, like dat, ‘Wot t’ell?’ See?</p>
-
-<p>“Den ’is Whiskers was kinder paralized like, an’ ’e turns to ’is
-daughter an’ ’e says&mdash;dese is ’is very words&mdash;’e says:</p>
-
-<p>“Really, Fannie,’ ’e says, ‘really, Fannie, you must enterpret dis
-young man’s langwudge.’</p>
-
-<p>“Den she laffs an’ says, says she:</p>
-
-<p>“Chimmie is a good boy if ’e only had a chance,’ she says.</p>
-
-<p>“Den ’is Whiskers ’e says, ‘I dare say,’ like dat. See? ‘I dare say.’
-See? Say, did ye ever ’ear words like dem? Say, I was fer tellin’ ’is
-Whiskers ter git t’ell outter dat, only fer der loidy. See?</p>
-
-<p>“Well, den we all give each odder a song an’ dance, an’ de end was I
-was took fer a footman. See? Tiger, ye say? Naw, dey don’t call me no
-tiger.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, wouldn’t de gang on de Bow’ry be paralized if dey seed me in dis
-harness? Ain’t it great? Sure! Wot am I doin’? Well, I’m doin’ pretty
-well. I had ter t’ump a felly dey calls de butler de first night I was
-dere for callin’ me a heathen. See? Say, dere’s a kid in de house wot
-opens de front door when youse ring de bell, an’ I win all ’is boodle
-de second night I was dere showin’ ’im how ter play Crusoe. Say, it’s a
-dead easy game, but de loidy she axed me not to bunco de farmers&mdash;dey’s
-all farmers up in dat house, dead farmers&mdash;so I leaves ’em alone.
-’Scuse me now, dat’s me loidy comin’ outter der shop. I opens de door
-of de carriage an’ she says, ‘Home, Chames.’ Den I jumps on de box an’
-strings de driver. Say, ’e’s a farmer, too. I’ll tell you some more
-’bout de game next time. So long.”</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p-min">&mdash;<i>Chimmie Fadden.</i></p>
-
-<p>Sam Walter Foss added to his misspelling a certain understanding of
-human nature and produced many mildly satirical verses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_718">[718]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>A PHILOSOPHER</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Zack Bumstead useter flosserfize</div>
- <div>About the ocean and the skies,</div>
- <div>An’ gab an’ gas f’um morn till noon</div>
- <div>About the other side the moon;</div>
- <div>An’ ’bout the natur of the place</div>
- <div>Ten miles beyend the end of space.</div>
- <div>An’ if his wife she’d ask the crank</div>
- <div>If he wouldn’t kinder try to yank</div>
- <div>Hisself outdoors an’ git some wood</div>
- <div>To make her kitchen fire good,</div>
- <div>So she c’d bake her beans an’ pies,</div>
- <div>He’d say, “I’ve gotter flosserfize.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>An’ then he’d set an’ flosserfize</div>
- <div>About the natur an’ the size</div>
- <div>Of angels’ wings, an’ think, and gawp,</div>
- <div>An’ wonder how they made ’em flop.</div>
- <div>He’d calkerlate how long a skid</div>
- <div>’Twould take to move the sun, he did;</div>
- <div>An’ if the skid wuz strong an’ prime,</div>
- <div>It couldn’t be moved to supper-time.</div>
- <div>An’ w’en his wife ’d ask the lout</div>
- <div>If he wouldn’t kinder waltz about</div>
- <div>An’ take a rag an’ shoo the flies,</div>
- <div>He’d say, “I’ve gotter flosserfize.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>An’ then he’d set an’ flosserfize</div>
- <div>’Bout schemes for fencing in the skies,</div>
- <div>Then lettin’ out the lots to rent</div>
- <div>So’s he could make an honest cent.</div>
- <div>An’ if he’d find it pooty tough</div>
- <div>To borry cash fer fencin’ stuff.</div>
- <div>An’ if ’twere best to take his wealth</div>
- <div>An’ go to Europe for his health,</div>
- <div>Or save his cash till he’d enough</div>
- <div>To buy some more of fencin’ stuff.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_719">[719]</span></div>
- <div>Then, if his wife she’d ask the gump</div>
- <div>If he wouldn’t kinder try to hump</div>
- <div>Hisself to t’other side the door</div>
- <div>So she c’d come an’ sweep the floor,</div>
- <div>He’d look at her with mournful eyes,</div>
- <div>An’ say, “I’ve gotter flosserfize.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>An’ so he’d set an’ flosserfize</div>
- <div>’Bout w’at it wuz held up the skies,</div>
- <div>An’ how God made this earthly ball</div>
- <div>Jest simply out er nawthin’ ’tall,</div>
- <div>An’ ’bout the natur, shape, an’ form</div>
- <div>Of nawthin’ that He made it from.</div>
- <div>Then, if his wife sh’d ask the freak</div>
- <div>If he wouldn’t kinder try to sneak</div>
- <div>Out to the barn an’ find some aigs,</div>
- <div>He’d never move, nor lift his laigs,</div>
- <div>He’d never stir, nor try to rise,</div>
- <div>But say, “I’ve gotter flosserfize.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>An’ so he’d set an’ flosserfize</div>
- <div>About the earth an’ sea an’ skies,</div>
- <div>An’ scratch his head an’ ask the cause</div>
- <div>Of w’at there wuz before time wuz,</div>
- <div>An’ w’at the universe’d do</div>
- <div>Bimeby w’en time had all got through;</div>
- <div>An’ jest how fur we’d have to climb</div>
- <div>If we sh’d travel out er time,</div>
- <div>An’ if we’d need, w’en we got there</div>
- <div>To keep our watches in repair.</div>
- <div>Then, if his wife she’d ask the gawk</div>
- <div>If he wouldn’t kinder try to walk</div>
- <div>To where she had the table spread</div>
- <div>An’ kinder git his stomach fed,</div>
- <div>He’d leap for that ’ar kitchen door,</div>
- <div>An’ say, “W’y didn’t you speak afore?”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_720">[720]</span></div>
- <div>An’ w’en he’d got his supper et,</div>
- <div>He’d set, an’ set, an’ set, an’ set,</div>
- <div>An’ fold his arms an’ shet his eyes,</div>
- <div>An’ set, an’ set, an’ flosserfize.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Finley Peter Dunne created the immortal Mr. Dooley about the time of
-the Spanish War.</p>
-
-<p>The Irish dialect is perfect, the humor most droll and the wit quiet
-and clean-cut.</p>
-
-<p>Among the best of the chapters is the one that burlesques the
-proceedings that took place at a celebrated murder trial of the day.</p>
-
-
-<h4><i>ON EXPERT TESTIMONY</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">“Annything new?” said Mr. Hennessy, who had been waiting patiently for
-Mr. Dooley to put down his newspaper.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been r-readin’ th’ tistimony iv th’ Lootgert case,” said Mr.
-Dooley.</p>
-
-<p>“What d’ye think iv it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think so,” said Mr. Dooley.</p>
-
-<p>“Think what?”</p>
-
-<p>“How do I know?” said Mr. Dooley. “How do I know what I think?
-I’m no combination iv chemist, doctor, osteologist, polisman, an’
-sausage-maker, that I can give ye an opinion right off th’ bat. A man
-needs to be all iv thim things to detarmine annything about a murdher
-trile in these days. This shows how intilligent our methods is, as
-Hogan says. A large German man is charged with puttin’ his wife away
-into a breakfas’-dish, an’ he says he didn’t do it. Th’ question thin
-is, Did or did not Alphonse Lootgert stick Mrs. L. into a vat, an’
-rayjooce her to a quick lunch? Am I right?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye ar-re,” said Mr. Hennessy.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s simple enough. What th’ Coort ought to’ve done was to call him
-up, an’ say: ‘Lootgert, where’s ye’er good woman?’ If Lootgert cudden’t
-tell, he ought to be hanged on gin’ral principles; f’r a man must keep
-his wife around th’ house, an’ whin she isn’t there it shows he’s a
-poor provider. But, if Lootgert says, ‘I don’t know where me wife is,’
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_721">[721]</span> Coort shud say:’ Go out an’ find her. If ye can’t projooce her in
-a week, I’ll fix ye.’ An’ let that be th’ end iv it.</p>
-
-<p>“But what do they do? They get Lootgert into coort an’ stand him up
-befure a gang iv young rayporthers an’ th’ likes iv thim to make
-pitchers iv him. Thin they summon a jury composed iv poor tired, sleepy
-expressmen an’ tailors an’ clerks. Thin they call in a profissor from
-a college. ‘Professor,’ says th’ lawyer f’r the State, ‘I put it to
-ye if a wooden vat three hundherd an’ sixty feet long, twenty-eight
-feet deep, an’ sivinty-five feet wide, an’ if three hundherd pounds
-iv caustic soda boiled, an’ if the leg iv a guinea-pig, an’ ye said
-yestherdah about bi-carbonate iv soda, an’ if it washes up an’ washes
-over, an’ th’ slimy, slippery stuff, an’ if a false tooth or a lock iv
-hair or a jawbone or a goluf ball across th’ cellar eleven feet nine
-inches&mdash;that is, two inches this way an’ five gallons that?’ ‘I agree
-with ye intirely,’ says th’ profissor. I made lab’ratory experiments in
-an’ ir’n basin, with bichloride iv gool, which I will call soup-stock,
-an’ coal-tar, which I will call ir’n filings. I mixed th’ two over a
-hot fire, an’ left in a cool place to harden. I thin packed it in ice,
-which I will call glue, an’ rock-salt, which I will call fried eggs,
-an’ obtained a dark queer solution that is a cure f’r freckles, which I
-will call antimony or doughnuts or annything I blamed please.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But,’ says th’ lawyer f’r th’ State, ‘measurin’ th’ vat with gas&mdash;an’
-I lave it to ye whether this is not th’ on’y fair test&mdash;an’ supposin’
-that two feet acrost is akel to tin feet sideways, an’ supposin’ that
-a thick green an’ hard substance, an’ I daresay it wud; an’ supposin’
-you may, takin’ into account th’ measuremints&mdash;twelve be eight&mdash;th’
-vat bein’ wound with twine six inches fr’m th’ handle an’ a rub iv th’
-green, thin ar-re not human teeth often found in counthry sausage?’ ‘In
-th’ winter,’ says th’ profissor. ‘But th’ sisymoid bone is sometimes
-seen in th’ fut, sometimes worn as a watch-charm. I took two sisymoid
-bones, which I will call poker dice, an’ shook thim together in a
-cylinder, which I will call Fido, poored in a can iv milk, which I will
-call gum arabic, took two pounds iv rough-on-rats, which I rayfuse to
-call; but th’ raysult is th’ same.’ Question be th’ Coort: ‘Different?’
-Answer: ‘Yis.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_722">[722]</span> Th’ Coort: ‘Th’ same.’ Be Misther McEwen: ‘Whose
-bones?’ Answer: ‘Yis.’ Be Misther Vincent: ‘Will ye go to th’ divvle?’
-Answer: ‘It dissolves th’ hair.’</p>
-
-<p>“Now what I want to know is where th’ jury gets off. What has that
-collection iv pure-minded pathrites to larn fr’m this here polite
-discussion, where no wan is so crool as to ask what anny wan else
-means? Thank th’ Lord, whin th’ case is all over, the jury’ll pitch
-th’ tistimony out iv th’ window, an’ consider three questions: ‘Did
-Lootgert look as though he’d kill his wife? Did his wife look as though
-she ought so be kilt? Isn’t it time we wint to supper?’ An’, howiver
-they answer, they’ll be right, an’ it’ll make little diff’rence wan way
-or th’ other. Th’ German vote is too large an’ ignorant annyhow.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>George Ade, in the Biographical Dictionaries, is classed almost
-exclusively as a playwright, but to those who know and love his
-<i>Fables in Slang</i>,&mdash;and who does not?&mdash;he will always be a
-humorist.</p>
-
-<p>His slang is all that slang should be, witty, trenchant, picturesque
-and used but once. His own rule for slang stipulates that it shall be
-impromptu, spontaneous and never repeated.</p>
-
-<p>From his opera <i>The Sultan of Sulu</i>, we quote one song.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE COCKTAIL</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The cocktail is a pleasant drink,</div>
- <div>It’s mild and harmless&mdash;I don’t think!</div>
- <div>When you have one, you call for two&mdash;</div>
- <div>And then you don’t care what you do.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Last night I hoisted twenty-three</div>
- <div>Of those arrangements into me;</div>
- <div>My bosom heaved, I swelled with pride,</div>
- <div>I was pickled, primed and ossified!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But R-E-M-O-R-S-E&mdash;</div>
- <div>The water wagon is the place for me!</div>
- <div>It is no time for mirth and laughter,</div>
- <div>The cold, dark dawn of the Morning After!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_723">[723]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><i>THE FABLE OF THE CADDY WHO HURT HIS HEAD WHILE THINKING</i></h4>
-
-<p class="p1">One day a Caddy sat in the Long Grass near the Ninth Hole and wondered
-if he had a Soul. His number was 27, and he almost had forgotten his
-Real Name.</p>
-
-<p>As he sat and Meditated, two Players passed him. They were going the
-Long Round, and the Frenzy was upon them.</p>
-
-<p>They followed the Gutta-Percha Balls with the intent swiftness of
-trained Bird-Dogs, and each talked feverishly of Brassy Lies, and
-getting past the Bunker, and Lofting to the Green, and Slicing into the
-Bramble&mdash;each telling his own Game to the Ambient Air, and ignoring
-what the other Fellow had to say.</p>
-
-<p>As they did the St. Andrews Full Swing for eighty Yards apiece and then
-Followed Through with the usual Explanations of how it Happened, the
-Caddy looked at them and Reflected that they were much inferior to his
-Father.</p>
-
-<p>His Father was too Serious a Man to get out in Mardi Gras Clothes and
-hammer a Ball from one Red flag to another.</p>
-
-<p>His Father worked in a Lumber-Yard.</p>
-
-<p>He was an Earnest Citizen, who seldom Smiled, and he knew all about the
-Silver Question and how J. Pierpont Morgan done up a Free People on the
-Bond Issue.</p>
-
-<p>The Caddy wondered why it was that his Father, a really Great Man, had
-to shove Lumber all day and could seldom get one Dollar to rub against
-another, while these superficial Johnnies who played Golf all the Time
-had Money to Throw at the Birds. The more he Thought the more his Head
-ached.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Moral.</span>&mdash;<i>Don’t try to Account for Anything.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Will Carleton wrote many long narrative ballads, of a homely type.
-His <i>Betsey and I Are Out</i>, and <i>Over the Hills to the
-Poorhouse</i>, in their day were known to every household.</p>
-
-<p>A shorter work is:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ELIPHALET CHAPIN’S WEDDING</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">’Twas when the leaves of Autumn were by tempest-fingers picked,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_724">[724]</span></div>
- <div>Eliphalet Chapin started to become a benedict;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">With an ancient two-ox waggon to bring back his new-found goods,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">He hawed and gee’d and floundered through some twenty miles o’ woods;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">With prematrimonial ardour he his hornèd steeds did press,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But Eliphalet’s wedding journey didn’t bristle with success.</div>
- <div class="i6h">Oh no,</div>
- <div class="i6h">Woe, woe!</div>
- <div class="i6h">With candour to digress,</div>
- <div>Eliphalet’s wedding journey didn’t tremble with success.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He had not carried five miles his mouth-disputed face,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">When his wedding garments parted in some inconvenient place;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">He’d have given both his oxen to a wife that now was dead,</div>
- <div>For her company two minutes with a needle and a thread.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But he pinned them up, with twinges of occasional distress,</div>
- <div>Feeling that his wedding wouldn’t be a carnival of dress:</div>
- <div class="i6h">“Haw, Buck!</div>
- <div class="i6h">Gee, Bright!</div>
- <div class="i6h">Derned pretty mess!”</div>
- <div>No; Eliphalet was not strictly a spectacular success.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">He had not gone a ten-mile when a wheel demurely broke,</div>
- <div>A disunited family of felloe, hub, and spoke;</div>
- <div>It joined, with flattering prospects, the Society of Wrecks;</div>
- <div>And he had to cut a sapling, and insert it ’neath the “ex.”</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">So he ploughed the hills and valleys with that Doric wheel and tire,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Feeling that his wedding journey was not all he could desire.</div>
- <div class="i6h">“Gee, Bright!</div>
- <div class="i6h">G’long, Buck!”</div>
- <div class="i6h">He shouted, hoarse with ire!</div>
- <div>No; Eliphalet’s wedding journey none in candour could admire!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_725">[725]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He had not gone fifteen miles with extended face forlorn,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">When Night lay down upon him hard, and kept him there till morn;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And when the daylight chuckled at the gloom within his mind,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">One ox was “Strayed or Stolen,” and the other hard to find.</div>
- <div>So yoking Buck as usual, he assumed the part of Bright</div>
- <div>(Constituting a menagerie diverting to the sight);</div>
- <div class="i6h">With “Haw, Buck!</div>
- <div class="i6h">Gee, Buck!</div>
- <div class="i6h">Sh’n’t get there till night!”</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">No; Eliphalet’s wedding journey was not one intense delight.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Now, when he drove his equipage up to his sweetheart’s door,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The wedding guests had tired and gone, just half-an-hour before;</div>
- <div>The preacher had from sickness an unprofitable call,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And had sent a voice proclaiming that he couldn’t come at all;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The parents had been prejudiced by some one, more or less,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And the sire the bridegroom greeted with a different word from “bless.”</div>
- <div class="i6h">“Blank your head,</div>
- <div class="i6h">You blank!” he said;</div>
- <div class="i6h">“We’ll break this off, I guess!”</div>
- <div>No; Eliphalet’s wedding was not an unqualified success.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Now, when the bride saw him arrive, she shook her crimson locks,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And vowed to goodness gracious she would never wed an ox;</div>
- <div>And with a vim deserving rather better social luck,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">She eloped that day by daylight with a swarthy Indian “buck,”</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">With the presents in the pockets of her woollen wedding-dress;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And “Things ain’t mostly with me,” quoth Eliphalet, “I confess,”</div>
- <div class="i6h">No&mdash;no;</div>
- <div class="i6h">As things go,</div>
- <div class="i6h">No fair mind ’twould impress,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">That Eliphalet Chapin’s wedding was an unalloyed success.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_726">[726]</span></p>
-
-<p>Dr. William H. Drummond is best known humorously by his apt rendition
-of the French-Canadian dialect.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE WRECK OF THE “JULIE PLANTE.”</i><br />
-<span class="subhed2">A Legend of Lake St. Peter.</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>On wan dark night on Lac Saint Pierre,</div>
- <div>De win’ she blow, blow, blow,</div>
- <div>An’ de crew of de wood scow “Julie Plante”</div>
- <div>Got scar’t, an’ run below&mdash;</div>
- <div>For de win’ she blow lak hurricain,</div>
- <div>Bimeby she blow some more,</div>
- <div>An’ de scow buss h’up on Lac Saint Pierre</div>
- <div>Wan h’arpent from de shore.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>De captinne walk h’on de fronte deck,</div>
- <div>An’ walk de hin’ deck too&mdash;</div>
- <div>He call de crew from h’up de ’ole</div>
- <div>He call de cook h’also.</div>
- <div>De crew she’s name was Rosie,</div>
- <div>She’s come from Montreal,</div>
- <div>Was chambre maid h’on lombaire barge,</div>
- <div>H’on de Grande La Chine Canal.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>De win’ she’s blow from nor’-eass-wess&mdash;</div>
- <div>De sout’ win’ she’s blow too,</div>
- <div>W’en Rosie cry, “Mon cher captinne,</div>
- <div>Mon cher, w’at I shall do?”</div>
- <div>Den de captinne trow de big h’ankerre,</div>
- <div>But steel de scow she dreef,</div>
- <div>De crew he can’t pass on de shore,</div>
- <div>Becos he loss hees skeef.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>De night was dark lak’ wan black cat,</div>
- <div>De wave run ’igh an’ fas’,</div>
- <div>W’en de captinne tak’ de poor Rosie</div>
- <div>An’ tie her to de mas’.</div>
- <div>Den he h’also tak’ de life preserve,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_727">[727]</span></div>
- <div>An’ jomp h’off on de lak’,</div>
- <div>An’ say, “Good-bye, ma Rosie dear,</div>
- <div>I go drown for your sak’.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nex’ morning very h’early</div>
- <div>Bout haf-pas’ two&mdash;t’ree&mdash;four&mdash;</div>
- <div>De captinne&mdash;scow&mdash;an’ de poor Rosie</div>
- <div>Was corpses on de shore.</div>
- <div>For de win’ she blow lak’ hurricain,</div>
- <div>Bimeby she blow some more,</div>
- <div>An’ de scow bus’ h’up on Lac Saint Pierre,</div>
- <div>Wan h’arpent from de shore.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><span class="smcap">Moral</span></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now h’all good wood scow sailor man</div>
- <div>Tak’ warning by dat storm,</div>
- <div>An’ go an’ marry some nice French girl</div>
- <div>An’ leev on one beeg farm.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>De win’ can blow lak hurricain</div>
- <div class="i1">An’ s’pose she blow some more,</div>
- <div>You can’t get drown on Lac St. Pierre</div>
- <div class="i1">So long you stay on shore.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Ben King is responsible for at least two humorous jingles of wide
-popularity.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE PESSIMIST</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nothing to do but work;</div>
- <div class="i1">Nothing to eat but food;</div>
- <div>Nothing to wear but clothes,</div>
- <div class="i1">To keep one from going nude.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nothing to breathe but air;</div>
- <div class="i1">Quick as a flash ’tis gone;</div>
- <div>Nowhere to fall but off;</div>
- <div class="i1">Nowhere to stand but on.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_728">[728]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nothing to comb but hair;</div>
- <div class="i1">Nowhere to sleep but in bed;</div>
- <div>Nothing to weep but tears;</div>
- <div class="i1">Nothing to bury but dead.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nothing to sing but songs,</div>
- <div class="i1">Ah, well, alas! alack!</div>
- <div>Nowhere to go but out;</div>
- <div class="i1">Nowhere to come but back.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nothing to see but sights;</div>
- <div class="i1">Nothing to quench but thirst;</div>
- <div>Nothing to have but what we’ve got;</div>
- <div class="i1">Thus thro’ life we are cursed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nothing to strike but a gait;</div>
- <div class="i1">Everything moves that goes.</div>
- <div>Nothing at all but common sense</div>
- <div class="i1">Can ever withstand these woes.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>IF I SHOULD DIE TO-NIGHT</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">If I should die to-night,</div>
- <div>And you should come to my cold corpse and say,</div>
- <div>Weeping and heartsick o’er my lifeless clay&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i2">If I should die to-night,</div>
- <div>And you should come in deepest grief and wo&mdash;</div>
- <div>And say, “Here’s that ten dollars that I owe,”</div>
- <div class="i2">I might arise in my large white cravat,</div>
- <div class="i2">And say, “What’s that?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">If I should die to-night,</div>
- <div>And you should come to my cold corpse and kneel,</div>
- <div>Clasping my bier to show the grief you feel,</div>
- <div class="i2">I say, if I should die to-night,</div>
- <div>And you should come to me, and there and then</div>
- <div>Just even hint ’bout payin’ me that ten,</div>
- <div class="i2">I might arise the while,</div>
- <div class="i2">But I’d drop dead again.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_729">[729]</span></p>
-
-<p>A humorous jingle that achieved immediate vogue is <i>Casey at the
-Bat</i>. The authorship has been questioned but consensus of research
-seems to ascribe it to Ernest Lawrence Thayer.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>CASEY AT THE BAT</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>It looked extremely rocky for the Mudville nine that day;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The score stood four to six, with just an inning left to play;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And so, when Cooney died at first, and Burrows did the same,</div>
- <div>A pallor wreathed the features of the patrons of the game.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A straggling few got up to go, leaving there the rest,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">With that hope which springs eternal within the human breast;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">For they thought if only Casey could get one whack, at that</div>
- <div>They’d put up even money, with Casey at the bat.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But Flynn preceded Casey, and so likewise did Blake,</div>
- <div>And the former was a pudding and the latter was a fake;</div>
- <div>So on that stricken multitude a death-like silence sat,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">For there seemed but little chance of Casey’s getting to the bat.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But Flynn let drive a single to the wonderment of all,</div>
- <div>And the much-despised Blakie tore the cover off the ball;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And when the dust had lifted, and they saw what had occurred,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">There was Blakie safe on second, and Flynn a-hugging third.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then from the gladdened multitude went up a joyous yell,</div>
- <div>It bounded from the mountain-top, and rattled in the dell;</div>
- <div>It struck upon the hillside, and rebounded on the flat;</div>
- <div>For Casey, mighty Casey, was advancing to the bat.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">There was ease in Casey’s manner as he stepped into his place,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">There was pride in Casey’s bearing, and a smile on Casey’s face;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And when responding to the cheers he lightly doffed his hat,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">No stranger in the crowd could doubt ’twas Casey at the bat.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_730">[730]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Ten thousand eyes were on him as he rubbed his hands with dirt,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Five thousand tongues applauded when he wiped them on his shirt;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Then while the writhing pitcher ground the ball into his hip,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Defiance glanced in Casey’s eye, a sneer curled Casey’s lip.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">And now the leather-covered sphere came hurtling through the air,</div>
- <div>And Casey stood a-watching it in haughty grandeur there;</div>
- <div>Close by the sturdy batsman the ball unheeded sped.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“That ain’t my style,” said Casey. “Strike one,” the umpire said.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">From the benches, black with people, there went up a muffled roar,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Like the beating of the storm-waves on a stern and distant shore;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“Kill him! kill the umpire!” shouted some one on the stand.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And it’s likely they’d have killed him had not Casey raised his hand.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">With a smile of Christian charity great Casey’s visage shone,</div>
- <div>He stilled the rising tumult; he bade the game go on;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">He signaled to the pitcher, and once more the spheroid flew,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But Casey still ignored it, and the umpire said, “Strike two.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">“Fraud!” cried the maddened thousands, and the echo answered, “Fraud!”</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But the scornful look from Casey, and the audience was awed;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">They saw his face grow stern and cold, they saw his muscles strain,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And they knew that Casey wouldn’t let that ball go by again.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">The sneer is gone from Casey’s lips, his teeth are clenched in hate,</div>
- <div>He pounds with cruel violence his bat upon the plate;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_731">[731]</span></div>
- <div>And now the pitcher holds the ball, and now he lets it go,</div>
- <div>And now the air is shattered by the force of Casey’s blow.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Oh! somewhere in this favored land the sun is shining bright,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The band is playing somewhere, and somewhere hearts are light;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And somewhere men are laughing, and somewhere children shout,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">But there is no joy in Mudville&mdash;mighty Casey has struck out.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>John Kendrick Bangs, one time Editor of <i>Puck</i>, of lamented
-memory, wrote tomes of humorous verse. As a pastime in tricky rhyming
-we quote:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MONA LISA</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa,</div>
- <div>Have you gone? Great Julius Cæsar!</div>
- <div>Who’s the Chap so bold and pinchey</div>
- <div>Thus to swipe the great da Vinci,</div>
- <div>Taking France’s first Chef d’œuvre</div>
- <div>Squarely from old Mr. Louvre,</div>
- <div>Easy as some pocket-picker</div>
- <div>Would remove our handkerchicker</div>
- <div>As we ride in careless folly</div>
- <div>On some gaily bounding trolley?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa,</div>
- <div>Who’s your Captor? Doubtless he’s a</div>
- <div>Crafty sort of treasure-seeker&mdash;</div>
- <div>Ne’er a Turpin e’er was sleeker&mdash;</div>
- <div>But, alas, if he can win you</div>
- <div>Easily as I could chin you,</div>
- <div>What is safe in all the nations</div>
- <div>From his dreadful depredations?</div>
- <div>He’s the style of Chap, I’m thinkin’</div>
- <div>Who will drive us all to drinkin’!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_732">[732]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa,</div>
- <div>Next he’ll swipe the Tower of Pisa,</div>
- <div>Pulling it from out its socket</div>
- <div>For to hide it in his pocket;</div>
- <div>Or perhaps he’ll up and steal, O,</div>
- <div>Madame Venus, late of Milo;</div>
- <div>Or maybe while on the grab he</div>
- <div>Will annex Westminster Abbey,</div>
- <div>And elope with that distinguished</div>
- <div>Heap of Ashes long extinguished.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">Maybe too, O Mona Lisa,</div>
- <div>He will come across the seas a&mdash;</div>
- <div>Searching for the style of treasure</div>
- <div>That we have in richest measure.</div>
- <div>Sunset Cox’s brazen statue,</div>
- <div>Have a care lest he shall catch you</div>
- <div>Or maybe he’ll set his eye on</div>
- <div>Hammerstein’s, or the Flatiron,</div>
- <div>Or some bit of White Wash done</div>
- <div>By those lads at Washington&mdash;</div>
- <div>Truly he’s a crafty geezer,</div>
- <div>Is your Captor, Mona Lisa!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Thomas L. Masson, humorous writer, and for many years editor of
-<i>Life</i>, has doubtless written more humor and books of humor than
-any one in the country.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE KISS</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“What other men have dared, I dare,”</div>
- <div class="i1">He said. “I’m daring, too:</div>
- <div>And tho’ they told me to beware,</div>
- <div class="i1">One kiss I’ll take from you.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Did I say one? Forgive me, dear;</div>
- <div class="i1">That was a grave mistake,</div>
- <div>For when I’ve taken one, I fear,</div>
- <div class="i1">One hundred more I’ll take.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_733">[733]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“’Tis sweet one kiss from you to win,</div>
- <div class="i1">But to stop there? Oh, no!</div>
- <div>One kiss is only to begin;</div>
- <div class="i1">There is no end, you know.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The maiden rose from where she sat</div>
- <div class="i1">And gently raised her head:</div>
- <div>“No man has ever talked like that&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">You may begin,” she said.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>DESOLATION</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Somewhat back from the village street</div>
- <div>Stands the old fashioned country seat.</div>
- <div>Across its antique portico</div>
- <div>Tall poplar trees their shadows throw.</div>
- <div>And there throughout the livelong day,</div>
- <div>Jemima plays the pi-a-na.</div>
- <div class="i5">Do, re, mi,</div>
- <div class="i5">Mi, re, do.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In the front parlor there it stands,</div>
- <div>And there Jemima plies her hands,</div>
- <div>While her papa, beneath his cloak,</div>
- <div>Mutters and groans: “This is no joke!”</div>
- <div>And swears to himself and sighs, alas!</div>
- <div>With sorrowful voice to all who pass.</div>
- <div class="i5">Do, re, mi,</div>
- <div class="i5">Mi, re, do.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Through days of death and days of birth</div>
- <div>She plays as if she owned the earth</div>
- <div>Through every swift vicissitude</div>
- <div>She drums as if it did her good,</div>
- <div>And still she sits from morn till night</div>
- <div>And plunks away with main and might</div>
- <div class="i5">Do, re, mi,</div>
- <div class="i5">Mi, re, do.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_734">[734]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In that mansion used to be</div>
- <div>Free-hearted hospitality;</div>
- <div>But that was many years before</div>
- <div>Jemima dallied with the score.</div>
- <div>When she began her daily plunk,</div>
- <div>Into their graves the neighbors sunk.</div>
- <div class="i5">Do, re, mi,</div>
- <div class="i5">Mi, re, do.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>To other worlds they’ve long since fled,</div>
- <div>All thankful that they’re safely dead.</div>
- <div>They stood the racket while alive</div>
- <div>Until Jemima rose at five.</div>
- <div>And then they laid their burdens down,</div>
- <div>And one and all they skipped the town.</div>
- <div class="i5">Do, re, mi,</div>
- <div class="i5">Mi, re, do.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Stephen Crane, a strange and often misunderstood genius, never waxed
-humorous in a broad sense. But the incisive, satirical wit of his lines
-can seldom be found bettered.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A man said to the universe,</div>
- <div>“Sir, I exist!”</div>
- <div>“However,” replied the universe,</div>
- <div>“The fact has not created in me</div>
- <div>A sense of obligation.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Upon the road of my life,</div>
- <div>Passed me many fair creatures,</div>
- <div>Clothed all in white, and radiant;</div>
- <div>To one, finally, I made speech:</div>
- <div>“Who art thou?”</div>
- <div>But she, like the others,</div>
- <div>Kept cowled her face,</div>
- <div>And answered in haste, anxiously,</div>
- <div>“I am Good Deed, forsooth;</div>
- <div>You have often seen me.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_735">[735]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Not uncowled,” I made reply.</div>
- <div>And with rash and strong hand,</div>
- <div>Though she resisted,</div>
- <div>I drew away the veil,</div>
- <div>And gazed at the features of Vanity.</div>
- <div>She, shamefaced, went on;</div>
- <div>And after I had mused a time,</div>
- <div>I said of myself, “Fool!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Think as I think,” said a man,</div>
- <div>“Or you are abominably wicked;</div>
- <div>You are a toad.”</div>
- <div>And after I had thought of it,</div>
- <div>I said, “I will, then, be a toad.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Charles Battell Loomis was a favorably known writer of humorous
-jingles, and he wielded a facile pen in parody.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>JACK AND JILL</i></h4>
-<h5 class="p1">(<i>As Austin Dobson might have written it</i>)</h5>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Their pail they must fill</div>
- <div class="i1">In a crystalline springlet,</div>
- <div>Brave Jack and fair Jill.</div>
- <div>Their pail they must fill</div>
- <div>At the top of the hill,</div>
- <div class="i1">Then she gives him a ringlet.</div>
- <div>Their pail they must fill</div>
- <div class="i1">In a crystalline springlet.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They stumbled and fell,</div>
- <div class="i1">And poor Jack broke his forehead,</div>
- <div>Oh, how he did yell!</div>
- <div>They stumbled and fell,</div>
- <div>And went down pell-mell&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">By Jove! it was horrid.</div>
- <div>They stumbled and fell,</div>
- <div class="i1">And poor Jack broke his forehead.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_736">[736]</span></div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>(<i>As Swinburne might have written it</i>)</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The shudd’ring sheet of rain athwart the trees!</div>
- <div>The crashing kiss of lightning on the seas!</div>
- <div class="i1">The moaning of the night wind on the wold,</div>
- <div>That erstwhile was a gentle, murm’ring breeze!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>On such a night as this went Jill and Jack</div>
- <div>With strong and sturdy strides through dampness black</div>
- <div class="i1">To find the hill’s high top and water cold,</div>
- <div>Then toiling through the town to bear it back.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The water drawn, they rest awhile. Sweet sips</div>
- <div>Of nectar then for Jack from Jill’s red lips,</div>
- <div class="i1">And then with arms entwined they homeward go;</div>
- <div>Till mid the mad mud’s moistened mush Jack slips.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Sweet Heaven, draw a veil on this sad plight,</div>
- <div>His crazèd cries and cranium cracked; the fright</div>
- <div class="i1">Of gentle Jill, her wretchedness and wo!</div>
- <div>Kind Phœbus, drive thy steeds and end this night!</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>(<i>As Walt Whitman might have written it</i>)</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I celebrate the personality of Jack!</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">I love his dirty hands, his tangled hair, his locomotion blundering.</div>
- <div>Each wart upon his hands I sing,</div>
- <div>Pæans I chant to his hulking shoulder blades.</div>
- <div>Also Jill!</div>
- <div>Her I celebrate.</div>
- <div>I, Walt, of unbridled thought and tongue,</div>
- <div>Whoop her up!</div>
- <div>What’s the matter with Jill?</div>
- <div>Oh, she’s all right!</div>
- <div>Who’s all right?</div>
- <div>Jill.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_737">[737]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Her golden hair, her sun-struck face, her hard and reddened hands;</div>
- <div>So, too, her feet, hefty, shambling.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">I see them in the evening, when the sun empurples the horizon, and through the darkening forest aisles are heard the sounds of myriad creatures of the night.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">I see them climb the steep ascent in quest of water for their mother.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Oh, speaking of her, I could celebrate the old lady if I had time.</div>
- <div>She is simply immense!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But Jack and Jill are walking up the hill.</div>
- <div>(I didn’t mean that rhyme.)</div>
- <div>I must watch them.</div>
- <div>I love to watch their walk,</div>
- <div>And wonder as I watch;</div>
- <div>He, stoop-shouldered, clumsy, hide-bound,</div>
- <div>Yet lusty,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Bearing his share of the 1-lb bucket as though it were a paperweight.</div>
- <div>She, erect, standing, her head uplifting,</div>
- <div>Holding, but bearing not the bucket.</div>
- <div>They have reached the spring.</div>
- <div>They have filled the bucket.</div>
- <div>Have you heard the “Old Oaken Bucket”?</div>
- <div>I will sing it:&mdash;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Of what countless patches is the bed-quilt of life composed!</div>
- <div>Here is a piece of lace. A babe is born.</div>
- <div>The father is happy, the mother is happy.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Next black crêpe. A beldame “shuffles off this mortal coil.”</div>
- <div>Now brocaded satin with orange blossoms,</div>
- <div>Mendelssohn’s “Wedding March,” an old shoe missile,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">A broken carriage window, the bride in the Bellevue sleeping.</div>
- <div>Here’s a large piece of black cloth!</div>
- <div>“Have you any last words to say?”</div>
- <div>“No.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_738">[738]</span></div>
- <div>“Sheriff, do your work!”</div>
- <div>Thus it is: from “grave to gay, from lively to severe.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I mourn the downfall of my Jack and Jill.</div>
- <div>I see them descending, obstacles not heeding.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">I see them pitching headlong, the water from the pail outpouring, a noise from leathern lungs out-belching.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The shadows of the night descend on Jack, recumbent, bellowing, his pate with gore besmeared.</div>
- <div>I love his cowardice, because it is an attribute, just like</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Job’s patience or Solomon’s wisdom, and I love attributes.</div>
- <div>Whoop!!!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Guy Wetmore Carryl, son of Charles E. Carryl, possessed a lovable and
-whimsical nature and wielded an exceedingly clever pen, both in verse
-and prose. His untimely death robbed us of one of our most delightful
-young humorists.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>HOW A GIRL WAS TOO RECKLESS OF GRAMMAR</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Matilda Maud Mackenzie frankly hadn’t any chin,</div>
- <div>Her hands were rough, her feet she turned invariably in;</div>
- <div class="i1">Her general form was German,</div>
- <div class="i2">By which I mean that you</div>
- <div class="i1">Her waist could not determine</div>
- <div class="i2">Within a foot or two.</div>
- <div>And not only did she stammer,</div>
- <div>But she used the kind of grammar</div>
- <div class="i1">That is called, for sake of euphony, askew.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>From what I say about her, don’t imagine I desire</div>
- <div>A prejudice against this worthy creature to inspire.</div>
- <div class="i1">She was willing, she was active,</div>
- <div class="i2">She was sober, she was kind,</div>
- <div class="i1">But she <i>never</i> looked attractive</div>
- <div class="i2">And she <i>hadn’t</i> any mind.</div>
- <div>I knew her more than slightly,</div>
- <div>And I treated her politely</div>
- <div class="i1">When I met her, but of course I wasn’t blind!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_739">[739]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Matilda Maud Mackenzie had a habit that was droll,</div>
- <div>She spent her morning seated on a rock or on a knoll,</div>
- <div class="i1">And threw with much composure</div>
- <div class="i2">A smallish rubber ball</div>
- <div class="i1">At an inoffensive osier</div>
- <div class="i2">By a little waterfall;</div>
- <div>But Matilda’s way of throwing</div>
- <div>Was like other people’s mowing,</div>
- <div class="i1">And she never hit the willow-tree at all!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One day as Miss Mackenzie with uncommon ardour tried</div>
- <div>To hit the mark, the missile flew exceptionally wide.</div>
- <div class="i1">And, before her eyes astounded,</div>
- <div class="i2">On a fallen maple’s trunk</div>
- <div class="i1">Ricochetted and rebounded</div>
- <div class="i2">In the rivulet, and sunk!</div>
- <div>Matilda, greatly frightened,</div>
- <div>In her grammar unenlightened,</div>
- <div class="i1">Remarked, “Well now I ast yer, who’d ’er thunk?”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">But what a marvel followed! From the pool at once there rose</div>
- <div>A frog, the sphere of rubber balanced deftly on his nose.</div>
- <div class="i1">He beheld her fright and frenzy</div>
- <div class="i2">And, her panic to dispel,</div>
- <div class="i1">On his knee by Miss Mackenzie</div>
- <div class="i2">He obsequiously fell.</div>
- <div>With quite as much decorum</div>
- <div>As a speaker in a forum</div>
- <div class="i1">He started in his history to tell.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Fair maid,” he said, “I beg you do not hesitate or wince,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">If you’ll promise that you’ll wed me, I’ll at once become a prince;</div>
- <div class="i1">For a fairy, old and vicious,</div>
- <div class="i2">An enchantment round me spun!”</div>
- <div class="i1">Then he looked up, unsuspicious,</div>
- <div class="i2">And he saw what he had won,</div>
- <div>And in terms of sad reproach, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_740">[740]</span></div>
- <div>Made some comments, <i>sotto voce</i>,</div>
- <div class="i1">(Which the publishers have bidden me to shun!)</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Matilda Maud Mackenzie said, as if she meant to scold;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">“I <i>never</i>! Why, you forward thing! Now, ain’t you awful bold!”</div>
- <div class="i1">Just a glance he paused to give her,</div>
- <div class="i2">And his head was seen to clutch,</div>
- <div class="i1">Then he darted to the river,</div>
- <div class="i2">And he dived to beat the Dutch!</div>
- <div>While the wrathful maiden panted</div>
- <div>“I don’t think he was enchanted!”</div>
- <div class="i1">(And he really didn’t look it overmuch!)</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5>THE MORAL</h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In one’s language one conservative should be;</div>
- <div>Speech is silver and it never should be free!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Edwin Arlington Robinson, among the greatest of our later poets, has a
-fine wit, nowhere better shown than in:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MINIVER CHEEVY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Miniver Cheevy, child of scorn,</div>
- <div class="i1">Grew lean while he assailed the seasons;</div>
- <div>He wept that he was ever born,</div>
- <div class="i1">And he had reasons.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Miniver loved the days of old</div>
- <div class="i1">When swords were bright and steeds were prancing;</div>
- <div>The vision of a warrior bold</div>
- <div class="i1">Would set him dancing.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Miniver sighed for what was not,</div>
- <div class="i1">And dreamed and rested from his labors;</div>
- <div>He dreamed of Thebes and Camelot</div>
- <div class="i1">And Priam’s neighbors.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_741">[741]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Miniver mourned the ripe renown</div>
- <div class="i1">That made so many a name so fragrant;</div>
- <div>He mourned Romance, now on the town,</div>
- <div class="i1">And Art, a vagrant.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Miniver loved the Medici,</div>
- <div class="i1">Albeit he had never seen one;</div>
- <div>He would have sinned incessantly</div>
- <div class="i1">Could he have been one.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Miniver cursed the commonplace,</div>
- <div class="i1">And eyed a khaki suit with loathing;</div>
- <div>He missed the mediæval grace</div>
- <div class="i1">Of iron clothing.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Miniver scorned the gold he sought,</div>
- <div class="i1">But sore annoyed he was without it;</div>
- <div>Miniver thought and thought and thought</div>
- <div class="i1">And thought about it.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Miniver Cheevy, born too late,</div>
- <div class="i1">Scratched his head and kept on thinking;</div>
- <div>Miniver coughed, and called it fate,</div>
- <div class="i1">And kept on drinking.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>TWO MEN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There be two men of all mankind</div>
- <div class="i1">That I should like to know about;</div>
- <div>But search and question where I will,</div>
- <div class="i1">I cannot ever find them out.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Melchizedek he praised the Lord,</div>
- <div class="i1">And gave some wine to Abraham;</div>
- <div>But who can tell what else he did</div>
- <div class="i1">Must be more learned than I am.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_742">[742]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ucalegon he lost his house</div>
- <div class="i1">When Agamemnon came to Troy;</div>
- <div>But who can tell me who he was&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">I’ll pray the gods to give him joy.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>There be two men of all mankind</div>
- <div class="i1">That I’m forever thinking on;</div>
- <div>They chase me everywhere I go,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Melchizedek, Ucalegon.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Arthur Guiterman, among the best of our present day humorous writers,
-never did anything better than this intensified bit of burlesque.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MAVRONE</i><br />
-<span class="subhed2">ONE OF THOSE SAD IRISH POEMS, WITH NOTES</span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>From Arranmore the weary miles I’ve come;</div>
- <div class="i1">An’ all the way I’ve heard</div>
- <div>A Shrawn<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> that’s kep’ me silent, speechless, dumb,</div>
- <div class="i1">Not sayin’ any word.</div>
- <div>An’ was it then the Shrawn of Eire,<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> you’ll say,</div>
- <div class="i1">For him that died the death on Carrisbool?</div>
- <div>It was not that; nor was it, by the way,</div>
- <div class="i1">The Sons of Garnim<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> blitherin’ their drool;</div>
- <div>Nor was it any Crowdie of the Shee,<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></div>
- <div class="i1">Or Itt, or Himm, nor wail of Barryhoo<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></div>
- <div>For Barrywhich that stilled the tongue of me.</div>
- <div>’Twas but my own heart cryin’ out for you</div>
- <div>Magraw!<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> Bulleen, shinnanigan, Boru,</div>
- <div>Aroon, Machree, Aboo!<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_743">[743]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>ELEGY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The jackals prowl, the serpents hiss</div>
- <div>In what was once Persepolis.</div>
- <div>Proud Babylon is but a trace</div>
- <div>Upon the desert’s dusty face.</div>
- <div>The topless towers of Ilium</div>
- <div>Are ashes. Judah’s harp is dumb.</div>
- <div>The fleets of Nineveh and Tyre</div>
- <div>Are down with Davy Jones, Esquire</div>
- <div>And all the oligarchies, kings,</div>
- <div>And potentates that ruled these things<span class="pagenum" id="Page_744">[744]</span></div>
- <div>Are gone! But cheer up; don’t be sad;</div>
- <div>Think what a lovely time they had!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Oliver Herford, born in England but living most of his life in America,
-has without doubt the most humorous soul in the world.</p>
-
-<p>His art, which is pictorial as well as literary, is unique and of an
-intangible, indescribable nature.</p>
-
-<p>As graceful of fancy as Spenser, as truly funny as Sir William Gilbert,
-he also possesses a deep philosophy and a perfect technique.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>PHYLLIS LEE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Beside a Primrose ’broider’d Rill</div>
- <div class="i1">Sat Phyllis Lee in Silken Dress</div>
- <div>Whilst Lucius limn’d with loving skill</div>
- <div class="i1">Her likeness, as a Shepherdess.</div>
- <div>Yet tho’ he strove with loving skill</div>
- <div>His Brush refused to work his Will.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>“Dear Maid, unless you close your Eyes</div>
- <div class="i1">I cannot paint to-day,” he said;</div>
- <div>“Their Brightness shames the very Skies</div>
- <div class="i1">And turns their Turquoise into Lead.”</div>
- <div>Quoth Phyllis, then, “To save the Skies</div>
- <div>And speed your Brush, I’ll shut my Eyes.”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now when her Eyes were closed, the Dear,</div>
- <div class="i1">Not dreaming of such Treachery,</div>
- <div>Felt a Soft Whisper in her Ear,</div>
- <div class="i1">“Without the Light, how can one See?”</div>
- <div>“If you are <i>sure</i> that none can see</div>
- <div>I’ll keep them shut,” said Phyllis Lee.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>SOME GEESE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ev-er-y child who has the use</div>
- <div>Of his sen-ses knows a goose.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_745">[745]</span></div>
- <div>See them un-der-neath the tree</div>
- <div>Gath-er round the goose-girl’s knee,</div>
- <div>While she reads them by the hour</div>
- <div>From the works of Scho-pen-hau-er.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>How pa-tient-ly the geese at-tend!</div>
- <div>But do they re-al-ly com-pre-hend</div>
- <div>What Scho-pen-hau-er’s driv-ing at?</div>
- <div>Oh, not at all; but what of that?</div>
- <div>Nei-ther do I; nei-ther does she;</div>
- <div>And, for that mat-ter, nor does he.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE CHIMPANZEE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Children, behold the Chimpanzee:</div>
- <div>He sits on the ancestral tree</div>
- <div>From which we sprang in ages gone.</div>
- <div>I’m glad we sprang: had we held on,</div>
- <div>We might, for aught that I can say,</div>
- <div>Be horrid Chimpanzees to-day.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE HEN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Alas! my Child, where is the Pen</div>
- <div>That can do Justice to the Hen?</div>
- <div>Like Royalty, She goes her way,</div>
- <div>Laying foundations every day,</div>
- <div>Though not for Public Buildings, yet</div>
- <div>For Custard, Cake and Omelette.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Or if too Old for such a use</div>
- <div>They have their Fling at some Abuse,</div>
- <div>As when to Censure Plays Unfit</div>
- <div>Upon the Stage they make a Hit,</div>
- <div>Or at elections Seal the Fate</div>
- <div>Of an Obnoxious Candidate.</div>
- <div>No wonder, Child, we prize the Hen,</div>
- <div>Whose Egg is Mightier than the Pen.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_746">[746]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>MARK TWAIN: A PIPE DREAM</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Well I recall how first I met</div>
- <div class="i1">Mark Twain&mdash;an infant barely three</div>
- <div>Rolling a tiny cigarette</div>
- <div class="i1">While cooing on his nurse’s knee.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Since then in every sort of place</div>
- <div class="i1">I’ve met with Mark and heard him joke,</div>
- <div>Yet how can I describe his face?</div>
- <div class="i1">I never saw it for the smoke.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At school he won a <i>smokership</i>,</div>
- <div class="i1">At Harvard College (Cambridge, Mass.)</div>
- <div>His name was soon on every lip,</div>
- <div class="i1">They made him “<i>smoker</i>” of his class.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Who will forget his smoking bout</div>
- <div class="i1">With Mount Vesuvius&mdash;our cheers&mdash;</div>
- <div>When Mount Vesuvius went out</div>
- <div class="i1">And didn’t smoke again for years?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The news was flashed to England’s King,</div>
- <div class="i1">Who begged Mark Twain to come and stay,</div>
- <div>Offered him dukedoms&mdash;anything</div>
- <div class="i1">To smoke the London fog away.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But Mark was firm. “I bow,” said he,</div>
- <div class="i1">“To no imperial command,</div>
- <div>No ducal coronet for me,</div>
- <div class="i1">My smoke is for my native land!”</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For Mark there waits a brighter crown!</div>
- <div class="i1">When Peter comes his card to read&mdash;</div>
- <div>He’ll take the sign “No Smoking” down,</div>
- <div class="i1">&mdash;Then Heaven will be Heaven indeed.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_747">[747]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>GOLD</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">Some take their gold</div>
- <div class="i1">In minted mold,</div>
- <div>And some in harps hereafter,</div>
- <div class="i1">But give me mine</div>
- <div class="i1">In tresses fine,</div>
- <div>And keep the change in laughter!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>AFTER HERRICK</i></h4>
-<h5 class="p1"><i>SONG</i></h5>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Gather Kittens while you may,</div>
- <div class="i1">Time brings only Sorrow;</div>
- <div>And the Kittens of To-day</div>
- <div class="i1">Will be Old Cats To-morrow.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>THE PRODIGAL EGG</i></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>An egg of humble sphere</div>
- <div class="i1">By vain ambition stung,</div>
- <div>Once left his mother dear</div>
- <div class="i1">When he was very young.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Tis needless to dilate</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon a tale so sad;</div>
- <div>The egg, I grieve to state,</div>
- <div class="i1">Grew very, very bad.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At last when old and blue,</div>
- <div class="i1">He wandered home, and then</div>
- <div>They gently broke it to</div>
- <div class="i1">The loving mother hen.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>She only said, in fun,</div>
- <div>“I fear you’re spoiled, my son!”</div>
- </div>
-
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Frank Gelett Burgess, one time editor of <i>The Lark</i>, a short-lived
-humorous periodical, is at his best in the realms of sheer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_748">[748]</span> nonsense.
-His <i>Purple Cow</i> has a nation-wide reputation and his humorous
-excursions into the French Forms are always marked by exact precision
-as to rule and law.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE PURPLE COW</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I never saw a Purple Cow,</div>
- <div class="i1">I never hope to see one;</div>
- <div>But I can tell you, anyhow,</div>
- <div class="i1">I’d rather see than be one.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE INVISIBLE BRIDGE</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I’d Never Dare to Walk across</div>
- <div class="i1">A Bridge I Could Not See;</div>
- <div>For Quite afraid of Falling off,</div>
- <div class="i1">I fear that I Should Be!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>VILLANELLE OF THINGS AMUSING</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>These are the things that make me laugh&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Life’s a preposterous farce, say I!</div>
- <div>And I’ve missed of too many jokes by half.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The high-heeled antics of colt and calf,</div>
- <div class="i1">The men who think they can act, and try&mdash;</div>
- <div>These are the things that make me laugh.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The hard-boiled poses in photograph,</div>
- <div class="i1">The groom still wearing his wedding tie&mdash;</div>
- <div>And I’ve missed of too many jokes by half!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>These are the bubbles I gayly quaff</div>
- <div class="i1">With the rank conceit of the new-born fly&mdash;</div>
- <div>These are the things that make me laugh!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For, Heaven help me! I needs must chaff,</div>
- <div class="i1">And people will tickle me till I die&mdash;</div>
- <div>And I’ve missed of too many jokes by half!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_749">[749]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So write me down in my epitaph</div>
- <div>As one too fond of his health to cry&mdash;</div>
- <div>These are the things that make me laugh,</div>
- <div>And I’ve missed of too many jokes by half!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>PSYCHOLOPHON</i><br />
-<span class="subhed2"><i>Supposed to be Translated from the Old Parsee</i></span></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Twine then the rays</div>
- <div class="i1">Round her soft Theban tissues!</div>
- <div>All will be as She says,</div>
- <div class="i1">When that dead past reissues.</div>
- <div>Matters not what nor where,</div>
- <div class="i1">Hark, to the moon’s dim cluster!</div>
- <div>How was her heavy hair</div>
- <div class="i1">Lithe as a feather duster!</div>
- <div>Matters not when nor whence;</div>
- <div class="i1">Flittertigibbet!</div>
- <div>Sounds make the song, not sense,</div>
- <div class="i1">Thus I inhibit!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Carolyn Wells has written much humorous verse and prose. Her work has
-appeared in many of the periodicals and in book form.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE IDIOT’S DELIGHT</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A curious man of the human clan</div>
- <div class="i1">Is a man who fools himself;</div>
- <div>Who thinks he can swing the Pierian spring</div>
- <div class="i1">Through a conduit of books on a shelf!</div>
- <div>Who thinks if he pores in the old bookstores</div>
- <div class="i1">And browses among the rares,</div>
- <div>He is fit to belong to the scholarly throng</div>
- <div class="i1">And gives himself scholarly airs.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He gasps as he speaks of his worn antiques&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">With emotion almost dumb!</div>
- <div>Or he solemnly turns his Kilmarnock Burns</div>
- <div class="i1">With an awed and reverent thumb;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_750">[750]</span></div>
- <div>He’ll scrimp to possess a Kelmscott Press,</div>
- <div class="i1">And hoard up his hard-earned wage</div>
- <div>Till he saves the cost of a Paradise Lost</div>
- <div class="i1">With the right sort of title page.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If he has on his shelves some dumpy twelves,</div>
- <div class="i1">Of which he’s a connoisseur,</div>
- <div>The bibliophile, with a fatuous smile,</div>
- <div class="i1">Believes he’s a littérateur!</div>
- <div>Because he achieves incunabula leaves,</div>
- <div class="i1">On himself as a scholar he’ll look;</div>
- <div>Though I’m ready to bet no scholar <i>I’ve</i> met</div>
- <div class="i1">Has ever collected a book!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The difference, you see, in the viewpoint must be,</div>
- <div class="i1">And it <i>is</i> a distinction nice;</div>
- <div>A scholar will look at the worth of a book,</div>
- <div class="i1">A collector will think of its price.</div>
- <div>He nearly bursts with pride in his firsts;</div>
- <div class="i1">And you can’t get it into his dome</div>
- <div>That he cannot affect his intellect</div>
- <div class="i1">By buying a tattered tome!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A collector <i>may</i> have matter gray,</div>
- <div class="i1">He <i>may</i> have wisdom, too;</div>
- <div>As he may have a head of a carroty red</div>
- <div class="i1">Or eyes of a chicory blue.</div>
- <div>But he has these things by the grace of God;</div>
- <div class="i1">Especially his good looks;</div>
- <div>By Nature’s laws, and <i>not</i> because</div>
- <div class="i1">The things he collects are <i>books</i>!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And so I maintain there is no brain,</div>
- <div class="i1">No genius or talent or mind,</div>
- <div>Required to look for a certain book,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or to struggle that book to find.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_751">[751]</span></div>
- <div>No collector reads his precious screeds,</div>
- <div class="i1">He appraises his books by sight;</div>
- <div>And I make claim that the blooming game</div>
- <div class="i1">Is the idiot’s delight!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>THE MYSTERY</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I can understand politics, civics and law,</div>
- <div>Of national issues I have no great awe;</div>
- <div>The theories of Einstein are simple to me,</div>
- <div>And psychoanalysis mere A. B. C.</div>
- <div>But there is one thing I can’t get in my head&mdash;</div>
- <div>Why <i>do</i> people marry the people they wed?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I can do mathematics, no matter how high;</div>
- <div>And to me fourth dimension is easy as pie;</div>
- <div>Most intricate problems I readily solve,</div>
- <div>And I know why the nebular spirals revolve.</div>
- <div>But on this baffling question no light has been shed;</div>
- <div>Why <i>do</i> people marry the people they wed?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Long hours over Nietzsche I frequently spend,</div>
- <div>I’ve all his philosophy at my tongue’s end.</div>
- <div>Of Freudian conclusions I haven’t a doubt.</div>
- <div>I’ve got human complexes all straightened out.</div>
- <div>But on this deep problem I muse in my bed&mdash;</div>
- <div>Why <i>do</i> people marry the people they wed?</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I’ve studied up ancient religions and cults,</div>
- <div>I’ve tried spiritism with curious results;</div>
- <div>I know the Piltdown and Neanderthal man,</div>
- <div>How big is Betelgeuse and how old is Ann;</div>
- <div>But this I shall wonder about till I’m dead&mdash;</div>
- <div>Why <i>do</i> people marry the people they wed?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>WOMAN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Women are dear and women are queer</div>
- <div class="i1">Men call them, with a laugh,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_752">[752]</span></div>
- <div>The female of the species,</div>
- <div class="i1">Or a husband’s better half.</div>
- <div>They sing their praise in many ways,</div>
- <div class="i1">They flatter them&mdash;but, oh,</div>
- <div>How little they know of Woman</div>
- <div class="i1">Who only women know!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now women are pert and women will flirt,</div>
- <div class="i1">And they’re catty and rude and vain;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And sometimes they’re witty and sometimes they’re pretty&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">And sometimes they’re awfully plain.</div>
- <div>But Woman is rare beyond compare,</div>
- <div class="i1">The poets tell us so;</div>
- <div>How little they know of Woman</div>
- <div class="i1">Who only women know!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Women are petty and women are fretty,</div>
- <div class="i1">They try to hide their years;</div>
- <div>They steadily nag and nervously rag,</div>
- <div class="i1">And frequently burst into tears.</div>
- <div>But Woman is gracious, serene and calm,</div>
- <div class="i1">Above all tricks or arts,</div>
- <div>Her sympathy’s like a soothing balm</div>
- <div class="i1">To sad and sorrowing hearts.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Women are very perverse and contrary,</div>
- <div class="i1">They will contradict you flat;</div>
- <div>Oh, women I’ll call the devil and all,</div>
- <div class="i1">There’s no denying that!</div>
- <div>But Woman, oh, men, is beyond our ken,</div>
- <div class="i1">Too angelic for mortals below;</div>
- <div>How little they know of Woman</div>
- <div class="i1">Who only women know!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><i>A SYMPOSIUM OF POETS</i></p>
-
-<p>Once upon a time a few of the greatest Poets of all ages gathered
-together for the purpose of discussing the merits of the Classic Poem:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_753">[753]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Peter, Peter, Pumpkin Eater,</div>
- <div>Had a wife and couldn’t keep her,</div>
- <div>Put her in a Pumpkin shell,</div>
- <div>And there he kept her very well.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>In many ways this historic narrative called forth admiration. One must
-admit Peter’s great strength of character, his power of quick decision,
-and immediate achievement. Some hold that his inability to retain the
-lady’s affection in the first place, argues a defect in his nature;
-but remembering the lady’s youth and beauty (implied by the spirit of
-the whole poem), we can only reiterate our appreciation of the way
-he conquered circumstances, and proved himself master of his fate,
-and captain of his soul! Truly, the Pumpkin-Eaters must have been a
-forceful race, able to defend their rights and rule their people.</p>
-
-<p>The Poets at their symposium unanimously felt that the style of the
-poem, though hardly to be called crude, was a little bare, and they
-took up with pleasure the somewhat arduous task of rewriting it.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Ed. Poe opined that there was lack of atmosphere, and that the
-facts of the narrative called for a more impressive setting. He
-therefore offered:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The skies, they were ashen and sober,</div>
- <div class="i1">The lady was shivering with fear;</div>
- <div class="i1">Her shoulders were shud’ring with fear.</div>
- <div>On a dark night in dismal October,</div>
- <div class="i1">Of his most Matrimonial Year.</div>
- <div class="i1">It was hard by the cornfield of Auber,</div>
- <div class="i1">In the musty Mud Meadows of Weir,</div>
- <div>Down by the dank frog-pond of Auber,</div>
- <div class="i1">In the ghoul-haunted cornfield of Weir.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now, his wife had a temper Satanic,</div>
- <div class="i1">And when Peter roamed here with his Soul,</div>
- <div class="i1">Through the corn with his conjugal Soul,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_754">[754]</span></div>
- <div>He spied a huge pumpkin Titanic,</div>
- <div class="i1">And he popped her right in through a hole.</div>
- <div class="i1">Then solemnly sealed up the hole.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And thus Peter Peter has kept her</div>
- <div class="i1">Immured in Mausoleum gloom,</div>
- <div class="i1">A moist, humid, damp sort of gloom.</div>
- <div>And though there’s no doubt he bewept her,</div>
- <div class="i1">She is still in her yellow hued tomb,</div>
- <div class="i1">Her unhallowed, Hallowe’en tomb</div>
- <div>And ever since Peter side-stepped her,</div>
- <div class="i1">He calls her his lost Lulalume,</div>
- <div class="i1">His Pumpkin-entombed Lulalume.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>This was received with acclaim, but many objected to the mortuary
-theory.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Mrs. Robert Browning was sure that Peter’s love for his wife, though
-perhaps that of a primitive man, was of the true Portuguese stamp, and
-with this view composed the following pleasing Sonnet:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>How do I keep thee? Let me count the ways.</div>
- <div>I bar up every breadth and depth and height</div>
- <div>My hands can reach, while feeling out of sight</div>
- <div>For bolts that stick and hasps that will not raise.</div>
- <div>I keep thee from the public’s idle gaze,</div>
- <div>I keep thee in, by sun or candle light.</div>
- <div>I keep thee, rude, as women strive for Right.</div>
- <div>I keep thee boldly, as they seek for praise,</div>
- <div>I keep thee with more effort than I’d use</div>
- <div>To keep a dry-goods shop or big hotel.</div>
- <div>I keep thee with a power I seemed to lose</div>
- <div>With that last cook. I’ll keep thee down the well,</div>
- <div>Or up the chimney-place! Or if I choose,</div>
- <div>I shall but keep thee in a Pumpkin shell.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_755">[755]</span></p>
-
-<p>This was of course meritorious, though somewhat suggestive of the
-cave-men, who, we have never been told, were Pumpkin Eaters.</p>
-
-<p>Austin Dobson’s version was really more ladylike:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>BALLADE OF A PUMPKIN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Golden-skinned, delicate, bright,</div>
- <div class="i1">Wondrous of texture and hue,</div>
- <div>Bathed in a soft, sunny light,</div>
- <div class="i1">Pearled with a silvery dew.</div>
- <div class="i1">Fair as a flower to the view,</div>
- <div>Ripened by summer’s soft heat,</div>
- <div class="i1">Basking beneath Heaven’s blue,&mdash;</div>
- <div>This is the Pumpkin of Pete.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Peter consumed day and night,</div>
- <div class="i1">Pumpkin in pie or in stew;</div>
- <div>Hinted to Cook that she might</div>
- <div class="i1">Can it for winter use, too.</div>
- <div class="i1">Pumpkin croquettes, not a few,</div>
- <div>Peter would happily eat;</div>
- <div class="i1">Knowing content would ensue,&mdash;</div>
- <div>This is the Pumpkin of Pete.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Everything went along right,</div>
- <div class="i1">Just as all things ought to do;</div>
- <div>Till Peter,&mdash;unfortunate wight,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Married a girl that he knew,</div>
- <div class="i1">Each day he had to pursue,</div>
- <div>His runaway Bride down the street,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">So her into prison he threw,&mdash;</div>
- <div>This is the Pumpkin of Pete.</div>
- </div>
-
-<h5><i>L’envoi</i></h5>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Lady, a sad lot, ’tis true,</div>
- <div class="i1">Staying your wandering feet;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_756">[756]</span></div>
- <div>But ’tis the best place for you,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">This is the Pumpkin of Pete.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Like the other women present Dinah Craik felt the pathos of the
-situation, and gave vent to her feelings in this tender burst of song:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Could I come back to you Peter, Peter,</div>
- <div class="i1">From this old pumpkin that I hate;</div>
- <div>I would be so tender, so loving, Peter,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Peter, Peter, gracious and great.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>You were not half worthy of me, Peter,</div>
- <div class="i1">Not half worthy the like of I;</div>
- <div>Now all men beside are not in it, Peter,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Peter, Peter, I feel like a pie.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Stretch out your hand to me, Peter, Peter,</div>
- <div class="i1">Let me out of this Pumpkin, do;</div>
- <div>Peter, my beautiful Pumpkin Eater,</div>
- <div class="i1">Peter, Peter, tender and true.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Mr. Hogg took his own graceful view of the matter, thus:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">Lady of wandering,</div>
- <div class="i1">Blithesome, meandering,</div>
- <div>Sweet was thy flitting o’er moorland and lea;</div>
- <div class="i1">Emblem of restlessness,</div>
- <div class="i1">Blest be thy dwelling place,</div>
- <div>Oh, to abide in the Pumpkin with thee.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">Peter, though bland and good,</div>
- <div class="i1">Never thee understood,</div>
- <div>Or he had known how thy nature was free;</div>
- <div class="i1">Goddess of fickleness,</div>
- <div class="i1">Blest be thy dwelling place,</div>
- <div>Oh, to abide in the Pumpkin with thee.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_757">[757]</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Kipling grasped at the occasion for a ballad in his best vein. The
-plot of the story aroused his old time enthusiasm, and he transplanted
-the pumpkin eater and his wife to the scenes of his earlier powers:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In a great big Mammoth pumpkin</div>
- <div class="i1">Lookin’ eastward to the sea,</div>
- <div>There’s a wife of mine a-settin’</div>
- <div class="i1">And I know she’s mad at me.</div>
- <div>For I hear her calling, “Peter!”</div>
- <div class="i1">With a wild hysteric shout;</div>
- <div>“Come you back, you Punkin Eater,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Come you back and let me out!”</div>
- <div class="i2">For she’s in a punkin shell,</div>
- <div class="i2">I have locked her in her cell;</div>
- <div>But it really is a comfy, well-constructed punkin shell;</div>
- <div class="i2">And there she’ll have to dwell,</div>
- <div class="i2">For she didn’t treat me well,</div>
- <div>So I put her in the punkin and I’ve kept her very well.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Algernon Swinburne was also in one of his early moods, and as a result
-he wove the story into this exquisite fabric of words:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h4><i>IN THE PUMPKIN</i></h4>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Leave go my hands. Let me catch breath and see,</div>
- <div>What is this confine either side of me?</div>
- <div class="i1">Green pumpkin vines about me coil and crawl,</div>
- <div>Seen sidelong, like a ’possum in a tree,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Ah me, ah me, that pumpkins are so small!</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Oh, my fair love, I charge thee, let me out;</div>
- <div>From this gold lush encircling me about;</div>
- <div class="i1">I turn and only meet a pumpkin wall.</div>
- <div>The crescent moon shines slim,&mdash;but I am stout,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Ah me, ah me, that pumpkins are so small!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_758">[758]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Pumpkin seeds like cold sea blooms bring me dreams;</div>
- <div>Ah, Pete,&mdash;too sweet to me,&mdash;my Pete, it seems</div>
- <div class="i1">Love like a Pumpkin holds me in its thrall;</div>
- <div>And overhead a writhen shadow gleams,&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i1">Ah me, ah me, that pumpkins are so small!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>This intense poesy thrilled the heavens, and it was with a sense of
-relief to their throbbing souls that they listened to Mr. Bret Harte’s
-contribution:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Which I wish to remark,</div>
- <div class="i1">That the lady was plain;</div>
- <div>And for ways that are dark</div>
- <div class="i1">And for tricks that are vain,</div>
- <div>She had predilections peculiar,</div>
- <div class="i1">And drove Peter nearly insane.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Far off, anywhere,</div>
- <div class="i1">She wandered each day;</div>
- <div>And though Peter would swear,</div>
- <div class="i1">The lady would stray;</div>
- <div>And whenever he thought he had got her,</div>
- <div class="i1">She was sure to be rambling away.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Said Peter, “My Wife,</div>
- <div class="i1">Hereafter you dwell</div>
- <div>For the rest of your life</div>
- <div class="i1">In a big Pumpkin Shell.”</div>
- <div>He popped her in one that was handy,</div>
- <div class="i1">And since then he’s kept her quite well.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Which is why I remark,</div>
- <div class="i1">Though the lady was plain,</div>
- <div>For ways that are dark</div>
- <div class="i1">And tricks that are vain,</div>
- <div>A husband is very peculiar,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the same I am free to maintain.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_759">[759]</span></p>
-
-<p>Oscar Wilde in a poetic fervour and a lily-like kimono, recited with
-tremulous intensity this masterpiece of his own:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Oh, Peter! Pumpkin-fed and proud,</div>
- <div class="i1">Ah me! ah me!</div>
- <div class="i1">(Sweet squashes, mother!)</div>
- <div>Thy woe knells like a stricken cloud;</div>
- <div>(Ah me; ah me!</div>
- <div class="i1">Hurroo, Hurree!)</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Lo! vanisht like an anguisht wraith;</div>
- <div class="i1">Ah me! ah me!</div>
- <div class="i1">(Sweet squashes, mother!)</div>
- <div>Wan hope a dolorous Musing saith;</div>
- <div>(Ah me; ah me!</div>
- <div class="i1">Dum diddle dee!)</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Hist! dare we soar? The Pumpkin shell</div>
- <div class="i1">Ah me! ah me!</div>
- <div class="i1">(Sweet squashes, mother!)</div>
- <div>(Fast and forever! Sooth, ’tis well.</div>
- <div>(Ah me; ah me!</div>
- <div class="i1">Faloodle dee!)</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>There was little to be said after this, so the meeting was closed with
-a solo by Lady Arthur Hill, using with a truly touching touch:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In the pumpkin, oh, my darling,</div>
- <div class="i1">Think not bitterly of me;</div>
- <div>Though I went away in silence,</div>
- <div class="i1">Though I couldn’t set you free.</div>
- <div>For my heart was filled with longing,</div>
- <div class="i1">For another piece of pie;</div>
- <div>It was best to leave you there, dear,</div>
- <div class="i1">Best for you and best for I.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_760">[760]</span></p>
-
-<p>Two of our most gentle and kindly humorists may not be quoted, because
-it would be a crime to separate their text and pictures.</p>
-
-<p>Peter Newell and J. G. Francis have drawn some of the most delicately
-witty pictures and have written quatrains or Limericks to accompany
-them, but picture and text must be shown together, if at all.</p>
-
-<p>For the same reason our cartoonists may not be touched upon.</p>
-
-<p>Nor can we include any writers whose work did not appear before 1900.</p>
-
-<p>The scope of this book is bounded by the twentieth century, and much
-as we should like to present the Columnists and the more recent
-versifiers, they must be left for a later chronicler.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_761">[761]</span></p>
-
-<h2>INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>About a Woman’s Promise</i>, Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-
- <li class="smcap">Abraham á Sancta Clara,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Burdensome Wife, A</i> (from <i>Hie! Fie!</i>),
- <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Donkey’s Voice, The</i> (from <i>Judas, the Arch-Rogue</i>),
- <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>St. Anthony’s Sermon to the Fishes</i>,
- <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
- <li class="smcap">Abu Ishak,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Parody on Hafiz</i>,
- <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Academy of Syllographs, The</i>, Count Giacomo Leopardi,
- <a href="#Page_616">616</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Acrostics</i>, Sir John Davies,
- <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
-
- <li class="smcap">Adams, John Quincy,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Sally</i>,
- <a href="#Page_650">650</a></li>
-
- <li class="smcap">Addison, Joseph,
- <a href="#Page_421">421</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Will of a Virtuoso, The</i> (from <i>The Tatler</i>),
- <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Address to Bacchus, An</i>, Marc-Antoine Gerard,
- <a href="#Page_392">392</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Address to the Toothache</i>, Robert Burns,
- <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-
- <li class="smcap">Ade, George,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Cocktail, The</i> (from <i>The Sultan of Sulu</i>),
- <a href="#Page_722">722</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Fable of the Caddy Who Hurt His Head While Thinking, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_723">723</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Adventures of Baron Münchausen</i>, (selections), Rudolph Erich Raspe,
- <a href="#Page_589">589</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Advice to a Friend on Marriage</i>, Eustache Deschampes,
- <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Advice to an Innkeeper</i>, José Morell,
- <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Advice to Ponticus</i>, Johannes Audœmus,
- <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Æsop’s</span> <i>Fables</i>,
- <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lion, the Bear, the Monkey and the Fox, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Partial Judge, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Æsop, G. Washington.</span> <i>See</i> <a href="#Lanigan">Lanigan, George Thomas</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Æstivation</i>, Oliver Wendell Holmes,
- <a href="#Page_666">666</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>After a Wedding</i> (from <i>Mrs. Partington</i>), Benjamin Penhallow Shillaber,
- <a href="#Page_664">664</a></li>
-
- <li><i>After Herrick: Song</i>, Oliver Herford,
- <a href="#Page_747">747</a></li>
-
- <li><i>After Swimming the Hellespont</i>, Lord Byron,
- <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Against Abolishing Christianity</i>, Jonathan Swift,
- <a href="#Page_415">415</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Agathias</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Grammar and Medicine</i>,
- <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Alarmed Skipper, The</i>, James Thomas Fields,
- <a href="#Page_668">668</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Alcazar, Baltazar del</span>, <i>Sleep</i>,
- <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Aldrich, Thomas Bailey</span>,
- <a href="#Page_683">683</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Alexis</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Aly Ben Ahmed Ben Mansour</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>To the Vizier Cassim Obid Allah, on the Death of One of His Sons</i>,
- <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
- <li>American humor,
- <a href="#Page_643">643–760</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Amicis, Edmondo de</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Tooth for Tooth</i>,
- <a href="#Page_623">623</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Ammianus</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Epitaph, An</i>,
- <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Analects of Confucius, The</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Anaxandriades</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Anstey, F.</span> <i>See</i> <a href="#Guthrie">Guthrie, T. A.</a></li>
-
- <li>Anthologies,
- <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Antiphanes</span>,
- <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Apollodorus</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Apology for Cider</i>, Olivier Basselin,
- <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Apology for Herodotus</i> (Noodle Stories from), Henry Stephens (Henri Estienn),
- <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Apuleius</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Metamorphose, or The Golden Ass</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
- <li>Arabian humor,
- <a href="#Page_33">33</a>,
- <a href="#Page_126">126–138</a>,
- <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Arabian Nights’ Entertainment, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_33">33</a>,
- <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Bakbarah’s Visit to the Harem</i>,
- <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Husband and the Parrot, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Ignorant Man Who Set Up for a Schoolmaster, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Simpleton and the Sharper, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Thief Turned Merchant and the Other Thief, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
- <li>Arabian Riddle,
- <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
- <li>Arabian tale, the universal,
- <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Arbuthnot, John</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Dissertation on Dumplings, A</i>, (from <i>Bull and Mouth</i>),
- <a href="#Page_427">427</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Aristophanes</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Birds, The</i> (plot),
- <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Frogs, The</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Aristophon</span>, Epigram,
- <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Aristotle</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">definition of the Ridiculous,
- <a href="#Page_3">3</a>,
- <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Disappointment Theory,
- <a href="#Page_4">4</a> <i>ff</i>.</li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Arouet</span>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Voltaire">Voltaire</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Artist and Public</i>, Friedrich Rückert,
- <a href="#Page_609">609</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent">“As with my hat upon my head,” Samuel Johnson,
- <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-
- <li><i>As You Like It</i> (extract), Shakespeare,
- <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ass and the Flute, The</i>, Thomas Yriarte,
- <a href="#Page_626">626</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ass’s Testament, The</i>, Rutebœuf,
- <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
- <li><i>At the Sign of the Cock</i>, Sir Owen Seaman,
- <a href="#Page_541">541</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Audœmus, Johannes</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Advice to Ponticus</i>,
- <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To a Friend in Distress</i>,
- <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Authors Unknown</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Convenient Partnership</i>,
- <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Creation of Woman</i>, The (<i>from The Churning of the Ocean of Time</i>),
- <a href="#Page_122">122</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Good Wife and the Bad Husband, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lerneans, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Long and Short</i>,
- <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Late Acquired Wealth</i>,
- <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On the Inconstancy of Woman’s Love</i>,
- <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Perplexity</i>,
- <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Voice from the Grave, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Wife’s Ruse, A</i>: A Rabbinical Tale,
- <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Aytoun, William Edmonstoune</span>,
- <a href="#Page_493">493</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Husband’s Petition, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lay of the Lovelorn, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_495">495</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>Baby’s Début, The</i>, James Smith,
- <a href="#Page_466">466</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bacon, Francis</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Baharistan, The</i> (extracts), Jami,
- <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Bakbarah’s Visit to the Harem</i> (from <i>The Arabian Nights’ Entertainment</i>),
- <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bakin, Kiokutei</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>On Clothes and Comforts</i> (from <i>The Land of Dreams</i>),
- <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
- <li>Balaam and his Ass, story of,
- <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Ballad</i>, after Rosetti, Charles Stuart Calverly,
- <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Ballad</i> (from <i>Hans Breitmann Ballads</i>), Charles Godfrey Leland,
- <a href="#Page_680">680</a></li>
-
- <li>Ballad literature,
- <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ballad of the Primitive Jest</i>, Andrew Lang,
- <a href="#Page_526">526</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ballad of the Women of Paris</i>, François Villon,
- <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ballad of Women’s Doubleness</i>, Chaucer,
- <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Ballade of an Anti-Puritan, A</i>, Gilbert K. Chesterton,
- <a href="#Page_558">558</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ballade of Dead Ladies, The</i>, François Villon,
- <a href="#Page_318">318</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ballade of Literary Fame</i>, Andrew Lang,
- <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ballade of Old Time Ladies, A</i>, François Villon,
- <a href="#Page_319">319</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ballade of Suicide, A</i>, Gilbert K. Chesterton,
- <a href="#Page_557">557</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Balzac, Honoré de</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Innocence</i> (from <i>Contés Drolatiques</i>),
- <a href="#Page_568">568</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Slight Misunderstanding, A</i> (from <i>Contés Drolatiques</i>),
- <a href="#Page_567">567</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bangs, John Kendrick</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Mona Lisa,
- <a href="#Page_731">731</a></li>
-
- <li>Bards or rhapsodists,
- <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bar Hebræus, Gregory</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>The Book of Laughable Stories</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Barham, Richard Harris</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ingoldsby Legends</i>,
- <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Raising the Devil</i>,
- <a href="#Page_456">456</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>“True and Original” Version, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Barrie, James Matthew</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Humourist on his Calling, A</i> (from <i>A Window in Thrums</i>),
- <a href="#Page_535">535</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Barrow, Dr. Isaac</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">on facetiousness,
- <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Basselin, Olivier</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Apology for Cider</i>,
- <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To My Nose</i>,
- <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Battle of the Frogs and Mice, The</i>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Homer,
- <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Version by “Singing Mouse,”
- <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Version by Samuel Wesley,
- <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Battle of the Kegs, The</i>, Francis Hopkinson,
- <a href="#Page_647">647</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bayly, Thomas Haynes</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Why Don’t the Men Propose?</i>
- <a href="#Page_472">472</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Beating of Thersites, The</i> (from <i>The Iliad</i>), Homer,
- <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Beer</i>, Julian,
- <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Belloc, Hilaire</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Bison, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_556">556</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Frog, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_557">557</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Microbe, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_556">556</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Python, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_555">555</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Beneficence and Gratitude</i>, Ivan Turgenieff,
- <a href="#Page_638">638</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Beranger, Pierre Jean de</span>,
- <a href="#Page_563">563</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Dead Alive, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_565">565</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Education of Young Ladies, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_564">564</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bercheure, Pierre</span>,
- <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bergerac, Cyrano De</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Soul of the Cabbage, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_390">390</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bergson</span>, on playfulness of animals and man,
- <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Berni, Francesco</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Living in Bed</i> (from <i>Roland Enamored</i>),
- <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Between the Lines</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Beza, Theodorus</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Epigram,
- <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bhartrihari</span>, cynical paragraphs,
- <a href="#Page_195">195</a>,
- <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bidpai.</span> <i>See</i> <a href="#Pilpay">Pilpay</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Biglow Papers</i> (extract), James Russell Lowell,
- <a href="#Page_674">674</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Billings, Josh.</span> <i>See</i> <a href="#Shaw">Shaw, Henry Wheeler</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Bison, The</i>, Hilaire Belloc,
- <a href="#Page_556">556</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Bizarrures</i> of Sieur Gaulard,
- <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Board or Lodging</i>, Lucilius,
- <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Boccaccio, Giovanni</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Decameron</i>,
- <a href="#Page_164">164</a>,
- <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of Three Girls and Their Talk</i> (a sonnet),
- <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Stolen Pig, The</i> (from <i>The Decameron</i>),
- <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Bohemian Life Sketches</i> (extracts), Henri Murger,
- <a href="#Page_579">579</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Boileau-Despreaux, Nicolas</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Cotin</i>,
- <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Perrault</i>,
- <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bonifacius, Balthasar</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Dangerous Love</i>,
- <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Book of Laughable Stories, The</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Boston Lullaby, A</i>, James Jeffrey Roche,
- <a href="#Page_708">708</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Brandt</span>,
- <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Browne">Browne, Charles Farrar</span> (Artemus Ward),
- <a href="#Page_684">684</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Forts</i>,
- <a href="#Page_685">685</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Browning, Robert</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Pope and the Net, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_502">502</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bruyere, Jean de La</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Iphis</i>,
- <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Thoughts</i>,
- <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Bryant, William Cullen</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To a Mosquito</i>,
- <a href="#Page_655">655</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Buchananus, Georgius</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Leonora</i>,
- <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Zoilus</i>,
- <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
- <li>Buddha’s <i>Jatakas</i>,
- <a href="#Page_34">34</a>,
- <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
- <li>Buffoons,
- <a href="#Page_26">26</a>,
- <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Burdensome Wife, A</i> (from <i>Hie! Fie!</i>), Abraham á Sancta Clara,
- <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Burdette, Robert Jones,</span></li>
- <li class="i1">“<i>Soldier, Rest!</i>”
- <a href="#Page_701">701</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>What Will We Do?</i>
- <a href="#Page_700">700</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Burgess, Frank Gelett</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Invisible Bridge, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_748">748</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Psycholophon</i>,
- <a href="#Page_749">749</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Purple Cow, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_748">748</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Villanelle of Things Amusing</i>,
- <a href="#Page_748">748</a></li>
-
- <li>Burlesque,
- <a href="#Page_25">25</a>,
- <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Burnand, Francis C.</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>True To Poll</i>,
- <a href="#Page_532">532</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Burns, Robert</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Address to the Toothache</i>,
- <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Holy Willie’s Prayer</i>,
- <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Busch, Wilhelm</span>,
- <a href="#Page_613">613</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Butler, Samuel</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Description of Holland</i>,
- <a href="#Page_377">377</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Poets</i>,
- <a href="#Page_377">377</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Puffing</i>,
- <a href="#Page_377">377</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Religion of Hudibras, The</i> (from <i>Hudibras</i>),
- <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Saintship versus Conscience</i>, (from <i>Hudibras</i>),
- <a href="#Page_375">375</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Butler, William Allen</span>,
- <a href="#Page_681">681</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Byron, Lord</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>After Swimming the Hellespont</i>,
- <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Don Juan</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_460">460</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>C. Mery Talys</i> (<i>Hundred Merry Tales</i>) (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_263">263</a>,
- <a href="#Page_265">265</a>,
- <a href="#Page_270">270</a> <i>ff</i></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Calverly, Charles Stuart</span>,
- <a href="#Page_537">537</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ballad</i>, after Rossetti,
- <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Cock and the Bull, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_507">507</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lovers and a Reflection</i>,
- <a href="#Page_511">511</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ode to Tobacco</i>,
- <a href="#Page_513">513</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Camden</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Britannia</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_383">383</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Witticisms</i>,
- <a href="#Page_274">274</a> <i>ff</i></li>
-
- <li><i>Candide</i> (extract), Voltaire,
- <a href="#Page_560">560</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Canning, George</span>,
- <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Friend of Humanity and the Knife-Grinder, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Carew, Thomas</span>,
- <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
-
- <li>Caricature,
- <a href="#Page_25">25</a>,
- <a href="#Page_27">27</a>,
- <a href="#Page_47">47</a>,
- <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Carleton, Will</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Eliphalet Chapin’s Wedding</i>,
- <a href="#Page_723">723</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Carroll">Carroll, Lewis</span> (Dodgson, Charles Lutwidge),
- <a href="#Page_514">514</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Jabberwocky</i> (from <i>Through the Looking-Glass</i>),
- <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Some Hallucinations</i>,
- <a href="#Page_518">518</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Ways and Means</i> (from <i>Through the Looking-Glass</i>),
- <a href="#Page_516">516</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Carryl, Charles E.</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Walloping Window-Blind, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_699">699</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Carryl, Guy Wetmore</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>How a Girl Was Too Reckless of Grammar</i>,
- <a href="#Page_738">738</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Cary, Phoebe</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>I Remember</i>,
- <a href="#Page_676">676</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Jacob</i>,
- <a href="#Page_677">677</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Reuben</i>,
- <a href="#Page_678">678</a></li>
- <li class="i1">“<i>There’s a Bower of Bean-Vines</i>,”
- <a href="#Page_677">677</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Casey at the Bat</i>, Ernest Lawrence Thayer,
- <a href="#Page_729">729</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Castiglione, Baldassare</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Il Cortegiano</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Catullus</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Fixed Smile, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On His Own Love</i>,
- <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Roman Cockney, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Cellini, Benvenuto</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Compulsory Marriage at Sword’s Point, A</i> (from his Biography),
- <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Criticism of a Statue of Hercules</i> (from his Biography),
- <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Certain Young Lady</i>, A, Washington Irving,
- <a href="#Page_654">654</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Certaine Conceyts and Jeasts</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Cervantes, Miguel de</span>,
- <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>He Secures Sancho Panza as his Squire</i> (from <i>Don Quixote</i>),
- <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Of the Valorous Don Quixote’s Adventure of the Windmills</i> (from <i>Don Quixote</i>),
- <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Chammisso, Adelbert von</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>The Pigtail</i>,
- <a href="#Page_605">605</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Charivari</span>,
- <a href="#Page_229">229</a>,
- <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Chaucer</span>,
- <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ballad of Women’s Doubleness</i>,
- <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Cock and the Fox, The</i> (from <i>The Nun’s Priest’s Tale</i>),
- <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To My Empty Purse</i>,
- <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Chekow, Anton</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Proverbs,
- <a href="#Page_639">639</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Chemnitzer, Ivan</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lion’s Council of State, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_632">632</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Philosopher, The</i> (from <i>The Fables</i>),
- <a href="#Page_631">631</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Chesterfield, Lord</span>,
- <a href="#Page_428">428</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Letters to His Son</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_429">429</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Chesterton, Gilbert K.</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ballade of an Anti-Puritan, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_558">558</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ballade of Suicide, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_557">557</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Child’s Verses</i> (extracts), Robert Louis Stevenson,
- <a href="#Page_534">534</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Chimmie Fadden</i> (extract), Edward Waterman Townsend,
- <a href="#Page_716">716</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Chimpanzee, The</i>, Oliver Herford,
- <a href="#Page_745">745</a></li>
-
- <li>Chinese humor,
- <a href="#Page_156">156–161</a>,
- <a href="#Page_164">164</a>,
- <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
- <li>Chinese Proverbs of Confucius,
- <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
- <li>Chinese story,
- <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Chotzner, Professor</span>, on Hebrew satire,
- <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Churning of the Ocean of Time</i> (extract), Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_122">122</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Chwang Tze</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Pleasure of Fishes, The</i> (from <i>Autumn Floods</i>),
- <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Claudius, Matthias</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>The Hen and the Egg</i>,
- <a href="#Page_592">592</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Clemens">Clemens, Samuel Langhorne</span> (Mark Twain),
- <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, The</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_681">681</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Clever Grethel</i> (from <i>Grimm’s Fairy Tales</i>),
- <a href="#Page_607">607</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Cock and the Bull, The</i>, Charles Stuart Calverly,
- <a href="#Page_507">507</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Cock and the Fox, The</i> (from <i>The Nun’s Priest’s Tale</i>), Chaucer,
- <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Cock and the Fox, The</i>, Jean de la Fontaine,
- <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Cocktail, The</i> (from <i>The Sultan of Sulu</i>), George Ade,
- <a href="#Page_722">722</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Code of Love, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Cogia">Cogia, Nasr Eddin Effendi</span>,
- <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Pleasantries of, The</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Cold Mutton, Pudding, Pancakes</i> (from <i>Mrs. Caudle’s Curtain Lectures</i>), Douglas Jerrold,
- <a href="#Page_476">476</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Coleridge</span>, on humor,
- <a href="#Page_3">3</a>,
- <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
- <li>Collections,
- <a href="#Page_162">162</a> <i>ff.</i>,
- <a href="#Page_263">263</a>,
- <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Colman, George</span>, the Younger,
- <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Colubriad, The</i>, William Cowper,
- <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-
- <li>Comedy,
- <a href="#Page_46">46</a>,
- <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
- <li>Comic, the,
- <a href="#Page_9">9</a>,
- <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
- <li>Comic literature,
- <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Compulsory Marriage at Sword’s Point A</i>, (from Biography), Benvenuto Cellini,
- <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Confucius</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Analects, The</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Proverbs,
- <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Constant Lover, The</i>, Sir John Suckling,
- <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Convenient Partnership</i>, Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Corbet, Bishop</span>,
- <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Epigram on Beaumont’s Early Death</i>,
- <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Farewell to the Fairies</i>,
- <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Like to the Thundering Tone</i>,
- <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Nonsense</i>,
- <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Cordus, Euricius</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Doctor’s Appearance, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Philomusus</i>,
- <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Cosmetic Disguise</i> (from <i>Satires</i>), Juvenal,
- <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Couch">Couch, Arthur Thomas Quiller-</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>De Tea Fabula</i>,
- <a href="#Page_546">546</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Council Held by the Rats, The</i>, Jean de la Fontaine,
- <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Country Parson, The</i>, Elizabeth Graeme Ferguson,
- <a href="#Page_650">650</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Country Squire, The</i>, Thomas Yriarte,
- <a href="#Page_628">628</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Court Fool and King’s Jester</i>,
- <a href="#Page_87">87</a>,
- <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Court of Love, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Cowper, William</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Colubriad, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Faithful Picture of Ordinary Society, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Cozzens, Frederick Swartout</span>,
- <a href="#Page_664">664</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Crane, Stephen</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Extracts,
- <a href="#Page_734">734</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Crane and the Cray-Fish, The</i>, Pilpay,
- <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Crates</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Cures for Love</i>,
- <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Cratinus</span> Extracts,
- <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Creation of Woman, The</i> (from <i>The Churning of the Ocean of Time</i>), Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_122">122</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Crede Experto</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Credo</i> (German Student Song),
- <a href="#Page_614">614</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Criticism of a Statue of Hercules</i> (from Biography), Benvenuto Cellini,
- <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Crow and the Fox, The</i>, Jean de la Fontaine,
- <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Cures for Love</i>, Crates,
- <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Curtis, George William</span>,
- <a href="#Page_678">678</a></li>
-
- <li>Cynical paragraphs, Bhartrihari,
- <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>Dangerous Love</i>, Balthasar Bonifacius,
- <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Dante</span>,
- <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Darkness</i>, Lucian,
- <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Daudet, Alphonse</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>William Tell</i> (from <i>Tartarin in the Alps</i>),
- <a href="#Page_583">583</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Davies, Sir John</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Acrostics</i>,
- <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Married State, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Davison, Francis</span>,
- <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
- <li><i>De Tea Fabula</i>, Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch,
- <a href="#Page_546">546</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Dead Alive, The</i>, Pierre Jean de Beranger,
- <a href="#Page_565">565</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Deane, Anthony C.</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Here Is the Tale</i>,
- <a href="#Page_543">543</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Decameron, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_164">164</a>; (extract),
- <a href="#Page_343">343</a>,
- <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, Giovanni Boccaccio</li>
-
- <li><i>Decorated Bow, The</i> (from <i>Fables</i>), Lessing,
- <a href="#Page_588">588</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Defoe, Daniel</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Friday’s Conflict with the Bear</i> (from <i>Robinson Crusoe</i>),
- <a href="#Page_383">383</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Dekker, Thomas</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Horace Concocting an Ode</i>,
- <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Obedient Husbands</i> (from <i>The Bachelor’s Banquet</i>),
- <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">De Quincey, Thomas</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Murder as One of the Fine Arts</i>,
- <a href="#Page_458">458</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Derby">Derby, George Horatio</span> (John Phoenix),</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Tushmaker’s Tooth-Puller</i>,
- <a href="#Page_678">678</a></li>
-
- <li>Derision theory of humor,
- <a href="#Page_5">5</a>,
- <a href="#Page_6">6</a>,
- <a href="#Page_9">9</a>,
- <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Desangiers, Marc Antoine</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Eternal Yawner, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_562">562</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Deschampes, Eustache</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Advice to a Friend on Marriage</i>,
- <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Description of Holland</i>, Samuel Butler,
- <a href="#Page_377">377</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Desolation</i>, Thomas L. Masson,
- <a href="#Page_733">733</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Dialogue between Shallow and Silence</i> (from <i>Henry IV, Part II</i>), Shakespeare,
- <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Diary of Samuel Pepys</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_378">378</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Diatribe Against Water</i>, Francesca Redi,
- <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Dickens, Charles</span>,
- <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Mrs. Gamp’s Apartment</i> (from <i>Martin Chuzzlewit</i>),
- <a href="#Page_491">491</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Dinkey-Bird, The</i>, Eugene Field,
- <a href="#Page_710">710</a></li>
-
- <li>Dionysiac festivals,
- <a href="#Page_46">46</a>,
- <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Diphilus</span>, Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
- <li>Disappointment Theory of humor,
- <a href="#Page_4">4</a> <i>ff.</i></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Discomfort Better Than Drowning</i> (from <i>The Rose Garden</i> [<i>Gulistan</i>]), Sadi,
- <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Dissertation on Dumplings, A</i> (from <i>Bull and Mouth</i>), John Arbuthnot,
- <a href="#Page_427">427</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Dissertation on Puns</i>, Theodore Hook,
- <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Diving for an Egg</i>, Do-Pyazah,
- <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Dobson, Henry Austin</span>, (Austin Dobson),</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On a Fan</i>,
- <a href="#Page_524">524</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Rondeau, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_525">525</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Doctor, The</i> (extract), Robert Southey,
- <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Doctor’s Appearance, The</i>, Euricius Cordus,
- <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Dodgson, Charles Lutwidge.</span> <i>See</i> <a href="#Carroll">Carroll, Lewis</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Don Juan</i> (extracts), Lord Byron,
- <a href="#Page_460">460</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Don Quixote</i> (extracts), Miguel de Cervantes,
- <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Donkey’s Voice, The</i> (from <i>Judas, the Arch-Rogue</i>), Abraham á Sancta Clara,
- <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Donne, John</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Will, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>See</i> <a href="#Dunne">Dunne, Finley Peter</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Dooley, Mr.</span>,
- <a href="#Page_720">720</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Do-Pyazah</span>, Definitions,
- <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Diving for an Egg</i>,
- <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Dostoevsky, Fedor</span>,
- <a href="#Page_634">634</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Karlchen, the Crocodile</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_635">635</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Downing, Major Jack.</span> <i>See</i> <a href="#Smith">Smith, Seba</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Drake, Joseph Rodman</span>, and <span class="smcap">Halleck, Fitz-Greene</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ode to Fortune</i>,
- <a href="#Page_657">657</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Dream Wife, The</i>, Kajetan Wengierski,
- <a href="#Page_639">639</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Drummond, William H.</span>, M. D.,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Wreck of the “Julie Plante,” The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_726">726</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Drunkard’s Fancy, The</i>, Wilhelm Müller,
- <a href="#Page_606">606</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Dryden, John</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Milton Compared with Homer and Virgil</i>,
- <a href="#Page_382">382</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Shadwell</i>,
- <a href="#Page_380">380</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On the Duke of Buckingham</i>,
- <a href="#Page_381">381</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Dumas, Alexander</span>, the Elder,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Touching the Olfactory Organ</i>,
- <a href="#Page_574">574</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent" id="Dunne"><span class="smcap">Dunne, Finley Peter</span> (Mr. Dooley),</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Expert Testimony</i>,
- <a href="#Page_720">720</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><span class="smcap">Eastman, Max</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">definition of the Disappointment Theory,
- <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
- <li class="i1">on sense of humor,
- <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Education of Young Ladies, The</i>, Pierre Jean de Béranger,
- <a href="#Page_563">563</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Eggs, The</i>, Thomas Yriarte,
- <a href="#Page_627">627</a></li>
-
- <li>Egyptian humor,
- <a href="#Page_27">27–29</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Elegy</i>, Arthur Guiterman,
- <a href="#Page_743">743</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog, An</i>, Oliver Goldsmith,
- <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Elegy on the Glory of Her Sex, Mrs. Mary Blaize, An</i>, Oliver Goldsmith,
- <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Eliphalet Chapin’s Wedding</i>, Will Carleton,
- <a href="#Page_723">723</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Emerson, Ralph Waldo</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Mountain and the Squirrel, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_660">660</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Enforced Greatness</i>, San Shroe Bu,
- <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li>
-
- <li>English humor,
- <a href="#Page_253">253–311</a>,
- <a href="#Page_365">365–389</a>,
- <a href="#Page_415">415–559</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Envy</i>, Lucilius,
- <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Epigram on Mrs. Tofts</i>, Alexander Pope,
- <a href="#Page_421">421</a></li>
-
- <li>Epigrams,</li>
- <li class="i1">English,
- <a href="#Page_291">291</a>,
- <a href="#Page_295">295</a>,
- <a href="#Page_296">296</a>,
- <a href="#Page_377">377</a>,
- <a href="#Page_382">382</a>,
- <a href="#Page_421">421</a>,
- <a href="#Page_478">478</a>,
- <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
- <li class="i1">French,
- <a href="#Page_335">335–337</a></li>
- <li class="i1">German,
- <a href="#Page_588">588–589</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Greek,
- <a href="#Page_67">67–70</a>,
- <a href="#Page_76">76–79</a>,
- <a href="#Page_83">83–85</a>,
- <a href="#Page_189">189</a>,
- <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Haytian,
- <a href="#Page_641">641</a>,
- <a href="#Page_642">642</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Hindu,
- <a href="#Page_195">195</a>,
- <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Mediæval,
- <a href="#Page_189">189–207</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Persian,
- <a href="#Page_142">142</a>,
- <a href="#Page_196">196–199</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Roman,
- <a href="#Page_107">107–110</a>,
- <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Turkish,
- <a href="#Page_199">199–204</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Epitaph, An</i>, Ammianus,
- <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Epitaph, An</i>, Matthew Prior,
- <a href="#Page_387">387</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Epitaph for an Old University Carrier</i>, Milton,
- <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Erasmus, Desiderius</span>,
- <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Praise of Folly, The</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Eternal Yawner, The</i>, Marc Antoine Desangier,
- <a href="#Page_562">562</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Eubulus</span>, Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Eulenspiegel, Tyll</span> (Owleglas or Howleglas),</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Golden Horsehoes, The</i> (from <i>Eulenspiegel’s Pranks</i>),
- <a href="#Page_339">339</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Paying with the Sound of a Penny</i> (from <i>Eulenspiegel’s Pranks</i>),
- <a href="#Page_340">340</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Evening Reception, An</i> (from <i>Bohemian Life Sketches</i>), Henri Murger,
- <a href="#Page_579">579</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Every Man in His Humor</i> (extract), Ben Jonson,
- <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Eve’s Daughter</i>, Edward Rowland Sill,
- <a href="#Page_698">698</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Fable of the Caddy Who Hurt His Head While Thinking, The</i>, George Ade,
- <a href="#Page_723">723</a></li>
-
- <li>Fables,</li>
- <li class="i1">origin of,
- <a href="#Page_27">27–28</a></li>
- <li class="i1">use of term,
- <a href="#Page_162">162</a>,
- <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Fables of Pilpay or Bidpai</i> (selections),
- <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Fabliaux</i>,
- <a href="#Page_164">164</a>,
- <a href="#Page_235">235</a>,
- <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Faithful Picture of Ordinary Society, A</i>, William Cowper,
- <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Faithless Nelly Gray</i>, Thomas Hood,
- <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
-
- <li><i>False Charms</i>, Lucilius,
- <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Farewell to Chloris</i>, Paul Scarron,
- <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Farewell to the Fairies</i>, Bishop Corbet,
- <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Fauvel</span>,
- <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Ferguson, Elizabeth Graeme</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Country Parson, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_650">650</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Field, Eugene</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Dinkey-Bird, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_710">710</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Good James and Naughty Reginald</i> (from <i>The Tribune Primer</i>),
- <a href="#Page_713">713</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Little Peach, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_712">712</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Fields, James Thomas</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Alarmed Skipper, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_668">668</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Filippo, Rustico di</span>,
- <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Making of Master Messerin, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Fine Lady, The</i>, Simonides,
- <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Firdausi</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Sultan Mahmoud</i>,
- <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Fixed Smile, A</i>, Catullus,
- <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Fletcher, John</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Laughing Song</i>,
- <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Fontaine, Jean de la</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Cock and the Fox, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Council Held by the Rats, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Crow and the Fox, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Foss, Sam Walter</span>,
- <a href="#Page_717">717</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Philosopher, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_718">718</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Francis, J. G.</span>,
- <a href="#Page_760">760</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Franklin, Benjamin</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1">“He Paid Too Much for His Whistle” (from Letter to a Friend),
- <a href="#Page_643">643</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Paper</i>,
- <a href="#Page_645">645</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent">French humor,
- <a href="#Page_211">211–213</a>,
- <a href="#Page_235">235–243</a>,
- <a href="#Page_312">312–337</a>,
- <a href="#Page_390">390–409</a>,
- <a href="#Page_560">560–585</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Friday’s Conflict With the Bear</i> (from <i>Robinson Crusoe</i>), Daniel Defoe,
- <a href="#Page_383">383</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Friend of Humanity and the Knife-Grinder, The</i>, George Canning,
- <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Frog, The</i>, Hilaire Belloc,
- <a href="#Page_557">557</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Frogs, The</i> (extracts), Aristophanes,
- <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Furniture of a Woman’s Mind, The</i>, Jonathan Swift,
- <a href="#Page_416">416</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>Gammer Gurton’s Needle</i> (extract), John Still,
- <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Garden Hose, The</i>, Edgar Wilson Nye,
- <a href="#Page_714">714</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Gargantua and Pantagruel</i>,
- <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
- <li class="i1">(extracts), François Rabelais,
- <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-
- <li>Gargoyles,
- <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Gaulard, Sieur</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Bizarrures</i>,
- <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Contes Facetieux, Les</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Gautier, Théophile</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lap Dog, The</i> (<i>Fanfreluche</i>),
- <a href="#Page_577">577</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Gellert, Christian F.</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Patient Cured, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_586">586</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Gentle Alice Brown</i>, William Schwenck Gilbert,
- <a href="#Page_529">529</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Gentleman Cit, The</i> (extract), Molière,
- <a href="#Page_396">396</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Gerard, Marc-Antoine</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Address to Bacchus, An</i>,
- <a href="#Page_392">392</a></li>
-
- <li>German humor,
- <a href="#Page_337">337–344</a>,
- <a href="#Page_412">412–415</a>,
- <a href="#Page_586">586–615</a></li>
-
- <li>German Student Songs,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Credo</i>,
- <a href="#Page_614">614</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Pope and Sultan</i>,
- <a href="#Page_613">613</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Gesta Romanorum</i>,</li>
- <li class="i2">authorship and sources,
- <a href="#Page_163">163</a>,
- <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of Sloth</i>,
- <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of the Deceits of the Devil</i>,
- <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Of the Good, Who Alone Will Enter the Kingdom of Heaven</i>,
- <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of the Incarnation of Our Lord</i>,
- <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of Vigilance in Our Calling</i>,
- <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Ghislanzoni, Antonio</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Musical Instruments</i>,
- <a href="#Page_619">619</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Gilbert, William Schwenk</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Gentle Alice Brown</i>,
- <a href="#Page_529">529</a></li>
- <li class="i1">“Lady from the provinces, The,”
- <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Mighty Must, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_528">528</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To the Terrestrial Globe</i>,
- <a href="#Page_529">529</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Giles and Joan</i>, Ben Jonson,
- <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
-
- <li>Gleemen,
- <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Goethe, Johann Wolfgang</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Reynard the Fox</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_596">596</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Gold</i>, Oliver Herford,
- <a href="#Page_747">747</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Golden Ass, The</i> (extracts), Apuleius,
- <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Golden Horseshoes, The</i> (from <i>Eulenspiegel’s Pranks</i>), Tyll Eulenspiegel,
- <a href="#Page_339">339</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Goldoni, Carlo</span>,
- <a href="#Page_616">616</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Goldsmith, Oliver</span>,
- <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog, An</i>,
- <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Elegy on the Glory of Her Sex, Mrs. Mary Blaize, An</i>,
- <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Parson Gray</i>,
- <a href="#Page_434">434</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Good Flea and the Wicked King, The</i> (from <i>Tales of a Grandfather</i>), Victor Marie Hugo,
- <a href="#Page_580">580</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Good James and Naughty Reginald</i> (from <i>The Tribune Primer</i>), Eugene Field,
- <a href="#Page_713">713</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Good Wife and the Bad Husband, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Goose, The</i>, Alfred Tennyson,
- <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
-
- <li>Gothamites,
- <a href="#Page_208">208</a>,
- <a href="#Page_214">214</a>,
- <a href="#Page_216">216</a>,
- <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Gozzi, Carlo</span>,
- <a href="#Page_616">616</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Grammar and Medicine</i>, Agathias,
- <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Great Contention, The</i>, Nicarchus,
- <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Greedy and Ambitious Cat, The</i>, Pilpay,
- <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Greek Anthology</i>,
- <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_76">76</a> <i>ff.</i></li>
-
- <li>Greek Comedy,
- <a href="#Page_46">46</a>,
- <a href="#Page_48">48</a>,
- <a href="#Page_55">55</a>,
- <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
- <li>Greek humor,
- <a href="#Page_43">43–85</a>,
- <a href="#Page_178">178–181</a>,
- <a href="#Page_189">189–190</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Greene, Albert Gorton</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Old Grimes</i>,
- <a href="#Page_658">658</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Griboyedoff, Alexander</span>,
- <a href="#Page_631">631</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Grimm, Jakob</span> and <span class="smcap">Wilhelm</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Clever Grethel</i> (from <i>Fairy Tales</i>),
- <a href="#Page_607">607</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Guiterman, Arthur</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Elegy</i>,
- <a href="#Page_743">743</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Mavrone</i>,
- <a href="#Page_742">742</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Guthrie">Guthrie, T. A.</span> (F. Anstey),</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Select Passages from a Coming Poet</i>,
- <a href="#Page_554">554</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><span class="smcap">Hale, Edward Everett</span>,
- <a href="#Page_678">678</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Halleck, Fitz-Greene</span>, and <span class="smcap">Drake, Joseph Rodman</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ode to Fortune</i>,
- <a href="#Page_657">657</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Halpine, Charles Graham</span>,
- <a href="#Page_681">681</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Hamlet</i> (extract), Shakespeare,
- <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Hans Breitmann Ballads</i> (selection), Charles Godfrey Leland,
- <a href="#Page_680">680</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Harington, Sir John</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of a Certain Man</i>,
- <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of a Precise Tailor</i>,
- <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Harris, Joel Chandler</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Sad End of Brer Wolf</i>, <i>The</i> (from <i>Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings</i>),
- <a href="#Page_708">708</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Harte, Francis Bret</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Society upon the Stanislaus, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_686">686</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To the Pliocene Skull</i>,
- <a href="#Page_688">688</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Hatefulness of Old Husbands</i> (from <i>The Rose Garden</i> [<i>Gulistan</i>]), Sadi,
- <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Hay, John</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Little Breeches</i> (from <i>Pike County Ballads</i>),
- <a href="#Page_690">690</a></li>
-
- <li>Haytian Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_641">641</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Hazlitt, William</span>,
- <a href="#Page_18">18</a>,
- <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
- <li class="i1">on the laughable,
- <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
- <li class="i1">on distinction between wit and humor,
- <a href="#Page_15">15</a>,
- <a href="#Page_16">16</a>,
- <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
- <li class="i1">on Falstaff,
- <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent">“He Paid Too Much for His Whistle” (from Letter to a Friend), Benjamin Franklin,
- <a href="#Page_643">643</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>He Secures Sancho Panza as His Squire</i> (from <i>Don Quixote</i>), Miguel de Cervantes,
- <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
- <li>Hebrew humor,
- <a href="#Page_30">30–33</a>,
- <a href="#Page_124">124–126</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Height of the Ridiculous, The</i>, Oliver Wendell Holmes,
- <a href="#Page_665">665</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Heine, Heinrich</span>,
- <a href="#Page_610">610</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Extracts,
- <a href="#Page_612">612</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Town of Göttingen, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_611">611</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Hen, A</i> (extract), Henry Wheeler Shaw,
- <a href="#Page_673">673</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Hen, The</i>, Oliver Herford,
- <a href="#Page_745">745</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Hen and the Egg, The</i>, Matthias Claudius,
- <a href="#Page_592">592</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Henley, William Ernest</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Villanelle</i>,
- <a href="#Page_533">533</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Henry IV, Part I</i> (extract), Shakespeare,
- <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Henry IV, Part II</i> (extract), Shakespeare,
- <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Heptameron, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_164">164</a>,
- <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Herbert, George</span>,
- <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Here Is the Tale</i>, Anthony C. Deane,
- <a href="#Page_543">543</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Herford, Oliver</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Chimpanzee, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_745">745</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Gold</i>,
- <a href="#Page_747">747</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Hen, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_745">745</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Mark Twain: A Pipe Dream</i>,
- <a href="#Page_746">746</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Phyllis Lee</i>,
- <a href="#Page_744">744</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Prodigal Egg, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_747">747</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Some Geese</i>,
- <a href="#Page_744">744</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Song&mdash;After Herrick</i>,
- <a href="#Page_747">747</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Herrick, Robert</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Kiss, The&mdash;A Dialogue</i>,
- <a href="#Page_367">367</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Ternary of Littles, upon a Pipkin of Jelly Sent to a Lady, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Hierocles</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Jests,
- <a href="#Page_72">72</a>,
- <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell, The</i>, Charles Algernon Swinburne,
- <a href="#Page_522">522</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent">Hindu humor,
- <a href="#Page_36">36–39</a>,
- <a href="#Page_121">121–124</a>,
- <a href="#Page_164">164–175</a>,
- <a href="#Page_195">195–196</a>,
- <a href="#Page_214">214–215</a>,
- <a href="#Page_219">219–225</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Hobbes, Thomas</span>,
- <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Laughter</i> (from <i>Treatise on Human Nature</i>),
- <a href="#Page_11">11</a>,
- <a href="#Page_12">12</a>,
- <a href="#Page_366">366</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Hoffman, Heinrich</span>,
- <a href="#Page_613">613</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Holley, Marietta</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>My Opinions and Betsy Bobbet’s</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_702">702</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Holmes, Oliver Wendell</span>,
- <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Æstivation</i>,
- <a href="#Page_666">666</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Height of the Ridiculous, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_665">665</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Holy Willie’s Prayer</i>, Robert Burns,
- <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Homer</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">identity,
- <a href="#Page_43">43</a>,
- <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Battle of the Frogs and Mice, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_51">51</a>,
- <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Beating of Thersites, The</i> (from <i>The Iliad</i>),
- <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
- <li>Homer’s Riddle,
- <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Hood, Thomas</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Faithless Nelly Gray</i>,
- <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>No!</i>,
- <a href="#Page_465">465</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Hook, Theodore</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Dissertation on Puns</i>,
- <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Hopkinson, Francis</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Battle of the Kegs, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_647">647</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Horace</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Obtrusive Company on the Sacred Way</i> (from <i>Satires</i>),
- <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Horace Concocting an Ode</i>, Thomas Dekker,
- <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Horse Tied to a Steeple, A</i> (from <i>Adventures of Baron Münchausen</i>), Rudolph Erich Raspe,
- <a href="#Page_589">589</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>How a Girl Was Too Reckless of Grammar</i>, Guy Wetmore Carryl,
- <a href="#Page_738">738</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>How Jacke by Sophistry Would Make of Two Eggs Three</i> (from <i>The Jests of Scogin</i>),
- <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>How Madde Coomes, When His Wife Was Drowned, Sought Her against the Streame</i> (from <i>Mother Bunches Merriments</i>),
- <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>How Maister Hobson Said He Was Not at Home</i> (from <i>The Pleasant Conceits of Old Hobson</i>, Richard Johnson),
- <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>How Scogin Sold Powder to Kill Fleas</i> (from <i>The Jests of Scogin</i>),
- <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>How Skelton Came Late Home to Oxford from Abington</i> (from <i>Certayne Merye Tales</i>), John Skelton,
- <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>How the Welshman Dyd Desyre Skelton to Ayde Him in Hys Sute to the Kynge for a Patent to Sell Drynke</i>, John Skelton,
- <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Hudibras</i> (extracts), Samuel Butler,
- <a href="#Page_375">375</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Hugo, Victor Marie</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>The Good Flea and the Wicked King</i> (from <i>Tales of a Grandfather</i>),
- <a href="#Page_580">580</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Human Nature, Treatise on</i> (extracts), Thomas Hobbes,
- <a href="#Page_11">11</a>,
- <a href="#Page_12">12</a>,
- <a href="#Page_366">366</a></li>
-
- <li>Humor,</li>
- <li class="i1">use of term,
- <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
- <li class="i1">theories and definitions,
- <a href="#Page_4">4</a> <i>ff.</i>,
- <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Hazlitt on,
- <a href="#Page_7">7</a>,
- <a href="#Page_15">15</a> <i>ff.</i></li>
- <li class="i1">Max Eastman on,
- <a href="#Page_7">7</a>,
- <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Dr. Isaac Barrows on,
- <a href="#Page_9">9–11</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Thomas Hobbes on,
- <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
- <li class="i1">George Meredith on,
- <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
- <li class="i1">sense of humor,
- <a href="#Page_13">13–15</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Brander Matthews on,
- <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
- <li class="i1">distinction between wit and,
- <a href="#Page_15">15–17</a></li>
- <li class="i1">playfulness of animals,
- <a href="#Page_18">18</a> <i>ff.</i></li>
- <li class="i1">chronological periods,
- <a href="#Page_20">20</a>,
- <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
- <li class="i1">origin of,
- <a href="#Page_23">23</a>,
- <a href="#Page_45">45</a>,
- <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
- <li class="i1">educational use,
- <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
- <li class="i1">influx into literature,
- <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Humorist on His Calling, A</i> (from <i>A Window in Thrums</i>), James Matthew Barrie,
- <a href="#Page_535">535</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Hunting with a King</i> (from <i>Sakuntala</i>), Kalidasa,
- <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Husband and the Parrot, The</i> (from <i>The Arabian Nights’ Entertainment</i>),
- <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Husband’s Petition, The</i>, William Edmonstoune Aytoun,
- <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Hymn of the Frogs, The</i> (from the Rig Vedas),
- <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li class="hangingindent">“I am a saint of good repute,” Monk of Montaudon,
- <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Idiot’s Delight, The</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_749">749</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Idler, The</i> (extract), Samuel Johnson,
- <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-
- <li><i>If I Should Die To-Night</i>, Ben King,
- <a href="#Page_728">728</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Ignorant Man Who Set Up for a Schoolmaster, The</i> (from <i>The Arabian Nights’ Entertainment</i>),
- <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Il Cortegiano</i> (extracts), Castiglione,
- <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Iliad</i> (extract), Homer,
- <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Iliad in a Nutshell, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Ingenious Cook, An</i> (from <i>Trimalchio’s Banquet</i>), Petronius,
- <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ingoldsby Legends</i>, Richard Harris Barham,
- <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Inheritance of a Library, The</i> (from <i>Novellino</i>), Massuchio di Salerno,
- <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
-
- <li><i>I Remember</i>, Phœbe Cary,
- <a href="#Page_676">676</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Innocence</i> (from <i>Contes Drolatiques</i>), Honoré de Balzac,
- <a href="#Page_568">568</a></li>
-
- <li>Irish Bulls, prototypes of,
- <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Invalid and His Deaf Visitor, The</i> (from <i>Stories in Rime</i> [<i>Masnavi</i>]), Jalal uddin Rumi,
- <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Invisible Bridge, The</i>, Frank Gelett Burgess,
- <a href="#Page_748">748</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Iphis</i>, Jean de la Bruyère,
- <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Irishman, The</i>, William Maginn,
- <a href="#Page_471">471</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Irving, Washington</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Certain Young Lady, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_654">654</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent">Italian humor,
- <a href="#Page_182">182–184</a>,
- <a href="#Page_218">218</a>,
- <a href="#Page_344">344–359</a>,
- <a href="#Page_409">409–411</a>,
- <a href="#Page_616">616–625</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Jabberwocky</i> (from <i>Through the Looking-Glass</i>), Lewis Carroll,
- <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Jack and Jill</i> (a symposium), Charles Battell Loomis,
- <a href="#Page_735">735</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Jacob</i>, Phœbe Cary,
- <a href="#Page_677">677</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Jalal uddin Rumi</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Invalid and His Deaf Visitor, The</i> (from <i>Stories in Rime</i> [<i>Masnavi</i>]),
- <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Old Age&mdash;Dialogue</i>,
- <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Sick Schoolmaster, The</i> (from <i>Stories in Rime</i>),
- <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Jami</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>The Baharistan</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
- <li>Japanese humor,
- <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Játakas</i>, or Buddhist stories,
- <a href="#Page_34">34</a>,
- <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Jerrold, Douglas</span>,
- <a href="#Page_475">475</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Cold Mutton, Pudding, Pancakes</i> (from <i>Mrs. Caudle’s Curtain Lectures</i>),
- <a href="#Page_476">476</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Witticisms,
- <a href="#Page_478">478</a></li>
-
- <li>Jestbooks (extracts),</li>
- <li class="i1">English,
- <a href="#Page_262">262</a> <i>ff.</i>,
- <a href="#Page_274">274</a> <i>ff.</i></li>
- <li class="i1">French,
- <a href="#Page_335">335–337</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Jester Condemned to Death, The</i>, Horace Smith,
- <a href="#Page_469">469</a></li>
-
- <li>Jests</li>
- <li class="i1">Greek,
- <a href="#Page_178">178–181</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Mediæval German,
- <a href="#Page_188">188–189</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Old jokes,
- <a href="#Page_72">72–75</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Roman,
- <a href="#Page_181">181–182</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Jests of Hierocles</i>,
- <a href="#Page_72">72</a>,
- <a href="#Page_175">175</a>,
- <a href="#Page_176">176–178</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Jests of Scogin, The</i>, 263, (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Jobsiad, The</i> (extract), Carl Arnold Kortum,
- <a href="#Page_599">599</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Johannes Secundus</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Charinus, the Husband of an Ugly Wife</i>,
- <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Johnson, Richard</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>The Pleasant Conceits of Old Hobson</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Johnson, Samuel</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">“As with my hat upon my head,”
- <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>On Lying News-Writers</i> (from <i>The Idler</i>),
- <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-
- <li>Jokes,</li>
- <li class="i1">popular idea of,
- <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
- <li class="i1">what makes,
- <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
- <li class="i1">practical,
- <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
- <li class="i1">and bards,
- <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Jolly Good Ale and Old</i> (from <i>Gammer Gurton’s Needle</i>), John Still,
- <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Jongleurs</i> of Middle Ages,
- <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Jonson, Ben</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Every Man in His Humor</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Giles and Joan</i>,
- <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To the Ghost of Martial</i>,
- <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Vintner, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Volpone</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
-
- <li>Jotham, story of,
- <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Judas, the Arch-Rogue</i> (extract), Abraham á Sancta Clara,
- <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
- <li>Jugglers,
- <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Julian</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Beer</i>,
- <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, The</i> (extract), Samuel Langhorne Clemens,
- <a href="#Page_681">681</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Juvenal</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Cosmetic Disguise</i> (from <i>Satires</i>),
- <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Domineering Wives</i> (from <i>Satires</i>),
- <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><span class="smcap">Kalidasa</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Hunting with a King</i> (from <i>Sakuntala</i>),
- <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Kant</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">definition of laughter,
- <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Karlchen, the Crocodile</i> (extract), Fedor Dostoevsky,
- <a href="#Page_635">635</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Kathá Manjari</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Kathá Sarit Ságara</i>, Somadeva,
- <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Kerr, Orpheus C</span>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Newell">Newell, Robert Henry</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Khoja Nasru’d Dín</span>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Cogia">Cogia Nasr Eddin Effendi</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Kind-Hearted She-Elephant, The</i>, George Thomas Lanigan,
- <a href="#Page_706">706</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">King, Ben</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>If I Should Die To-Night</i>,
- <a href="#Page_728">728</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Pessimist, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_727">727</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Kingsley, Charles</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Professor’s Malady, The</i> (from <i>Water Babies</i>),
- <a href="#Page_498">498</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Kiss, The</i>, Thomas L. Masson,
- <a href="#Page_732">732</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Kiss, The&mdash;A Dialogue</i>, Robert Herrick,
- <a href="#Page_367">367</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Kock, Charles Paul de</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Theophile’s Mother-in-Law</i> (from <i>A Much Worried Gentleman</i>),
- <a href="#Page_572">572</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Kortum, Carl Arnold</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>The Jobsiad</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_599">599</a></li>
-
- <li>Krishna,</li>
- <li class="i1">caricatures of,
- <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Kryloff (v), Ivan</span>,
- <a href="#Page_631">631</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Musicians, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_634">634</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Swan, the Pike and the Crab, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_633">633</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>Lady from the Provinces, The</i>, W. S. Gilbert,
- <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent">“La Gallisse, now I wish to touch,” Gilles Ménage,
- <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
-
- <li><i>L’Allegro</i>, Milton,
- <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Lamb, Charles</span> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Landon, Melville D</span>.,
- <a href="#Page_698">698</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Lang, Andrew</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ballad of the Primitive Jest</i>,
- <a href="#Page_526">526</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ballade of Literary Fame</i>,
- <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent" id="Lanigan"><span class="smcap">Lanigan, George Thomas</span> (G. Washington Æsop),
- <a href="#Page_705">705</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Kind-Hearted She-Elephant, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_706">706</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ostrich and the Hen, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_706">706</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Threnody, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_704">704</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Lanty Leary</i>, Samuel Lover,
- <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Lap Dog, The</i>, Théophile Gautier,
- <a href="#Page_577">577</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">La Rochefoucauld, François de</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Maxims</i>,
- <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
- <li>Laughable, the, ideas on,
- <a href="#Page_4">4</a>,
- <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Laughing Song</i>, John Fletcher,
- <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
-
- <li>Laughter,</li>
- <li class="i1">what makes us laugh,
- <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Hobbes’s definition,
- <a href="#Page_11">11</a>,
- <a href="#Page_12">12</a>,
- <a href="#Page_366">366</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Kant’s definition,
- <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Lay of the Lovelorn, The</i>, William Edmonstoune Aytoun,
- <a href="#Page_495">495</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Lear, Edward</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Limericks,
- <a href="#Page_519">519</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Two Old Bachelors, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_520">520</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Learned Women, The</i> (extract), Molière,
- <a href="#Page_394">394</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Leland, Charles Godfrey</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ballad</i> (from <i>Hans Breitmann Ballads</i>),
- <a href="#Page_680">680</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Leopardi, Giacomo</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Academy of Syllographs, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_616">616</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Lerneans, The</i>, Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Le Sage, Alan René</span>,
- <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Decorated Bow, The</i> (from <i>Fables</i>),
- <a href="#Page_588">588</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_588">588</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Fables</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_588">588</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Raven, The</i> (from <i>Fables</i>),
- <a href="#Page_588">588</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Let the Toast Pass</i> (from <i>The School for Scandal</i>), Richard Brinsley Sheridan,
- <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Letters to His Son</i> (extracts), Lord Chesterfield,
- <a href="#Page_429">429</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Lever, Charles</span>,
- <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Widow Malone</i>,
- <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Lie, The</i>, Sir Walter Raleigh,
- <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Like to the Thundering Tone</i>, Bishop Corbet,
- <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
- <li>Limericks, Edward Lear,
- <a href="#Page_519">519</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Lines by a Person of Quality</i>, Alexander Pope,
- <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Lines on Milton</i>, Cowper,
- <a href="#Page_382">382</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Lion, the Bear, the Monkey and the Fox, The</i> (from <i>Æsop’s Fables</i>),
- <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Lions Council of State, The</i>, Ivan Chemnitzer,
- <a href="#Page_632">632</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Little Billee</i>, William Makepeace Thackeray,
- <a href="#Page_487">487</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Little Breeches</i> (from <i>Pike County Ballads</i>), John Hay,
- <a href="#Page_690">690</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Little Peach, The</i>, Eugene Field,
- <a href="#Page_712">712</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Living in Bed</i> (from <i>Roland Enamored</i>), Francesco Berni,
- <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Locke">Locke, David Ross</span> (Petroleum V. Nasby),
- <a href="#Page_684">684</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Locker-Lampson, Frederick</span>,
- <a href="#Page_484">484</a>,
- <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>My Mistress’s Boots</i>,
- <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On a Sense of Humor</i>,
- <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Some Ladies</i>,
- <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Terrible Infant, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Long and Short</i>, Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth</span>,
- <a href="#Page_666">666</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Mr. Finney’s Turnip</i>,
- <a href="#Page_667">667</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>There Was a Little Girl</i>,
- <a href="#Page_667">667</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Loomis, Charles Battell</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Jack and Jill</i> (a symposium),
- <a href="#Page_735">735</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Lord Erskine’s Simile</i>, Richard Brinsley Sheridan,
- <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Lost Hatchet, The</i> (from <i>Gargantua and Pantagruel</i>), François Rabelais,
- <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Love in a Cottage</i>, Nathaniel Parker Willis,
- <a href="#Page_661">661</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Love Lesson, A</i>, Clement Marot,
- <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Lovelace, Richard</span>,
- <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Song</i>,
- <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Lover, Samuel</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lanty Leary</i>,
- <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Rory O’More</i>,
- <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Lovers and a Reflection</i>, Charles Stuart Calverly,
- <a href="#Page_511">511</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Love’s Labour’s Lost</i> (extract), Shakespeare,
- <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Lowell, James Russell</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>What Mr. Robinson Thinks</i> (from <i>Biglow Papers</i>),
- <a href="#Page_674">674</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Lucian</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Darkness</i>,
- <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Odysseus’s Trick on Polyphemus</i> (from <i>Dialogues of the Sea Gods</i>),
- <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Question of Precedence, A</i> (from <i>Dialogues of the Gods</i>),
- <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Lucilius</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Board or Lodging</i>,
- <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Envy</i>,
- <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>False Charms</i>,
- <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Professor with a Small Class, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Schoolmaster with a Gay Wife, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Lucillius</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>A Miser’s Dream</i>,
- <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Lying</i>, Thomas Moore,
- <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>Madame d’Albret’s Laugh</i>, Clement Marot,
- <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Maginn, William</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Irishman, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_471">471</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Maid, the Monkey, and the Mendicant, The</i>, Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Making of Master Messerin, The</i>, Rustico di Filippo,
- <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Man and Superman</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Mark Twain: A Pipe Dream</i>, Oliver Herford,
- <a href="#Page_746">746</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Marot, Clement</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Love Lesson, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Madame d’Albret’s Laugh</i>,
- <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Married Life</i>, Stephanus Paschasius,
- <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Married State, The</i>, Sir John Davies,
- <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Marryat, Frederick</span> (Captain Marryat),</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Nautical Terms</i> (from <i>Peter Simple</i>),
- <a href="#Page_474">474</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Marston, John</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Scholar and His Dog, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Martial</span>, Father of Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_106">106</a>,
- <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Between the Lines</i>,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Crede Experto</i>,
- <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Man and Superman</i>,
- <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Mere Suggestion, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Millions in It</i>,
- <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Mute Miltons</i>,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Numbers Sweet</i>,
- <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Play’s the Thing</i>,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Rounded with a Sleep</i>,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Aulus</i>,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Catullus</i>,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Linus</i>,
- <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Mamercus</i>,
- <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Postumus</i>,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Sabidins</i>,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Total Abstainer, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Vendetta</i>,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>What Might Have Been</i>,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Martin, Theodore</span>,
- <a href="#Page_493">493</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Marvel, Ik.</span> <i>See</i> <a href="#Mitchell">Mitchell, Donald G.</a></li>
-
- <li>Masks,
- <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Masson, Thomas L.</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Desolation</i>,
- <a href="#Page_733">733</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Kiss, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_732">732</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Matthews Brander</span>, on sense of humor,
- <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Mavrone</i>, Arthur Guiterman,
- <a href="#Page_742">742</a></li>
-
- <li>Maxims of François de La Rochefoucauld,
- <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Meeting, The</i>, “Singing Mouse,”
- <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Melchior de Santa Cruz</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">Spanish Apothegms,
- <a href="#Page_184">184–189</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Ménage, Gilles</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">“La Galisse, now I wish to touch,”
- <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Menander</span>, fragments,
- <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Mendoza, Hurtado de</span>,
- <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Merchant and His Friend, The</i>, Pilpay,
- <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Merchant of Venice, The</i> (extract), Shakespeare,
- <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Merchaunte of London That Dyd Put Nobles in His Mouthe in Hys Dethe Bedde</i> (from <i>C. Mery Talys</i>),
- <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Mere Suggestion, A</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Meredith, George</span>, on modification of Derision Theory,
- <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Merie Tayles of Skelton</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Mery Tales of the Mad Men of Gotham</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Metamorphoses, or The Golden Ass</i> (extracts), Apuleius,
- <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Microbe, The</i>, Hilaire Belloc,
- <a href="#Page_556">556</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Mighty Must, The</i>, William Schwenck Gilbert,
- <a href="#Page_528">528</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Military Swagger</i> (from <i>The Braggart Captain</i>), Plautus,
- <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Milkmaid and the Banker, The</i>, Horace Smith,
- <a href="#Page_468">468</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Millennium, The</i>, James Kenneth Stephen,
- <a href="#Page_549">549</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Miller, Joaquin</span>,
- <a href="#Page_690">690</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>That Gentle Man from Boston Town</i>,
- <a href="#Page_692">692</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Millions in It</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Milton</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Epitaph for an Old University Carrier</i>,
- <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>L’Allegro</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Milton Compared with Homer and Virgil</i>, William Cowper,
- <a href="#Page_382">382</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Milton Compared with Homer and Virgil</i>, John Dryden,
- <a href="#Page_382">382</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Milton Compared with Homer and Virgil</i>, Selvaggi,
- <a href="#Page_382">382</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Mimi Pinson</i> (extract), Louis Charles Alfred de Musset,
- <a href="#Page_569">569</a></li>
-
- <li>Mimicry,
- <a href="#Page_23">23</a>,
- <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Miniver Cheevy</i>, Edwin Arlington Robinson,
- <a href="#Page_740">740</a></li>
-
- <li>Minstrels,
- <a href="#Page_233">233</a>,
- <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Miser and the Mouse, The</i>, Plato,
- <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Misers Dream, A</i>, Lucillius,
- <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Mrs. Caudle’s Curtain Lectures</i>, Douglas Jerrold,
- <a href="#Page_476">476</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Mrs. Gamp’s Apartment</i> (from <i>Martin Chuzzlewit</i>), Charles Dickens,
- <a href="#Page_491">491</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Mrs. Partington</i> (extract), Benjamin Penhallow Shillaber,
- <a href="#Page_664">664</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Mrs. Partington</i> (from Speech), Sydney Smith,
- <a href="#Page_448">448</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Mr. Finney’s Turnip</i>, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,
- <a href="#Page_667">667</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Mitchell">Mitchell, Donald G.</span> (Ik Marvel),
- <a href="#Page_678">678</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Molière</span>,
- <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Gentleman Cit, The</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_396">396</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Learned Women, The</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_394">394</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Mona Lisa</i>, John Kendrick Bangs,
- <a href="#Page_731">731</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Money</i>, Jehan du Pontalais,
- <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Montaudon, Monk of</span>,
- <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
- <li class="i1">“I am a saint of good repute,”
- <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
-
- <li>Montfaucon’s alphabet of men and animals,
- <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Moore, Clement C.</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Visit from St. Nicholas, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_652">652</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Moore, Thomas</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lying</i>,
- <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Nonsense</i>,
- <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of All the Men</i>,
- <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Taking a Wife</i>,
- <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Upon Being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party</i>,
- <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>What’s My Thought Like?</i>
- <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Moral Man, A</i>, Nikolai Nekrasov,
- <a href="#Page_637">637</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">More, Thomas</span>,
- <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Morell, José</span>,
- <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Advice to an Innkeeper</i>,
- <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To a Poet</i>,
- <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Mother Bunches Merriments</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Mountain and the Squirrel, The</i>, Ralph Waldo Emerson,
- <a href="#Page_660">660</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Much Ado About Nothing</i> (extract), Shakespeare,
- <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Much Married Gentleman, A</i> (extract), Charles Paul de Kock,
- <a href="#Page_572">572</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Müller, Wilhelm</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>The Drunkard’s Fancy</i>,
- <a href="#Page_606">606</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Munkittrick, Richard Kendall</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>What’s in a Name?</i>,
- <a href="#Page_715">715</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Murder as One of the Fine Arts</i>, Thomas De Quincey,
- <a href="#Page_458">458</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Murger, Henri</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>An Evening Reception</i> (from <i>Bohemian Life Sketches</i>),
- <a href="#Page_579">579</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Musicians, The</i>, Ivan Kryloff,
- <a href="#Page_634">634</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Musset, Louis Charles Alfred de</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>The Supper Party of the Three Cavaliers</i> (from <i>Mimi Pinson</i>),
- <a href="#Page_569">569</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Mute Miltons</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent">“My boy, if you’d wish to make constant your Venus,” Rambaud d’Orange,
- <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
- <li><i>My Familiar</i>, John Godfrey Saxe,
- <a href="#Page_669">669</a></li>
-
- <li><i>My First Visit to Portland</i>, Seba Smith,
- <a href="#Page_662">662</a></li>
-
- <li><i>My Mistress’s Boots</i>, Frederick Locker-Lampson,
- <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>My Opinions and Betsy Bobbet’s</i> (extracts), Marietta Holley,
- <a href="#Page_702">702</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Mystery, The</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_751">751</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><span class="smcap">Nasby, Petroleum V.</span> <i>See</i> <a href="#Locke">Locke, David Ross</a></li>
-
- <li>Nathan, story of,
- <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Nautical Terms</i> (from <i>Peter Simple</i>), Frederick Marryat,
- <a href="#Page_474">474</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Nearchus</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Singer, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Nekrasov, Nikolai</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Moral Man, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_637">637</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Nephelidia</i>, Swinburne,
- <a href="#Page_523">523</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Newell">Newell, Peter</span>,
- <a href="#Page_760">760</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Newell, Robert Henry</span> (Orpheus C. Kerr)</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Rejected “National Hymns,”</i>
- <a href="#Page_695">695</a></li>
-
- <li>Newspaper humor,
- <a href="#Page_663">663</a>,
- <a href="#Page_678">678</a>,
- <a href="#Page_698">698</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Nicarchus</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Great Contention, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
- <li><i>No!</i>, Thomas Hood,
- <a href="#Page_465">465</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Nocturne at Danieli’s, A</i>, Sir Owen Seaman,
- <a href="#Page_537">537</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Nonsense</i>, Bishop Corbet,
- <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Nonsense</i>, Thomas Moore,
- <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
-
- <li>Noodle stories,</li>
- <li class="i1">origin,
- <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
- <li class="i1">selections,
- <a href="#Page_199">199–225</a>,
- <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
- <li class="i1">principle of humor in,
- <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Novellino</i>, Massuchio di Salerno,
- <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Numbers Sweet</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Nye, Edgar Wilson</span> (Bill Nye),</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Garden Hose, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_714">714</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Obedient Husbands</i> (from <i>The Bachelor’s Banquet</i>), Thomas Dekker,
- <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
-
- <li>Obstinate Family, The, tale of,
- <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Obtrusive Company on the Sacred Way</i> (from <i>Satires</i>), Horace,
- <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Ode to Fortune</i>, Fitz-Greene Halleck and Joseph Rodman Drake,
- <a href="#Page_657">657</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ode to Tobacco</i>, Charles Stuart Calverly,
- <a href="#Page_513">513</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Odysseus’s Trick on Polyphemus</i> (from <i>Dialogues of the Sea-Gods</i>), Lucian,
- <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Of a Certain Man</i>, Sir John Harington,
- <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Of a Precise Tailor</i>, Sir John Harington,
- <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Of a Queer Relationship</i>, Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Of All the Men</i>, Thomas Moore,
- <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of Hym That Sought His Wyfe Agaynst the Streme</i> (from <i>C. Mery Talys</i>),
- <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of Loquacity</i> (from <i>The Characters</i>), Theophrastus,
- <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Of Sloth</i> (from <i>Gesta Romanorum</i>),
- <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of Slovenliness</i> (from <i>The Characters</i>), Theophrastus,
- <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of the Courtear That Ete the Hot Custarde</i> (from <i>C. Mery Talys</i>),
- <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of the Deceits of the Devil</i> (from <i>Gesta Romanorum</i>),
- <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Of the Diseases This Year</i>, François Rabelais,
- <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Of the Eclipses This Year</i>, François Rabelais,
- <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of the Foole That Thought Hym Selfe Deed</i> (from <i>C. Mery Talys</i>),
- <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of the Fruits of the Earth This Year</i>, François Rabelais,
- <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of the Good, Who Alone Will Enter the Kingdom of Heaven</i> (from <i>Gesta Romanorum</i>),
- <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of the Incarnation of Our Lord</i> (from <i>Gesta Romanorum</i>),
- <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of the Merchaunte of London That Dyd Put Nobles in His Mouthe in Hys Dethe Bedde</i> (from <i>C. Mery Talys</i>),
- <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of the Scoler of Oxforde That Proved by Sovestry II Chickens III</i> (from <i>C. Mery Talys</i>),
- <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of the Valorous Don Quixote’s ... Adventure of the Windmills</i> (from <i>Don Quixote</i>), Cervantes,
- <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of the Woman that Followed her Fourth Husband’s Bere and Wept</i> (from <i>Wit and Mirth</i>),
- <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of Three Girls and Their Talk</i>: A Sonnet, Giovanni Boccaccio,
- <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Of Vigilance in Our Calling</i> (from <i>Gesta Romanorum</i>),
- <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Old Age&mdash;Dialogue</i>, Jalal uddin Rumi,
- <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Old Grimes</i>, Albert Gorton Greene,
- <a href="#Page_658">658</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Omar Khayyam</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Rubaiyat</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On a Fan</i>, Henry Austin Dobson,
- <a href="#Page_524">524</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>On a Sense of Humor</i>, Frederick Locker-Lampson,
- <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On a Wet Day</i>, Francho Sacchetti,
- <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On Aufidius</i>, Actius Sannazarius,
- <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On Aurispa</i>, Janus Pannonius,
- <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On Celsus</i>, Paulus Thomas,
- <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>On Charinus, the Husband of an Ugly Wife</i>, Johannes Secundus,
- <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>On Clothes and Comforts</i> (from <i>The Land of Dreams</i>), Kiokutei Bakin,
- <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On Cotin</i>, Nicolas Boileau-Despreaux,
- <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>On Domineering Wives</i> (from <i>Satires</i>), Juvenal,
- <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On Expert Testimony</i>, Finley Peter Dunne,
- <a href="#Page_720">720</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On “Forts,”</i> Charles Farrar Browne,
- <a href="#Page_685">685</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On His Own Deafness</i>, Jonathan Swift,
- <a href="#Page_418">418</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On His Own Love</i>, Catullus,
- <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On Late-Acquired Wealth</i>, Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On Leonora</i>, Georgius Buchananus,
- <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>On Lying News-Writers</i> (from <i>The Idler</i>), Samuel Johnson,
- <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>On Mental Reservations</i> (from <i>Les Provinciales</i>), Blaise Pascal,
- <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On Musical Instruments</i>, Antonio Ghislanzoni,
- <a href="#Page_619">619</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On Shadwell</i>, John Dryden,
- <a href="#Page_380">380</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On Sultan Mahmoud</i>, Firdausi,
- <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On Taking a Wife</i>, Thomas Moore,
- <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On the Duke of Buckingham</i>, John Dryden,
- <a href="#Page_381">381</a></li>
-
- <li><i>On the Inconstancy of Woman’s Love</i>, Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Orange, Rambaud d’</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Song</i>: “My boy, if you’d wish to make constant your Venus,”
- <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Ostrich and the Hen, The</i>, George Thomas Lanigan,
- <a href="#Page_706">706</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><span class="smcap">Pain, Barry</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_551">551</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Palabras Grandiosas</i> (from <i>Echo Club</i>), James Bayard Taylor,
- <a href="#Page_683">683</a></li>
-
- <li>Palæolithic humor,
- <a href="#Page_24">24</a>,
- <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Pannonius, Janus</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Aurispa</i>,
- <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Paper</i>, Benjamin Franklin,
- <a href="#Page_645">645</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Parasites and Gnathonites</i> (from <i>Eunuchus</i>), Terence,
- <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Paris</i>, Paul Scarron,
- <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-
- <li>Parodies</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>Select Passages from a Coming Poet</i>, T. A. Guthrie,
- <a href="#Page_554">554</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After T. B. Aldrich</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Palabras Grandiosas</i>, James Bayard Taylor,
- <a href="#Page_683">683</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>Rejected “National Hymns,”</i> Robert Henry Newell,
- <a href="#Page_697">697</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Browning</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>Cock and the Bull, The</i>, Charles Stuart Calverley,
- <a href="#Page_507">507</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Nocturne at Danieli’s, A</i>, Owen Seaman,
- <a href="#Page_537">537</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>, Barry Pain,
- <a href="#Page_552">552</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Mrs. Browning</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_754">754</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Bryant</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>Rejected “National Hymns,”</i> Robert Henry Newell,
- <a href="#Page_697">697</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Burns</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>, Barry Pain,
- <a href="#Page_554">554</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Cowper</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>, Barry Pain,
- <a href="#Page_552">552</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Dinah Craik</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_750">750</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Austin Dobson</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Jack and Jill</i>, Charles Battell Loomis,
- <a href="#Page_735">735</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_755">755</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Emerson</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>Rejected “National Hymns,”</i> Robert Henry Newell,
- <a href="#Page_696">696</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Hafiz, Abu Ishak,
- <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Bret Harte</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>De Tea Fabula</i>, Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch,
- <a href="#Page_546">546</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_758">758</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Herrick</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Song</i>, O. Herford,
- <a href="#Page_747">747</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>To Julia under Lock and Key</i>, Owen Seaman,
- <a href="#Page_540">540</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Lady Arthur Hill</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_759">759</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Hogg</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_756">756</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Oliver Wendell Holmes</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>Rejected “National Hymns,”</i> Robert Henry Newell,
- <a href="#Page_696">696</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Hood</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>I Remember</i>, Phœbe Cary,
- <a href="#Page_676">676</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Jean Ingelow</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>Lovers and a Reflection</i>, Charles Stuart Calverley,
- <a href="#Page_511">511</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Kipling</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Here Is the Tale</i>, Anthony C. Deane,
- <a href="#Page_543">543</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>, Carolyn, Wells,
- <a href="#Page_757">757</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Longfellow</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>Rejected “National Hymns,”</i> Robert Henry Newell,
- <a href="#Page_695">695</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Macaulay</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>, Barry Pain,
- <a href="#Page_551">551</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After George Meredith</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>At the Sign of the Cock</i>, Owen Seaman,
- <a href="#Page_541">541</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Milton</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>The Splendid Shilling</i>, John Philips,
- <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Thomas Moore</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2">“There’s a bower of bean vines,” Phœbe Cary,
- <a href="#Page_677">677</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After E. A. Poe</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>, Barry Pain,
- <a href="#Page_553">553</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_753">753</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Rossetti</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Ballad</i>, Charles Stuart Calverley,
- <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>, Barry Pain,
- <a href="#Page_553">553</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Southey</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>The Friend of Humanity and the Knife-Grinder</i>, George Canning,
- <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Swinburne</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Jack and Jill</i>, Charles Battell Loomis,
- <a href="#Page_736">736</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Nephilidia</i>, Algernon Charles Swinburne,
- <a href="#Page_523">523</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>, Barry Pain,
- <a href="#Page_551">551</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_757">757</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Tennyson</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell, The</i>, Algernon Charles Swinburne,
- <a href="#Page_522">522</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>The Lay of the Lovelorn</i>, William Edmonstoune Aytoun,
- <a href="#Page_495">495</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>, Barry Pain,
- <a href="#Page_551">551</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Walt Whitman</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Jack and Jill</i>, Charles Battell Loomis,
- <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>, Barry Pain,
- <a href="#Page_554">554</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Whittier</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>Rejected “National Hymns,”</i> Robert Henry Newell,
- <a href="#Page_696">696</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Oscar Wilde</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_759">759</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Nathaniel P. Willis</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>Rejected “National Hymns,”</i> Robert Henry Newell,
- <a href="#Page_697">697</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Charles Wolfe</li>
- <li class="hangingindent2"><i>“True and Original” Version, A</i>, Richard Harris Barham,
- <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After Wordsworth</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Baby’s Début, The</i>, James Smith,
- <a href="#Page_466">466</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Jacob</i>, Phœbe Cary,
- <a href="#Page_677">677</a></li>
- <li class="i2"><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>, Barry Pain,
- <a href="#Page_552">552</a></li>
- <li class="i1">After a Popular Song</li>
- <li class="i2"><i>If I Should Die To-night</i>, Ben King,
- <a href="#Page_728">728</a></li>
-
- <li>Parody,
- <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Parson Gray</i>, Oliver Goldsmith,
- <a href="#Page_434">434</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Partial Judge, The</i> (from <i>Æsop’s Fables</i>),
- <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Pascal, Blaise</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>On Mental Reservations</i> (from <i>Les Provinciates</i>),
- <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Paschasius, Stephanus</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Married Life</i>,
- <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Patient Cured, The</i>, Christian F. Gellert,
- <a href="#Page_586">586</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Paying with the Sound of a Penny</i> (from <i>Eulenspiegel’s Pranks</i>), Tyll Eulenspiegel,
- <a href="#Page_340">340</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Peasant of Larcarà, The</i>, Pitrá,
- <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Pegasus in the Yoke</i>, Friedrich von Schiller,
- <a href="#Page_593">593</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Pepys, Samuel</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Diary</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_378">378</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Perplexity</i>, Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
-
- <li>Persian humor,
- <a href="#Page_73">73</a>,
- <a href="#Page_138">138–156</a>,
- <a href="#Page_196">196–199</a></li>
-
- <li>Persian Jest-Book,
- <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Persius</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Poetic Fame</i> (from <i>Satires</i>),
- <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Pessimist, The</i>, Ben King,
- <a href="#Page_727">727</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Peter Simple</i> (extracts), Frederick Marryat,
- <a href="#Page_474">474</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Petronius</span>,
- <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Ingenious Cook, An</i> (from <i>Trimalchio’s Banquet</i>),
- <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Philippides</span>, Epigrams,
- <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Philips, John</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Splendid Shilling, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Phillis’ Age</i>, Matthew Prior,
- <a href="#Page_389">389</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Philosopher, A</i>, Sam Walter Foss,
- <a href="#Page_718">718</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Philosopher, The</i> (from <i>The Fables</i>), Ivan Chemnitzer,
- <a href="#Page_631">631</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Phoenix, John.</span> <i>See</i> <a href="#Derby">Derby, George Horatio</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Phoenixiana</i> (extract), George Horatio Derby,
- <a href="#Page_678">678</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Phyllis Lee</i>, Oliver Herford,
- <a href="#Page_744">744</a></li>
-
- <li>Pictorial humor,
- <a href="#Page_27">27</a>,
- <a href="#Page_46">46</a>,
- <a href="#Page_47">47</a>,
- <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Pigtail, The</i>, Adelbert von Chamisso,
- <a href="#Page_605">605</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Pike County Ballads</i> (extract), John Hay,
- <a href="#Page_690">690</a></li>
-
- <li id="Pilpay">Pilpay (or Bidpai), <i>Fables</i>,
- <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;</li>
- <li class="i1">(Selections),
- <a href="#Page_164">164–170</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Pitrá</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>The Peasant of Larcarà</i>,
- <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Plato</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">idea of humor,
- <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Miser and the Mouse, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Thief and the Suicide, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Plato Comicus</span>, fragments,
- <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Plautus</span>,
- <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Military Swagger</i> (from <i>The Braggart Captain</i>),
- <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Suspicious Miser, The</i> (from <i>The Pot of Gold</i>),
- <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
- <li>Playfulness of animals,
- <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Play’s the Thing</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Pleasant Conceits of Old Hobson, The</i> (extract), Richard Johnson,
- <a href="#Page_265">265</a>,
- <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Pleasantries of Cogia Nasr Eddin Effendi, The</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Pleasure of Fishes, The</i> (from <i>Autumn Floods</i>), Chwang Tze,
- <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Poems in Prose</i>, Ivan Turgenieff,
- <a href="#Page_638">638</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Poetic Fame</i> (from <i>Satires</i>), Persius,
- <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Poets</i>, Samuel Butler,
- <a href="#Page_377">377</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Poets at Tea, The</i>, Barry Pain,
- <a href="#Page_551">551</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Poggio</span>, Italian stories,
- <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
- <li>Polish humor,
- <a href="#Page_639">639–641</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Pontalais, Jehan du</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Money</i>,
- <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Pope, Alexander</span>,
- <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Epigram on Mrs. Tofts</i>,
- <a href="#Page_421">421</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lines by a Person of Quality</i>,
- <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Worms</i>,
- <a href="#Page_420">420</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Pope and Sultan</i> (German Student Song),
- <a href="#Page_613">613</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Pope and the Net, The</i>, Robert Browning,
- <a href="#Page_502">502</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Popularity</i>, Sung Yu,
- <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Praed, Winthrop Mackworth</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Song of Impossibilities, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_484">484</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Praise of Folly, The</i> (extracts), Desiderius Erasmus,
- <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Prayer</i>, Ivan Turgenieff,
- <a href="#Page_638">638</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Prior, Matthew</span>,
- <a href="#Page_386">386</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Epitaph, An</i>,
- <a href="#Page_387">387</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Phillis’ Age</i>,
- <a href="#Page_389">389</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Reasonable Affliction, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_389">389</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Simile, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_388">388</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Prodigal Egg, The</i>, Oliver Herford,
- <a href="#Page_747">747</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent">Professional entertainers of the Middle Ages,
- <a href="#Page_231">231–236</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Professor with a Small Class, A</i>, Lucilius,
- <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Professor’s Malady, The</i> (from <i>Water Babies</i>), Charles Kingsley,
- <a href="#Page_498">498</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Proverbial Wisdom</i>, Anton Chekov,
- <a href="#Page_639">639</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Provinciales, Les</i> (extract), Blaise Pascal,
- <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Psycholophon</i>, Frank Gelett Burgess,
- <a href="#Page_749">749</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Puffing</i>, Samuel Butler,
- <a href="#Page_377">377</a></li>
-
- <li>“Punning” (from Speeches), Sydney Smith,
- <a href="#Page_446">446</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Purple Cow, The</i>, Frank Gelett Burgess,
- <a href="#Page_748">748</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Python, The</i>, Hilaire Belloc,
- <a href="#Page_555">555</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Question of Precedence, A</i> (from <i>Dialogues of the Gods</i>), Lucian,
- <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Quiller-Couch, Arthur Thomas.</span> <i>See</i> <a href="#Couch">Couch, Arthur Thomas Quiller-</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><span class="smcap">Rabelais, François</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of the Diseases This Year</i>,
- <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of the Eclipses This Year</i>,
- <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of the Fruits of the Earth This Year</i>,
- <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Lost Hatchet, The</i> (from <i>Gargantua and Pantagruel</i>),
- <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1">“<i>Rabelais Imitates Diogenes</i>” (from <i>Gargantua and Pantagruel</i>),
- <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Radhi Billah</span>, the Kaliph,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To a Lady upon Seeing Her Blush</i>,
- <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Raising the Devil</i>, Richard Harris Barham,
- <a href="#Page_456">456</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Raleigh, Sir Walter</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lie, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Raspe, Rudolph Erich</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Horse Tied to a Steeple, A</i> (from <i>Adventures of Baron Münchausen</i>),
- <a href="#Page_589">589</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Rather Large Whale, A</i> (from <i>Adventures of Baron Münchausen</i>),
- <a href="#Page_590">590</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Raven, The</i> (from Fables), Lessing,
- <a href="#Page_588">588</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Raven, a Fox and a Serpent, A</i>, Pilpay,
- <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Reasonable Affliction, A</i>, Matthew Prior,
- <a href="#Page_389">389</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Redi, Francesca</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Diatribe Against Water</i>,
- <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Rejected Addresses</i> (extract), James and Horace Smith,
- <a href="#Page_465">465</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Rejected “National Hymns”</i> (burlesque), Robert Henry Newell,
- <a href="#Page_695">695</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Religion of Hudibras, The</i> (from <i>Hudibras</i>), Samuel Butler,
- <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Remonstrance, The</i>, Sir John Suckling,
- <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Reuben</i>, Phœbe Cary,
- <a href="#Page_678">678</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Reynard the Fox</i>,</li>
- <li class="i1">forms and origin,
- <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Goethe’s version (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_596">596</a></li>
-
- <li>Riddles,</li>
- <li class="i1">Arabian,
- <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Homer’s,
- <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Samson’s,
- <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Sphinx’s,
- <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Rig Vedas</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Robinson, Edwin Arlington</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Miniver Cheevy</i>,
- <a href="#Page_740">740</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Two Men</i>,
- <a href="#Page_741">741</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Roche, James Jeffrey</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Boston Lullaby, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_708">708</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>V-a-s-e, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_706">706</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Roland Enamored</i> (extract), Francesco Berni,
- <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Roman Cockney, The</i>, Catullus,
- <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
- <li>Roman humor,
- <a href="#Page_86">86–119</a>,
- <a href="#Page_181">181–182</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Rondeau, The</i>, Henry Austin Dobson,
- <a href="#Page_525">525</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Rory O’More</i>, Samuel Lover,
- <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Rose Garden, The</i> (<i>Gulistan</i>) (extracts), Sadi,
- <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Rounded with a Sleep</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Rubaiyat</i> (extract), Omar Khayyam,
- <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Rückert, Friedrich</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Artist and Public</i>,
- <a href="#Page_609">609</a></li>
-
- <li>Russian humor,
- <a href="#Page_217">217</a>,
- <a href="#Page_631">631–639</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Rutebœuf</span>, the Trouvère,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ass’s Testament, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><span class="smcap">Sacchetti, Francho</span>,
- <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On a Wet Day</i>,
- <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Sad End of Brer Wolf, The</i> (from <i>Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings</i>), Joel Chandler Harris,
- <a href="#Page_708">708</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Sadi</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Discomfort Better Than Drowning</i>, (from <i>The Rose Garden</i> [<i>Gulistan</i>]),
- <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Hatefulness of Old Husbands</i> (from <i>The Rose Garden</i>),
- <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Strict Schoolmaster and the Mild, The</i> (from <i>The Rose Garden</i>),
- <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Wise Sayings</i>,
- <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Saintship versus Conscience</i> (from <i>Hudibras</i>), Samuel Butler,
- <a href="#Page_375">375</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Sakuntala</i> (extract), Kaildasa,
- <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Salad</i>, Sydney Smith,
- <a href="#Page_448">448</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Salerno, Massuchio di</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Inheritance of a Library, The</i> (from <i>Novellino</i>),
- <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
-
- <li>Samson’s Riddle,
- <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">San Shroe Bu</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Enforced Greatness</i>,
- <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Sannazarius, Actius</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Aufidius</i>,
- <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Satires</i> (extract), Horace,
- <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Satires</i> (extract), Juvenal,
- <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Satires</i> (extract), Persius,
- <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
- <li>Satires on dress,
- <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Saxe, John Godfrey</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>My Familiar</i>,
- <a href="#Page_669">669</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Scarron, Paul</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Farewell to Chloris</i>,
- <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Paris</i>,
- <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-
- <li>Schildburgers, the, tales of,
- <a href="#Page_341">341–344</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Schiller, Friedrich von</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Pegasus in the Yoke</i>,
- <a href="#Page_593">593</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Scholar and His Dog, The</i>, John Marston,
- <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-
- <li><i>School</i>, James Kenneth Stephen,
- <a href="#Page_550">550</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>School for Scandal, The</i> (extract), Richard Brinsley Sheridan,
- <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Schoolmaster with a Gay Wife, A</i>, Lucilius,
- <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Scogin</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Jests</i>,
- <a href="#Page_263">263</a>,
- <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Seaman, Sir Owen</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>At the Sign of the Cock</i>,
- <a href="#Page_541">541</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Nocturne at Danieli’s, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_537">537</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Julia under Lock and Key</i>,
- <a href="#Page_540">540</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Select Passages from a Coming Poet</i>, T. A. Guthrie,
- <a href="#Page_554">554</a></li>
-
- <li>Sense of humor,
- <a href="#Page_13">13</a>,
- <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Shakespeare</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">on sense of humor,
- <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
- <li class="i1">as humorist,
- <a href="#Page_277">277</a>,
- <a href="#Page_278">278</a>,
- <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>As You Like It</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Hamlet</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Henry IV, Part I</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Henry IV, Part II</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Love’s Labour’s Lost</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Merchant of Venice, The</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Shaw">Shaw, Henry Wheeler</span> (Josh Billings),
- <a href="#Page_671">671</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Hen, A</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_673">673</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Tight Boots</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_671">671</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Sheridan, Richard Brinsley</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Calendar</i>,
- <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Let the Toast Pass</i> (from <i>The School for Scandal</i>),
- <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lord Erskine’s Simile</i>,
- <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Sheridan’s Calendar</i>, Richard Brinsley Sheridan,
- <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Shillaber, Benjamin Penhallow</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>After a Wedding</i> (from <i>Mrs. Partington</i>),
- <a href="#Page_664">664</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Sick Schoolmaster, The</i> (from <i>Stories in Rime [Masnavi]</i>), Jalal uddin Rumi,
- <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Sill, Edward Rowland</span>,
- <a href="#Page_690">690</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Eves Daughter</i>,
- <a href="#Page_698">698</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Simile, A</i>, Matthew Prior,
- <a href="#Page_388">388</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Simonides</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Fine Lady, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Simpleton and the Sharper, The</i> (from <i>The Arabian Nights’ Entertainment</i>),
- <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Singer, A</i>, Nearchus,
- <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
- <li>“Singing Mouse, The,”
- <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Meeting, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Skelton, John</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>How Skelton Came Late Home to Oxford from Abington</i> (from <i>Certayne Merye Tales</i>),
- <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>How the Welshman Dyd Desyre Skelton to Hyde Him in Hys Sute to the Kynge for a Patent to Sell Drynke</i>,
- <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>To Maistres Margaret Hussey</i>,
- <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Sleep</i>, Baltazar del Alcazar,
- <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Slight Misunderstanding, A</i> (from <i>Contés Drolatiques</i>), Honoré de Balzac,
- <a href="#Page_567">567</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Smith">Smith, Horace</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Jester Condemned to Death, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_469">469</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Milkmaid and the Banker, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_468">468</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Smith, James</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Baby’s Debut, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_466">466</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Smith, Seba</span> (Major Jack Downing),</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>My First Visit to Portland</i>,
- <a href="#Page_662">662</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Smith, Sydney</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Mrs. Partington</i> (from Speech),
- <a href="#Page_448">448</a></li>
- <li class="i1">“Punning” (from Speeches),
- <a href="#Page_446">446</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Salad</i>,
- <a href="#Page_448">448</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Smollett</span>,
- <a href="#Page_429">429</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Society upon the Stanislaus, The</i>, Francis Bret Harte,
- <a href="#Page_686">686</a></li>
-
- <li>“<i>Soldier, Rest!</i>” Robert Jones Burdette,
- <a href="#Page_701">701</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Somadeva</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Kathá Sarit Ságara</i>,
- <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Some Geese</i>, Oliver Herford,
- <a href="#Page_744">744</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Some Hallucinations</i>, Lewis Carroll,
- <a href="#Page_518">518</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Some Ladies</i>, Frederick Locker-Lampson,
- <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Song</i>, Richard Lovelace,
- <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Song&mdash;After Herrick</i>, Oliver Herford,
- <a href="#Page_747">747</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Song of Impossibilities, A</i>, Winthrop Mackworth Praed,
- <a href="#Page_484">484</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Sonnet</i>: “Two voices are there: one is of the deep,” James Kenneth Stephen,
- <a href="#Page_548">548</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Sorrows of Werther</i>, William Makepeace Thackeray,
- <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Soul of the Cabbage, The</i>, Cyrano de Bergerac,
- <a href="#Page_390">390</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Southey, Robert</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, The</i>, (from <i>The Doctor</i>),
- <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Well of St. Keyne, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
-
- <li>Spanish Apothegms of Melchior de Santa Cruz,
- <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent">Spanish humor,
- <a href="#Page_184">184–189</a>,
- <a href="#Page_359">359–364</a>,
- <a href="#Page_411">411–412</a>,
- <a href="#Page_626">626–630</a></li>
-
- <li>Sphinx’s Riddle,
- <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Splendid Shilling, The</i>, John Philips,
- <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Stanza for a Tobacco-Pouch, A</i>, Yuan Mei,
- <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Stedman, Edmund Clarence</span>,
- <a href="#Page_683">683</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Stephen, James Kenneth</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Millennium, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_549">549</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>School</i>,
- <a href="#Page_550">550</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Sonnet</i>, “Two voices are there: one is of the deep,”
- <a href="#Page_548">548</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Thought, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_549">549</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Stephens, Henry</span> (Henri Estienne),</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Noodle Stories</i> from Introduction to <i>Apology for Herodotus</i>,
- <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Sterne</span>,
- <a href="#Page_429">429</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Stevenson, Robert Louis</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Child’s Verses</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_534">534</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Still, John</span>,</li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Jolly Good Ale and Old</i> (from <i>Gammer Gurton’s Needle</i>),
- <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Stockton, Frank R.</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Lady and the Tiger, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_686">686</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Stolen Pig, The</i> (from the <i>Decameron</i>), Giovanni Boccaccio,
- <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Stories in Rime</i> (extracts), Jalal uddin Rumi,
- <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Strict Schoolmaster and the Mild, The</i> (from <i>The Rose Garden</i> [<i>Gulistan</i>]), Sadi,
- <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Stupid Man</i> (from <i>The Characters</i>), Theophrastus,
- <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Suckling, Sir John</span>,
- <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Constant Lover, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Remonstrance, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Sung Yu</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Popularity</i>,
- <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Sunt Qui Servari Nolunt</i>, Jonathan Swift,
- <a href="#Page_418">418</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Supper-Party of the Three Cavaliers, The</i> (from <i>Mimi Pinson</i>), Louis Charles Alfred de Musset,
- <a href="#Page_569">569</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Suspicious Miser, The</i> (from <i>The Pot of Gold</i>), Plautus,
- <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Swan, the Pike and the Crab, The</i>, Ivan Krylov,
- <a href="#Page_633">633</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Swift, Jonathan</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Against Abolishing Christianity</i>,
- <a href="#Page_415">415</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Furniture of a Woman’s Mind, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_416">416</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On His Own Deafness</i>,
- <a href="#Page_418">418</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Sunt Qui Servari Nolunt</i>,
- <a href="#Page_418">418</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>“To Mrs. Houghton of Bormount, upon praising her husband to Dr. Swift,”</i>
- <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Swinburne, Charles Algernon</span>,
- <a href="#Page_521">521</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_522">522</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Nephelidia</i>,
- <a href="#Page_523">523</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_752">752</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Tales of a Grandfather</i> (extract), Victor Marie Hugo,
- <a href="#Page_580">580</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Talmud, The</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Tatler, The</i> (extract), Joseph Addison,
- <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Taylor, James Bayard</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Palabras Grandiosas</i> (from Echo Club),
- <a href="#Page_683">683</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Taylor, John</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Wit and Mirth</i> (extracts),
- <a href="#Page_74">74</a>,
- <a href="#Page_268">268</a>,
- <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, The</i> (from <i>The Doctor</i>), Robert Southey,
- <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Tennyson, Alfred</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>The Goose</i>,
- <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Terence</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Parasites and Gnathonites</i> (from <i>Eunuchus</i>),
- <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Ternary of Littles upon a Pipkin of Jelly sent to a Lady, A</i>, Robert Herrick,
- <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Terrible Infant, A</i>, Frederick Locker-Lampson,
- <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Thackeray, William Makepeace</span>,
- <a href="#Page_486">486</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Little Billee</i>,
- <a href="#Page_487">487</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Sorrows of Werther</i>,
- <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>When Moonlike Ore the Hazure Seas</i>,
- <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Wolfe New Ballad of Jane Roney and Mary Brown, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_488">488</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>That Gentle Man from Boston Town</i>, Joaquin Miller,
- <a href="#Page_692">692</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Thayer, Ernest Lawrence</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Casey at the Bat</i>,
- <a href="#Page_729">729</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Theophile’s Mother-in-Law</i> (from <i>A Much Worried Gentleman</i>), Charles Paul de Kock,
- <a href="#Page_572">572</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Theophrastus</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of Loquacity</i> (from <i>The Characters</i>),
- <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Of Slovenliness</i> (from <i>The Characters</i>),
- <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Stupid Man, The</i> (from <i>The Characters</i>),
- <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>There Was a Little Girl</i>, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,
- <a href="#Page_667">667</a></li>
-
- <li>“There’s a Bower of Bean-Vines,” Phœbe Cary,
- <a href="#Page_677">677</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Thief and the Suicide, The</i>, Plato,
- <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Thief Turned Merchant and the Other Thief, The</i> (from <i>The Arabian Nights’ Entertainment</i>),
- <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Thomas, Paulus</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>On Celsus</i>,
- <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Thought, A</i>, James Kenneth Stephen,
- <a href="#Page_549">549</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Thoughts</i>, Jean de la Bruyère,
- <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Threnody, A</i>, George Thomas Lanigan,
- <a href="#Page_704">704</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Through the Looking-Glass</i> (extract), Lewis Carroll,
- <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Tight Boots</i>, Henry Wheeler Shaw (Josh Billings),
- <a href="#Page_671">671</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Tithes</i>, a Hebrew Satire,
- <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To a Friend in Distress</i>, Johannes Audœmus,
- <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>To a Lady Upon Seeing Her Blush</i>, The Kaliph Radhi Billah,
- <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To a Mosquito</i>, William Cullen Bryant,
- <a href="#Page_655">655</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To a Poet</i>, José Morell,
- <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Aulus</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Catullus</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Julia under Lock and Key</i>, Sir Owen Seaman,
- <a href="#Page_540">540</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Linus</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Maistres Margaret Hussey</i>, John Skelton,
- <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Mamercus</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>To Mrs. Houghton of Bormount, upon praising her husband to Dr. Swift</i>, Jonathan Swift,
- <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To My Empty Purse</i>, Chaucer,
- <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To My Nose</i>, Olivier Basselin,
- <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Perrault</i>, Nicolas Boileau-Despreaux,
- <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Philomusus</i>, Euricius Cordus,
- <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Postumus</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Sabidius</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Sally</i>, John Quincy Adams,
- <a href="#Page_650">650</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To the Ghost of Martial</i>, Ben Jonson,
- <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To the Pliocene Skull</i>, Francis Bret Harte,
- <a href="#Page_688">688</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>To the Terrestrial Globe</i>, William Schwenck Gilbert,
- <a href="#Page_529">529</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>To the Vizier Cassim Obid Allah, On the Death of One of His Sons</i>, Aly Ben Ahmed Ben Mansour,
- <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
- <li><i>To Zoilus</i>, Georgius Buchananus,
- <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Tooth for Tooth</i>, Edmondo de Amicis,
- <a href="#Page_623">623</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Total Abstainer, A</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Touching the Olfactory Organ</i>, Alexander Dumas, the Elder,
- <a href="#Page_574">574</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Town of Göttingen, The</i>, Heinrich Heine,
- <a href="#Page_611">611</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Townsend, Edward Waterman</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Chimmie Fadden</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_716">716</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Trimalchio’s Banquet</i> (extract), Petronius,
- <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
-
- <li>Troubadours,
- <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
- <li>Troubadours’ Songs,
- <a href="#Page_236">236–240</a></li>
-
- <li>Trouvères,
- <a href="#Page_236">236</a>,
- <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Trowbridge, John T.</span>,
- <a href="#Page_681">681</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>“True and Original” Version, A</i>, Richard Harris Barham,
- <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
-
- <li><i>True to Poll</i>, Francis C. Burnand,
- <a href="#Page_532">532</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Turgenieff, Ivan</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Beneficence and Gratitude</i>,
- <a href="#Page_638">638</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Prayer,
- <a href="#Page_638">638</a></li>
-
- <li>Turkish humor,
- <a href="#Page_33">33</a>,
- <a href="#Page_199">199–204</a>,
- <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Tushmaker’s Tooth-Puller</i>, George Horatio Derby,
- <a href="#Page_678">678</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Twain, Mark.</span> <i>See</i> <a href="#Clemens">Clemens, Samuel Langhorne</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Two Men</i>, Edwin Arlington Robinson,
- <a href="#Page_741">741</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Two Old Bachelors, The</i>, Edward Lear,
- <a href="#Page_520">520</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent">“Two voices are there: one is of the deep,” James Kenneth Stephen,
- <a href="#Page_548">548</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><span class="smcap">Udall, Nicholas</span>,
- <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
- <li>Ulysses, stories of,
- <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_708">708</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Upon Being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party</i>, Thomas Moore,
- <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>V-a-s-e, The</i>, James Jeffrey Roche,
- <a href="#Page_706">706</a></li>
-
- <li>Vega, Lope de,
- <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Vendetta</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Ventadour, Bernard de</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">“You say the moon is all aglow,”
- <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Vers de Société</i>,
- <a href="#Page_503">503</a>,
- <a href="#Page_524">524</a>,
- <a href="#Page_706">706</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Vicissitudes of a Donkey</i> (from <i>The Golden Ass</i>), Apuleius,
- <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Villanelle</i>, William Ernest Henley,
- <a href="#Page_533">533</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Villanelle of Things Amusing</i>, Frank Gelett Burgess,
- <a href="#Page_748">748</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Villon, François</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ballad of the Women of Paris</i>,
- <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ballade of Dead Ladies, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_318">318</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ballade of Old Time Ladies, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_319">319</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Vintner, A</i>, Ben Johnson,
- <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Visit from St. Nicholas, A</i>, Clement C. Moore,
- <a href="#Page_652">652</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Voice from the Grave, A</i>, Unknown,
- <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Volpone</i> (extract), Ben Jonson,
- <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap" id="Voltaire">Voltaire</span> (Francis Marie Arouet),</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Candide</i> (extract),
- <a href="#Page_560">560</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li><span class="smcap">Waller, Edmund</span>,
- <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Walloping Window-Blind, The</i>, Charles E. Carryl,
- <a href="#Page_699">699</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Ward, Artemus</span>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Browne">Browne, Charles Farrar</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Ward, William Hayes</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1">on Greek humor,
- <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Warner, Charles Dudley</span>,
- <a href="#Page_681">681</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Water Babies</i> (extract), Charles Kingsley,
- <a href="#Page_498">498</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Ways and Means</i>, Lewis Carroll,
- <a href="#Page_516">516</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Well of St. Keyne, The</i>, Robert Southey,
- <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Wells, Carolyn</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Idiot’s Delight, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_749">749</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Mystery, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_751">751</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Symposium of Poets, A</i>,
- <a href="#Page_752">752</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Woman</i>,
- <a href="#Page_751">751</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Wengierski, Kajetan</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Dream Wife, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_639">639</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Wesley, Samuel</span>,
- <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
- <li class="i1">Homer’s <i>The Battle of the Frogs and Mice</i>,
- <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-
- <li><i>What’s In a Name?</i> Richard Kendall Munkittrick,
- <a href="#Page_715">715</a></li>
-
- <li><i>What Might Have Been</i>, Martial,
- <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>What Mr. Robinson Thinks</i> (from <i>Biglow Papers</i>), James Russell Lowell,
- <a href="#Page_674">674</a></li>
-
- <li><i>What Will We Do?</i> Robert Jones Burdette,
- <a href="#Page_700">700</a></li>
-
- <li><i>What’s My Thought Like?</i> Thomas Moore,
- <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>When Moonlike Ore the Hazure Seas</i>, William Makepeace Thackeray,
- <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Whitcher, Mrs. Frances Miriam</span>,
- <a href="#Page_664">664</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">White, Richard Grant</span>,
- <a href="#Page_678">678</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Why Don’t the Men Propose?</i> Thomas Haynes Bayly,
- <a href="#Page_472">472</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Widow Malone</i>, Charles Lever,
- <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Wife’s Ruse, A</i>: A Rabbinical Tale,
- <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Will, The</i>, John Donne,
- <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Will of a Virtuoso, The</i> (from <i>The Tatler</i>), Joseph Addison,
- <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>William Tell</i> (from <i>Tartarin in the Alps</i>), Alphonse Daudet,
- <a href="#Page_583">583</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Willis, Nathaniel Parker</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Love in a Cottage</i>,
- <a href="#Page_661">661</a></li>
-
- <li>Wit and humor,</li>
- <li class="i1">Hazlitt on the distinction between,
- <a href="#Page_15">15–17</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Wit and Mirth</i> (extracts), John Taylor,
- <a href="#Page_74">74</a>,
- <a href="#Page_268">268–270</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Wolfe New Ballad of Jane Roney and Mary Brown, The</i>, William Makepeace Thackeray,
- <a href="#Page_488">488</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Woman</i>, Carolyn Wells,
- <a href="#Page_751">751</a></li>
-
- <li><i>Worms</i>, Alexander Pope,
- <a href="#Page_420">420</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Wreck of the “Julie Plante,” The</i>, William H. Drummond, M.D.,
- <a href="#Page_726">726</a></li>
-
- <li class="hangingindent"><span class="smcap">Wright, Thomas</span>, on caricature by prehistoric man,
- <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
- <li class="hangingindent">“You say the moon is all aglow,” Bernard de Ventadour,
- <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Yriarte, Thomas</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Ass and the Flute, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_626">626</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Country Squire, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_628">628</a></li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Eggs, The</i>,
- <a href="#Page_627">627</a></li>
-
- <li><span class="smcap">Yuan Mei</span>,</li>
- <li class="i1"><i>Recipes</i> (from <i>Cookery Book</i>),
- <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent1"><i>Stanza for a Tobacco-Pouch, A</i>, (from <i>Letters</i>),
- <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> For putting out the fire in a brasier or cooking-stove.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> A Shrawn is a pure Gaelic noise, something like a groan,
-more like a shriek, and most like a sigh of longing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> Eire was daughter of Carne, King of Connaught. Her lover,
-Murdh of the Open Hand, was captured by Greatcoat Mackintosh, King of
-Ulster, on the plain of Carrisbool and made into soup. Eire’s grief on
-this sad occasion has become proverbial.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> Garnim was second cousin to Manannan MacLir. His sons were
-always sad about something. There were twenty-two of them, and they
-were all unfortunate in love at the same time, just like a chorus at
-the opera. “Blitherin’ their drool” is about the same as “dreeing their
-weird.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> The Shee (or “Sidhe,” as I should properly spell it if
-you were not so ignorant) were, as everybody knows, the regular,
-stand-pat, organization fairies of Erin. The Crowdie was their annual
-convention, at which they made melancholy sounds. The Itt and Himm were
-the irregular, or insurgent, fairies. They <i>never</i> got any offices
-or patronage. See MacAlester, <i>Polity of the Sidhe of West Meath</i>,
-page 985.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> The Barryhoo is an ancient Celtic bird about the size of
-a Mavis, with lavender eyes and a black-crape tail. It continually
-mourns its mate (Barrywhich, feminine form), which has an hereditary
-predisposition to an early and tragic demise and invariably dies first.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> Magraw, a Gaelic term of endearment, often heard on the
-baseball fields of Donnybrook.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> These last six words are all that tradition has preserved
-of the original incantation by means of which Irish rats were rhymed to
-death. Thereby hangs a good Celtic tale, which I should be glad to tell
-you in this note; but the publishers say that being prosed to death is
-as bad as being rhymed to death, and that the readers won’t stand for
-any more.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="transnote">Transcriber’s Notes:<br />
-
-1. Obvious printers’, punctuation and spelling errors have been
-corrected silently.<br />
-
-2. Some hyphenated and non-hyphenated versions of the same words have
-been retained as in the original.<br />
-
-3. The heading hierarchy used follows the original publication and
-consequently in some chapters the h3 level has been skipped.</p>
-
-
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