<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>MORE BAB BALLADS</h1>
<br/>
<p>Contents:</p>
<p>Mister William<br/>The Bumboat Woman’s Story<br/>The Two
Ogres<br/>Little Oliver<br/>Pasha Bailey Ben<br/>Lieutenant-Colonel
Flare<br/>Lost Mr. Blake<br/>The Baby’s Vengeance<br/>The Captain
And The Mermaids<br/>Annie Protheroe. A Legend of Stratford-Le-Bow<br/>An
Unfortunate Likeness<br/>Gregory Parable, LL.D.<br/>The King Of Canoodle-Dum<br/>First
Love<br/>Brave Alum Bey<br/>Sir Barnaby Bampton Boo<br/>The Modest
Couple<br/>The Martinet<br/>The Sailor Boy To His Lass<br/>The Reverend
Simon Magus<br/>Damon v. Pythias<br/>My Dream<br/>The Bishop Of Rum-Ti-Foo
Again<br/>A Worm Will Turn<br/>The Haughty Actor<br/>The Two Majors<br/>Emily,
John, James, And I. A Derby Legend<br/>The Perils Of Invisibility<br/>Old
Paul And Old Tim<br/>The Mystic Selvagee<br/>The Cunning Woman<br/>Phrenology<br/>The
Fairy Curate<br/>The Way Of Wooing<br/>Hongree And Mahry. A
Recollection Of A Surrey Melodrama<br/>Etiquette</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Mister William</h2>
<br/>
<p>Oh, listen to the tale of MISTER WILLIAM, if you please,<br/>Whom
naughty, naughty judges sent away beyond the seas.<br/>He forged a
party’s will, which caused anxiety and strife,<br/>Resulting
in his getting penal servitude for life.</p>
<p>He was a kindly goodly man, and naturally prone,<br/>Instead of
taking others’ gold, to give away his own.<br/>But he had heard
of Vice, and longed for only once to strike—<br/>To plan <i>one</i>
little wickedness—to see what it was like.</p>
<p>He argued with himself, and said, “A spotless man am I;<br/>I
can’t be more respectable, however hard I try!<br/>For six and
thirty years I’ve always been as good as gold,<br/>And now for
half an hour I’ll plan infamy untold!</p>
<p>“A baby who is wicked at the early age of one,<br/>And then
reforms—and dies at thirty-six a spotless son,<br/>Is never,
never saddled with his babyhood’s defect,<br/>But earns from
worthy men consideration and respect.</p>
<p>“So one who never revelled in discreditable tricks<br/>Until
he reached the comfortable age of thirty-six,<br/>May then for half
an hour perpetrate a deed of shame,<br/>Without incurring permanent
disgrace, or even blame.</p>
<p>“That babies don’t commit such crimes as forgery is true,<br/>But
little sins develop, if you leave ’em to accrue;<br/>And he who
shuns all vices as successive seasons roll,<br/>Should reap at length
the benefit of so much self-control.</p>
<p>“The common sin of babyhood—objecting to be drest—<br/>If
you leave it to accumulate at compound interest,<br/>For anything you
know, may represent, if you’re alive,<br/>A burglary or murder
at the age of thirty-five.</p>
<p>“Still, I wouldn’t take advantage of this fact, but be
content<br/>With some pardonable folly—it’s a mere experiment.<br/>The
greater the temptation to go wrong, the less the sin;<br/>So with something
that’s particularly tempting I’ll begin.</p>
<p>“I would not steal a penny, for my income’s very fair—<br/>I
do not want a penny—I have pennies and to spare—<br/>And
if I stole a penny from a money-bag or till,<br/>The sin would be enormous—the
temptation being <i>nil</i>.</p>
<p>“But if I broke asunder all such pettifogging bounds,<br/>And
forged a party’s Will for (say) Five Hundred Thousand Pounds,<br/>With
such an irresistible temptation to a haul,<br/>Of course the sin must
be infinitesimally small.</p>
<p>“There’s WILSON who is dying—he has wealth from
Stock and rent—<br/>If I divert his riches from their natural
descent,<br/>I’m placed in a position to indulge each little
whim.”<br/>So he diverted them—and they, in turn, diverted
him.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, though, by some unpardonable flaw,<br/>Temptation
isn’t recognized by Britain’s Common Law;<br/>Men found
him out by some peculiarity of touch,<br/>And WILLIAM got a “lifer,”
which annoyed him very much.</p>
<p>For, ah! he never reconciled himself to life in gaol,<br/>He fretted
and he pined, and grew dispirited and pale;<br/>He was numbered like
a cabman, too, which told upon him so<br/>That his spirits, once so
buoyant, grew uncomfortably low.</p>
<p>And sympathetic gaolers would remark, “It’s very true,<br/>He
ain’t been brought up common, like the likes of me and you.”<br/>So
they took him into hospital, and gave him mutton chops,<br/>And chocolate,
and arrowroot, and buns, and malt and hops.</p>
<p>Kind Clergymen, besides, grew interested in his fate,<br/>Affected
by the details of his pitiable state.<br/>They waited on the Secretary,
somewhere in Whitehall,<br/>Who said he would receive them any day
they liked to call.</p>
<p>“Consider, sir, the hardship of this interesting case:<br/>A
prison life brings with it something very like disgrace;<br/>It’s
telling on young WILLIAM, who’s reduced to skin and bone—<br/>Remember
he’s a gentleman, with money of his own.</p>
<p>“He had an ample income, and of course he stands in need<br/>Of
sherry with his dinner, and his customary weed;<br/>No delicacies now
can pass his gentlemanly lips—<br/>He misses his sea-bathing
and his continental trips.</p>
<p>“He says the other prisoners are commonplace and rude;<br/>He
says he cannot relish uncongenial prison food.<br/>When quite a boy
they taught him to distinguish Good from Bad,<br/>And other educational
advantages he’s had.</p>
<p>“A burglar or garotter, or, indeed, a common thief<br/>Is
very glad to batten on potatoes and on beef,<br/>Or anything, in short,
that prison kitchens can afford,—<br/>A cut above the diet in
a common workhouse ward.</p>
<p>“But beef and mutton-broth don’t seem to suit our WILLIAM’S
whim,<br/>A boon to other prisoners—a punishment to him.<br/>It
never was intended that the discipline of gaol<br/>Should dash a convict’s
spirits, sir, or make him thin or pale.”</p>
<p>“Good Gracious Me!” that sympathetic Secretary cried,<br/>“Suppose
in prison fetters MISTER WILLIAM should have died!<br/>Dear me, of
course! Imprisonment for <i>Life</i> his sentence saith:<br/>I’m
very glad you mentioned it—it might have been For Death!</p>
<p>“Release him with a ticket—he’ll be better then,
no doubt,<br/>And tell him I apologize.” So MISTER WILLIAM’S
out.<br/>I hope he will be careful in his manuscripts, I’m sure,<br/>And
not begin experimentalizing any more.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Bumboat Woman’s Story</h2>
<br/>
<p>I’m old, my dears, and shrivelled with age, and work, and grief,<br/>My
eyes are gone, and my teeth have been drawn by Time, the Thief!<br/>For
terrible sights I’ve seen, and dangers great I’ve run—<br/>I’m
nearly seventy now, and my work is almost done!</p>
<p>Ah! I’ve been young in my time, and I’ve played
the deuce with men!<br/>I’m speaking of ten years past—I
was barely sixty then:<br/>My cheeks were mellow and soft, and my eyes
were large and sweet,<br/>POLL PINEAPPLE’S eyes were the standing
toast of the Royal Fleet!</p>
<p>A bumboat woman was I, and I faithfully served the ships<br/>With
apples and cakes, and fowls, and beer, and halfpenny dips,<br/>And
beef for the generous mess, where the officers dine at nights,<br/>And
fine fresh peppermint drops for the rollicking midshipmites.</p>
<p>Of all the kind commanders who anchored in Portsmouth Bay,<br/>By
far the sweetest of all was kind LIEUTENANT BELAYE.’<br/>LIEUTENANT
BELAYE commanded the gunboat <i>Hot Cross Bun,<br/></i>She was seven
and thirty feet in length, and she carried a gun.</p>
<p>With a laudable view of enhancing his country’s naval pride,<br/>When
people inquired her size, LIEUTENANT BELAYE replied,<br/>“Oh,
my ship, my ship is the first of the Hundred and Seventy-ones!”<br/>Which
meant her tonnage, but people imagined it meant her guns.</p>
<p>Whenever I went on board he would beckon me down below,<br/>“Come
down, Little Buttercup, come” (for he loved to call me so),<br/>And
he’d tell of the fights at sea in which he’d taken a part,<br/>And
so LIEUTENANT BELAYE won poor POLL PINEAPPLE’S heart!</p>
<p>But at length his orders came, and he said one day, said he,<br/>“I’m
ordered to sail with the <i>Hot Cross Bun</i> to the German Sea.”<br/>And
the Portsmouth maidens wept when they learnt the evil day,<br/>For
every Portsmouth maid loved good LIEUTENANT BELAYE.</p>
<p>And I went to a back back street, with plenty of cheap cheap shops,<br/>And
I bought an oilskin hat and a second-hand suit of slops,<br/>And I
went to LIEUTENANT BELAYE (and he never suspected <i>me</i>!)<br/>And
I entered myself as a chap as wanted to go to sea.</p>
<p>We sailed that afternoon at the mystic hour of one,—<br/>Remarkably
nice young men were the crew of the <i>Hot Cross Bun,<br/></i>I’m
sorry to say that I’ve heard that sailors sometimes swear,<br/>But
I never yet heard a <i>Bun</i> say anything wrong, I declare.</p>
<p>When Jack Tars meet, they meet with a “Messmate, ho!
What cheer?”<br/>But here, on the <i>Hot Cross Bun</i>, it was
“How do you do, my dear?”<br/>When Jack Tars growl, I believe
they growl with a big big D-<br/>But the strongest oath of the <i>Hot
Cross Buns</i> was a mild “Dear me!”</p>
<p>Yet, though they were all well-bred, you could scarcely call them
slick:<br/>Whenever a sea was on, they were all extremely sick;<br/>And
whenever the weather was calm, and the wind was light and fair,<br/>They
spent more time than a sailor should on his back back hair.</p>
<p>They certainly shivered and shook when ordered aloft to run,<br/>And
they screamed when LIEUTENANT BELAYE discharged his only gun.<br/>And
as he was proud of his gun—such pride is hardly wrong—<br/>The
Lieutenant was blazing away at intervals all day long.</p>
<p>They all agreed very well, though at times you heard it said<br/>That
BILL had a way of his own of making his lips look red—<br/>That
JOE looked quite his age—or somebody might declare<br/>That BARNACLE’S
long pig-tail was never his own own hair.</p>
<p>BELAYE would admit that his men were of no great use to him,<br/>“But,
then,” he would say, “there is little to do on a gunboat
trim<br/>I can hand, and reef, and steer, and fire my big gun too—<br/>And
it <i>is</i> such a treat to sail with a gentle well-bred crew.”</p>
<p>I saw him every day. How the happy moments sped!<br/>Reef
topsails! Make all taut! There’s dirty weather ahead!<br/>(I
do not mean that tempests threatened the <i>Hot Cross Bun:<br/></i>In
<i>that</i> case, I don’t know whatever we <i>should</i> have
done!)</p>
<p>After a fortnight’s cruise, we put into port one day,<br/>And
off on leave for a week went kind LIEUTENANT BELAYE,<br/>And after
a long long week had passed (and it seemed like a life),<br/>LIEUTENANT
BELAYE returned to his ship with a fair young wife!</p>
<p>He up, and he says, says he, “O crew of the <i>Hot Cross Bun</i>,<br/>Here
is the wife of my heart, for the Church has made us one!”<br/>And
as he uttered the word, the crew went out of their wits,<br/>And all
fell down in so many separate fainting-fits.</p>
<p>And then their hair came down, or off, as the case might be,<br/>And
lo! the rest of the crew were simple girls, like me,<br/>Who all had
fled from their homes in a sailor’s blue array,<br/>To follow
the shifting fate of kind LIEUTENANT BELAYE.</p>
<p>* * * * * * * *</p>
<p>It’s strange to think that <i>I</i> should ever have loved
young men,<br/>But I’m speaking of ten years past—I was
barely sixty then,<br/>And now my cheeks are furrowed with grief and
age, I trow!<br/>And poor POLL PINEAPPLE’S eyes have lost their
lustre now!</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Two Ogres</h2>
<br/>
<p>Good children, list, if you’re inclined,<br/>And wicked children
too—<br/>This pretty ballad is designed<br/>Especially for you.</p>
<p>Two ogres dwelt in Wickham Wold—<br/>Each <i>traits</i> distinctive
had:<br/>The younger was as good as gold,<br/>The elder was as bad.</p>
<p>A wicked, disobedient son<br/>Was JAMES M’ALPINE, and<br/>A
contrast to the elder one,<br/>Good APPLEBODY BLAND.</p>
<p>M’ALPINE—brutes like him are few—<br/>In greediness
delights,<br/>A melancholy victim to<br/>Unchastened appetites.</p>
<p>Good, well-bred children every day<br/>He ravenously ate,—<br/>All
boys were fish who found their way<br/>Into M’ALPINE’S
net:</p>
<p>Boys whose good breeding is innate,<br/>Whose sums are always right;<br/>And
boys who don’t expostulate<br/>When sent to bed at night;</p>
<p>And kindly boys who never search<br/>The nests of birds of song;<br/>And
serious boys for whom, in church,<br/>No sermon is too long.</p>
<p>Contrast with JAMES’S greedy haste<br/>And comprehensive hand,<br/>The
nice discriminating taste<br/>Of APPLEBODY BLAND.</p>
<p>BLAND only eats bad boys, who swear—<br/>Who <i>can</i> behave,
but <i>don’t—<br/></i>Disgraceful lads who say “don’t
care,”<br/>And “shan’t,” and “can’t,”
and “won’t.”</p>
<p>Who wet their shoes and learn to box,<br/>And say what isn’t
true,<br/>Who bite their nails and jam their frocks,<br/>And make
long noses too;</p>
<p>Who kick a nurse’s aged shin,<br/>And sit in sulky mopes;<br/>And
boys who twirl poor kittens in<br/>Distracting zoëtropes.</p>
<p>But JAMES, when he was quite a youth,<br/>Had often been to school,<br/>And
though so bad, to tell the truth,<br/>He wasn’t quite a fool.</p>
<p>At logic few with him could vie;<br/>To his peculiar sect<br/>He
could propose a fallacy<br/>With singular effect.</p>
<p>So, when his Mentors said, “Expound—<br/>Why eat good
children—why?”<br/>Upon his Mentors he would round<br/>With
this absurd reply:</p>
<p>“I have been taught to love the good—<br/>The pure—the
unalloyed—<br/>And wicked boys, I’ve understood,<br/>I
always should avoid.</p>
<p>“Why do I eat good children—why?<br/>Because I love
them so!”<br/>(But this was empty sophistry,<br/>As your Papa
can show.)</p>
<p>Now, though the learning of his friends<br/>Was truly not immense,<br/>They
had a way of fitting ends<br/>By rule of common sense.</p>
<p>“Away, away!” his Mentors cried,<br/>“Thou uncongenial
pest!<br/>A quirk’s a thing we can’t abide,<br/>A quibble
we detest!</p>
<p>“A fallacy in your reply<br/>Our intellect descries,<br/>Although
we don’t pretend to spy<br/>Exactly where it lies.</p>
<p>“In misery and penal woes<br/>Must end a glutton’s joys;<br/>And
learn how ogres punish those<br/>Who dare to eat good boys.</p>
<p>“Secured by fetter, cramp, and chain,<br/>And gagged securely—so—<br/>You
shall be placed in Drury Lane,<br/>Where only good lads go.</p>
<p>“Surrounded there by virtuous boys,<br/>You’ll suffer
torture wus<br/>Than that which constantly annoys<br/>Disgraceful
TANTALUS.</p>
<p>(“If you would learn the woes that vex<br/>Poor TANTALUS,
down there,<br/>Pray borrow of Papa an ex-<br/>Purgated LEMPRIERE.)</p>
<p>“But as for BLAND who, as it seems,<br/>Eats only naughty
boys,<br/>We’ve planned a recompense that teems<br/>With gastronomic
joys.</p>
<p>“Where wicked youths in crowds are stowed<br/>He shall unquestioned
rule,<br/>And have the run of Hackney Road<br/>Reformatory School!”</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Little Oliver</h2>
<br/>
<p>EARL JOYCE he was a kind old party<br/>Whom nothing ever could put
out,<br/>Though eighty-two, he still was hearty,<br/>Excepting as
regarded gout.</p>
<p>He had one unexampled daughter,<br/>The LADY MINNIE-HAHA JOYCE,<br/>Fair
MINNIE-HAHA, “Laughing Water,”<br/>So called from her melodious
voice.</p>
<p>By Nature planned for lover-capture,<br/>Her beauty every heart
assailed;<br/>The good old nobleman with rapture<br/>Observed how
widely she prevailed</p>
<p>Aloof from all the lordly flockings<br/>Of titled swells who worshipped
her,<br/>There stood, in pumps and cotton stockings,<br/>One humble
lover—OLIVER.</p>
<p>He was no peer by Fortune petted,<br/>His name recalled no bygone
age;<br/>He was no lordling coronetted—<br/>Alas! he was a simple
page!</p>
<p>With vain appeals he never bored her,<br/>But stood in silent sorrow
by—<br/>He knew how fondly he adored her,<br/>And knew, alas!
how hopelessly!</p>
<p>Well grounded by a village tutor<br/>In languages alive and past,<br/>He’d
say unto himself, “Knee-suitor,<br/>Oh, do not go beyond your
last!”</p>
<p>But though his name could boast no handle,<br/>He could not every
hope resign;<br/>As moths will hover round a candle,<br/>So hovered
he about her shrine.</p>
<p>The brilliant candle dazed the moth well:<br/>One day she sang to
her Papa<br/>The air that MARIE sings with BOTHWELL<br/>In NEIDERMEYER’S
opera.</p>
<p>(Therein a stable boy, it’s stated,<br/>Devoutly loved a noble
dame,<br/>Who ardently reciprocated<br/>His rather injudicious flame.)</p>
<p>And then, before the piano closing<br/>(He listened coyly at the
door),<br/>She sang a song of her composing—<br/>I give one
verse from half a score:</p>
<br/>
<p>BALLAD</p>
<p>Why, pretty page, art ever sighing?<br/>Is sorrow in thy heartlet
lying?<br/>Come, set a-ringing<br/>Thy laugh entrancing,<br/>And
ever singing<br/>And ever dancing.<br/>Ever singing, Tra! la! la!<br/>Ever
dancing, Tra! la! la!<br/>Ever singing, ever dancing,<br/>Ever singing,
Tra! la! la!</p>
<p>He skipped for joy like little muttons,<br/>He danced like Esmeralda’s
kid.<br/>(She did not mean a boy in buttons,<br/>Although he fancied
that she did.)</p>
<p>Poor lad! convinced he thus would win her,<br/>He wore out many
pairs of soles;<br/>He danced when taking down the dinner—<br/>He
danced when bringing up the coals.</p>
<p>He danced and sang (however laden)<br/>With his incessant “Tra!
la! la!”<br/>Which much surprised the noble maiden,<br/>And
puzzled even her Papa.</p>
<p>He nourished now his flame and fanned it,<br/>He even danced at
work below.<br/>The upper servants wouldn’t stand it,<br/>And
BOWLES the butler told him so.</p>
<p>At length on impulse acting blindly,<br/>His love he laid completely
bare;<br/>The gentle Earl received him kindly<br/>And told the lad
to take a chair.</p>
<p>“Oh, sir,” the suitor uttered sadly,<br/>“Don’t
give your indignation vent;<br/>I fear you think I’m acting madly,<br/>Perhaps
you think me insolent?”</p>
<p>The kindly Earl repelled the notion;<br/>His noble bosom heaved
a sigh,<br/>His fingers trembled with emotion,<br/>A tear stood in
his mild blue eye:</p>
<p>For, oh! the scene recalled too plainly<br/>The half-forgotten time
when he,<br/>A boy of nine, had worshipped vainly<br/>A governess
of forty-three!</p>
<p>“My boy,” he said, in tone consoling,<br/>“Give
up this idle fancy—do—<br/>The song you heard my daughter
trolling<br/>Did not, indeed, refer to you.</p>
<p>“I feel for you, poor boy, acutely;<br/>I would not wish to
give you pain;<br/>Your pangs I estimate minutely,—<br/>I, too,
have loved, and loved in vain.</p>
<p>“But still your humble rank and station<br/>For MINNIE surely
are not meet”—<br/>He said much more in conversation<br/>Which
it were needless to repeat.</p>
<p>Now I’m prepared to bet a guinea,<br/>Were this a mere dramatic
case,<br/>The page would have eloped with MINNIE,<br/>But, no—he
only left his place.</p>
<p>The simple Truth is my detective,<br/>With me Sensation can’t
abide;<br/>The Likely beats the mere Effective,<br/>And Nature is
my only guide.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Pasha Bailey Ben</h2>
<br/>
<p>A proud Pasha was BAILEY BEN,<br/>His wives were three, his tails
were ten;<br/>His form was dignified, but stout,<br/>Men called him
“Little Roundabout.”</p>
<p><i>His Importance</i></p>
<p>Pale Pilgrims came from o’er the sea<br/>To wait on PASHA
BAILEY B.,<br/>All bearing presents in a crowd,<br/>For B. was poor
as well as proud.</p>
<p><i>His Presents</i></p>
<p>They brought him onions strung on ropes,<br/>And cold boiled beef,
and telescopes,<br/>And balls of string, and shrimps, and guns,<br/>And
chops, and tacks, and hats, and buns.</p>
<p><i>More of them</i></p>
<p>They brought him white kid gloves, and pails,<br/>And candlesticks,
and potted quails,<br/>And capstan-bars, and scales and weights,<br/>And
ornaments for empty grates.</p>
<p><i>Why I mention these</i></p>
<p>My tale is not of these—oh no!<br/>I only mention them to
show<br/>The divers gifts that divers men<br/>Brought o’er the
sea to BAILEY BEN.</p>
<p><i>His Confidant</i></p>
<p>A confidant had BAILEY B.,<br/>A gay Mongolian dog was he;<br/>I
am not good at Turkish names,<br/>And so I call him SIMPLE JAMES.</p>
<p><i>His Confidant’s Countenance</i></p>
<p>A dreadful legend you might trace<br/>In SIMPLE JAMES’S honest
face,<br/>For there you read, in Nature’s print,<br/>“A
Scoundrel of the Deepest Tint.”</p>
<p><i>His Character</i></p>
<p>A deed of blood, or fire, or flames,<br/>Was meat and drink to SIMPLE
JAMES:<br/>To hide his guilt he did not plan,<br/>But owned himself
a bad young man.</p>
<p><i>The Author to his Reader</i></p>
<p>And why on earth good BAILEY BEN<br/>(The wisest, noblest, best
of men)<br/>Made SIMPLE JAMES his right-hand man<br/>Is quite beyond
my mental span.</p>
<p><i>The same, continued</i></p>
<p>But there—enough of gruesome deeds!<br/>My heart, in thinking
of them, bleeds;<br/>And so let SIMPLE JAMES take wing,—<br/>’Tis
not of him I’m going to sing.</p>
<p><i>The Pasha’s Clerk</i></p>
<p>Good PASHA BAILEY kept a clerk<br/>(For BAILEY only made his mark),<br/>His
name was MATTHEW WYCOMBE COO,<br/>A man of nearly forty-two.</p>
<p><i>His Accomplishments</i></p>
<p>No person that I ever knew<br/>Could “yödel” half
as well as COO,<br/>And Highlanders exclaimed, “Eh, weel!”<br/>When
COO began to dance a reel.</p>
<p><i>His Kindness to the Pasha’s Wives</i></p>
<p>He used to dance and sing and play<br/>In such an unaffected way,<br/>He
cheered the unexciting lives<br/>Of PASHA BAILEY’S lovely wives.</p>
<p><i>The Author to his Reader</i></p>
<p>But why should I encumber you<br/>With histories of MATTHEW COO?<br/>Let
MATTHEW COO at once take wing,—<br/>’Tis not of COO I’m
going to sing.</p>
<p><i>The Author’s Muse</i></p>
<p>Let me recall my wandering Muse;<br/>She <i>shall</i> be steady
if I choose—<br/>She roves, instead of helping me<br/>To tell
the deeds of BAILEY B.</p>
<p><i>The Pasha’s Visitor</i></p>
<p>One morning knocked, at half-past eight,<br/>A tall Red Indian at
his gate.<br/>In Turkey, as you’re p’raps aware,<br/>Red
Indians are extremely rare.</p>
<p><i>The Visitor’s Outfit</i></p>
<p>Mocassins decked his graceful legs,<br/>His eyes were black, and
round as eggs,<br/>And on his neck, instead of beads,<br/>Hung several
Catawampous seeds.</p>
<p><i>What the Visitor said</i></p>
<p>“Ho, ho!” he said, “thou pale-faced one,<br/>Poor
offspring of an Eastern sun,<br/>You’ve <i>never</i> seen the
Red Man skip<br/>Upon the banks of Mississip!”</p>
<p><i>The Author’s Moderation</i></p>
<p>To say that BAILEY oped his eyes<br/>Would feebly paint his great
surprise—<br/>To say it almost made him die<br/>Would be to
paint it much too high.</p>
<p><i>The Author to his Reader</i></p>
<p>But why should I ransack my head<br/>To tell you all that Indian
said;<br/>We’ll let the Indian man take wing,—<br/>’Tis
not of him I’m going to sing.</p>
<p><i>The Reader to the Author</i></p>
<p>Come, come, I say, that’s quite enough<br/>Of this absurd
disjointed stuff;<br/>Now let’s get on to that affair<br/>About
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL FLARE.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Lieutenant-Colonel Flare</h2>
<br/>
<p>The earth has armies plenty,<br/>And semi-warlike bands,<br/>I
dare say there are twenty<br/>In European lands;<br/>But, oh! in no
direction<br/>You’d find one to compare<br/>In brotherly affection<br/>With
that of COLONEL FLARE.</p>
<p>His soldiers might be rated<br/>As military Pearls.<br/>As unsophisticated<br/>As
pretty little girls!<br/>They never smoked or ratted,<br/>Or talked
of Sues or Polls;<br/>The Sergeant-Major tatted,<br/>The others nursed
their dolls.</p>
<p>He spent his days in teaching<br/>These truly solemn facts;<br/>There’s
little use in preaching,<br/>Or circulating tracts.<br/>(The vainest
plan invented<br/>For stifling other creeds,<br/>Unless it’s
supplemented<br/>With charitable <i>deeds</i>.)</p>
<p>He taught his soldiers kindly<br/>To give at Hunger’s call:<br/>“Oh,
better far give blindly,<br/>Than never give at all!<br/>Though sympathy
be kindled<br/>By Imposition’s game,<br/>Oh, better far be swindled<br/>Than
smother up its flame!”</p>
<p>His means were far from ample<br/>For pleasure or for dress,<br/>Yet
note this bright example<br/>Of single-heartedness:<br/>Though ranking
as a Colonel,<br/>His pay was but a groat,<br/>While their reward
diurnal<br/>Was—each a five-pound note.</p>
<p>Moreover,—this evinces<br/>His kindness, you’ll allow,—<br/>He
fed them all like princes,<br/>And lived himself on cow.<br/>He set
them all regaling<br/>On curious wines, and dear,<br/>While he would
sit pale-ale-ing,<br/>Or quaffing ginger-beer.</p>
<p>Then at his instigation<br/>(A pretty fancy this)<br/>Their daily
pay and ration<br/>He’d take in change for his;<br/>They brought
it to him weekly,<br/>And he without a groan,<br/>Would take it from
them meekly<br/>And give them all his own!</p>
<p>Though not exactly knighted<br/>As knights, of course, should be,<br/>Yet
no one so delighted<br/>In harmless chivalry.<br/>If peasant girl
or ladye<br/>Beneath misfortunes sank,<br/>Whate’er distinctions
made he,<br/>They were not those of rank.</p>
<p>No maiden young and comely<br/>Who wanted good advice<br/>(However
poor or homely)<br/>Need ask him for it twice.<br/>He’d wipe
away the blindness<br/>That comes of teary dew;<br/>His sympathetic
kindness<br/>No sort of limit knew.</p>
<p>He always hated dealing<br/>With men who schemed or planned;<br/>A
person harsh—unfeeling—<br/>The Colonel could not stand.<br/>He
hated cold, suspecting,<br/>Official men in blue,<br/>Who pass their
lives detecting<br/>The crimes that others do.</p>
<p>For men who’d shoot a sparrow,<br/>Or immolate a worm<br/>Beneath
a farmer’s harrow,<br/>He could not find a term.<br/>Humanely,
ay, and knightly<br/>He dealt with such an one;<br/>He took and tied
him tightly,<br/>And blew him from a gun.</p>
<p>The earth has armies plenty,<br/>And semi-warlike bands,<br/>I’m
certain there are twenty<br/>In European lands;<br/>But, oh! in no
direction<br/>You’d find one to compare<br/>In brotherly affection<br/>With
that of COLONEL FLARE.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Lost Mr. Blake</h2>
<br/>
<p>MR. BLAKE was a regular out-and-out hardened sinner,<br/>Who was
quite out of the pale of Christianity, so to speak,<br/>He was in the
habit of smoking a long pipe and drinking a glass of grog on a Sunday
after dinner,<br/>And seldom thought of going to church more than twice
or—if Good Friday or Christmas Day happened to come in it—three
times a week.</p>
<p>He was quite indifferent as to the particular kinds of dresses<br/>That
the clergyman wore at church where he used to go to pray,<br/>And whatever
he did in the way of relieving a chap’s distresses,<br/>He always
did in a nasty, sneaking, underhanded, hole-and-corner sort of way.</p>
<p>I have known him indulge in profane, ungentlemanly emphatics,<br/>When
the Protestant Church has been divided on the subject of the proper
width of a chasuble’s hem;<br/>I have even known him to sneer
at albs—and as for dalmatics,<br/>Words can’t convey an
idea of the contempt he expressed for <i>them.</i></p>
<p>He didn’t believe in persons who, not being well off themselves,
are obliged to confine their charitable exertions to collecting money
from wealthier people,<br/>And looked upon individuals of the former
class as ecclesiastical hawks;<br/>He used to say that he would no
more think of interfering with his priest’s robes than with his
church or his steeple,<br/>And that he did not consider his soul imperilled
because somebody over whom he had no influence whatever, chose to dress
himself up like an exaggerated GUY FAWKES.</p>
<p>This shocking old vagabond was so unutterably shameless<br/>That
he actually went a-courting a very respectable and pious middle-aged
sister, by the name of BIGGS.<br/>She was a rather attractive widow,
whose life as such had always been particularly blameless;<br/>Her
first husband had left her a secure but moderate competence, owing to
some fortunate speculations in the matter of figs.</p>
<p>She was an excellent person in every way—and won the respect
even of MRS. GRUNDY,<br/>She was a good housewife, too, and wouldn’t
have wasted a penny if she had owned the Koh-i-noor.<br/>She was just
as strict as he was lax in her observance of Sunday,<br/>And being
a good economist, and charitable besides, she took all the bones and
cold potatoes and broken pie-crusts and candle-ends (when she had quite
done with them), and made them into an excellent soup for the deserving
poor.</p>
<p>I am sorry to say that she rather took to BLAKE—that outcast
of society,<br/>And when respectable brothers who were fond of her
began to look dubious and to cough,<br/>She would say, “Oh, my
friends, it’s because I hope to bring this poor benighted soul
back to virtue and propriety,<br/>And besides, the poor benighted soul,
with all his faults, was uncommonly well off.</p>
<p>And when MR. BLAKE’S dissipated friends called his attention
to the frown or the pout of her,<br/>Whenever he did anything which
appeared to her to savour of an unmentionable place,<br/>He would say
that “she would be a very decent old girl when all that nonsense
was knocked out of her,”<br/>And his method of knocking it out
of her is one that covered him with disgrace.</p>
<p>She was fond of going to church services four times every Sunday,
and, four or five times in the week, and never seemed to pall of them,<br/>So
he hunted out all the churches within a convenient distance that had
services at different hours, so to speak;<br/>And when he had married
her he positively insisted upon their going to all of them,<br/>So
they contrived to do about twelve churches every Sunday, and, if they
had luck, from twenty-two to twenty-three in the course of the week.</p>
<p>She was fond of dropping his sovereigns ostentatiously into the plate,
and she liked to see them stand out rather conspicuously against the
commonplace half-crowns and shillings,<br/>So he took her to all the
charity sermons, and if by any extraordinary chance there wasn’t
a charity sermon anywhere, he would drop a couple of sovereigns (one
for him and one for her) into the poor-box at the door;<br/>And as
he always deducted the sums thus given in charity from the housekeeping
money, and the money he allowed her for her bonnets and frillings,<br/>She
soon began to find that even charity, if you allow it to interfere with
your personal luxuries, becomes an intolerable bore.</p>
<p>On Sundays she was always melancholy and anything but good society,<br/>For
that day in her household was a day of sighings and sobbings and wringing
of hands and shaking of heads:<br/>She wouldn’t hear of a button
being sewn on a glove, because it was a work neither of necessity nor
of piety,<br/>And strictly prohibited her servants from amusing themselves,
or indeed doing anything at all except dusting the drawing-rooms, cleaning
the boots and shoes, cooking the parlour dinner, waiting generally on
the family, and making the beds.<br/>But BLAKE even went further than
that, and said that people should do their own works of necessity, and
not delegate them to persons in a menial situation,<br/>So he wouldn’t
allow his servants to do so much as even answer a bell.<br/>Here he
is making his wife carry up the water for her bath to the second floor,
much against her inclination,—<br/>And why in the world the gentleman
who illustrates these ballads has put him in a cocked hat is more than
I can tell.</p>
<p>After about three months of this sort of thing, taking the smooth
with the rough of it,<br/>(Blacking her own boots and peeling her own
potatoes was not her notion of connubial bliss),<br/>MRS. BLAKE began
to find that she had pretty nearly had enough of it,<br/>And came,
in course of time, to think that BLAKE’S own original line of
conduct wasn’t so much amiss.</p>
<p>And now that wicked person—that detestable sinner (“BELIAL
BLAKE” his friends and well-wishers call him for his atrocities),<br/>And
his poor deluded victim, whom all her Christian brothers dislike and
pity so,<br/>Go to the parish church only on Sunday morning and afternoon
and occasionally on a week-day, and spend their evenings in connubial
fondlings and affectionate reciprocities,<br/>And I should like to
know where in the world (or rather, out of it) they expect to go!</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Baby’s Vengeance</h2>
<br/>
<p>Weary at heart and extremely ill<br/>Was PALEY VOLLAIRE of Bromptonville,<br/>In
a dirty lodging, with fever down,<br/>Close to the Polygon, Somers
Town.</p>
<p>PALEY VOLLAIRE was an only son<br/>(For why? His mother had
had but one),<br/>And PALEY inherited gold and grounds<br/>Worth several
hundred thousand pounds.</p>
<p>But he, like many a rich young man,<br/>Through this magnificent
fortune ran,<br/>And nothing was left for his daily needs<br/>But
duplicate copies of mortgage-deeds.</p>
<p>Shabby and sorry and sorely sick,<br/>He slept, and dreamt that
the clock’s “tick, tick,”<br/>Was one of the Fates,
with a long sharp knife,<br/>Snicking off bits of his shortened life.</p>
<p>He woke and counted the pips on the walls,<br/>The outdoor passengers’
loud footfalls,<br/>And reckoned all over, and reckoned again,<br/>The
little white tufts on his counterpane.</p>
<p>A medical man to his bedside came.<br/>(I can’t remember that
doctor’s name),<br/>And said, “You’ll die in a very
short while<br/>If you don’t set sail for Madeira’s isle.”</p>
<p>“Go to Madeira? goodness me!<br/>I haven’t the money
to pay your fee!”<br/>“Then, PALEY VOLLAIRE,” said
the leech, “good bye;<br/>I’ll come no more, for your’re
sure to die.”</p>
<p>He sighed and he groaned and smote his breast;<br/>“Oh, send,”
said he, “for FREDERICK WEST,<br/>Ere senses fade or my eyes
grow dim:<br/>I’ve a terrible tale to whisper him!”</p>
<p>Poor was FREDERICK’S lot in life,—<br/>A dustman he
with a fair young wife,<br/>A worthy man with a hard-earned store,<br/>A
hundred and seventy pounds—or more.</p>
<p>FREDERICK came, and he said, “Maybe<br/>You’ll say what
you happened to want with me?”<br/>“Wronged boy,”
said PALEY VOLLAIRE, “I will,<br/>But don’t you fidget
yourself—sit still.”</p>
<br/>
<p>THE TERRIBLE TALE.</p>
<br/>
<p>“’Tis now some thirty-seven years ago<br/>Since first
began the plot that I’m revealing,<br/>A fine young woman, whom
you ought to know,<br/>Lived with her husband down in Drum Lane, Ealing.<br/>Herself
by means of mangling reimbursing,<br/>And now and then (at intervals)
wet-nursing.</p>
<p>“Two little babes dwelt in their humble cot:<br/>One was her
own—the other only lent to her:<br/><i>Her own she slighted</i>.
Tempted by a lot<br/>Of gold and silver regularly sent to her,<br/>She
ministered unto the little other<br/>In the capacity of foster-mother.</p>
<p>“<i>I was her own</i>. Oh! how I lay and sobbed<br/>In
my poor cradle—deeply, deeply cursing<br/>The rich man’s
pampered bantling, who had robbed<br/>My only birthright—an attentive
nursing!<br/>Sometimes in hatred of my foster-brother,<br/>I gnashed
my gums—which terrified my mother.</p>
<p>“One day—it was quite early in the week—<br/>I
<i>in</i> MY <i>cradle having placed the bantling</i>—<br/>Crept
into his! He had not learnt to speak,<br/>But I could see his
face with anger mantling.<br/>It was imprudent—well, disgraceful
maybe,<br/>For, oh! I was a bad, blackhearted baby!</p>
<p>“So great a luxury was food, I think<br/>No wickedness but
I was game to try for it.<br/><i>Now</i> if I wanted anything to drink<br/>At
any time, I only had to cry for it!<br/><i>Once</i>, if I dared to
weep, the bottle lacking,<br/>My blubbering involved a serious smacking!</p>
<p>“We grew up in the usual way—my friend,<br/>My foster-brother,
daily growing thinner,<br/>While gradually I began to mend,<br/>And
thrived amazingly on double dinner.<br/>And every one, besides my foster-mother,<br/>Believed
that either of us was the other.</p>
<p>“I came into <i>his</i> wealth—I bore <i>his</i> name,<br/>I
bear it still—<i>his</i> property I squandered—<br/>I mortgaged
everything—and now (oh, shame!)<br/>Into a Somers Town shake-down
I’ve wandered!<br/>I am no PALEY—no, VOLLAIRE—it’s
true, my boy!<br/>The only rightful PALEY V. is <i>you</i>, my boy!</p>
<p>“And all I have is yours—and yours is mine.<br/>I still
may place you in your true position:<br/>Give me the pounds you’ve
saved, and I’ll resign<br/>My noble name, my rank, and my condition.<br/>So
far my wickedness in falsely owning<br/>Your vasty wealth, I am at
last atoning!”</p>
<p>* * * * * * *</p>
<p>FREDERICK he was a simple soul,<br/>He pulled from his pocket a
bulky roll,<br/>And gave to PALEY his hard-earned store,<br/>A hundred
and seventy pounds or more.</p>
<p>PALEY VOLLAIRE, with many a groan,<br/>Gave FREDERICK all that he
called his own,—<br/>Two shirts and a sock, and a vest of jean,<br/>A
Wellington boot and a bamboo cane.</p>
<p>And FRED (entitled to all things there)<br/>He took the fever from
MR. VOLLAIRE,<br/>Which killed poor FREDERICK WEST. Meanwhile<br/>VOLLAIRE
sailed off to Madeira’s isle.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Captain And The Mermaids</h2>
<br/>
<p>I sing a legend of the sea,<br/>So hard-a-port upon your lee!<br/>A
ship on starboard tack!<br/>She’s bound upon a private cruise—<br/>(This
is the kind of spice I use<br/>To give a salt-sea smack).</p>
<p>Behold, on every afternoon<br/>(Save in a gale or strong Monsoon)<br/>Great
CAPTAIN CAPEL CLEGGS<br/>(Great morally, though rather short)<br/>Sat
at an open weather-port<br/>And aired his shapely legs.</p>
<p>And Mermaids hung around in flocks,<br/>On cable chains and distant
rocks,<br/>To gaze upon those limbs;<br/>For legs like those, of flesh
and bone,<br/>Are things “not generally known”<br/>To
any Merman TIMBS.</p>
<p>But Mermen didn’t seem to care<br/>Much time (as far as I’m
aware)<br/>With CLEGGS’S legs to spend;<br/>Though Mermaids
swam around all day<br/>And gazed, exclaiming, “<i>That’s</i>
the way<br/>A gentleman should end!</p>
<p>“A pair of legs with well-cut knees,<br/>And calves and ankles
such as these<br/>Which we in rapture hail,<br/>Are far more eloquent,
it’s clear<br/>(When clothed in silk and kerseymere),<br/>Than
any nasty tail.”</p>
<p>And CLEGGS—a worthy kind old boy—<br/>Rejoiced to add
to others’ joy,<br/>And, when the day was dry,<br/>Because it
pleased the lookers-on,<br/>He sat from morn till night—though
con-<br/>Stitutionally shy.</p>
<p>At first the Mermen laughed, “Pooh! pooh!”<br/>But finally
they jealous grew,<br/>And sounded loud recalls;<br/>But vainly.
So these fishy males<br/>Declared they too would clothe their tails<br/>In
silken hose and smalls.</p>
<p>They set to work, these water-men,<br/>And made their nether robes—but
when<br/>They drew with dainty touch<br/>The kerseymere upon their
tails,<br/>They found it scraped against their scales,<br/>And hurt
them very much.</p>
<p>The silk, besides, with which they chose<br/>To deck their tails
by way of hose<br/>(They never thought of shoon),<br/>For such a use
was much too thin,—<br/>It tore against the caudal fin,<br/>And
“went in ladders” soon.</p>
<p>So they designed another plan:<br/>They sent their most seductive
man<br/>This note to him to show—<br/>“Our Monarch sends
to CAPTAIN CLEGGS<br/>His humble compliments, and begs<br/>He’ll
join him down below;</p>
<p>“We’ve pleasant homes below the sea—<br/>Besides,
if CAPTAIN CLEGGS should be<br/>(As our advices say)<br/>A judge of
Mermaids, he will find<br/>Our lady-fish of every kind<br/>Inspection
will repay.”</p>
<p>Good CAPEL sent a kind reply,<br/>For CAPEL thought he could descry<br/>An
admirable plan<br/>To study all their ways and laws—<br/>(But
not their lady-fish, because<br/>He was a married man).</p>
<p>The Merman sank—the Captain too<br/>Jumped overboard, and
dropped from view<br/>Like stone from catapult;<br/>And when he reached
the Merman’s lair,<br/>He certainly was welcomed there,<br/>But,
ah! with what result?</p>
<p>They didn’t let him learn their law,<br/>Or make a note of
what he saw,<br/>Or interesting mem.:<br/>The lady-fish he couldn’t
find,<br/>But that, of course, he didn’t mind—<br/>He
didn’t come for them.</p>
<p>For though, when CAPTAIN CAPEL sank,<br/>The Mermen drawn in double
rank<br/>Gave him a hearty hail,<br/>Yet when secure of CAPTAIN CLEGGS,<br/>They
cut off both his lovely legs,<br/>And gave him <i>such</i> a tail!</p>
<p>When CAPTAIN CLEGGS returned aboard,<br/>His blithesome crew convulsive
roar’d,<br/>To see him altered so.<br/>The Admiralty did insist<br/>That
he upon the Half-pay List<br/>Immediately should go.</p>
<p>In vain declared the poor old salt,<br/>“It’s my misfortune—not
my fault,”<br/>With tear and trembling lip—<br/>In vain
poor CAPEL begged and begged.<br/>“A man must be completely legged<br/>Who
rules a British ship.”</p>
<p>So spake the stern First Lord aloud—<br/>He was a wag, though
very proud,<br/>And much rejoiced to say,<br/>“You’re
only half a captain now—<br/>And so, my worthy friend, I vow<br/>You’ll
only get half-pay!”</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Annie Protheroe. A Legend of Stratford-Le-Bow</h2>
<br/>
<p>Oh! listen to the tale of little ANNIE PROTHEROE.<br/>She kept a
small post-office in the neighbourhood of BOW;<br/>She loved a skilled
mechanic, who was famous in his day—<br/>A gentle executioner
whose name was GILBERT CLAY.</p>
<p>I think I hear you say, “A dreadful subject for your rhymes!”<br/>O
reader, do not shrink—he didn’t live in modern times!<br/>He
lived so long ago (the sketch will show it at a glance)<br/>That all
his actions glitter with the lime-light of Romance.</p>
<p>In busy times he laboured at his gentle craft all day—<br/>“No
doubt you mean his Cal-craft,” you amusingly will say—<br/>But,
no—he didn’t operate with common bits of string,<br/>He
was a Public Headsman, which is quite another thing.</p>
<p>And when his work was over, they would ramble o’er the lea,<br/>And
sit beneath the frondage of an elderberry tree,<br/>And ANNIE’S
simple prattle entertained him on his walk,<br/>For public executions
formed the subject of her talk.</p>
<p>And sometimes he’d explain to her, which charmed her very much,<br/>How
famous operators vary very much in touch,<br/>And then, perhaps, he’d
show how he himself performed the trick,<br/>And illustrate his meaning
with a poppy and a stick.</p>
<p>Or, if it rained, the little maid would stop at home, and look<br/>At
his favourable notices, all pasted in a book,<br/>And then her cheek
would flush—her swimming eyes would dance with joy<br/>In a glow
of admiration at the prowess of her boy.</p>
<p>One summer eve, at supper-time, the gentle GILBERT said<br/>(As
he helped his pretty ANNIE to a slice of collared head),<br/>“This
reminds me I must settle on the next ensuing day<br/>The hash of that
unmitigated villain PETER GRAY.”</p>
<p>He saw his ANNIE tremble and he saw his ANNIE start,<br/>Her changing
colour trumpeted the flutter at her heart;<br/>Young GILBERT’S
manly bosom rose and sank with jealous fear,<br/>And he said, “O
gentle ANNIE, what’s the meaning of this here?”</p>
<p>And ANNIE answered, blushing in an interesting way,<br/>“You
think, no doubt, I’m sighing for that felon PETER GRAY:<br/>That
I was his young woman is unquestionably true,<br/>But not since I began
a-keeping company with you.”</p>
<p>Then GILBERT, who was irritable, rose and loudly swore<br/>He’d
know the reason why if she refused to tell him more;<br/>And she answered
(all the woman in her flashing from her eyes)<br/>“You mustn’t
ask no questions, and you won’t be told no lies!</p>
<p>“Few lovers have the privilege enjoyed, my dear, by you,<br/>Of
chopping off a rival’s head and quartering him too!<br/>Of vengeance,
dear, to-morrow you will surely take your fill!”<br/>And GILBERT
ground his molars as he answered her, “I will!”</p>
<p>Young GILBERT rose from table with a stern determined look,<br/>And,
frowning, took an inexpensive hatchet from its hook;<br/>And ANNIE
watched his movements with an interested air—<br/>For the morrow—for
the morrow he was going to prepare!</p>
<p>He chipped it with a hammer and he chopped it with a bill,<br/>He
poured sulphuric acid on the edge of it, until<br/>This terrible Avenger
of the Majesty of Law<br/>Was far less like a hatchet than a dissipated
saw.</p>
<p>And ANNIE said, “O GILBERT, dear, I do not understand<br/>Why
ever you are injuring that hatchet in your hand?’<br/>He said,
“It is intended for to lacerate and flay<br/>The neck of that
unmitigated villain PETER GRAY!”</p>
<p>“Now, GILBERT,” ANNIE answered, “wicked headsman,
just beware—<br/>I won’t have PETER tortured with that
horrible affair;<br/>If you appear with that, you may depend you’ll
rue the day.”<br/>But GILBERT said, “Oh, shall I?”
which was just his nasty way.</p>
<p>He saw a look of anger from her eyes distinctly dart,<br/>For ANNIE
was a woman, and had pity in her heart!<br/>She wished him a good evening—he
answered with a glare;<br/>She only said, “Remember, for your
ANNIE will be there!”</p>
<p>* * * * * * * *</p>
<p>The morrow GILBERT boldly on the scaffold took his stand,<br/>With
a vizor on his face and with a hatchet in his hand,<br/>And all the
people noticed that the Engine of the Law<br/>Was far less like a hatchet
than a dissipated saw.</p>
<p>The felon very coolly loosed his collar and his stock,<br/>And placed
his wicked head upon the handy little block.<br/>The hatchet was uplifted
for to settle PETER GRAY,<br/>When GILBERT plainly heard a woman’s
voice exclaiming, “Stay!”</p>
<p>’Twas ANNIE, gentle ANNIE, as you’ll easily believe.<br/>“O
GILBERT, you must spare him, for I bring him a reprieve,<br/>It came
from our Home Secretary many weeks ago,<br/>And passed through that
post-office which I used to keep at Bow.</p>
<p>“I loved you, loved you madly, and you know it, GILBERT CLAY,<br/>And
as I’d quite surrendered all idea of PETER GRAY,<br/>I quietly
suppressed it, as you’ll clearly understand,<br/>For I thought
it might be awkward if he came and claimed my hand.</p>
<p>“In anger at my secret (which I could not tell before),<br/>To
lacerate poor PETER GRAY vindictively you swore;<br/>I told you if
you used that blunted axe you’d rue the day,<br/>And so you will,
young GILBERT, for I’ll marry PETER GRAY!”</p>
<p>[<i>And so she did.</i></p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: An Unfortunate Likeness</h2>
<br/>
<p>I’ve painted SHAKESPEARE all my life—<br/>“An
infant” (even then at “play”!)<br/>“A boy,”
with stage-ambition rife,<br/>Then “Married to ANN HATHAWAY.”</p>
<p>“The bard’s first ticket night” (or “ben.”),<br/>His
“First appearance on the stage,”<br/>His “Call before
the curtain”—then<br/>“Rejoicings when he came of
age.”</p>
<p>The bard play-writing in his room,<br/>The bard a humble lawyer’s
clerk.<br/>The bard a lawyer <SPAN name="citation1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote1">{1}</SPAN>—parson
<SPAN name="citation2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote2">{2}</SPAN>—groom <SPAN name="citation3"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote3">{3}</SPAN>—<br/>The
bard deer-stealing, after dark.</p>
<p>The bard a tradesman <SPAN name="citation4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote4">{4}</SPAN>—and
a Jew <SPAN name="citation5"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote5">{5}</SPAN>—<br/>The
bard a botanist <SPAN name="citation6"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote6">{6}</SPAN>—a
beak <SPAN name="citation7"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote7">{7}</SPAN>—<br/>The
bard a skilled musician <SPAN name="citation8"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote8">{8}</SPAN>
too—<br/>A sheriff <SPAN name="citation9"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote9">{9}</SPAN>
and a surgeon <SPAN name="citation10"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote10">{10}</SPAN>
eke!</p>
<p>Yet critics say (a friendly stock)<br/>That, though it’s evident
I try,<br/>Yet even <i>I</i> can barely mock<br/>The glimmer of his
wondrous eye!</p>
<p>One morning as a work I framed,<br/>There passed a person, walking
hard:<br/>“My gracious goodness,” I exclaimed,<br/>“How
very like my dear old bard!</p>
<p>“Oh, what a model he would make!”<br/>I rushed outside—impulsive
me!—<br/>“Forgive the liberty I take,<br/>But you’re
so very”—“Stop!” said he.</p>
<p>“You needn’t waste your breath or time,—<br/>I
know what you are going to say,—<br/>That you’re an artist,
and that I’m<br/>Remarkably like SHAKESPEARE. Eh?</p>
<p>“You wish that I would sit to you?”<br/>I clasped him
madly round the waist,<br/>And breathlessly replied, “I do!”<br/>“All
right,” said he, “but please make haste.”</p>
<p>I led him by his hallowed sleeve,<br/>And worked away at him apace,<br/>I
painted him till dewy eve,—<br/>There never was a nobler face!</p>
<p>“Oh, sir,” I said, “a fortune grand<br/>Is yours,
by dint of merest chance,—<br/>To sport <i>his</i> brow at second-hand,<br/>To
wear <i>his</i> cast-off countenance!</p>
<p>“To rub <i>his</i> eyes whene’er they ache—<br/>To
wear <i>his</i> baldness ere you’re old—<br/>To clean <i>his</i>
teeth when you awake—<br/>To blow <i>his</i> nose when you’ve
a cold!”</p>
<p>His eyeballs glistened in his eyes—<br/>I sat and watched
and smoked my pipe;<br/>“Bravo!” I said, “I recognize<br/>The
phrensy of your prototype!”</p>
<p>His scanty hair he wildly tore:<br/>“That’s right,”
said I, “it shows your breed.”<br/>He danced—he stamped—he
wildly swore—<br/>“Bless me, that’s very fine indeed!”</p>
<p>“Sir,” said the grand Shakesperian boy<br/>(Continuing
to blaze away),<br/>“You think my face a source of joy;<br/>That
shows you know not what you say.</p>
<p>“Forgive these yells and cellar-flaps:<br/>I’m always
thrown in some such state<br/>When on his face well-meaning chaps<br/>This
wretched man congratulate.</p>
<p>“For, oh! this face—this pointed chin—<br/>This
nose—this brow—these eyeballs too,<br/>Have always been
the origin<br/>Of all the woes I ever knew!</p>
<p>“If to the play my way I find,<br/>To see a grand Shakesperian
piece,<br/>I have no rest, no ease of mind<br/>Until the author’s
puppets cease.</p>
<p>“Men nudge each other—thus—and say,<br/>‘This
certainly is SHAKESPEARE’S son,’<br/>And merry wags (of
course in play)<br/>Cry ‘Author!’ when the piece is done.</p>
<p>“In church the people stare at me,<br/>Their soul the sermon
never binds;<br/>I catch them looking round to see,<br/>And thoughts
of SHAKESPEARE fill their minds.</p>
<p>“And sculptors, fraught with cunning wile,<br/>Who find it
difficult to crown<br/>A bust with BROWN’S insipid smile,<br/>Or
TOMKINS’S unmannered frown,</p>
<p>“Yet boldly make my face their own,<br/>When (oh, presumption!)
they require<br/>To animate a paving-stone<br/>With SHAKESPEARE’S
intellectual fire.</p>
<p>“At parties where young ladies gaze,<br/>And I attempt to
speak my joy,<br/>‘Hush, pray,’ some lovely creature says,<br/>‘The
fond illusion don’t destroy!’</p>
<p>“Whene’er I speak, my soul is wrung<br/>With these or
some such whisperings:<br/>‘’Tis pity that a SHAKESPEARE’S
tongue<br/>Should say such un-Shakesperian things!’</p>
<p>“I should not thus be criticised<br/>Had I a face of common
wont:<br/>Don’t envy me—now, be advised!”<br/>And,
now I think of it, I don’t!</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Gregory Parable, LL.D.</h2>
<br/>
<p>A leafy cot, where no dry rot<br/>Had ever been by tenant seen,<br/>Where
ivy clung and wopses stung,<br/>Where beeses hummed and drummed and
strummed,<br/>Where treeses grew and breezes blew—<br/>A thatchy
roof, quite waterproof,<br/>Where countless herds of dicky-birds<br/>Built
twiggy beds to lay their heads<br/>(My mother begs I’ll make
it “eggs,”<br/>But though it’s true that dickies
do<br/>Construct a nest with chirpy noise,<br/>With view to rest their
eggy joys,<br/>’Neath eavy sheds, yet eggs and beds,<br/>As
I explain to her in vain<br/>Five hundred times, are faulty rhymes).<br/>’Neath
such a cot, built on a plot<br/>Of freehold land, dwelt MARY and<br/>Her
worthy father, named by me<br/>GREGORY PARABLE, LL.D.</p>
<p>He knew no guile, this simple man,<br/>No worldly wile, or plot,
or plan,<br/>Except that plot of freehold land<br/>That held the cot,
and MARY, and<br/>Her worthy father, named by me<br/>GREGORY PARABLE,
LL.D.</p>
<p>A grave and learned scholar he,<br/>Yet simple as a child could
be.<br/>He’d shirk his meal to sit and cram<br/>A goodish deal
of Eton Gram.<br/>No man alive could him nonplus<br/>With vocative
of <i>filius</i>;<br/>No man alive more fully knew<br/>The passive
of a verb or two;<br/>None better knew the worth than he<br/>Of words
that end in <i>b, d, t.<br/></i>Upon his green in early spring<br/>He
might be seen endeavouring<br/>To understand the hooks and crooks<br/>Of
HENRY and his Latin books;<br/>Or calling for his “Caesar on<br/>The
Gallic War,” like any don;<br/>Or, p’raps, expounding unto
all<br/>How mythic BALBUS built a wall.<br/>So lived the sage who’s
named by me<br/>GREGORY PARABLE, LL.D.</p>
<p>To him one autumn day there came<br/>A lovely youth of mystic name:<br/>He
took a lodging in the house,<br/>And fell a-dodging snipe and grouse,<br/>For,
oh! that mild scholastic one<br/>Let shooting for a single gun.</p>
<p>By three or four, when sport was o’er,<br/>The Mystic One
laid by his gun,<br/>And made sheep’s eyes of giant size,<br/>Till
after tea, at MARY P.<br/>And MARY P. (so kind was she),<br/>She,
too, made eyes of giant size,<br/>Whose every dart right through the
heart<br/>Appeared to run that Mystic One.<br/>The Doctor’s
whim engrossing him,<br/>He did not know they flirted so.<br/>For,
save at tea, “<i>musa musae</i>,”<br/>As I’m advised,
monopolised<br/>And rendered blind his giant mind.<br/>But looking
up above his cup<br/>One afternoon, he saw them spoon.<br/>“Aha!”
quoth he, “you naughty lass!<br/>As quaint old OVID says, ‘Amas!’”</p>
<p>The Mystic Youth avowed the truth,<br/>And, claiming ruth, he said,
“In sooth<br/>I love your daughter, aged man:<br/>Refuse to
join us if you can.<br/>Treat not my offer, sir, with scorn,<br/>I’m
wealthy though I’m lowly born.”<br/>“Young sir,”
the aged scholar said,<br/>“I never thought you meant to wed:<br/>Engrossed
completely with my books,<br/>I little noticed lovers’ looks.<br/>I’ve
lived so long away from man,<br/>I do not know of any plan<br/>By
which to test a lover’s worth,<br/>Except, perhaps, the test
of birth.<br/>I’ve half forgotten in this wild<br/>A father’s
duty to his child.<br/>It is his place, I think it’s said,<br/>To
see his daughters richly wed<br/>To dignitaries of the earth—<br/>If
possible, of noble birth.<br/>If noble birth is not at hand,<br/>A
father may, I understand<br/>(And this affords a chance for you),<br/>Be
satisfied to wed her to<br/>A BOUCICAULT or BARING—which<br/>Means
any one who’s very rich.<br/>Now, there’s an Earl who lives
hard by,—<br/>My child and I will go and try<br/>If he will
make the maid his bride—<br/>If not, to you she shall be tied.”</p>
<p>They sought the Earl that very day;<br/>The Sage began to say his
say.<br/>The Earl (a very wicked man,<br/>Whose face bore Vice’s
blackest ban)<br/>Cut short the scholar’s simple tale,<br/>And
said in voice to make them quail,<br/>“Pooh! go along! you’re
drunk, no doubt—<br/>Here, PETERS, turn these people out!”</p>
<p>The Sage, rebuffed in mode uncouth,<br/>Returning, met the Mystic
Youth.<br/>“My darling boy,” the Scholar said,<br/>“Take
MARY—blessings on your head!”</p>
<p>The Mystic Boy undid his vest,<br/>And took a parchment from his
breast,<br/>And said, “Now, by that noble brow,<br/>I ne’er
knew father such as thou!<br/>The sterling rule of common sense<br/>Now
reaps its proper recompense.<br/>Rejoice, my soul’s unequalled
Queen,<br/>For I am DUKE OF GRETNA GREEN!”</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The King Of Canoodle-Dum</h2>
<br/>
<p>The story of FREDERICK GOWLER,<br/>A mariner of the sea,<br/>Who
quitted his ship, the <i>Howler,<br/></i>A-sailing in Caribbee.<br/>For
many a day he wandered,<br/>Till he met in a state of rum<br/>CALAMITY
POP VON PEPPERMINT DROP,<br/>The King of Canoodle-Dum.</p>
<p>That monarch addressed him gaily,<br/>“Hum! Golly de
do to-day?<br/>Hum! Lily-white Buckra Sailee”—<br/>(You
notice his playful way?)—<br/>“What dickens you doin’
here, sar?<br/>Why debbil you want to come?<br/>Hum! Picaninnee,
dere isn’t no sea<br/>In City Canoodle-Dum!”</p>
<p>And GOWLER he answered sadly,<br/>“Oh, mine is a doleful tale!<br/>They’ve
treated me werry badly<br/>In Lunnon, from where I hail.<br/>I’m
one of the Family Royal—<br/>No common Jack Tar you see;<br/>I’m
WILLIAM THE FOURTH, far up in the North,<br/>A King in my own countree!”</p>
<p>Bang-bang! How the tom-toms thundered!<br/>Bang-bang!
How they thumped this gongs!<br/>Bang-bang! How the people wondered!<br/>Bang-bang!
At it hammer and tongs!<br/>Alliance with Kings of Europe<br/>Is an
honour Canoodlers seek,<br/>Her monarchs don’t stop with PEPPERMINT
DROP<br/>Every day in the week!</p>
<p>FRED told them that he was undone,<br/>For his people all went insane,<br/>And
fired the Tower of London,<br/>And Grinnidge’s Naval Fane.<br/>And
some of them racked St. James’s,<br/>And vented their rage upon<br/>The
Church of St. Paul, the Fishmongers’ Hall,<br/>And the Angel
at Islington.</p>
<p>CALAMITY POP implored him<br/>In his capital to remain<br/>Till
those people of his restored him<br/>To power and rank again.<br/>CALAMITY
POP he made him<br/>A Prince of Canoodle-Dum,<br/>With a couple of
caves, some beautiful slaves,<br/>And the run of the royal rum.</p>
<p>Pop gave him his only daughter,<br/>HUM PICKETY WIMPLE TIP:<br/>FRED
vowed that if over the water<br/>He went, in an English ship,<br/>He’d
make her his Queen,—though truly<br/>It is an unusual thing<br/>For
a Caribbee brat who’s as black as your hat<br/>To be wife of
an English King.</p>
<p>And all the Canoodle-Dummers<br/>They copied his rolling walk,<br/>His
method of draining rummers,<br/>His emblematical talk.<br/>For his
dress and his graceful breeding,<br/>His delicate taste in rum,<br/>And
his nautical way, were the talk of the day<br/>In the Court of Canoodle-Dum.</p>
<p>CALAMITY POP most wisely<br/>Determined in everything<br/>To model
his Court precisely<br/>On that of the English King;<br/>And ordered
that every lady<br/>And every lady’s lord<br/>Should masticate
jacky (a kind of tobaccy),<br/>And scatter its juice abroad.</p>
<p>They signified wonder roundly<br/>At any astounding yarn,<br/>By
darning their dear eyes roundly<br/>(’T was all they had to darn).<br/>They
“hoisted their slacks,” adjusting<br/>Garments of plantain-leaves<br/>With
nautical twitches (as if they wore breeches,<br/>Instead of a dress
like EVE’S!)</p>
<p>They shivered their timbers proudly,<br/>At a phantom forelock dragged,<br/>And
called for a hornpipe loudly<br/>Whenever amusement flagged.<br/>“Hum!
Golly! him POP resemble,<br/>Him Britisher sov’reign, hum!<br/>CALAMITY
POP VON PEPPERMINT DROP,<br/>De King of Canoodle-Dum!”</p>
<p>The mariner’s lively “Hollo!”<br/>Enlivened Canoodle’s
plain<br/>(For blessings unnumbered follow<br/>In Civilization’s
train).<br/>But Fortune, who loves a bathos,<br/>A terrible ending
planned,<br/>For ADMIRAL D. CHICKABIDDY, C.B.,<br/>Placed foot on
Canoodle land!</p>
<p>That rebel, he seized KING GOWLER,<br/>He threatened his royal brains,<br/>And
put him aboard the <i>Howler,<br/></i>And fastened him down with chains.<br/>The
<i>Howler</i> she weighed her anchor,<br/>With FREDERICK nicely nailed,<br/>And
off to the North with WILLIAM THE FOURTH<br/>These horrible pirates
sailed.</p>
<p>CALAMITY said (with folly),<br/>“Hum! nebber want him again—<br/>Him
civilize all of us, golly!<br/>CALAMITY suck him brain!”<br/>The
people, however, were pained when<br/>They saw him aboard his ship,<br/>But
none of them wept for their FREDDY, except<br/>HUM PICKETY WIMPLE TIP.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: First Love</h2>
<br/>
<p>A clergyman in Berkshire dwelt,<br/>The REVEREND BERNARD POWLES,<br/>And
in his church there weekly knelt<br/>At least a hundred souls.</p>
<p>There little ELLEN you might see,<br/>The modest rustic belle;<br/>In
maidenly simplicity,<br/>She loved her BERNARD well.</p>
<p>Though ELLEN wore a plain silk gown<br/>Untrimmed with lace or fur,<br/>Yet
not a husband in the town<br/>But wished his wife like her.</p>
<p>Though sterner memories might fade,<br/>You never could forget<br/>The
child-form of that baby-maid,<br/>The Village Violet!</p>
<p>A simple frightened loveliness,<br/>Whose sacred spirit-part<br/>Shrank
timidly from worldly stress,<br/>And nestled in your heart.</p>
<p>POWLES woo’d with every well-worn plan<br/>And all the usual
wiles<br/>With which a well-schooled gentleman<br/>A simple heart
beguiles.</p>
<p>The hackneyed compliments that bore<br/>World-folks like you and
me,<br/>Appeared to her as if they wore<br/>The crown of Poesy.</p>
<p>His winking eyelid sang a song<br/>Her heart could understand,<br/>Eternity
seemed scarce too long<br/>When BERNARD squeezed her hand.</p>
<p>He ordered down the martial crew<br/>Of GODFREY’S Grenadiers,<br/>And
COOTE conspired with TINNEY to<br/>Ecstaticise her ears.</p>
<p>Beneath her window, veiled from eye,<br/>They nightly took their
stand;<br/>On birthdays supplemented by<br/>The Covent Garden band.</p>
<p>And little ELLEN, all alone,<br/>Enraptured sat above,<br/>And
thought how blest she was to own<br/>The wealth of POWLES’S love.</p>
<p>I often, often wonder what<br/>Poor ELLEN saw in him;<br/>For calculated
he was <i>not<br/></i>To please a woman’s whim.</p>
<p>He wasn’t good, despite the air<br/>An M.B. waistcoat gives;<br/>Indeed,
his dearest friends declare<br/>No greater humbug lives.</p>
<p>No kind of virtue decked this priest,<br/>He’d nothing to
allure;<br/>He wasn’t handsome in the least,—<br/>He wasn’t
even poor.</p>
<p>No—he was cursed with acres fat<br/>(A Christian’s direst
ban),<br/>And gold—yet, notwithstanding that,<br/>Poor ELLEN
loved the man.</p>
<p>As unlike BERNARD as could be<br/>Was poor old AARON WOOD<br/>(Disgraceful
BERNARD’S curate he):<br/>He was extremely good.</p>
<p>A BAYARD in his moral pluck<br/>Without reproach or fear,<br/>A
quiet venerable duck<br/>With fifty pounds a year.</p>
<p>No fault had he—no fad, except<br/>A tendency to strum,<br/>In
mode at which you would have wept,<br/>A dull harmonium.</p>
<p>He had no gold with which to hire<br/>The minstrels who could best<br/>Convey
a notion of the fire<br/>That raged within his breast.</p>
<p>And so, when COOTE and TINNEY’S Own<br/>Had tootled all they
knew,<br/>And when the Guards, completely blown,<br/>Exhaustedly withdrew,</p>
<p>And NELL began to sleepy feel,<br/>Poor AARON then would come,<br/>And
underneath her window wheel<br/>His plain harmonium.</p>
<p>He woke her every morn at two,<br/>And having gained her ear,<br/>In
vivid colours AARON drew<br/>The sluggard’s grim career.</p>
<p>He warbled Apiarian praise,<br/>And taught her in his chant<br/>To
shun the dog’s pugnacious ways,<br/>And imitate the ant.</p>
<p>Still NELL seemed not, how much he played,<br/>To love him out and
out,<br/>Although the admirable maid<br/>Respected him, no doubt.</p>
<p>She told him of her early vow,<br/>And said as BERNARD’S wife<br/>It
might be hers to show him how<br/>To rectify his life.</p>
<p>“You are so pure, so kind, so true,<br/>Your goodness shines
so bright,<br/>What use would ELLEN be to you?<br/>Believe me, you’re
all right.”</p>
<p>She wished him happiness and health,<br/>And flew on lightning wings<br/>To
BERNARD with his dangerous wealth<br/>And all the woes it brings.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Brave Alum Bey</h2>
<br/>
<p>Oh, big was the bosom of brave ALUM BEY,<br/>And also the region
that under it lay,<br/>In safety and peril remarkably cool,<br/>And
he dwelt on the banks of the river Stamboul.</p>
<p>Each morning he went to his garden, to cull<br/>A bunch of zenana
or sprig of bul-bul,<br/>And offered the bouquet, in exquisite bloom,<br/>To
BACKSHEESH, the daughter of RAHAT LAKOUM.</p>
<p>No maiden like BACKSHEESH could tastily cook<br/>A kettle of kismet
or joint of tchibouk,<br/>As ALUM, brave fellow! sat pensively by,<br/>With
a bright sympathetic ka-bob in his eye.</p>
<p>Stern duty compelled him to leave her one day—<br/>(A ship’s
supercargo was brave ALUM BEY)—<br/>To pretty young BACKSHEESH
he made a salaam,<br/>And sailed to the isle of Seringapatam.</p>
<p>“O ALUM,” said she, “think again, ere you go—<br/>Hareems
may arise and Moguls they may blow;<br/>You may strike on a fez, or
be drowned, which is wuss!”<br/>But ALUM embraced her and spoke
to her thus:</p>
<p>“Cease weeping, fair BACKSHEESH! I willingly swear<br/>Cork
jackets and trousers I always will wear,<br/>And I also throw in a
large number of oaths<br/>That I never—no, <i>never</i>—will
take off my clothes!”</p>
<p>* * * * *</p>
<p>They left Madagascar away on their right,<br/>And made Clapham Common
the following night,<br/>Then lay on their oars for a fortnight or
two,<br/>Becalmed in the ocean of Honololu.</p>
<p>One day ALUM saw, with alarm in his breast,<br/>A cloud on the nor-sow-sow-nor-sow-nor-west;<br/>The
wind it arose, and the crew gave a scream,<br/>For they knew it—they
knew it!—the dreaded Hareem!!</p>
<p>The mast it went over, and so did the sails,<br/>Brave ALUM threw
over his casks and his bales;<br/>The billows arose as the weather
grew thick,<br/>And all except ALUM were terribly sick.</p>
<p>The crew were but three, but they holloa’d for nine,<br/>They
howled and they blubbered with wail and with whine:<br/>The skipper
he fainted away in the fore,<br/>For he hadn’t the heart for
to skip any more.</p>
<p>“Ho, coward!” said ALUM, “with heart of a child!<br/>Thou
son of a party whose grave is defiled!<br/>Is ALUM in terror? is ALUM
afeard?<br/>Ho! ho! If you had one I’d laugh at your beard.”</p>
<p>His eyeball it gleamed like a furnace of coke;<br/>He boldly inflated
his clothes as he spoke;<br/>He daringly felt for the corks on his
chest,<br/>And he recklessly tightened the belt at his breast.</p>
<p>For he knew, the brave ALUM, that, happen what might,<br/>With belts
and cork-jacketing, <i>he</i> was all right;<br/>Though others might
sink, he was certain to swim,—<br/>No Hareem whatever had terrors
for him!</p>
<p>They begged him to spare from his personal store<br/>A single cork
garment—they asked for no more;<br/>But he couldn’t, because
of the number of oaths<br/>That he never—no, never!—would
take off his clothes.</p>
<p>The billows dash o’er them and topple around,<br/>They see
they are pretty near sure to be drowned.<br/>A terrible wave o’er
the quarter-deck breaks,<br/>And the vessel it sinks in a couple of
shakes!</p>
<p>The dreadful Hareem, though it knows how to blow,<br/>Expends all
its strength in a minute or so;<br/>When the vessel had foundered,
as I have detailed,<br/>The tempest subsided, and quiet prevailed.</p>
<p>One seized on a cork with a yelling “Ha! ha!”<br/>(Its
bottle had ’prisoned a pint of Pacha)—<br/>Another a toothpick—another
a tray—<br/>“Alas! it is useless!” said brave ALUM
BEY.</p>
<p>“To holloa and kick is a very bad plan:<br/>Get it over, my
tulips, as soon as you can;<br/>You’d better lay hold of a good
lump of lead,<br/>And cling to it tightly until you are dead.</p>
<p>“Just raise your hands over your pretty heads—so—<br/>Right
down to the bottom you’re certain to go.<br/>Ta! ta! I’m
afraid we shall not meet again”—<br/>For the truly courageous
are truly humane.</p>
<p>Brave ALUM was picked up the very next day—<br/>A man-o’-war
sighted him smoking away;<br/>With hunger and cold he was ready to
drop,<br/>So they sent him below and they gave him a chop.</p>
<p>O reader, or readress, whichever you be,<br/>You weep for the crew
who have sunk in the sea?<br/>O reader, or readress, read farther,
and dry<br/>The bright sympathetic ka-bob in your eye.</p>
<p>That ship had a grapple with three iron spikes,—<br/>It’s
lowered, and, ha! on a something it strikes!<br/>They haul it aboard
with a British “heave-ho!”<br/>And what it has fished the
drawing will show.</p>
<p>There was WILSON, and PARKER, and TOMLINSON, too—<br/>(The
first was the captain, the others the crew)—<br/>As lively and
spry as a Malabar ape,<br/>Quite pleased and surprised at their happy
escape.</p>
<p>And ALUM, brave fellow, who stood in the fore,<br/>And never expected
to look on them more,<br/>Was really delighted to see them again,<br/>For
the truly courageous are truly humane.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Sir Barnaby Bampton Boo</h2>
<br/>
<p>This is SIR BARNABY BAMPTON BOO,<br/>Last of a noble race,<br/>BARNABY
BAMPTON, coming to woo,<br/>All at a deuce of a pace.<br/>BARNABY
BAMPTON BOO,<br/>Here is a health to you:<br/>Here is wishing you
luck, you elderly buck—<br/>BARNABY BAMPTON BOO!</p>
<p>The excellent women of Tuptonvee<br/>Knew SIR BARNABY BOO;<br/>One
of them surely his bride would be,<br/>But dickens a soul knew who.<br/>Women
of Tuptonvee,<br/>Here is a health to ye<br/>For a Baronet, dears,
you would cut off your ears,<br/>Women of Tuptonvee!</p>
<p>Here are old MR. and MRS. DE PLOW<br/>(PETER his Christian name),<br/>They
kept seven oxen, a pig, and a cow—<br/>Farming it was their game.<br/>Worthy
old PETER DE PLOW,<br/>Here is a health to thou:<br/>Your race isn’t
run, though you’re seventy-one,<br/>Worthy old PETER DE PLOW!</p>
<p>To excellent MR. and MRS. DE PLOW<br/>Came SIR BARNABY BOO,<br/>He
asked for their daughter, and told ’em as how<br/>He was as rich
as a Jew.<br/>BARNABY BAMPTON’S wealth,<br/>Here is your jolly
good health:<br/>I’d never repine if you came to be mine,<br/>BARNABY
BAMPTON’S wealth!</p>
<p>“O great SIR BARNABY BAMPTON BOO”<br/>(Said PLOW to
that titled swell),<br/>“My missus has given me daughters two—<br/>AMELIA
and VOLATILE NELL!”<br/>AMELIA and VOLATILE NELL,<br/>I hope
you’re uncommonly well:<br/>You two pretty pearls—you extremely
nice girls—<br/>AMELIA and VOLATILE NELL!</p>
<p>“AMELIA is passable only, in face,<br/>But, oh! she’s
a worthy girl;<br/>Superior morals like hers would grace<br/>The home
of a belted Earl.”<br/>Morality, heavenly link!<br/>To you I’ll
eternally drink:<br/>I’m awfully fond of that heavenly bond,<br/>Morality,
heavenly link!</p>
<p>“Now NELLY’S the prettier, p’raps, of my gals,<br/>But,
oh! she’s a wayward chit;<br/>She dresses herself in her showy
fal-lals,<br/>And doesn’t read TUPPER a bit!”<br/>O TUPPER,
philosopher true,<br/>How do you happen to do?<br/>A publisher looks
with respect on your books,<br/>For they <i>do</i> sell, philosopher
true!</p>
<p>The Bart. (I’ll be hanged if I drink him again,<br/>Or
care if he’s ill or well),<br/>He sneered at the goodness of
MILLY THE PLAIN,<br/>And cottoned to VOLATILE NELL!<br/>O VOLATILE
NELLY DE P.!<br/>Be hanged if I’ll empty to thee:<br/>I like
worthy maids, not mere frivolous jades,<br/>VOLATILE NELLY DE P.!</p>
<p>They bolted, the Bart. and his frivolous dear,<br/>And MILLY was
left to pout;<br/>For years they’ve got on very well, as I hear,<br/>But
soon he will rue it, no doubt.<br/>O excellent MILLY DE PLOW,<br/>I
really can’t drink to you now;<br/>My head isn’t strong,
and the song has been long,<br/>Excellent MILLY DE PLOW!</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Modest Couple</h2>
<br/>
<p>When man and maiden meet, I like to see a drooping eye,<br/>I always
droop my own—I am the shyest of the shy.<br/>I’m also fond
of bashfulness, and sitting down on thorns,<br/>For modesty’s
a quality that womankind adorns.</p>
<p>Whenever I am introduced to any pretty maid,<br/>My knees they knock
together, just as if I were afraid;<br/>I flutter, and I stammer, and
I turn a pleasing red,<br/>For to laugh, and flirt, and ogle I consider
most ill-bred.</p>
<p>But still in all these matters, as in other things below,<br/>There
is a proper medium, as I’m about to show.<br/>I do not recommend
a newly-married pair to try<br/>To carry on as PETER carried on with
SARAH BLIGH.</p>
<p>Betrothed they were when very young—before they’d learnt
to speak<br/>(For SARAH was but six days old, and PETER was a week);<br/>Though
little more than babies at those early ages, yet<br/>They bashfully
would faint when they occasionally met.</p>
<p>They blushed, and flushed, and fainted, till they reached the age
of nine,<br/>When PETER’S good papa (he was a Baron of the Rhine)<br/>Determined
to endeavour some sound argument to find<br/>To bring these shy young
people to a proper frame of mind.</p>
<p>He told them that as SARAH was to be his PETER’S bride,<br/>They
might at least consent to sit at table side by side;<br/>He begged
that they would now and then shake hands, till he was hoarse,<br/>Which
SARAH thought indelicate, and PETER very coarse.</p>
<p>And PETER in a tremble to the blushing maid would say,<br/>“You
must excuse papa, MISS BLIGH,—it is his mountain way.”<br/>Says
SARAH, “His behaviour I’ll endeavour to forget,<br/>But
your papa’s the coarsest person that I ever met.</p>
<p>“He plighted us without our leave, when we were very young,<br/>Before
we had begun articulating with the tongue.<br/>His underbred suggestions
fill your SARAH with alarm;<br/>Why, gracious me! he’ll ask us
next to walk out arm-in-arm!”</p>
<p>At length when SARAH reached the legal age of twenty-one,<br/>The
Baron he determined to unite her to his son;<br/>And SARAH in a fainting-fit
for weeks unconscious lay,<br/>And PETER blushed so hard you might
have heard him miles away.</p>
<p>And when the time arrived for taking SARAH to his heart,<br/>They
were married in two churches half-a-dozen miles apart<br/>(Intending
to escape all public ridicule and chaff),<br/>And the service was conducted
by electric telegraph.</p>
<p>And when it was concluded, and the priest had said his say,<br/>Until
the time arrived when they were both to drive away,<br/>They never
spoke or offered for to fondle or to fawn,<br/>For <i>he</i> waited
in the attic, and <i>she</i> waited on the lawn.</p>
<p>At length, when four o’clock arrived, and it was time to go,<br/>The
carriage was announced, but decent SARAH answered “No!<br/>Upon
my word, I’d rather sleep my everlasting nap,<br/>Than go and
ride alone with MR. PETER in a trap.”</p>
<p>And PETER’S over-sensitive and highly-polished mind<br/>Wouldn’t
suffer him to sanction a proceeding of the kind;<br/>And further, he
declared he suffered overwhelming shocks<br/>At the bare idea of having
any coachman on the box.</p>
<p>So PETER into one turn-out incontinently rushed,<br/>While SARAH
in a second trap sat modestly and blushed;<br/>And MR. NEWMAN’S
coachman, on authority I’ve heard,<br/>Drove away in gallant
style upon the coach-box of a third.</p>
<p>Now, though this modest couple in the matter of the car<br/>Were
very likely carrying a principle too far,<br/>I hold their shy behaviour
was more laudable in them<br/>Than that of PETER’S brother with
MISS SARAH’S sister EM.</p>
<p>ALPHONSO, who in cool assurance all creation licks,<br/>He up and
said to EMMIE (who had impudence for six),<br/>“MISS EMILY, I
love you—will you marry? Say the word!”<br/>And EMILY
said, “Certainly, ALPHONSO, like a bird!”</p>
<p>I do not recommend a newly-married pair to try<br/>To carry on as
PETER carried on with SARAH BLIGH,<br/>But still their shy behaviour
was more laudable in them<br/>Than that of PETER’S brother with
MISS SARAH’S sister EM.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Martinet</h2>
<br/>
<p>Some time ago, in simple verse<br/>I sang the story true<br/>Of
CAPTAIN REECE, the <i>Mantelpiece,<br/></i>And all her happy crew.</p>
<p>I showed how any captain may<br/>Attach his men to him,<br/>If
he but heeds their smallest needs,<br/>And studies every whim.</p>
<p>Now mark how, by Draconic rule<br/>And <i>hauteur</i> ill-advised,<br/>The
noblest crew upon the Blue<br/>May be demoralized.</p>
<p>When his ungrateful country placed<br/>Kind REECE upon half-pay,<br/>Without
much claim SIR BERKELY came,<br/>And took command one day.</p>
<p>SIR BERKELY was a martinet—<br/>A stern unyielding soul—<br/>Who
ruled his ship by dint of whip<br/>And horrible black-hole.</p>
<p>A sailor who was overcome<br/>From having freely dined,<br/>And
chanced to reel when at the wheel,<br/>He instantly confined!</p>
<p>And tars who, when an action raged,<br/>Appeared alarmed or scared,<br/>And
those below who wished to go,<br/>He very seldom spared.</p>
<p>E’en he who smote his officer<br/>For punishment was booked,<br/>And
mutinies upon the seas<br/>He rarely overlooked.</p>
<p>In short, the happy <i>Mantelpiece</i>,<br/>Where all had gone so
well,<br/>Beneath that fool SIR BERKELY’S rule<br/>Became a
floating hell.</p>
<p>When first SIR BERKELY came aboard<br/>He read a speech to all,<br/>And
told them how he’d made a vow<br/>To act on duty’s call.</p>
<p>Then WILLIAM LEE, he up and said<br/>(The Captain’s coxswain
he),<br/>“We’ve heard the speech your honour’s made,<br/>And
werry pleased we be.</p>
<p>“We won’t pretend, my lad, as how<br/>We’re glad
to lose our REECE;<br/>Urbane, polite, he suited quite<br/>The saucy
<i>Mantelpiece.</i></p>
<p>“But if your honour gives your mind<br/>To study all our ways,<br/>With
dance and song we’ll jog along<br/>As in those happy days.</p>
<p>“I like your honour’s looks, and feel<br/>You’re
worthy of your sword.<br/>Your hand, my lad—I’m doosid
glad<br/>To welcome you aboard!”</p>
<p>SIR BERKELY looked amazed, as though<br/>He didn’t understand.<br/>“Don’t
shake your head,” good WILLIAM said,<br/>“It is an honest
hand.</p>
<p>“It’s grasped a better hand than yourn—<br/>Come,
gov’nor, I insist!”<br/>The Captain stared—the coxswain
glared—<br/>The hand became a fist!</p>
<p>“Down, upstart!” said the hardy salt;<br/>But BERKELY
dodged his aim,<br/>And made him go in chains below:<br/>The seamen
murmured “Shame!”</p>
<p>He stopped all songs at 12 p.m.,<br/>Stopped hornpipes when at sea,<br/>And
swore his cot (or bunk) should not<br/>Be used by aught than he.</p>
<p>He never joined their daily mess,<br/>Nor asked them to his own,<br/>But
chaffed in gay and social way<br/>The officers alone.</p>
<p>His First Lieutenant, PETER, was<br/>As useless as could be,<br/>A
helpless stick, and always sick<br/>When there was any sea.</p>
<p>This First Lieutenant proved to be<br/>His foster-sister MAY,<br/>Who
went to sea for love of he<br/>In masculine array.</p>
<p>And when he learnt the curious fact,<br/>Did he emotion show,<br/>Or
dry her tears or end her fears<br/>By marrying her? No!</p>
<p>Or did he even try to soothe<br/>This maiden in her teens?<br/>Oh,
no!—instead he made her wed<br/>The Sergeant of Marines!</p>
<p>Of course such Spartan discipline<br/>Would make an angel fret;<br/>They
drew a lot, and WILLIAM shot<br/>This fearful martinet.</p>
<p>The Admiralty saw how ill<br/>They’d treated CAPTAIN REECE;<br/>He
was restored once more aboard<br/>The saucy <i>Mantelpiece.</i></p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Sailor Boy To His Lass</h2>
<br/>
<p>I go away this blessed day,<br/>To sail across the sea, MATILDA!<br/>My
vessel starts for various parts<br/>At twenty after three, MATILDA.<br/>I
hardly know where we may go,<br/>Or if it’s near or far, MATILDA,<br/>For
CAPTAIN HYDE does not confide<br/>In any ’fore-mast tar, MATILDA!</p>
<p>Beneath my ban that mystic man<br/>Shall suffer, <i>coûte
qui coûte</i>, MATILDA!<br/>What right has he to keep from me<br/>The
Admiralty route, MATILDA?<br/>Because, forsooth! I am a youth<br/>Of
common sailors’ lot, MATILDA!<br/>Am I a man on human plan<br/>Designed,
or am I not, MATILDA?</p>
<p>But there, my lass, we’ll let that pass!<br/>With anxious
love I burn, MATILDA.<br/>I want to know if we shall go<br/>To church
when I return, MATILDA?<br/>Your eyes are red, you bow your head;<br/>It’s
pretty clear you thirst, MATILDA,<br/>To name the day—What’s
that you say?<br/>- “You’ll see me further first,”
MATILDA?</p>
<p>I can’t mistake the signs you make,<br/>Although you barely
speak, MATILDA;<br/>Though pure and young, you thrust your tongue<br/>Right
in your pretty cheek, MATILDA!<br/>My dear, I fear I hear you sneer—<br/>I
do—I’m sure I do, MATILDA!<br/>With simple grace you make
a face,<br/>Ejaculating, “Ugh!” MATILDA.</p>
<p>Oh, pause to think before you drink<br/>The dregs of Lethe’s
cup, MATILDA!<br/>Remember, do, what I’ve gone through,<br/>Before
you give me up, MATILDA!<br/>Recall again the mental pain<br/>Of what
I’ve had to do, MATILDA!<br/>And be assured that I’ve endured<br/>It,
all along of you, MATILDA!</p>
<p>Do you forget, my blithesome pet,<br/>How once with jealous rage,
MATILDA,<br/>I watched you walk and gaily talk<br/>With some one thrice
your age, MATILDA?<br/>You squatted free upon his knee,<br/>A sight
that made me sad, MATILDA!<br/>You pinched his cheek with friendly
tweak,<br/>Which almost drove me mad, MATILDA!</p>
<p>I knew him not, but hoped to spot<br/>Some man you thought to wed,
MATILDA!<br/>I took a gun, my darling one,<br/>And shot him through
the head, MATILDA!<br/>I’m made of stuff that’s rough and
gruff<br/>Enough, I own; but, ah, MATILDA!<br/>It <i>did</i> annoy
your sailor boy<br/>To find it was your pa, MATILDA!</p>
<p>I’ve passed a life of toil and strife,<br/>And disappointments
deep, MATILDA;<br/>I’ve lain awake with dental ache<br/>Until
I fell asleep, MATILDA!<br/>At times again I’ve missed a train,<br/>Or
p’rhaps run short of tin, MATILDA,<br/>And worn a boot on corns
that shoot,<br/>Or, shaving, cut my chin, MATILDA.</p>
<p>But, oh! no trains—no dental pains—<br/>Believe me when
I say, MATILDA,<br/>No corns that shoot—no pinching boot<br/>Upon
a summer day, MATILDA—<br/>It’s my belief, could cause
such grief<br/>As that I’ve suffered for, MATILDA,<br/>My having
shot in vital spot<br/>Your old progenitor, MATILDA.</p>
<p>Bethink you how I’ve kept the vow<br/>I made one winter day,
MATILDA—<br/>That, come what could, I never would<br/>Remain
too long away, MATILDA.<br/>And, oh! the crimes with which, at times,<br/>I’ve
charged my gentle mind, MATILDA,<br/>To keep the vow I made—and
now<br/>You treat me so unkind, MATILDA!</p>
<p>For when at sea, off Caribbee,<br/>I felt my passion burn, MATILDA,<br/>By
passion egged, I went and begged<br/>The captain to return, MATILDA.<br/>And
when, my pet, I couldn’t get<br/>That captain to agree, MATILDA,<br/>Right
through a sort of open port<br/>I pitched him in the sea, MATILDA!</p>
<p>Remember, too, how all the crew<br/>With indignation blind, MATILDA,<br/>Distinctly
swore they ne’er before<br/>Had thought me so unkind, MATILDA.<br/>And
how they’d shun me one by one—<br/>An unforgiving group,
MATILDA—<br/>I stopped their howls and sulky scowls<br/>By pizening
their soup, MATILDA!</p>
<p>So pause to think, before you drink<br/>The dregs of Lethe’s
cup, MATILDA;<br/>Remember, do, what I’ve gone through,<br/>Before
you give me up, MATILDA.<br/>Recall again the mental pain<br/>Of what
I’ve had to do, MATILDA,<br/>And be assured that I’ve endured<br/>It,
all along of you, MATILDA!</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Reverend Simon Magus</h2>
<br/>
<p>A rich advowson, highly prized,<br/>For private sale was advertised;<br/>And
many a parson made a bid;<br/>The REVEREND SIMON MAGUS did.</p>
<p>He sought the agent’s: “Agent, I<br/>Have come prepared
at once to buy<br/>(If your demand is not too big)<br/>The Cure of
Otium-cum-Digge.”</p>
<p>“Ah!” said the agent, “<i>there’s</i> a berth—<br/>The
snuggest vicarage on earth;<br/>No sort of duty (so I hear),<br/>And
fifteen hundred pounds a year!</p>
<p>“If on the price we should agree,<br/>The living soon will
vacant be;<br/>The good incumbent’s ninety five,<br/>And cannot
very long survive.</p>
<p>See—here’s his photograph—you see,<br/>He’s
in his dotage.” “Ah, dear me!<br/>Poor soul!”
said SIMON. “His decease<br/>Would be a merciful release!”</p>
<p>The agent laughed—the agent blinked—<br/>The agent blew
his nose and winked—<br/>And poked the parson’s ribs in
play—<br/>It was that agent’s vulgar way.</p>
<p>The REVEREND SIMON frowned: “I grieve<br/>This light demeanour
to perceive;<br/>It’s scarcely <i>comme il</i> <i>faut</i>, I
think:<br/>Now—pray oblige me—do not wink.</p>
<p>“Don’t dig my waistcoat into holes—<br/>Your mission
is to sell the souls<br/>Of human sheep and human kids<br/>To that
divine who highest bids.</p>
<p>“Do well in this, and on your head<br/>Unnumbered honours
will be shed.”<br/>The agent said, “Well, truth to tell,<br/>I
<i>have</i> been doing very well.”</p>
<p>“You should,” said SIMON, “at your age;<br/>But
now about the parsonage.<br/>How many rooms does it contain?<br/>Show
me the photograph again.</p>
<p>“A poor apostle’s humble house<br/>Must not be too luxurious;<br/>No
stately halls with oaken floor—<br/>It should be decent and no
more.</p>
<p>“ No billiard-rooms—no stately trees—<br/>No croquêt-grounds
or pineries.”<br/>“Ah!” sighed the agent, “very
true:<br/>This property won’t do for you.”</p>
<p>“All these about the house you’ll find.”—<br/>“Well,”
said the parson, “never mind;<br/>I’ll manage to submit
to these<br/>Luxurious superfluities.</p>
<p>“A clergyman who does not shirk<br/>The various calls of Christian
work,<br/>Will have no leisure to employ<br/>These ‘common forms’
of worldly joy.</p>
<p>“To preach three times on Sabbath days—<br/>To wean
the lost from wicked ways—<br/>The sick to soothe—the sane
to wed—<br/>The poor to feed with meat and bread;</p>
<p> “These are the various wholesome ways<br/>In which I’ll
spend my nights and days:<br/>My zeal will have no time to cool<br/>At
croquet, archery, or pool.”</p>
<p>The agent said, “From what I hear,<br/>This living will not
suit, I fear—<br/>There are no poor, no sick at all;<br/>For
services there is no call.”</p>
<p>The reverend gent looked grave, “Dear me!<br/>Then there is
<i>no</i> ‘society’?—<br/>I mean, of course, no sinners
there<br/>Whose souls will be my special care?”</p>
<p>The cunning agent shook his head,<br/>“No, none—except”—(the
agent said)—<br/>“The DUKE OF A., the EARL OF B.,<br/>The
MARQUIS C., and VISCOUNT D.</p>
<p>“But you will not be quite alone,<br/>For though they’ve
chaplains of their own,<br/>Of course this noble well-bred clan<br/>Receive
the parish clergyman.”</p>
<p>“Oh, silence, sir!” said SIMON M.,<br/>“Dukes—Earls!
What should I care for them?<br/>These worldly ranks I scorn and flout!”<br/>“Of
course,” the agent said, “no doubt!”</p>
<p>“Yet I might show these men of birth<br/>The hollowness of
rank on earth.”<br/>The agent answered, “Very true—<br/>But
I should not, if I were you.”</p>
<p>“Who sells this rich advowson, pray?”<br/>The agent
winked—it was his way—<br/>“His name is HART; ’twixt
me and you,<br/>He is, I’m grieved to say, a Jew!”</p>
<p>“A Jew?” said SIMON, “happy find!<br/>I purchase
this advowson, mind.<br/>My life shall be devoted to<br/>Converting
that unhappy Jew!”</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Damon v. Pythias</h2>
<br/>
<p>Two better friends you wouldn’t pass<br/>Throughout a summer’s
day,<br/>Than DAMON and his PYTHIAS,—<br/>Two merchant princes
they.</p>
<p>At school together they contrived<br/>All sorts of boyish larks;<br/>And,
later on, together thrived<br/>As merry merchants’ clerks.</p>
<p>And then, when many years had flown,<br/>They rose together till<br/>They
bought a business of their own—<br/>And they conduct it still.</p>
<p>They loved each other all their lives,<br/>Dissent they never knew,<br/>And,
stranger still, their very wives<br/>Were rather friendly too.</p>
<p>Perhaps you think, to serve my ends,<br/>These statements I refute,<br/>When
I admit that these dear friends<br/>Were parties to a suit?</p>
<p>But ’twas a friendly action, for<br/>Good PYTHIAS, as you
see,<br/>Fought merely as executor,<br/>And DAMON as trustee.</p>
<p>They laughed to think, as through the throng<br/>Of suitors sad
they passed,<br/>That they, who’d lived and loved so long,<br/>Should
go to law at last.</p>
<p>The junior briefs they kindly let<br/>Two sucking counsel hold;<br/>These
learned persons never yet<br/>Had fingered suitors’ gold.</p>
<p>But though the happy suitors two<br/>Were friendly as could be,<br/>Not
so the junior counsel who<br/>Were earning maiden fee.</p>
<p>They too, till then, were friends. At school<br/>They’d
done each other’s sums,<br/>And under Oxford’s gentle rule<br/>Had
been the closest chums.</p>
<p>But now they met with scowl and grin<br/>In every public place,<br/>And
often snapped their fingers in<br/>Each other’s learned face.</p>
<p>It almost ended in a fight<br/>When they on path or stair<br/>Met
face to face. They made it quite<br/>A personal affair.</p>
<p>And when at length the case was called<br/>(It came on rather late),<br/>Spectators
really were appalled<br/>To see their deadly hate.</p>
<p>One junior rose—with eyeballs tense,<br/>And swollen frontal
veins:<br/>To all his powers of eloquence<br/>He gave the fullest
reins.</p>
<p>His argument was novel—for<br/>A verdict he relied<br/>On
blackening the junior<br/>Upon the other side.</p>
<p>“Oh,” said the Judge, in robe and fur,<br/>“The
matter in dispute<br/>To arbitration pray refer—<br/>This is
a friendly suit.”</p>
<p>And PYTHIAS, in merry mood,<br/>Digged DAMON in the side;<br/>And
DAMON, tickled with the feud,<br/>With other digs replied.</p>
<p>But oh! those deadly counsel twain,<br/>Who were such friends before,<br/>Were
never reconciled again—<br/>They quarrelled more and more.</p>
<p>At length it happened that they met<br/>On Alpine heights one day,<br/>And
thus they paid each one his debt,<br/>Their fury had its way—</p>
<p>They seized each other in a trice,<br/>With scorn and hatred filled,<br/>And,
falling from a precipice,<br/>They, both of them, were killed.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: My Dream</h2>
<br/>
<p>The other night, from cares exempt,<br/>I slept—and what d’you
think I dreamt?<br/>I dreamt that somehow I had come<br/>To dwell
in Topsy-Turveydom—</p>
<p>Where vice is virtue—virtue, vice:<br/>Where nice is nasty—nasty,
nice:<br/>Where right is wrong and wrong is right—<br/>Where
white is black and black is white.</p>
<p>Where babies, much to their surprise,<br/>Are born astonishingly
wise;<br/>With every Science on their lips,<br/>And Art at all their
finger-tips.</p>
<p>For, as their nurses dandle them<br/>They crow binomial theorem,<br/>With
views (it seems absurd to us)<br/>On differential calculus.</p>
<p>But though a babe, as I have said,<br/>Is born with learning in
his head,<br/>He must forget it, if he can,<br/>Before he calls himself
a man.</p>
<p>For that which we call folly here,<br/>Is wisdom in that favoured
sphere;<br/>The wisdom we so highly prize<br/>Is blatant folly in
their eyes.</p>
<p>A boy, if he would push his way,<br/>Must learn some nonsense every
day;<br/>And cut, to carry out this view,<br/>His wisdom teeth and
wisdom too.</p>
<p>Historians burn their midnight oils,<br/>Intent on giant-killers’
toils;<br/>And sages close their aged eyes<br/>To other sages’
lullabies.</p>
<p>Our magistrates, in duty bound,<br/>Commit all robbers who are found;<br/>But
there the Beaks (so people said)<br/>Commit all robberies instead.</p>
<p>Our Judges, pure and wise in tone,<br/>Know crime from theory alone,<br/>And
glean the motives of a thief<br/>From books and popular belief.</p>
<p>But there, a Judge who wants to prime<br/>His mind with true ideas
of crime,<br/>Derives them from the common sense<br/>Of practical
experience.</p>
<p>Policemen march all folks away<br/>Who practise virtue every day—<br/>Of
course, I mean to say, you know,<br/>What we call virtue here below.</p>
<p>For only scoundrels dare to do<br/>What we consider just and true,<br/>And
only good men do, in fact,<br/>What we should think a dirty act.</p>
<p>But strangest of these social twirls,<br/>The girls are boys—the
boys are girls!<br/>The men are women, too—but then,<br/><i>Per
contra</i>, women all are men.</p>
<p>To one who to tradition clings<br/>This seems an awkward state of
things,<br/>But if to think it out you try,<br/>It doesn’t really
signify.</p>
<p>With them, as surely as can be,<br/>A sailor should be sick at sea,<br/>And
not a passenger may sail<br/>Who cannot smoke right through a gale.</p>
<p>A soldier (save by rarest luck)<br/>Is always shot for showing pluck<br/>(That
is, if others can be found<br/>With pluck enough to fire a round).</p>
<p>“How strange!” I said to one I saw;<br/>“You quite
upset our every law.<br/>However can you get along<br/>So systematically
wrong?”</p>
<p>“Dear me!” my mad informant said,<br/>“Have you
no eyes within your head?<br/>You sneer when you your hat should doff:<br/>Why,
we begin where you leave off!</p>
<p>“Your wisest men are very far<br/>Less learned than our babies
are!”<br/>I mused awhile—and then, oh me!<br/>I framed
this brilliant repartee:</p>
<p>“Although your babes are wiser far<br/>Than our most valued
sages are,<br/>Your sages, with their toys and cots,<br/>Are duller
than our idiots!”</p>
<p>But this remark, I grieve to state,<br/>Came just a little bit too
late<br/>For as I framed it in my head,<br/>I woke and found myself
in bed.</p>
<p>Still I could wish that, ’stead of here,<br/>My lot were in
that favoured sphere!—<br/>Where greatest fools bear off the
bell<br/>I ought to do extremely well.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Bishop Of Rum-Ti-Foo Again</h2>
<br/>
<p>I often wonder whether you<br/>Think sometimes of that Bishop, who<br/>From
black but balmy Rum-ti-Foo<br/>Last summer twelvemonth came.<br/>Unto
your mind I p’r’aps may bring<br/>Remembrance of the man
I sing<br/>To-day, by simply mentioning<br/>That PETER was his name.</p>
<p>Remember how that holy man<br/>Came with the great Colonial clan<br/>To
Synod, called Pan-Anglican;<br/>And kindly recollect<br/>How, having
crossed the ocean wide,<br/>To please his flock all means he tried<br/>Consistent
with a proper pride<br/>And manly self-respect.</p>
<p>He only, of the reverend pack<br/>Who minister to Christians black,<br/>Brought
any useful knowledge back<br/>To his Colonial fold.<br/>In consequence
a place I claim<br/>For “PETER” on the scroll of Fame<br/>(For
PETER was that Bishop’s name,<br/>As I’ve already told).</p>
<p>He carried Art, he often said,<br/>To places where that timid maid<br/>(Save
by Colonial Bishops’ aid)<br/>Could never hope to roam.<br/>The
Payne-cum-Lauri feat he taught<br/>As he had learnt it; for he thought<br/>The
choicest fruits of Progress ought<br/>To bless the Negro’s home.</p>
<p>And he had other work to do,<br/>For, while he tossed upon the Blue,<br/>The
islanders of Rum-ti-Foo<br/>Forgot their kindly friend.<br/>Their
decent clothes they learnt to tear—<br/>They learnt to say, “I
do not care,”<br/>Though they, of course, were well aware<br/>How
folks, who say so, end.</p>
<p>Some sailors, whom he did not know,<br/>Had landed there not long
ago,<br/>And taught them “Bother!” also, “Blow!”<br/>(Of
wickedness the germs).<br/>No need to use a casuist’s pen<br/>To
prove that they were merchantmen;<br/>No sailor of the Royal N.<br/>Would
use such awful terms.</p>
<p>And so, when BISHOP PETER came<br/>(That was the kindly Bishop’s
name),<br/>He heard these dreadful oaths with shame,<br/>And chid
their want of dress.<br/>(Except a shell—a bangle rare—<br/>A
feather here—a feather there<br/>The South Pacific Negroes wear<br/>Their
native nothingness.)</p>
<p>He taught them that a Bishop loathes<br/>To listen to disgraceful
oaths,<br/>He gave them all his left-off clothes—<br/>They bent
them to his will.<br/>The Bishop’s gift spreads quickly round;<br/>In
PETER’S left-off clothes they bound<br/>(His three-and-twenty
suits they found<br/>In fair condition still).</p>
<p>The Bishop’s eyes with water fill,<br/>Quite overjoyed to
find them still<br/>Obedient to his sovereign will,<br/>And said,
“Good Rum-ti-Foo!<br/>Half-way I’ll meet you, I declare:<br/>I’ll
dress myself in cowries rare,<br/>And fasten feathers in my hair,<br/>And
dance the ‘Cutch-chi-boo!’” <SPAN name="citation11"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote11">{11}</SPAN></p>
<p>And to conciliate his See<br/>He married PICCADILLILLEE,<br/>The
youngest of his twenty-three,<br/>Tall—neither fat nor thin.<br/>(And
though the dress he made her don<br/>Looks awkwardly a girl upon,<br/>It
was a great improvement on<br/>The one he found her in.)</p>
<p>The Bishop in his gay canoe<br/>(His wife, of course, went with
him too)<br/>To some adjacent island flew,<br/>To spend his honeymoon.<br/>Some
day in sunny Rum-ti-Foo<br/>A little PETER’ll be on view;<br/>And
that (if people tell me true)<br/>Is like to happen soon.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: A Worm Will Turn</h2>
<br/>
<p>I love a man who’ll smile and joke<br/>When with misfortune
crowned;<br/>Who’ll pun beneath a pauper’s yoke,<br/>And
as he breaks his daily toke,<br/>Conundrums gay propound.</p>
<p>Just such a man was BERNARD JUPP,<br/>He scoffed at Fortune’s
frown;<br/>He gaily drained his bitter cup—<br/>Though Fortune
often threw him up,<br/>It never cast him down.</p>
<p>Though years their share of sorrow bring,<br/>We know that far above<br/>All
other griefs, are griefs that spring<br/>From some misfortune happening<br/>To
those we really love.</p>
<p>E’en sorrow for another’s woe<br/>Our BERNARD failed
to quell;<br/>Though by this special form of blow<br/>No person ever
suffered so,<br/>Or bore his grief so well.</p>
<p>His father, wealthy and well clad,<br/>And owning house and park,<br/>Lost
every halfpenny he had,<br/>And then became (extremely sad!)<br/>A
poor attorney’s clerk.</p>
<p>All sons it surely would appal,<br/>Except the passing meek,<br/>To
see a father lose his all,<br/>And from an independence fall<br/>To
one pound ten a week!</p>
<p>But JUPP shook off this sorrow’s weight,<br/>And, like a Christian
son,<br/>Proved Poverty a happy fate—<br/>Proved Wealth to be
a devil’s bait,<br/>To lure poor sinners on.</p>
<p>With other sorrows BERNARD coped,<br/>For sorrows came in packs;<br/>His
cousins with their housemaids sloped—<br/>His uncles forged—his
aunts eloped—<br/>His sisters married blacks.</p>
<p>But BERNARD, far from murmuring<br/>(Exemplar, friends, to us),<br/>Determined
to his faith to cling,—<br/>He made the best of everything,<br/>And
argued softly thus:</p>
<p>“’Twere harsh my uncles’ forging knack<br/>Too
rudely to condemn—<br/>My aunts, repentant, may come back,<br/>And
blacks are nothing like as black<br/>As people colour them!”</p>
<p>Still Fate, with many a sorrow rife,<br/>Maintained relentless fight:<br/>His
grandmamma next lost her life,<br/>Then died the mother of his wife,<br/>But
still he seemed all right.</p>
<p>His brother fond (the only link<br/>To life that bound him now)<br/>One
morning, overcome by drink,<br/>He broke his leg (the right, I think)<br/>In
some disgraceful row.</p>
<p>But did my BERNARD swear and curse?<br/>Oh no—to murmur loth,<br/>He
only said, “Go, get a nurse:<br/>Be thankful that it isn’t
worse;<br/>You might have broken both!”</p>
<p>But worms who watch without concern<br/>The cockchafer on thorns,<br/>Or
beetles smashed, themselves will turn<br/>If, walking through the slippery
fern,<br/>You tread upon their corns.</p>
<p>One night as BERNARD made his track<br/>Through Brompton home to
bed,<br/>A footpad, with a vizor black,<br/>Took watch and purse,
and dealt a crack<br/>On BERNARD’S saint-like head.</p>
<p>It was too much—his spirit rose,<br/>He looked extremely cross.<br/>Men
thought him steeled to mortal foes,<br/>But no—he bowed to countless
blows,<br/>But kicked against this loss.</p>
<p>He finally made up his mind<br/>Upon his friends to call;<br/>Subscription
lists were largely signed,<br/>For men were really glad to find<br/>Him
mortal, after all!</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Haughty Actor</h2>
<br/>
<p>An actor—GIBBS, of Drury Lane—<br/>Of very decent station,<br/>Once
happened in a part to gain<br/>Excessive approbation:<br/>It sometimes
turns a fellow’s brain<br/>And makes him singularly vain<br/>When
he believes that he receives<br/>Tremendous approbation.</p>
<p>His great success half drove him mad,<br/>But no one seemed to mind
him;<br/>Well, in another piece he had<br/>Another part assigned him.<br/>This
part was smaller, by a bit,<br/>Than that in which he made a hit.<br/>So,
much ill-used, he straight refused<br/>To play the part assigned him.</p>
<p>* * * * * * * *</p>
<p><i>That night that actor slept, and I’ll attempt<br/>To tell
you of the vivid dream he dreamt.</i></p>
<br/>
<p>THE DREAM.</p>
<br/>
<p>In fighting with a robber band<br/>(A thing he loved sincerely)<br/>A
sword struck GIBBS upon the hand,<br/>And wounded it severely.<br/>At
first he didn’t heed it much,<br/>He thought it was a simple
touch,<br/>But soon he found the weapon’s bound<br/>Had wounded
him severely.</p>
<p>To Surgeon COBB he made a trip,<br/>Who’d just effected featly<br/>An
amputation at the hip<br/>Particularly neatly.<br/>A rising man was
Surgeon COBB<br/>But this extremely ticklish job<br/>He had achieved
(as he believed)<br/>Particularly neatly.</p>
<p>The actor rang the surgeon’s bell.<br/>“Observe my wounded
finger,<br/>Be good enough to strap it well,<br/>And prithee do not
linger.<br/>That I, dear sir, may fill again<br/>The Theatre Royal
Drury Lane:<br/>This very night I have to fight—<br/>So prithee
do not linger.”</p>
<p>“I don’t strap fingers up for doles,”<br/>Replied
the haughty surgeon;<br/>“To use your cant, I don’t play
<i>rôles<br/></i>Utility that verge on.<br/>First amputation—nothing
less—<br/>That is my line of business:<br/>We surgeon nobs despise
all jobs<br/>Utility that verge on</p>
<p>“When in your hip there lurks disease”<br/>(So dreamt
this lively dreamer),<br/>“Or devastating <i>caries<br/></i>In
<i>humerus</i> or <i>femur,<br/></i>If you can pay a handsome fee,<br/>Oh,
then you may remember me—<br/>With joy elate I’ll amputate<br/>Your
<i>humerus</i> or <i>femur</i>.”</p>
<p>The disconcerted actor ceased<br/>The haughty leech to pester,<br/>But
when the wound in size increased,<br/>And then began to fester,<br/>He
sought a learned Counsel’s lair,<br/>And told that Counsel, then
and there,<br/>How COBB’S neglect of his defect<br/>Had made
his finger fester.</p>
<p>“Oh, bring my action, if you please,<br/>The case I pray you
urge on,<br/>And win me thumping damages<br/>From COBB, that haughty
surgeon.<br/>He culpably neglected me<br/>Although I proffered him
his fee,<br/>So pray come down, in wig and gown,<br/>On COBB, that
haughty surgeon!”</p>
<p>That Counsel learned in the laws,<br/>With passion almost trembled.<br/>He
just had gained a mighty cause<br/>Before the Peers assembled!<br/>Said
he, “How dare you have the face<br/>To come with Common Jury
case<br/>To one who wings rhetoric flings<br/>Before the Peers assembled?”</p>
<p>Dispirited became our friend—<br/>Depressed his moral pecker—<br/>“But
stay! a thought!—I’ll gain my end,<br/>And save my poor
exchequer.<br/>I won’t be placed upon the shelf,<br/>I’ll
take it into Court myself,<br/>And legal lore display before<br/>The
Court of the Exchequer.”</p>
<p>He found a Baron—one of those<br/>Who with our laws supply
us—<br/>In wig and silken gown and hose,<br/>As if at <i>Nisi
Prius.<br/></i>But he’d just given, off the reel,<br/>A famous
judgment on Appeal:<br/>It scarce became his heightened fame<br/>To
sit at <i>Nisi Prius.</i></p>
<p>Our friend began, with easy wit,<br/>That half concealed his terror:<br/>“Pooh!”
said the Judge, “I only sit<br/>In <i>Banco</i> or in Error.<br/>Can
you suppose, my man, that I’d<br/>O’er <i>Nisi Prius</i>
Courts preside,<br/>Or condescend my time to spend<br/>On anything
but Error?”</p>
<p>“Too bad,” said GIBBS, “my case to shirk!<br/>You
must be bad innately,<br/>To save your skill for mighty work<br/>Because
it’s valued greatly!”<br/>But here he woke, with sudden
start.</p>
<p>* * * * * * * *</p>
<p>He wrote to say he’d play the part.<br/>I’ve but to
tell he played it well—<br/>The author’s words—his
native wit<br/>Combined, achieved a perfect “hit”—<br/>The
papers praised him greatly.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Two Majors</h2>
<br/>
<p>An excellent soldier who’s worthy the name<br/>Loves officers
dashing and strict:<br/>When good, he’s content with escaping
all blame,<br/>When naughty, he likes to be licked.</p>
<p>He likes for a fault to be bullied and stormed,<br/>Or imprisoned
for several days,<br/>And hates, for a duty correctly performed,<br/>To
be slavered with sickening praise.</p>
<p>No officer sickened with praises his <i>corps<br/></i>So little
as MAJOR LA GUERRE—<br/>No officer swore at his warriors more<br/>Than
MAJOR MAKREDI PREPERE.</p>
<p>Their soldiers adored them, and every grade<br/>Delighted to hear
their abuse;<br/>Though whenever these officers came on parade<br/>They
shivered and shook in their shoes.</p>
<p>For, oh! if LA GUERRE could all praises withhold,<br/>Why, so could
MAKREDI PREPERE,<br/>And, oh! if MAKREDI could bluster and scold,<br/>Why,
so could the mighty LA GUERRE.</p>
<p>“No doubt we deserve it—no mercy we crave—<br/>Go
on—you’re conferring a boon;<br/>We would rather be slanged
by a warrior brave,<br/>Than praised by a wretched poltroon!”</p>
<p>MAKREDI would say that in battle’s fierce rage<br/>True happiness
only was met:<br/>Poor MAJOR MAKREDI, though fifty his age,<br/>Had
never known happiness yet!</p>
<p>LA GUERRE would declare, “With the blood of a foe<br/>No tipple
is worthy to clink.”<br/>Poor fellow! he hadn’t, though
sixty or so,<br/>Yet tasted his favourite drink!</p>
<p>They agreed at their mess—they agreed in the glass—<br/>They
agreed in the choice of their “set,”<br/>And they also
agreed in adoring, alas!<br/>The Vivandière, pretty FILLETTE.</p>
<p>Agreement, you see, may be carried too far,<br/>And after agreeing
all round<br/>For years—in this soldierly “maid of the
bar,”<br/>A bone of contention they found!</p>
<p>It may seem improper to call such a pet—<br/>By a metaphor,
even—a bone;<br/>But though they agreed in adoring her, yet<br/>Each
wanted to make her his own.</p>
<p>“On the day that you marry her,” muttered PREPERE<br/>(With
a pistol he quietly played),<br/>“I’ll scatter the brains
in your noddle, I swear,<br/>All over the stony parade!”</p>
<p>“I cannot do <i>that</i> to you,” answered LA GUERRE,<br/>“Whatever
events may befall;<br/>But this <i>I can</i> do—<i>if you</i>
wed her, <i>mon cher!<br/></i>I’ll eat you, moustachios and all!”</p>
<p>The rivals, although they would never engage,<br/>Yet quarrelled
whenever they met;<br/>They met in a fury and left in a rage,<br/>But
neither took pretty FILLETTE.</p>
<p>“I am not afraid,” thought MAKREDI PREPERE:<br/>“For
country I’m ready to fall;<br/>But nobody wants, for a mere Vivandière,<br/>To
be eaten, moustachios and all!</p>
<p>“Besides, though LA GUERRE has his faults, I’ll allow<br/>He’s
one of the bravest of men:<br/>My goodness! if I disagree with him
now,<br/>I might disagree with him then.”</p>
<p>“No coward am I,” said LA GUERRE, “as you guess—<br/>I
sneer at an enemy’s blade;<br/>But I don’t want PREPERE
to get into a mess<br/>For splashing the stony parade!”</p>
<p>One day on parade to PREPERE and LA GUERRE<br/>Came CORPORAL JACOT
DEBETTE,<br/>And trembling all over, he prayed of them there<br/>To
give him the pretty FILLETTE.</p>
<p>“You see, I am willing to marry my bride<br/>Until you’ve
arranged this affair;<br/>I will blow out my brains when your honours
decide<br/>Which marries the sweet Vivandière!”</p>
<p>“Well, take her,’ said both of them in a duet<br/>(A
favourite form of reply),<br/>“But when I am ready to marry FILLETTE.<br/>Remember
you’ve promised to die!”</p>
<p>He married her then: from the flowery plains<br/>Of existence the
roses they cull:<br/>He lived and he died with his wife; and his brains<br/>Are
reposing in peace in his skull.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Emily, John, James, And I. A Derby Legend</h2>
<br/>
<p>EMILY JANE was a nursery maid,<br/>JAMES was a bold Life Guard,<br/>JOHN
was a constable, poorly paid<br/>(And I am a doggerel bard).</p>
<p>A very good girl was EMILY JANE,<br/>JIMMY was good and true,<br/>JOHN
was a very good man in the main<br/>(And I am a good man too).</p>
<p>Rivals for EMMIE were JOHNNY and JAMES,<br/>Though EMILY liked them
both;<br/>She couldn’t tell which had the strongest claims<br/>(And
<i>I</i> couldn’t take my oath).</p>
<p>But sooner or later you’re certain to find<br/>Your sentiments
can’t lie hid—<br/>JANE thought it was time that she made
up her mind<br/>(And I think it was time she did).</p>
<p>Said JANE, with a smirk, and a blush on her face,<br/>“I’ll
promise to wed the boy<br/>Who takes me to-morrow to Epsom Race!”<br/>(Which
I would have done, with joy).</p>
<p>From JOHNNY escaped an expression of pain,<br/>But Jimmy said, “Done
with you!<br/>I’ll take you with pleasure, my EMILY JANE!”<br/>(And
I would have said so too).</p>
<p>JOHN lay on the ground, and he roared like mad<br/>(For JOHNNY was
sore perplexed),<br/>And he kicked very hard at a very small lad<br/>(Which
<i>I</i> often do, when vexed).</p>
<p>For JOHN was on duty next day with the Force,<br/>To punish all
Epsom crimes;<br/>Young people <i>will</i> cross when they’re
clearing the course<br/>(I do it myself, sometimes).</p>
<p>* * * * * * * *</p>
<p>The Derby Day sun glittered gaily on cads,<br/>On maidens with gamboge
hair,<br/>On sharpers and pickpockets, swindlers and pads,<br/>(For
I, with my harp, was there).</p>
<p>And JIMMY went down with his JANE that day,<br/>And JOHN by the
collar or nape<br/>Seized everybody who came in his way<br/>(And <i>I</i>
had a narrow escape).</p>
<p>He noticed his EMILY JANE with JIM,<br/>And envied the well-made
elf;<br/>And people remarked that he muttered “Oh, dim!”<br/>(I
often say “dim!” myself).</p>
<p>JOHN dogged them all day, without asking their leaves;<br/>For his
sergeant he told, aside,<br/>That JIMMY and JANE were notorious thieves<br/>(And
I think he was justified).</p>
<p>But JAMES wouldn’t dream of abstracting a fork,<br/>And JENNY
would blush with shame<br/>At stealing so much as a bottle or cork<br/>(A
bottle I think fair game).</p>
<p>But, ah! there’s another more serious crime!<br/>They wickedly
strayed upon<br/>The course, at a critical moment of time<br/>(I pointed
them out to JOHN).</p>
<p>The constable fell on the pair in a crack—<br/>And then, with
a demon smile,<br/>Let JENNY cross over, but sent JIMMY back<br/>(I
played on my harp the while).</p>
<p>Stern JOHNNY their agony loud derides<br/>With a very triumphant
sneer—<br/>They weep and they wail from the opposite sides<br/>(And
<i>I</i> shed a silent tear).</p>
<p>And JENNY is crying away like mad,<br/>And JIMMY is swearing hard;<br/>And
JOHNNY is looking uncommonly glad<br/>(And I am a doggerel bard).</p>
<p>But JIMMY he ventured on crossing again<br/>The scenes of our Isthmian
Games—<br/>JOHN caught him, and collared him, giving him pain<br/>(I
felt very much for JAMES).</p>
<p>JOHN led him away with a victor’s hand,<br/>And JIMMY was
shortly seen<br/>In the station-house under the grand Grand Stand<br/>(As
many a time <i>I’ve</i> been).</p>
<p>And JIMMY, bad boy, was imprisoned for life,<br/>Though EMILY pleaded
hard;<br/>And JOHNNY had EMILY JANE to wife<br/>(And I am a doggerel
bard).</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Perils Of Invisibility</h2>
<br/>
<p>OLD PETER led a wretched life—<br/>Old PETER had a furious
wife;<br/>Old PETER too was truly stout,<br/>He measured several yards
about.</p>
<p>The little fairy PICKLEKIN<br/>One summer afternoon looked in,<br/>And
said, “Old PETER, how de do?<br/>Can I do anything for you?</p>
<p>“I have three gifts—the first will give<br/>Unbounded
riches while you live;<br/>The second health where’er you be;<br/>The
third, invisibility.”</p>
<p>“O little fairy PICKLEKIN,”<br/>Old PETER answered with
a grin,<br/>“To hesitate would be absurd,—<br/>Undoubtedly
I choose the third.”</p>
<p>“’Tis yours,” the fairy said; “be quite<br/>Invisible
to mortal sight<br/>Whene’er you please. Remember me<br/>Most
kindly, pray, to MRS. P.”</p>
<p>Old MRS. PETER overheard<br/>Wee PICKLEKIN’S concluding word,<br/>And,
jealous of her girlhood’s choice,<br/>Said, “That was some
young woman’s voice:</p>
<p>Old PETER let her scold and swear—<br/>Old PETER, bless him,
didn’t care.<br/>“My dear, your rage is wasted quite—<br/>Observe,
I disappear from sight!”</p>
<p>A well-bred fairy (so I’ve heard)<br/>Is always faithful to
her word:<br/>Old PETER vanished like a shot,<br/>Put then—<i>his
suit of clothes did not</i>!</p>
<p>For when conferred the fairy slim<br/>Invisibility on <i>him,<br/></i>She
popped away on fairy wings,<br/>Without referring to his “things.”</p>
<p>So there remained a coat of blue,<br/>A vest and double eyeglass
too,<br/>His tail, his shoes, his socks as well,<br/>His pair of—no,
I must not tell.</p>
<p>Old MRS. PETER soon began<br/>To see the failure of his plan,<br/>And
then resolved (I quote the Bard)<br/>To “hoist him with his own
petard.”</p>
<p>Old PETER woke next day and dressed,<br/>Put on his coat, and shoes,
and vest,<br/>His shirt and stock; <i>but could not find<br/>His only
pair of</i>—never mind!</p>
<p>Old PETER was a decent man,<br/>And though he twigged his lady’s
plan,<br/>Yet, hearing her approaching, he<br/>Resumed invisibility.</p>
<p>“Dear MRS. P., my only joy,”<br/>Exclaimed the horrified
old boy,<br/>“Now, give them up, I beg of you—<br/>You
know what I’m referring to!”</p>
<p>But no; the cross old lady swore<br/>She’d keep his—what
I said before—<br/>To make him publicly absurd;<br/>And MRS.
PETER kept her word.</p>
<p>The poor old fellow had no rest;<br/>His coat, his stick, his shoes,
his vest,<br/>Were all that now met mortal eye—<br/>The rest,
invisibility!</p>
<p>“Now, madam, give them up, I beg—<br/>I’ve had
rheumatics in my leg;<br/>Besides, until you do, it’s plain<br/>I
cannot come to sight again!</p>
<p>“For though some mirth it might afford<br/>To see my clothes
without their lord,<br/>Yet there would rise indignant oaths<br/>If
he were seen without his clothes!”</p>
<p>But no; resolved to have her quiz,<br/>The lady held her own—and
his—<br/>And PETER left his humble cot<br/>To find a pair of—you
know what.</p>
<p>But—here’s the worst of the affair—<br/>Whene’er
he came across a pair<br/>Already placed for him to don,<br/>He was
too stout to get them on!</p>
<p>So he resolved at once to train,<br/>And walked and walked with
all his main;<br/>For years he paced this mortal earth,<br/>To bring
himself to decent girth.</p>
<p>At night, when all around is still,<br/>You’ll find him pounding
up a hill;<br/>And shrieking peasants whom he meets,<br/>Fall down
in terror on the peats!</p>
<p>Old PETER walks through wind and rain,<br/>Resolved to train, and
train, and train,<br/>Until he weighs twelve stone’ or so—<br/>And
when he does, I’ll let you know.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Old Paul And Old Tim</h2>
<br/>
<p>When rival adorers come courting a maid,<br/>There’s something
or other may often be said,<br/>Why <i>he</i> should be pitched upon
rather than <i>him.<br/></i>This wasn’t the case with Old PAUL
and Old TIM.</p>
<p>No soul could discover a reason at all<br/>For marrying TIMOTHY
rather than PAUL;<br/>Though all could have offered good reasons, on
oath,<br/>Against marrying either—or marrying both.</p>
<p>They were equally wealthy and equally old,<br/>They were equally
timid and equally bold;<br/>They were equally tall as they stood in
their shoes—<br/>Between them, in fact, there was nothing to
choose.</p>
<p>Had I been young EMILY, I should have said,<br/>“You’re
both much too old for a pretty young maid,<br/>Threescore at the least
you are verging upon”;<br/>But I wasn’t young EMILY.
Let us get on.</p>
<p>No coward’s blood ran in young EMILY’S veins,<br/>Her
martial old father loved bloody campaigns;<br/>At the rumours of battles
all over the globe<br/>He pricked up his ears like the war-horse in
“Job.”</p>
<p>He chuckled to hear of a sudden surprise—<br/>Of soldiers,
compelled, through an enemy’s spies,<br/>Without any knapsacks
or shakos to flee—<br/>For an eminent army-contractor was he.</p>
<p>So when her two lovers, whose patience was tried,<br/>Implored her
between them at once to decide,<br/>She told them she’d marry
whichever might bring<br/>Good proofs of his doing the pluckiest thing.</p>
<p>They both went away with a qualified joy:<br/>That coward, Old PAUL,
chose a very small boy,<br/>And when no one was looking, in spite of
his fears,<br/>He set to work boxing that little boy’s ears.</p>
<p>The little boy struggled and tugged at his hair,<br/>But the lion
was roused, and Old PAUL didn’t care;<br/>He smacked him, and
whacked him, and boxed him, and kicked<br/>Till the poor little beggar
was royally licked.</p>
<p>Old TIM knew a trick worth a dozen of that,<br/>So he called for
his stick and he called for his hat.<br/>“I’ll cover myself
with cheap glory—I’ll go<br/>And wallop the Frenchmen who
live in Soho!</p>
<p>“The German invader is ravaging France<br/>With infantry rifle
and cavalry lance,<br/>And beautiful Paris is fighting her best<br/>To
shake herself free from her terrible guest.</p>
<p>“The Frenchmen in London, in craven alarms,<br/>Have all run
away from the summons to arms;<br/>They haven’t the pluck of
a pigeon—I’ll go<br/>And wallop the Frenchmen who skulk
in Soho!”</p>
<p>Old TIMOTHY tried it and found it succeed:<br/>That day he caused
many French noses to bleed;<br/>Through foggy Soho he spread fear and
dismay,<br/>And Frenchmen all round him in agony lay.</p>
<p>He took care to abstain from employing his fist<br/>On the old and
the crippled, for they might resist;<br/>A crippled old man may have
pluck in his breast,<br/>But the young and the strong ones are cowards
confest.</p>
<p>Old TIM and Old PAUL, with the list of their foes,<br/>Prostrated
themselves at their EMILY’S toes:<br/>“Oh, which of us
two is the pluckier blade?”<br/>And EMILY answered and EMILY
said:</p>
<p>“Old TIM has thrashed runaway Frenchmen in scores,<br/>Who
ought to be guarding their cities and shores;<br/>Old PAUL has made
little chaps’ noses to bleed—<br/>Old PAUL has accomplished
the pluckier deed!”</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Mystic Selvagee</h2>
<br/>
<p>Perhaps already you may know<br/>SIR BLENNERHASSET PORTICO?<br/>A
Captain in the Navy, he—<br/>A Baronet and K.C.B.<br/>You do?
I thought so!<br/>It was that Captain’s favourite whim<br/>(A
notion not confined to him)<br/>That RODNEY was the greatest tar<br/>Who
ever wielded capstan-bar.<br/>He had been taught so.</p>
<p>“BENBOW! CORNWALLIS! HOOD!—Belay!<br/>Compared
with RODNEY”—he would say—<br/>“No other tar
is worth a rap!<br/>The great LORD RODNEY was the chap<br/>The French
to polish!<br/> “Though, mind you, I respect LORD HOOD;<br/>CORNWALLIS,
too, was rather good;<br/>BENBOW could enemies repel,<br/>LORD NELSON,
too, was pretty well—<br/>That is, tol-lol-ish!”</p>
<p>SIR BLENNERHASSET spent his days<br/>In learning RODNEY’S
little ways,<br/>And closely imitated, too,<br/>His mode of talking
to his crew—<br/>His port and paces.<br/>An ancient tar he tried
to catch<br/>Who’d served in RODNEY’S famous batch;<br/>But
since his time long years have fled,<br/>And RODNEY’S tars are
mostly dead:<br/><i>Eheu fugaces</i>!</p>
<p>But after searching near and far,<br/>At last he found an ancient
tar<br/>Who served with RODNEY and his crew<br/>Against the French
in ’Eighty-two,<br/>(That gained the peerage).<br/>He gave him
fifty pounds a year,<br/>His rum, his baccy, and his beer;<br/>And
had a comfortable den<br/>Rigged up in what, by merchantmen,<br/>Is
called the steerage.</p>
<p>“Now, JASPER”—’t was that sailor’s
name—<br/>“Don’t fear that you’ll incur my
blame<br/>By saying, when it seems to you,<br/>That there is anything
I do<br/>That RODNEY wouldn’t.”<br/>The ancient sailor
turned his quid,<br/>Prepared to do as he was bid:<br/>“Ay,
ay, yer honour; to begin,<br/>You’ve done away with ‘swifting
in’—<br/>Well, sir, you shouldn’t!</p>
<p>“Upon your spars I see you’ve clapped<br/>Peak halliard
blocks, all iron-capped.<br/>I would not christen that a crime,<br/>But
’twas not done in RODNEY’S time.<br/>It looks half-witted!<br/>Upon
your maintop-stay, I see,<br/>You always clap a selvagee!<br/>Your
stays, I see, are equalized—<br/>No vessel, such as RODNEY prized,<br/>Would
thus be fitted!</p>
<p>“And RODNEY, honoured sir, would grin<br/>To see you turning
deadeyes in,<br/>Not <i>up</i>, as in the ancient way,<br/>But downwards,
like a cutter’s stay—<br/>You didn’t oughter;<br/>Besides,
in seizing shrouds on board,<br/>Breast backstays you have quite ignored;<br/>Great
RODNEY kept unto the last<br/>Breast backstays on topgallant mast—<br/>They
make it tauter.”</p>
<p>SIR BLENNERHASSET “swifted in,”<br/>Turned deadeyes
up, and lent a fin<br/>To strip (as told by JASPER KNOX)<br/>The iron
capping from his blocks,<br/>Where there was any.<br/>SIR BLENNERHASSET
does away,<br/>With selvagees from maintop-stay;<br/>And though it
makes his sailors stare,<br/>He rigs breast backstays everywhere—<br/>In
fact, too many.</p>
<p>One morning, when the saucy craft<br/>Lay calmed, old JASPER toddled
aft.<br/>“My mind misgives me, sir, that we<br/>Were wrong about
that selvagee—<br/>I should restore it.”<br/>“Good,”
said the Captain, and that day<br/>Restored it to the maintop-stay.<br/>Well-practised
sailors often make<br/>A much more serious mistake,<br/>And then ignore
it.</p>
<p>Next day old JASPER came once more:<br/>“I think, sir, I was
right before.”<br/>Well, up the mast the sailors skipped,<br/>The
selvagee was soon unshipped,<br/>And all were merry.<br/>Again a day,
and JASPER came:<br/>“I p’r’aps deserve your honour’s
blame,<br/>I can’t make up my mind,” said he,<br/>“About
that cursed selvagee—<br/>It’s foolish—very.</p>
<p>“On Monday night I could have sworn<br/>That maintop-stay
it should adorn,<br/>On Tuesday morning I could swear<br/>That selvagee
should not be there.<br/>The knot’s a rasper!”<br/>“Oh,
you be hanged,” said CAPTAIN P.,<br/>“Here, go ashore at
Caribbee.<br/>Get out—good bye—shove off—all right!”<br/>Old
JASPER soon was out of sight—<br/>Farewell, old JASPER!</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Cunning Woman</h2>
<br/>
<p>On all Arcadia’s sunny plain,<br/>On all Arcadia’s hill,<br/>None
were so blithe as BILL and JANE,<br/>So blithe as JANE and BILL.</p>
<p>No social earthquake e’er occurred<br/>To rack their common
mind:<br/>To them a Panic was a word—<br/>A Crisis, empty wind.</p>
<p>No Stock Exchange disturbed the lad<br/>With overwhelming shocks—<br/>BILL
ploughed with all the shares he had,<br/>JANE planted all her stocks.</p>
<p>And learn in what a simple way<br/>Their pleasures they enhanced—<br/>JANE
danced like any lamb all day,<br/>BILL piped as well as danced.</p>
<p>Surrounded by a twittling crew,<br/>Of linnet, lark, and thrush,<br/>BILL
treated his young lady to<br/>This sentimental gush:</p>
<p>“Oh, JANE, how true I am to you!<br/>How true you are to me!<br/>And
how we woo, and how we coo!<br/>So fond a pair are we!</p>
<p>“To think, dear JANE, that anyways.<br/>Your chiefest end
and aim<br/>Is, one of these fine summer days,<br/>To bear my humble
name!”</p>
<p>Quoth JANE, “Well, as you put the case,<br/>I’m true
enough, no doubt,<br/>But then, you see, in this here place<br/>There’s
none to cut you out.</p>
<p>“But, oh! if anybody came—<br/>A Lord or any such—<br/>I
do not think your humble name<br/>Would fascinate me much.</p>
<p>“For though your mates, you often boast.<br/>You distance
out-and-out;<br/>Still, in the abstract, you’re a most<br/>Uncompromising
lout!”</p>
<p>Poor BILL, he gave a heavy sigh,<br/>He tried in vain to speak—<br/>A
fat tear started to each eye<br/>And coursed adown each cheek.</p>
<p>For, oh! right well in truth he knew<br/>That very self-same day,<br/>The
LORD DE JACOB PILLALOO<br/>Was coming there to stay!</p>
<p>The LORD DE JACOB PILLALOO<br/>All proper maidens shun—<br/>He
loves all women, it is true,<br/>But never marries one.</p>
<p>Now JANE, with all her mad self-will,<br/>Was no coquette—oh
no!<br/>She really loved her faithful BILL,<br/>And thus she tuned
her woe:</p>
<p>“Oh, willow, willow, o’er the lea!<br/>And willow once
again!<br/>The Peer will fall in love with me!<br/>Why wasn’t
I made plain?”</p>
<p>* * * * *</p>
<p>A cunning woman lived hard by,<br/>A sorceressing dame,<br/>MACCATACOMB
DE SALMON-EYE<br/>Was her uncommon name.</p>
<p>To her good JANE, with kindly yearn<br/>For BILL’S increasing
pain,<br/>Repaired in secrecy to learn<br/>How best to make her plain.</p>
<p>“Oh, JANE,” the worthy woman said,<br/>“This mystic
phial keep,<br/>And rub its liquor in your head<br/>Before you go
to sleep.</p>
<p>“When you awake next day, I trow,<br/>You’ll look in
form and hue<br/>To others just as you do now—<br/>But not to
PILLALOO!</p>
<p>“When you approach him, you will find<br/>He’ll think
you coarse—unkempt—<br/>And rudely bid you get behind,<br/>With
undisguised contempt.”</p>
<p>The LORD DE PILLALOO arrived<br/>With his expensive train,<br/>And
when in state serenely hived,<br/>He sent for BILL and JANE.</p>
<p>“Oh, spare her, LORD OF PILLALOO!<br/>(Said BILL) if wed you
be,<br/>There’s anything <i>I’d</i> rather do<br/>Than
flirt with LADY P.”</p>
<p>The Lord he gazed in Jenny’s eyes,<br/>He looked her through
and through:<br/>The cunning woman’s prophecies<br/>Were clearly
coming true.</p>
<p>LORD PILLALOO, the Rustic’s Bane<br/>(Bad person he, and proud),<br/><i>He
laughed Ha! ha! at pretty</i> JANE,<br/><i>And sneered at her aloud!</i></p>
<p>He bade her get behind him then,<br/>And seek her mother’s
stye—<br/>Yet to her native countrymen<br/>She was as fair as
aye!</p>
<p>MACCATACOMB, continue green!<br/>Grow, SALMON-EYE, in might,<br/>Except
for you, there might have been<br/>The deuce’s own delight</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Phrenology</h2>
<br/>
<p>“Come, collar this bad man—<br/>Around the throat he
knotted me<br/>Till I to choke began—<br/>In point of fact,
garotted me!”</p>
<p>So spake SIR HERBERT WRITE<br/>To JAMES, Policeman Thirty-two—<br/>All
ruffled with his fight<br/>SIR HERBERT was, and dirty too.</p>
<p>Policeman nothing said<br/>(Though he had much to say on it),<br/>But
from the bad man’s head<br/>He took the cap that lay on it.</p>
<p>“No, great SIR HERBERT WHITE—<br/>Impossible to take
him up.<br/>This man is honest quite—<br/>Wherever did you rake
him up?</p>
<p>“For Burglars, Thieves, and Co.,<br/>Indeed, I’m no
apologist,<br/>But I, some years ago,<br/>Assisted a Phrenologist.</p>
<p>“Observe his various bumps,<br/>His head as I uncover it:<br/>His
morals lie in lumps<br/>All round about and over it.”</p>
<p>“Now take him,” said SIR WHITE,<br/>“Or you will
soon be rueing it;<br/>Bless me! I must be right,—<br/>I
caught the fellow doing it!”</p>
<p>Policeman calmly smiled,<br/>“Indeed you are mistaken, sir,<br/>You’re
agitated—riled—<br/>And very badly shaken, sir.</p>
<p>“Sit down, and I’ll explain<br/>My system of Phrenology,<br/>A
second, please, remain”—<br/>(A second is horology).</p>
<p>Policeman left his beat—<br/>(The Bart., no longer furious,<br/>Sat
down upon a seat,<br/>Observing, “This is curious!”)</p>
<p>“Oh, surely, here are signs<br/>Should soften your rigidity:<br/>This
gentleman combines<br/>Politeness with timidity.</p>
<p>“Of Shyness here’s a lump—<br/>A hole for Animosity—<br/>And
like my fist his bump<br/>Of Impecuniosity.</p>
<p>“Just here the bump appears<br/>Of Innocent Hilarity,<br/>And
just behind his ears<br/>Are Faith, and Hope, and Charity.</p>
<p>He of true Christian ways<br/>As bright example sent us is—<br/>This
maxim he obeys,<br/>‘<i>Sorte tuâ contentus sis</i>.’</p>
<p>“There, let him go his ways,<br/>He needs no stern admonishing.”<br/>The
Bart., in blank amaze,<br/>Exclaimed, “This is astonishing!</p>
<p>“I <i>must</i> have made a mull,<br/>This matter I’ve
been blind in it:<br/>Examine, please, <i>my</i> skull,<br/>And tell
me what you find in it.”</p>
<p>That Crusher looked, and said,<br/>With unimpaired urbanity,<br/>“SIR
HERBERT, you’ve a head<br/>That teems with inhumanity.</p>
<p>“Here’s Murder, Envy, Strife<br/>(Propensity to kill
any),<br/>And Lies as large as life,<br/>And heaps of Social Villany.</p>
<p>“Here’s Love of Bran-New Clothes,<br/>Embezzling—Arson—Deism—<br/>A
taste for Slang and Oaths,<br/>And Fraudulent Trusteeism.</p>
<p>“Here’s Love of Groundless Charge—<br/>Here’s
Malice, too, and Trickery,<br/>Unusually large<br/>Your bump of Pocket-Pickery—”</p>
<p>“Stop!” said the Bart., “my cup<br/>Is full—I’m
worse than him in all;<br/>Policeman, take me up—<br/>No doubt
I am some criminal!”</p>
<p>That Pleeceman’s scorn grew large<br/>(Phrenology had nettled
it),<br/>He took that Bart. in charge—<br/>I don’t know
how they settled it.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Fairy Curate</h2>
<br/>
<p>Once a fairy<br/>Light and airy<br/>Married with a mortal;<br/>Men,
however,<br/>Never, never<br/>Pass the fairy portal.<br/>Slyly stealing,<br/>She
to Ealing<br/>Made a daily journey;<br/>There she found him,<br/>Clients
round him<br/>(He was an attorney).</p>
<p>Long they tarried,<br/>Then they married.<br/>When the ceremony<br/>Once
was ended,<br/>Off they wended<br/>On their moon of honey.<br/>Twelvemonth,
maybe,<br/>Saw a baby<br/>(Friends performed an orgie).<br/>Much
they prized him,<br/>And baptized him<br/>By the name of GEORGIE,</p>
<p>GEORGIE grew up;<br/>Then he flew up<br/>To his fairy mother.<br/>Happy
meeting—<br/>Pleasant greeting—<br/>Kissing one another.<br/>“Choose
a calling<br/>Most enthralling,<br/>I sincerely urge ye.”<br/>“Mother,”
said he<br/>(Rev’rence made he),<br/>“I would join the
clergy.</p>
<p>“Give permission<br/>In addition—<br/>Pa will let me
do it:<br/>There’s a living<br/>In his giving—<br/>He’ll
appoint me to it.<br/>Dreams of coff’ring,<br/>Easter off’ring,<br/>Tithe
and rent and pew-rate,<br/>So inflame me<br/>(Do not blame me),<br/>That
I’ll be a curate.”</p>
<p>She, with pleasure,<br/>Said, “My treasure,<br/>’T
is my wish precisely.<br/>Do your duty,<br/>There’s a beauty;<br/>You
have chosen wisely.<br/>Tell your father<br/>I would rather<br/>As
a churchman rank you.<br/>You, in clover,<br/>I’ll watch over.”<br/>GEORGIE
said, “Oh, thank you!”</p>
<p>GEORGIE scudded,<br/>Went and studied,<br/>Made all preparations,<br/>And
with credit<br/>(Though he said it)<br/>Passed examinations.<br/>(Do
not quarrel<br/>With him, moral,<br/>Scrupulous digestions—<br/>’Twas
his mother,<br/>And no other,<br/>Answered all the questions.)</p>
<p>Time proceeded;<br/>Little needed<br/>GEORGIE admonition:<br/>He,
elated,<br/>Vindicated<br/>Clergyman’s position.<br/>People
round him<br/>Always found him<br/>Plain and unpretending;<br/>Kindly
teaching,<br/>Plainly preaching,<br/>All his money lending.</p>
<p>So the fairy,<br/>Wise and wary,<br/>Felt no sorrow rising—<br/>No
occasion<br/>For persuasion,<br/>Warning, or advising.<br/>He, resuming<br/>Fairy
pluming<br/>(That’s not English, is it?)<br/>Oft would fly up,<br/>To
the sky up,<br/>Pay mamma a visit.</p>
<p>* * * * * * * *</p>
<p>Time progressing,<br/>GEORGIE’S blessing<br/>Grew more Ritualistic—<br/>Popish
scandals,<br/>Tonsures—sandals—<br/>Genuflections mystic;<br/>Gushing
meetings—<br/>Bosom-beatings—<br/>Heavenly ecstatics—<br/>Broidered
spencers—<br/>Copes and censers—<br/>Rochets and dalmatics.</p>
<p>This quandary<br/>Vexed the fairy—<br/>Flew she down to Ealing.<br/>“GEORGIE,
stop it!<br/>Pray you, drop it;<br/>Hark to my appealing:<br/>To
this foolish<br/>Papal rule-ish<br/>Twaddle put an ending;<br/>This
a swerve is<br/>From our Service<br/>Plain and unpretending.”</p>
<p>He, replying,<br/>Answered, sighing,<br/>Hawing, hemming, humming,<br/>“It’s
a pity—<br/>They’re so pritty;<br/>Yet in mode becoming,<br/>Mother
tender,<br/>I’ll surrender—<br/>I’ll be unaffected—”<br/>But
his Bishop<br/>Into <i>his</i> shop<br/>Entered unexpected!</p>
<p>“Who is this, sir,—<br/>Ballet miss, sir?”<br/>Said
the Bishop coldly.<br/>“’T is my mother,<br/>And no other,”<br/>GEORGIE
answered boldly.<br/>“Go along, sir!<br/>You are wrong, sir;<br/>You
have years in plenty,<br/>While this hussy<br/>(Gracious mussy!)<br/>Isn’t
two and twenty!”</p>
<p>(Fairies clever<br/>Never, never<br/>Grow in visage older;<br/>And
the fairy,<br/>All unwary,<br/>Leant upon his shoulder!)<br/>Bishop
grieved him,<br/>Disbelieved him;<br/>GEORGE the point grew warm on;<br/>Changed
religion,<br/>Like a pigeon, <SPAN name="citation12"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote12">{12}</SPAN><br/>And
became a Mormon!</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: The Way Of Wooing</h2>
<br/>
<p>A maiden sat at her window wide,<br/>Pretty enough for a Prince’s
bride,<br/>Yet nobody came to claim her.<br/>She sat like a beautiful
picture there,<br/>With pretty bluebells and roses fair,<br/>And jasmine-leaves
to frame her.<br/>And why she sat there nobody knows;<br/>But this
she sang as she plucked a rose,<br/>The leaves around her strewing:<br/>“I’ve
time to lose and power to choose;<br/>’T is not so much the gallant
who woos,<br/>But the gallant’s <i>way</i> of wooing!”</p>
<p>A lover came riding by awhile,<br/>A wealthy lover was he, whose
smile<br/>Some maids would value greatly—<br/>A formal lover,
who bowed and bent,<br/>With many a high-flown compliment,<br/>And
cold demeanour stately,<br/>“You’ve still,” said
she to her suitor stern,<br/>“The ’prentice-work of your
craft to learn,<br/>If thus you come a-cooing.<br/>I’ve time
to lose and power to choose;<br/>’T is not so much the gallant
who woos,<br/>As the gallant’s <i>way</i> of wooing!”</p>
<p>A second lover came ambling by—<br/>A timid lad with a frightened
eye<br/>And a colour mantling highly.<br/>He muttered the errand on
which he’d come,<br/>Then only chuckled and bit his thumb,<br/>And
simpered, simpered shyly.<br/>“No,” said the maiden, “go
your way;<br/>You dare but think what a man would say,<br/>Yet dare
to come a-suing!<br/>I’ve time to lose and power to choose;<br/>’T
is not so much the gallant who woos,<br/>As the gallant’s <i>way</i>
of wooing!”</p>
<p>A third rode up at a startling pace—<br/>A suitor poor, with
a homely face—<br/>No doubts appeared to bind him.<br/>He kissed
her lips and he pressed her waist,<br/>And off he rode with the maiden,
placed<br/>On a pillion safe behind him.<br/>And she heard the suitor
bold confide<br/>This golden hint to the priest who tied<br/>The knot
there’s no undoing;<br/>With pretty young maidens who can choose,<br/>’Tis
not so much the gallant who woos,<br/>As the gallant’s <i>way</i>
of wooing!”</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Hongree And Mahry. A Recollection Of A Surrey Melodrama</h2>
<br/>
<p>The sun was setting in its wonted west,<br/>When HONGREE, Sub-Lieutenant
of Chassoores,<br/>Met MAHRY DAUBIGNY, the Village Rose,<br/>Under
the Wizard’s Oak—old trysting-place<br/>Of those who loved
in rosy Aquitaine.</p>
<p>They thought themselves unwatched, but they were not;<br/>For HONGREE,
Sub-Lieutenant of Chassoores,<br/>Found in LIEUTENANT-COLONEL JOOLES
DUBOSC<br/>A rival, envious and unscrupulous,<br/>Who thought it not
foul scorn to dodge his steps,<br/>And listen, unperceived, to all
that passed<br/>Between the simple little Village Rose<br/>And HONGREE,
Sub-Lieutenant of Chassoores.</p>
<p>A clumsy barrack-bully was DUBOSC,<br/>Quite unfamiliar with the
well-bred tact<br/>That animates a proper gentleman<br/>In dealing
with a girl of humble rank.<br/>You’ll understand his coarseness
when I say<br/>He would have married MAHRY DAUBIGNY,<br/>And dragged
the unsophisticated girl<br/>Into the whirl of fashionable life,<br/>For
which her singularly rustic ways,<br/>Her breeding (moral, but extremely
rude),<br/>Her language (chaste, but ungrammatical),<br/>Would absolutely
have unfitted her.<br/>How different to this unreflecting boor<br/>Was
HONGREE, Sub-Lieutenant of Chassoores.</p>
<p>Contemporary with the incident<br/>Related in our opening paragraph,<br/>Was
that sad war ’twixt Gallia and ourselves<br/>That followed on
the treaty signed at Troyes;<br/>And so LIEUTENANT-COLONEL JOOLES DUBOSC<br/>(Brave
soldier, he, with all his faults of style)<br/>And HONGREE, Sub-Lieutenant
of Chassoores,<br/>Were sent by CHARLES of France against the lines<br/>Of
our Sixth HENRY (Fourteen twenty-nine),<br/>To drive his legions out
of Aquitaine.</p>
<p>When HONGREE, Sub-Lieutenant of Chassoores,<br/>Returned, suspecting
nothing, to his camp,<br/>After his meeting with the Village Rose,<br/>He
found inside his barrack letter-box<br/>A note from the commanding
officer,<br/>Requiring his attendance at head-quarters.<br/>He went,
and found LIEUTENANT-COLONEL JOOLES.</p>
<p>“Young HONGREE, Sub-Lieutenant of Chassoores,<br/>This night
we shall attack the English camp:<br/>Be the ‘forlorn hope’
yours—you’ll lead it, sir,<br/>And lead it too with credit,
I’ve no doubt.<br/>As every man must certainly be killed<br/>(For
you are twenty ’gainst two thousand men),<br/>It is not likely
that you will return.<br/>But what of that? you’ll have the benefit<br/>Of
knowing that you die a soldier’s death.”</p>
<p>Obedience was young HONGREE’S strongest point,<br/>But he
imagined that he only owed<br/>Allegiance to his MAHRY and his King.<br/>“If
MAHRY bade me lead these fated men,<br/>I’d lead them—but
I do not think she would.<br/>If CHARLES, my King, said, ‘Go,
my son, and die,’<br/>I’d go, of course—my duty would
be clear.<br/>But MAHRY is in bed asleep, I hope,<br/>And CHARLES,
my King, a hundred leagues from this.<br/>As for LIEUTENANT-COLONEL
JOOLES DUBOSC,<br/>How know I that our monarch would approve<br/>The
order he has given me to-night?<br/>My King I’ve sworn in all
things to obey—<br/>I’ll only take my orders from my King!”<br/>Thus
HONGREE, Sub-Lieutenant of Chassoores,<br/>Interpreted the terms of
his commission.</p>
<p>And HONGREE, who was wise as he was good,<br/>Disguised himself
that night in ample cloak,<br/>Round flapping hat, and vizor mask of
black,<br/>And made, unnoticed, for the English camp.<br/>He passed
the unsuspecting sentinels<br/>(Who little thought a man in this disguise<br/>Could
be a proper object of suspicion),<br/>And ere the curfew bell had boomed
“lights out,”<br/>He found in audience Bedford’s
haughty Duke.</p>
<p>“Your Grace,” he said, “start not—be not
alarmed,<br/>Although a Frenchman stands before your eyes.<br/>I’m
HONGREE, Sub-Lieutenant of Chassoores.<br/>My Colonel will attack your
camp to-night,<br/>And orders me to lead the hope forlorn.<br/>Now
I am sure our excellent KING CHARLES<br/>Would not approve of this;
but he’s away<br/>A hundred leagues, and rather more than that.<br/>So,
utterly devoted to my King,<br/>Blinded by my attachment to the throne,<br/>And
having but its interest at heart,<br/>I feel it is my duty to disclose<br/>All
schemes that emanate from COLONEL JOOLES,<br/>If I believe that they
are not the kind<br/>Of schemes that our good monarch would approve.”</p>
<p>“But how,” said Bedford’s Duke, “do you propose<br/>That
we should overthrow your Colonel’s scheme?”<br/>And HONGREE,
Sub-Lieutenant of Chassoores,<br/>Replied at once with never-failing
tact:<br/>“Oh, sir, I know this cursed country well.<br/>Entrust
yourself and all your host to me;<br/>I’ll lead you safely by
a secret path<br/>Into the heart of COLONEL JOOLES’ array,<br/>And
you can then attack them unprepared,<br/>And slay my fellow-countrymen
unarmed.”</p>
<p>The thing was done. The DUKE of BEDFORD gave<br/>The order,
and two thousand fighting men<br/>Crept silently into the Gallic camp,<br/>And
slew the Frenchmen as they lay asleep;<br/>And Bedford’s haughty
Duke slew COLONEL JOOLES,<br/>And gave fair MAHRY, pride of Aquitaine,<br/>To
HONGREE, Sub-Lieutenant of Chassoores.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Ballad: Etiquette</h2>
<br/>
<p>The<i> Ballyshannon</i> foundered off the coast of Cariboo,<br/>And
down in fathoms many went the captain and the crew;<br/>Down went the
owners—greedy men whom hope of gain allured:<br/>Oh, dry the
starting tear, for they were heavily insured.</p>
<p>Besides the captain and the mate, the owners and the crew,<br/>The
passengers were also drowned excepting only two:<br/>Young PETER GRAY,
who tasted teas for BAKER, CROOP, AND CO.,<br/>And SOMERS, who from
Eastern shores imported indigo.</p>
<p>These passengers, by reason of their clinging to a mast,<br/>Upon
a desert island were eventually cast.<br/>They hunted for their meals,
as ALEXANDER SELKIRK used,<br/>But they couldn’t chat together—they
had not been introduced.</p>
<p>For PETER GRAY, and SOMERS too, though certainly in trade,<br/>Were
properly particular about the friends they made;<br/>And somehow thus
they settled it without a word of mouth—<br/>That GRAY should
take the northern half, while SOMERS took the south.</p>
<p>On PETER’S portion oysters grew—a delicacy rare,<br/>But
oysters were a delicacy PETER couldn’t bear.<br/>On SOMERS’
side was turtle, on the shingle lying thick,<br/>Which SOMERS couldn’t
eat, because it always made him sick.</p>
<p>GRAY gnashed his teeth with envy as he saw a mighty store<br/>Of
turtle unmolested on his fellow-creature’s shore.<br/>The oysters
at his feet aside impatiently he shoved,<br/>For turtle and his mother
were the only things he loved.</p>
<p>And SOMERS sighed in sorrow as he settled in the south,<br/>For
the thought of PETER’S oysters brought the water to his mouth.<br/>He
longed to lay him down upon the shelly bed, and stuff:<br/>He had often
eaten oysters, but had never had enough.</p>
<p>How they wished an introduction to each other they had had<br/>When
on board the <i>Ballyshannon</i>! And it drove them nearly mad<br/>To
think how very friendly with each other they might get,<br/>If it wasn’t
for the arbitrary rule of etiquette!</p>
<p>One day, when out a-hunting for the <i>mus ridiculus,<br/></i>GRAY
overheard his fellow-man soliloquizing thus:<br/>“I wonder how
the playmates of my youth are getting on,<br/>M’CONNELL, S. B.
WALTERS, PADDY BYLES, and ROBINSON?”</p>
<p>These simple words made PETER as delighted as could be,<br/>Old
chummies at the Charterhouse were ROBINSON and he!<br/>He walked straight
up to SOMERS, then he turned extremely red,<br/>Hesitated, hummed and
hawed a bit, then cleared his throat, and said:</p>
<p>I beg your pardon—pray forgive me if I seem too bold,<br/>But
you have breathed a name I knew familiarly of old.<br/>You spoke aloud
of ROBINSON—I happened to be by.<br/>You know him?”
“Yes, extremely well.” “Allow me, so do I.”</p>
<p>It was enough: they felt they could more pleasantly get on,<br/>For
(ah, the magic of the fact!) they each knew ROBINSON!<br/>And Mr. SOMERS’
turtle was at PETER’S service quite,<br/>And Mr. SOMERS punished
PETER’S oyster-beds all night.</p>
<p>They soon became like brothers from community of wrongs:<br/>They
wrote each other little odes and sang each other songs;<br/>They told
each other anecdotes disparaging their wives;<br/>On several occasions,
too, they saved each other’s lives.</p>
<p>They felt quite melancholy when they parted for the night,<br/>And
got up in the morning soon as ever it was light;<br/>Each other’s
pleasant company they reckoned so upon,<br/>And all because it happened
that they both knew ROBINSON!</p>
<p>They lived for many years on that inhospitable shore,<br/>And day
by day they learned to love each other more and more.<br/>At last,
to their astonishment, on getting up one day,<br/>They saw a frigate
anchored in the offing of the bay.</p>
<p>To PETER an idea occurred. “Suppose we cross the main?<br/>So
good an opportunity may not be found again.”<br/>And SOMERS thought
a minute, then ejaculated, “Done!<br/>I wonder how my business
in the City’s getting on?”</p>
<p>“But stay,” said Mr. PETER: “when in England, as
you know,<br/>I earned a living tasting teas for BAKER, CROOP, AND
CO.,<br/>I may be superseded—my employers think me dead!”<br/>“Then
come with me,” said SOMERS, “and taste indigo instead.”</p>
<p>But all their plans were scattered in a moment when they found<br/>The
vessel was a convict ship from Portland, outward bound;<br/>When a
boat came off to fetch them, though they felt it very kind,<br/>To
go on board they firmly but respectfully declined.</p>
<p>As both the happy settlers roared with laughter at the joke,<br/>They
recognized a gentlemanly fellow pulling stroke:<br/>’Twas ROBINSON—a
convict, in an unbecoming frock!<br/>Condemned to seven years for misappropriating
stock!!!</p>
<p>They laughed no more, for SOMERS thought he had been rather rash<br/>In
knowing one whose friend had misappropriated cash;<br/>And PETER thought
a foolish tack he must have gone upon<br/>In making the acquaintance
of a friend of ROBINSON.</p>
<p>At first they didn’t quarrel very openly, I’ve heard;<br/>They
nodded when they met, and now and then exchanged a word:<br/>The word
grew rare, and rarer still the nodding of the head,<br/>And when they
meet each other now, they cut each other dead.</p>
<p>To allocate the island they agreed by word of mouth,<br/>And PETER
takes the north again, and SOMERS takes the south;<br/>And PETER has
the oysters, which he hates, in layers thick,<br/>And SOMERS has the
turtle—turtle always makes him sick.</p>
<br/>
<h2>Foonotes:</h2>
<p><SPAN name="footnote1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation1">{1}</SPAN> “Go
with me to a Notary—seal me there<br/>Your single bond.”—<i>Merchant
of Venice</i>, Act I., sc. 3.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation2">{2}</SPAN> “And
there shall she, at Friar Lawrence’ cell,<br/>Be shrived and
married.”—<i>Romeo and Juliet</i>, Act II., sc. 4.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote3"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation3">{3}</SPAN> “And
give the fasting horses provender.”—<i>Henry the Fifth</i>,
Act IV., sc. 2.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation4">{4}</SPAN> “Let
us, like merchants, show our foulest wares.”—<i>Troilus
and Cressida</i>, Act I., sc. 3.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote5"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation5">{5}</SPAN> “Then
must the Jew be merciful.”—<i>Merchant of Venice</i>, Act
IV., sc. 1.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote6"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation6">{6}</SPAN> “The
spring, the summer,<br/>The chilling autumn, angry winter, change<br/>Their
wonted liveries.”—<i>Midsummer Night Dream</i>, Act IV.,
sc. 1.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote7"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation7">{7}</SPAN> “In
the county of Glo’ster, justice of the peace and <i>coram</i>.”<br/><i>Merry
Wives of Windsor</i>, Act I., sc. 1.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote8"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation8">{8}</SPAN> “What
lusty trumpet thus doth summon us?”—<i>King John</i>, Act
V., sc. 2.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote9"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation9">{9}</SPAN> “And
I’ll provide his executioner.”—<i>Henry the Sixth</i>
(Second Part), Act III., sc. 1.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote10"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation10">{10}</SPAN> “The
lioness had torn some flesh away,<br/>Which all this while had bled.”—<i>As
You Like It</i>, Act IV., sc. 3.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote11"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation11">{11}</SPAN> Described
by MUNGO PARK.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote12"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation12">{12}</SPAN> “Like
a bird.”—<i>Slang expression.</i></p>
<br/>
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