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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13313 ***
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOLUME 100.
+
+
+
+May 9, 1891.
+
+
+
+
+A FIRST VISIT TO THE "NAVERIES."
+
+"Shiver my timbers!" said the Scribe.
+
+"Haul down my yard-arm with a marling-spike!" cried the Artist.
+
+And with these strictly nautical expressions, two of _Mr. Punch's_
+Own entered the Royal Naval Exhibition, which now occupies the larger
+portion of the grounds of the Military Hospital, Chelsea. That so
+popular a show should be allowed to occupy so large a site speaks
+wonders for the amiability of the British Public. When the Sodgeries
+appeared last year, it was, so to speak, with fear and trembling that
+"the powers that were" appropriated a little of the ground usually
+over-run by the Nobility and Gentry of the Pimlico Road and its
+vicinity; or, rather, by their haughty offspring. This year the tough
+old sea-dogs of the Admiralty have had no hesitation in taking
+what they required, apparently without causing comment, much less
+objection. And the result? In lieu of the dusty arena of 1890,
+scarcely large enough for a ladies' cricket-match, there appears in
+1891 an enclosure containing lakes and lighthouses, panoramas, and
+full-size models of men-of-war! And the Public take their exclusion
+philosophically, either paying their shillings at the door, or
+attempting to get a view of the hoofs of the nautical horses through
+the gaps in the surrounding hoardings.
+
+The Scribe and the Artist, having been ordered by He Who Must Be
+Obeyed in the world generally, and at 85, Fleet Street, in particular,
+to make a sort of preliminary cruise through the wonders of the
+(Admiralty) Deep, hastened from the inviting grounds into the main
+building, with its pictures, its plans, and last, but (it is only
+just to say) least, its pickles. The first object that attracted their
+favourable attention was a trophy of arms, representing the fashions
+of the past and the present. On one side were shrapnel and magazine
+rifles, on the other flint-locks and the ordnance of an age long gone
+by. Next they passed through the Arctic section, wherein they found
+dummies drawing a sledge through the canvas snow of a corded-off North
+Pole. Then they entered the Picture Galleries called after NELSON and
+BENBOW, wherein magnificent paintings by POWELL, full of smoke and
+action, served as an appropriate background to the collection of
+plate, lent by that gallant sailor-warrior and industrious collector
+of well-considered trifles, H.R.H. the Duke of EDINBURGH. They glanced
+at the relics of Trafalgar, and then hurried away to the HOWE Gallery,
+which, containing as it did specimens of the implements used in
+the game of golf, might have as appropriately been christened the
+WHEREFORE. Next they skirted a corridor full of plans, and here they
+discovered that the Committee of the Exhibition must be wags, every
+Jack Tar of them! This corridor was close to the Dining-rooms, and the
+Committee (ha! ha! ha!) had called it (he! he! he!) after COOK! (Ho!
+ho! ho!) Oh, the wit of it! How the Members of the Executive must have
+nudged one another in the ribs as the quaint idea dawned upon them!
+And how they must have laughed, too, on the Opening Day, when the
+Guard of Honour, presenting arms, and the "Greenwich Boys" singing
+"_Ye Mariners of England_," were drenched in the rain! And what a
+capital notion it was on that occasion to put "the Representatives of
+the Fourth Estate" (no doubt called by _them_, with many a sly twinkle
+of the eye, "the Press Gang") into a pen that soon, thanks to a series
+of water-spouts, assumed the appearance of a tank!
+
+After leaving the Galleries, the Scribe and the Artist looked up at
+the model of Eddystone Lighthouse, and entered a shed declared to be
+an "Arctic Scene." Here they were reminded by the introduced ship
+of those happy days of their boyhood spent in the toy-shops of the
+Lowther Arcade. Next they visited the Panorama of Trafalgar, and
+revelled in the carnage of a sea-fight that only required Margate in
+the distance to be entirely convincing. They glanced at the arena, and
+gazed with awe at the lake which is to be devoted to the manoeuvring
+of miniature ironclads. It will be interesting to note whether these
+mimic combats will hold their own in the coming season against the
+introduction of capsized clowns, drenched old women, and comic police.
+Keeping the best for the last, the Scribe and the Artist now entered
+the model of the _Victory_--a really admirable exhibition. There they
+saw before them the old battle-ship with its full equipment, as it
+was in the days of NELSON--when that deathless hero expected every
+Englishman (not excluding even those passing the Custom House--as
+the Committee would say) "to _do_ his duty." To make the illusion
+complete, the great sea-captain was observed dying in the cook-pit in
+the agonies of wax. And to think that this work was executed by a firm
+of house-decorators! Why, who would not, after this, have his back
+drawing-room converted into the quarter-deck of the _Shannon_, and his
+spare bed-room into a tiny reproduction of the Battle of Copenhagen!
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Punch's Representatives, after partaking of
+Chelsea Hospitality (_a purely fancy sketch_).]
+
+The Scribe and the Artist, on their visit, were invited by all sorts
+and conditions of men to partake of champagne. The moment it was
+discovered that they were "connected with the Press," the offerers
+of hospitality were absolutely overwhelming. But, obeying the best
+traditions of their order, they sternly, but courteously, refused all
+refreshment. It is fortunate they pursued this course, for had they
+received the entirely disinterested kindness of their would-be hosts,
+their recollections of the marvels of the Royal Naval Exhibition would
+no doubt have been of the haziest character imaginable. As it was,
+they were able to take their departure through the main entrance
+with some show of dignity, and not in a less imposing manner (as the
+Committee--_Cook's_ Gallery near the Dining-rooms--ho! ho! ho! ha! ha!
+ha!--would probably and amusingly suggest), by Tite Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AMONG THE IMMORTALS.
+
+Mr. PUNCH would be failing in his duty to Art and the British
+Public if he did not place on imperishable record his notes of the
+exceptionally brilliant Royal Academy Banquet of last Saturday. H.R.H.
+the Prince of WALES made one of his best and briefest speeches, in
+which he feelingly alluded to the late Sir EDGAR BOËHM, R.A. Never
+was the President, Sir FREDERICK, more eloquent, or his themes more
+varied; for this occasion is noteworthy as being the first time in the
+history of this great annual representative gathering that the toast
+of Music and the Drama has been duly honoured. Sir ARTHUR SULLIVAN
+responded for the first, and HENRY IRVING for the second. Both made
+excellent speeches. Sir ARTHUR'S solo was most effective; his notes
+were in his head; he gave us several variations on the original
+theme, and cleverly played upon one word in saying that music had been
+"instrumental" on various historical occasions. HENRY IRVING followed
+suit; he spoke of Mrs. SIDDONS, Sir JOSHUA REYNOLDS, and of a
+professional gentleman, one ROSCIUS, mentioned, we believe, by
+_Hamlet_ as having been, some considerable time ago, "a man of parts,"
+that is an Actor, in Rome. It was a great success. Sir FREDERICK then
+proposed the LORD MAYOR, which may be briefly expressed as "a toast
+with a Savory to follow." For "The Visitors," Lord Justice BOWEN,
+catching sight of the President's classical picture (No. 232), made a
+happy hit about the delights of a honeymoon in the Infernal Regions,
+ending in the return of Proserpine to her mother Ceres by order of the
+Court above. Finally, the President, in summing up the losses to Art
+during the past year, paid a graceful tribute to the memory of CHARLES
+KEENE, who, but a short while ago, was our fellow-worker on the staff
+of _Mr. Punch_ With a hopeful allusion to the Storage of Artistic
+Force in the near future, the President concluded: but this Banquet of
+1891 will long live in the recollection of all whose privilege it was
+to be present on so memorable an occasion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MUSICAL NOTES.
+
+I SAY! YSAYE! _Why say?_ Why _not_ say that YSAYE is a grand Yolinist,
+since he is this; and, as 'ARRY would observe, "No error!" and whoever
+says the contrary, is not speaking the absolute truth, but "_Ysaye
+Worsay_." The Yolinist had the advantage of the co-operation of a fine
+Orchestra, under the Magic Wand of Conductor COWEN.
+
+On the 27th, Heard young JEAN GERARDY, Little boy, but player hardy,
+Not the slightest Lardy-Dardy, Not yet out of care of "Guardy," Heard
+him _Lundi_, not on _Mardi_. But, whene'er he plays, your Bardy,
+Always spry, and never tardy, Will again hear JEAN GERARDY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GENERAL SUMMARY OF CARICATURES OF MR. GLADSTONE.--"Collarable
+Imitations."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FASHION'S FLORALIA: OR, THE URBAN QUEEN OF
+THE MAY.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FASHION'S FLORALIA;
+
+OR, THE URBAN QUEEN OF THE MAY.
+
+(_A Song of the Season, a very long way after Herrick_.)
+
+ "London town is another affair
+ Since HERRICK wrote his perfect rhymes."
+
+MORTIMER COLLINS.
+
+ True, sadly true, shaper of rattling rhymes,
+ London hath changed with process of the times.
+ Aurora now may "throw her faire
+ Fresh-quilted colours through the aire,"
+ But our conditions atmospheric
+ Are not as in the days of HERRICK.
+ Nathless the Muse to-day may see
+ Flora at urban revelry.
+ See how the goddess trippeth from the West,
+ Fragrant, though something fashionably drest;
+ The Season waketh at her tread,
+ Art lifteth a long-drooping head;
+ Music doth make a merry din.
+ 'Tis profanation, keeping in,
+ Whenas a hundred Shows upon this day
+ Spring, lightly as the lark to fetch in May.
+
+ Rise, Nymph, put on fresh finery, and be seen,
+ To come forth like the Spring-time, fresh and green!
+ And gay as Flora. Art is there,
+ With flowing hyacinthine hair.
+ Fear not, the throng will strew
+ Largess abundant upon _you_,
+ When Burlington's great Opening Day is kept.
+ Gone is thy Grosvenor rival, not unwept;
+ But a New Nymph, with footing light,
+ Trips it beside thee, nor hath night
+ Shadowed sweet "Aquarelle" whose skill,
+ As of a Water-Nymph, is still
+ Well to the fore. Pipe up! playing means paying,
+ When Fashion's Urban Flora goes a-Maying.
+
+ Come, my CORINNA, come; and, coming, mark
+ How each street turns a grove, each square a park,
+ Made green and trimmed with trees: see how
+ The pinky hawthorn decks the bough!
+ Each Bond Street porch, or door, ere this
+ Of Art a Tabernacle is;
+ Nor Art alone. With May is interwove
+ Seaweed, which Neptune's favourites love.
+ SWINBURNE should sing in stanzas fleet,
+ How NELSON may, at Chelsea, meet
+ ARMSTRONG! Sound conch-shell! Let's obey
+ Thy Proclamation made for May.
+ Wild marine whiffs from the salt sea are straying,
+ And the brine greets us as we go a-Maying.
+
+ There's not a London-Teuton but this day
+ Hath a new welcome for the English May.
+ Germania from her distant home
+ In Flora's train this year doth come.
+ She hath despatched her country's cream
+ Of things, to make the Cockney dream.
+ Neptune and she have wooed and plighted troth,
+ And her we give May-welcome, nothing loth,
+ As many a welcome we have given
+ To France, Spain, Italy! War hath riven
+ Many true hearts, but we're content
+ Of Peace to make experiment.
+ Blow Teuton horn--(not like "_Hernani's_" braying!)--
+ It makes new music as we go a-Maying!
+
+ Come, let us go, while May is in its prime,
+ And make the best of the brief Season's time.
+ HERRICK'S CORINNA might not see
+ An Urban May Queen such as we
+ Behold disport in our rare sun.
+ Rouse, Nymph! The Season is begun!
+ We'll trust no blizzard, and no boreal rain
+ May mar "Our Opening Day." Sound flutes again!
+ Pipe, Sir FREDERICK! Ah, well played!
+ Tootle thy new strains, fair Maid.
+ Blow, oh Briny One, with might!
+ Teuton BRUNEHILD, glad our sight!
+ Fashion's Floralia, Nymph, invite our straying;
+ Come, my CORINNA, come; let's go a-Maying!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THINGS ONE WOULD RATHER HAVE LEFT
+UNSAID.
+
+_Painter_. "WOULD YOU BELIEVE IT? THIS IS THE PICTURE THEY'VE THOUGHT
+PROPER TO REJECT! I'LL BE SO BOLD AS TO SAY, THERE ARE NOT TWENTY
+BETTER IN THE WHOLE EXHIBITION!"
+
+_Friend_. "DEAR ME! IS IT SUCH A POOR ACADEMY AS THAT?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HUMOUR O'T!
+
+(_Namely of Parliament, as seen through Harry Furniss's fancy._)
+
+AIR--"_The Wooing o't._"
+
+ LIKA JOKO makes us laugh,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ With caricature and caustic chaff;
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ Parliament strikes some as slow,
+ LIKA JOKO deems not so;
+ Visit _his_ St. Stephen's Show!
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ GLADSTONE stern and GLADSTONE staid,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ GLADSTONE in war-paint arrayed,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ GLADSTONE "Out" and GLADSTONE "In,"
+ GLADSTONE with colossal chin,
+ Giant collars plunged within,
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ SMITH with bland perennial smile,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ BALFOUR, pet of the Green Isle,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ HARCOURT, big as Babel's tower,
+ GOSCHEN, with myopic glower,
+ JOSEPH of the orchid-flower.
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ How they muster, how they "tell,"
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ Woes of the Division Bell,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ _All_--from Prayers to "Who goes Home?"
+ O'er St. Stephens you may roam;
+ LIKA JOKO bids you. Come!
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ LIKA JOKO is a wag,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ All the tricks are in his bag,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ He can mimic, he can mime,
+ Draw, and act, and--what is prime--
+ _Keep you laughing all the time._
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Why doesn't some Musical Photographic Artist of Scotch Nationality
+compose a March for his fellow Professors and Practisers, and call it
+"_The March of the Camera Men_"? Sure to be popular.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN UN-"COMMON" GOOD HORSE.--The Winner of this Year's Two Thousand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. PUNCH'S POCKET IBSEN.
+
+(_Condensed and Revised Version by Mr. P.'s Own Harmless Ibsenite._)
+
+No. III.--HEDDA GABLER.
+
+ACT. III.
+
+SCENE.--_The same Room, but--it being evening--darker than ever--The
+crape curtains are drawn. A Servant, with black ribbons in her cap,
+and red eyes, comes in and lights the gas quietly and carefully.
+Chords are heard on the piano in the back Drawing-room. Presently_
+HEDDA _comes in and looks out into the darkness. A short pause. Enter_
+GEORGE TESMAN.
+
+_George_. I am _so_ uneasy about poor LÖVBORG. Fancy! he is not at
+home. Mrs. ELVSTED told me he had been here early this morning, so I
+suppose you gave him back his manuscript, eh?
+
+_Hedda_ (_cold and immovable, supported by arm-chair_). No, I put it
+on the fire instead.
+
+_George_. On the fire! LÖVBORG'S wonderful new book that he read to
+me at BRACK'S party, when we had that wild revelry last night! Fancy
+_that!_ But, I say, HEDDA--isn't that _rather_--eh? _Too_ bad, you
+know--really. A great work like that. How on earth did you come to
+think of it?
+
+_Hedda_ (_suppressing an almost imperceptible smile_). Well, dear
+GEORGE, you gave me a tolerably strong hint.
+
+_George_. Me? Well, to be sure--that _is_ a joke! Why, I only said
+that I envied him for writing such a book, and it would put me
+entirely in the shade if it came out, and if anything was to happen to
+it, I should never forgive myself, as poor LÖVBORG couldn't write it
+all over again, and so we must take the greatest care of it! And then
+I left it on a chair and went away--that was all! And you went and
+burnt the book all up! Bless me, who _would_ have expected it?
+
+_Hedda_. Nobody, you dear simple old soul! But I did it for your
+sake--it was _love_, GEORGE!
+
+_George_ (_in an outburst between doubt and joy_). HEDDA, you don't
+mean that! Your love takes such queer forms sometimes, Yes, but
+yes--(_laughing in excess of joy_), why, you _must_ be fond of me!
+Just think of that now! Well, you _are_ fun, HEDDA! Look here, I must
+just run and tell the housemaid that--she will enjoy the joke so, eh?
+
+_Hedda_ (_coldly, in self-command_). It is surely not necessary, even
+for a clever Norwegian man of letters in a realistic social drama, to
+make quite such a fool of himself as all that?
+
+_George_. No, that's true too. Perhaps we'd better keep it
+quiet--though I _must_ tell Aunt JULIE--it will make her so happy to
+hear that you burnt a manuscript on my account! And, besides, I should
+like to ask her whether that's a usual thing with young wives. (_Looks
+uneasy and pensive again._) But poor old EJLERT'S manuscript! Oh Lor,
+you know! Well, well! [Mrs. ELVSTED _comes in_.
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, please, I'm so uneasy about dear Mr. LÖVBORG. Something
+has happened to him, I'm sure!
+
+_Judge Brack_ (_comes in from the hall, with a new hat in his hand_).
+You have guessed it, first time. Something _has!_
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, dear, good gracious! What is it? Something distressing,
+I'm certain of it! [_d._
+
+_Brack_ (_pleasantly_). That depends on how one takes it. He has shot
+himself, and is in a hospital now, that's all!
+
+_George_ (_sympathetically_). That's sad, eh? poor old LÖVBORG! Well,
+I _am_ cut up to hear that. Fancy, though, eh?
+
+_Hedda_. Was it through the temple, or through the breast? The breast?
+Well, one can do it beautifully through the breast, too. Do you know,
+as an advanced woman, I like an act of that sort--it's so positive, to
+have the courage to settle the account with himself--it's beautiful,
+really!
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, HEDDA, what an odd way to look at it! But never mind
+poor dear Mr. LÖVBORG now. What _we've_ got to do is to see if we
+can't put his wonderful manuscript, that he said he had torn to
+pieces, together again. (_Takes a bundle of small pages out of the
+pocket of her mantle._) There are the loose scraps he dictated it to
+me from. I hid them on the chance of some such emergency. And if
+dear Mr. TESMAN and I were to put our heads together, I _do_ think
+something might come of it.
+
+_George_. Fancy! I will dedicate my life--or all I can spare of it--to
+the task. I seem to feel I owe him some slight amends, perhaps. No use
+crying over spilt milk, eh, Mrs. ELVSTED? We'll sit down--just you and
+I--in the back drawing-room, and see if you can't inspire me as you
+did him, eh?
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, goodness, yes! I should like it--if it only might be
+possible!
+
+[GEORGE _and_ Mrs. E. _go into the back Drawing-room and
+become absorbed in eager conversation_; HEDDA _sits in a chair in the
+front room, and a little later_ BRACK _crosses over to her._
+
+_Hedda_ (_in a low tone_). Oh, Judge, _what_ a relief to know that
+everything--including LÖVBORG'S pistol--went off so well! In the
+breast! Isn't there a veil of unintentional beauty in that? Such an
+act of voluntary courage, too!
+
+_Brack_ (_smiles_). Hm!--perhaps, dear Mrs. HEDDA--
+
+_Hedda_ (_enthusiastically_). But _wasn't_ it sweet of him! To have
+the courage to live his own life after his own fashion--to break away
+from the banquet of life--_so_ early and _so_ drunk! A beautiful act
+like that _does_ appeal to a superior woman's imagination!
+
+_Brack_. Sorry to shatter your poetical illusions, little Mrs. HEDDA,
+but, as a matter of fact, our lamented friend met his end under other
+circumstances. The shot did _not_ strike him in the _breast_--but--
+[_Pauses._
+
+_Hedda_ (_excitedly_). General GABLER'S pistols! I might have known
+it! Did they _ever_ shoot straight? Where _was_ he hit, then?
+
+_Brack_ (_in a discreet undertone_). A little lower down!
+
+_Hedda_. Oh, _how_ disgusting!--how vulgar!--how ridiculous!--like
+everything else about me!
+
+_Brack_. Yes, we're realistic types of human nature, and all that--but
+a trifle squalid, perhaps. And why did you give LÖVBORG your pistol,
+when it was certain to be traced by the police? For a charming
+cold-blooded woman with a clear head and no scruples, wasn't it just a
+leetle foolish?
+
+_Hedda_. Perhaps; but I wanted him to do it beautifully, and he
+didn't! Oh, I've just admitted that I _did_ give him the pistol--how
+annoyingly unwise of me! Now I'm in _your_ power, I suppose?
+
+_Brack_. Precisely--for some reason it's not easy to understand.
+But it's inevitable, and you know how you dread anything approaching
+scandal. All your past proceedings show that. (_To_ GEORGE _and_ Mrs.
+E., _who come in together from the back-room._) Well, how are you
+getting on with the reconstruction of poor LÖVBORG'S great work, eh?
+
+[Illustration: "What! the accounts of all those everlasting
+bores settled?"]
+
+_George_. Capitally; we've made out the first two parts already. And
+really, HEDDA, I do believe Mrs. ELVSTED _is_ inspiring me; I begin to
+feel it coming on. Fancy that!
+
+_Mrs. E._ Yes, goodness! HEDDA, _won't_ it be lovely if I can. I mean
+to try _so_ hard!
+
+_Hedda_. Do, you dear little silly rabbit; and while you are trying I
+will go into the back drawing-room and lie down.
+
+[_She goes into the back-room and draws the curtains. Short pause.
+Suddenly she is heard playing_ "The Bogie Man" _within on the piano._
+
+_George_. But, dearest HEDDA, don't play "_The Bogie Man_" this
+evening. As one of my aunts is dead, and poor old LÖVBORG has shot
+himself, it seems just a little pointed, eh?
+
+_Hedda_ (_puts her head out between the curtains_). All right! I'll be
+quiet after this. I'm going to practise with the late General GABLER'S
+pistol!
+
+[_Closes the curtains again_; GEORGE _gets behind the stove_, Judge
+BRACK _under the table, and_ Mrs. ELVSTED _under the sofa. A shot is
+heard within._
+
+_George_ (_behind the stove_). Eh, look here, I tell you what--she's
+hit _me!_ Think of that!
+
+[_His legs are visibly agitated for a short
+time. Another shot is heard._
+
+_Mrs. E._ (_under the sofa_). Oh, please, not me! Oh, goodness, now
+I can't inspire anybody any more. Oh!
+
+[_Her feet, which can be seen
+under the valance, quiver a little, and then are suddenly still._
+
+_Brack_ (_vivaciously, from under the table_). I say, Mrs. HEDDA,
+I'm coming in every evening--we will have great fun here togeth--
+(_Another shot is heard._) Bless me! to bring down the poor old
+cock-of-the-walk--it's unsportsmanlike!--it's--.
+
+[_The table-cloth is violently agitated for a minute, and presently
+the curtains open, and_ HEDDA _appears._
+
+_Hedda_ (_clearly and firmly_). I've been trying in there to shoot
+myself beautifully--but with General GABLER'S pistol--(_She lifts the
+tablecloth, then looks behind the stove and under the sofa._) What!
+the accounts of all those everlasting bores settled? Then my suicide
+becomes unnecessary. Yes, I feel the courage of life once more!
+
+[_She goes into the back-room and plays_ "The Funeral March of a
+Marionette" _as the Curtain falls._
+
+THE END (_with the usual apologies_).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OPERATIC NOTES.
+
+[Illustration: "J'y suis."
+Pro Arris et focus.]
+
+
+_Monday.--Le Prophête_.--Notable performance. Profit to those who
+were there; loss to those who weren't. The two Poles, NED and JOHN DE
+RESZKÉ, excellent as the Tipster, or Prophet, and the Chief Anabaptist
+Swindler. Madame RICHARD--"_O Richard, Oma Reine!_" repeated her grand
+impersonation of _Fides_, but being a trifle "out of it" as to tune
+occasionally, I cannot be _Fidei Defensor_, and swear she was quite
+correct, so can only report that RICHARD was a bit "dicky"; otherwise,
+sings like a Dicky-Bird. Cathedral Scene magnificent. Rites are wrong,
+probably; but these are trifles, except to strict ritualists. Skating
+Scene not up to date; it was a novelty once upon a time, but rinks
+have done for it. There was an unrehearsed effect in the Prison Scene,
+when the walls collapsed--the imprisoned Madame RICHARD escaped, and
+the Curtain descended. Nobody hurt. The walls, which had fallen,
+like those of Jericho, to the sound of the trumpet, were put away
+carefully, for alteration and repairs. The prisoner, issuing from
+her narrow fire-escape, was recaptured, and the Opera ended with the
+Drinking Scene, the Prophet among the Peris, a peri-lous situation,
+which makes the Opera go, at the climax, "like a house-a-fire." Burns
+Justice is done to the Impostor, and, at a late hour, we call our
+cabs, and return to hum "_béviam_" over "a modest quencher."
+
+_Saturday_.--BOÏTO'S _Mefistofele_. Strong combination. Excellent. But
+big "waits" made it heavy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN AGRICULTURAL TRIPOS.
+
+PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION PAPER.
+
+1. A field is ploughed three years running. Can it still have a shy
+at its little go? Examine this, and say all you know about "PIERS, or
+PEARS, the Ploughman." Did he use his own soap?
+
+2. How do you extract the square of a Beet-root? In connection with
+this, say how much it will take to square a "Swede?"
+
+3. Explain the use of the "Sewing-machine" for agricultural purposes.
+What do you mean by "going against the grain?"
+
+4. You plant a field of corn. What plaster do you adopt when it begins
+to shoot? Also give the best remedy you know for _corn in the ear_.
+
+5. Write a Sentimental History of the Harvest Moon. Is it really twice
+as big as any other moon, or does it only look so, after drinking the
+landlord's health several times over?
+
+6. To what _gourmet_ giving a dinner-party in January is attributed
+the historical saying, "_Peas_ at any price"?
+
+7. How many black beans will make five white ones? Given the number,
+explain the process, and solve the equation.
+
+8. What pomade do you recommend for "top-dressing"?
+
+9. What would be an M.P.'s first step towards squaring a circle of
+Agricultural Voters?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAD STORY.--A painter, who had on several occasions aspired to a place
+in the Chantrey Collection, and invariably been refused, on being
+encouraged to launch a fresh venture, and spread his canvas, which
+would be soon filled, for a sale, replied dejectedly, "Chantrey be
+blowed; I _shan't try_ any more!" Poor fellow! He must indeed have
+been bad. He has not been heard of since. The Serpentine has been
+dragged.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HANSOM CAB STRIKE!--Remarkable Conversion!! Not yet concluded!
+Last week another lot of Hansoms became Growlers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REPARTEE TO A SPOUSE.
+
+Both parties in the recent extraordinary abduction case, where a
+Mrs. JONES was carried off down a rope-ladder at midnight by her own
+husband, Mr. JONES, have published statements defending their own line
+of conduct. The following is Mrs. JONES'S version:--
+
+"As public opinion appears to have erroneously taken
+my--so-called--husband's side, as far as I can gather from my having
+been twice chased through the streets by an infuriated mob, and
+four separate attempts having been made to blow up my house
+with nitro-glycerine, I feel compelled to explain--with much
+reluctance--why it was that I declined to live with Mr. JONES.
+
+"To begin with, it was only under _the most awful threats_ that Mr.
+JONES prevailed on me to become his wife. His words--I remember them
+well--were, 'My darling, you know how tenderly I adore you; if you
+don't marry me _at once_ I'll break every bone in your body!' He then
+snatched my bonnet, a _new one_, from my head, and so acted on my
+_nerves_ that I went off to the Registry Office and was married. That
+he was actuated by merely mercenary motives is proved by the fact that
+the gratuity (of half-a-crown), which he presented to the Registry
+Clerk, he actually _borrowed from me!_ I knew him already to be
+unprincipled; but never until that moment had it flashed upon me that
+he was a _fortune-hunter!_ However, as he had the drawing-room poker
+with him--he kept it concealed up his back during the ceremony at the
+Registry Office--I did not at that time say anything, but handed him
+the coin. I do not know if I should have left him at once, had he not
+aggravated the baseness of his conduct by using the vulgar expression,
+'Fork it out quick!' But I regret to say that his origin is painfully
+_low_. Whereas, anybody who consults _my_ relatives will hear from
+them that they belong to the very highest County Families. Indeed, he
+would hear it all day long if he lived with them, as I do!
+
+"On the day of the abduction, I was treated _barbarously!_ Even the
+cab in which I was taken off was, so the coachman informed me, 'put
+down to my account.' Oh, had I but guessed the truth about Mr. JONES
+when I went to the Altar--I mean the Registry Office! Supper consisted
+of _cold mutton and pickles_ (!) which latter he upset, and I had a
+dress _ruined_."
+
+On perusing the above, Mr. JONES decided that he could no longer keep
+silence, and has made public the subjoined explanation:--
+
+"When I first saw Mrs. JONES--then Miss THOMPSON--her youthful grace
+quite captivated me. Her age was under fifty-six, and mine was just
+sixty. She was, in fact, as I told her at the time, almost old enough
+to know her own mind. It is true that she was wealthy, but that had
+no influence on my conduct. On the contrary I felt it as a positive
+drawback, as my domestic ideal has always been Love in a Cottage! But
+as she was bent upon our marrying, I agreed to waive this objection.
+
+"In proof of this assertion I need only say that on the _very day
+after_ our first meeting, I received the following letter:--
+
+"'PRICELESS AND ADORABLE PET,--How _are_ your little
+tootsy-wootsicums? _Did_ they get wet in conducting me home after
+that _delicious_ interview? If so, and you were to catch cold in your
+precious head, I should never forgive myself. Oh, come and see me
+_soon!_ Your Own, till Death, ANGELINA.'
+
+"Possibly I may be blamed for publishing this letter. I do it for
+_her_ sake, not for mine. Even now I believe that, were I left alone
+with her for an hour, with none of her relatives nor a policeman near,
+I could persuade her to retract her calumnious statement about the
+poker. I conclude by saying that it is my belief that her relatives,
+who are all of them powerful mesmerists, have _hypnotised her!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+_My Face is My Fortune_, by Messrs. PHILIPS and FENDALL. Why don't
+they agree to spell both names with an "F," and make it FILLIPS and
+FENDALL. I fancy that FENDALL couldn't do without the sensational
+fillips. This story excites curiosity throughout the first volume,
+and then, in the other volume, satisfies it in so disappointing and
+commonplace a fashion as to suggest the idea that one of the authors,
+becoming weary of his share in the work, suddenly chucked it up,
+and said, "Oh, bother! let's finish anyhow;" and then the other
+_collaborateur_, whichever it was, did finish it as best and as
+quickly as he could. There is evidence of laziness or of lack of
+invention in the story. If it were for the first time in fiction that
+a secret is learnt by some one hiding behind some pantomime plants
+in a conservatory, then too much praise could not be bestowed on the
+ingenious devisers of so strong and original a situation. But as "we
+know that situation,--he comes from Sheffield," and as it has done
+duty some scores of times before, on or off the stage, why, the
+thoroughgoing novel-reader shakes his head and asks, "Couldn't they
+have devised something better than this between them?" "I expected
+much from this combination in Authorship, and am disappointed," says
+the candid BARON DE BOOK-WORMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WHAT OUR ARTIST (THE NEWLY-MARRIED ONE)
+HAS TO PUT UP WITH.
+
+_Our Artist_. "JUST LOOK, DARLING! I WAS SHORT OF CANVASSES, SO I'VE
+STRETCHED A CLEAN POCKET-HANDKERCHIEF!--SEE HOW SPLENDIDLY IT TAKES
+THE PAINT!"
+
+_His Prudent Little Wife._. "OH, JOHN DEAR, HOW EXTRAVAGANT OF YOU!
+_IT'LL NEVER COME OUT!_"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ADOPTED CHILD.
+
+ "Last year the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER frittered away his
+ resources in a number of small remissions, for which hardly
+ anyone was grateful. This year he squanders the greater
+ part of his surplus in providing for Free, or--as the phrase
+ is--Assisted Education--an innovation for which there is
+ hardly any genuine demand, and which a very large class of the
+ community, including many of the most loyal supporters of the
+ Government, view with rooted distrust."--_The Standard_.
+
+MRS. GAMP (_the "Old Regular_") _loquitur_:--
+
+ "More changes, too, to come afore we have done with changes!"
+ Ah! I said that to good Mister MOULD years agone; which 'ow memory
+ ranges
+ All over them dear "Good Old Times," as I wish them wos back agen,
+ bless 'em!
+ Which the new ones ain't much to _my_ mind; there's too many fresh
+ "monthlies" to mess 'em.
+ No; monthlying ain't wot it were; the perfession's too open, a lump.
+ Nusses now ain't no more like old SAIREY, no not than the old Aldgit
+ Pump.
+ Like the Cristial Palluses fountings; A Pilgjian's Projiss is life,
+ And a Nuss ain't no more _like_ a Nuss than a Wife now resembles a
+ Wife.
+
+ Heigho! Which it's no use a frettin'. But _Fondlings_! Ah, well, I
+ _did_ think
+ Our respectable fam'lies, _though_ mixed, from sich ojus demeaning
+ would shrink,
+ Which no greater hinsult to _me_, the old reglar, could well be
+ deviged;
+ And though I've to live and to learn, I confess as this turn I'm
+ serpriged.
+ A Fondling!!! Turned up unbeknownst on a doorstep permiskus, no doubt.
+ And then to _adopt_ him! Oh dear, wot the plague is our Party about?
+ Wich to monthly to _it_ were my pride; its legitermit offspring I've
+ nussed
+ Many years with the greatest success, but to-day I feels flurried and
+ fussed,
+ And my eyes is Saint Polge's fontin with tears, and this brat is their
+ source;
+ As it isn't no offspring of _ourn_--of the fam'ly I mean, Ma'am, in
+ course;
+ But a Brummagem bantling, picked hup, as were not worth its swaddlin'
+ and food,
+ And I never yet knowed any brat from _that_ source as turned out any
+ good.
+ Missis G., Mum, it's all a mistake, as you know in your 'art all the
+ same,
+ For you turned up your nose at the child when JOE CHAMBERLING give him
+ a name,
+ Afore we was thick with his set, when you snubbed him, and laughed him
+ to scorn,
+ And heaped naughty names on this kid, as you swore was his nat'ral
+ fust-born.
+ And now you come dandling, and doddling, and patting the brat on the
+ 'ed,
+ And forgetting the things as you promiged, and backing on all as you
+ said.
+ Missis G., you do raly amaze me! This comes of our precious mix-up;
+ Which the child's no more like one of ourn than a pug's like a
+ tarrier-pup.
+
+ In the best-regulated o' fam'lies things will go askew, I'm aweer;
+ As I says to my friend Mrs. HARRIS, as says to me, "SAIREY, my dear,
+ You looks dragged, my sweet creetur," she says. "Missis HARRIS," I
+ makes 'er reply,
+ "When the 'art in one's buzzum beats 'ot, there's excuge for the tear
+ in one's heye.
+ Which wales isn't in it for worrit, my love, with your poor old pal,
+ SAIREY,
+ Along o' the Fam'ly," I says; "as things _do_ seem to go that
+ contrairey,
+ _My_ services now ain't required, with 'adoptions' all over the shop,
+ From Brummagem, yus, and elsewheres; and I ast 'Where is this thing to
+ stop?'
+ RITCHIE'S 'pick-up' was tryin', most tryin'; and as to those bad Irish
+ brats,
+ As BALFOUR interjuced--dear! jest fancy our Party adopting small Pats!
+ And now this here Brummagem babby! You say he's a promising cheild,
+ Missis G., and 'you're learning to love him!' All this makes old
+ SAIREY feel wild.
+ It's wus than kidnapping, this bizness of picking up 'Fondlings' all
+ round.
+ You're nussing a wiper, _I_ say, and you'll soon feel 'is bite, _I'll_
+ be bound.
+ Who arsked for 'im, BETSY--I mean Missis G.--who demanded the brat?
+ _You_'ve altered your mind, and you pet him; you'd much better mind
+ what you're at.
+ Drat the boy's bragian imperence! _I_ says. He's a halien, a fondling,
+ a waif,
+ And _I_ never knew, for my part, _any_ Brummagem goods as wos _safe!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE ADOPTED CHILD.
+
+MOTHER GOSCHEN. "FOUND 'IM IN BIRMINGHAM, MY DEAR! DIDN'T LIKE 'IM AT
+FIRST,--BUT, SOMEHOW, I'VE QUITE TOOK A FANCY TO 'IM!!"
+
+MRS. GAMP. "A FONDLING INDEED!--WHICH ALL I CAN SAY IS I DON'T LIKE
+THE LOOKS OF 'IM!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.
+
+_House of Commons, Monday, April 27_.--"Well, I never!" said GEORGE
+ELLIOT, beaming on House from back bench; "have known HARCOURT man
+and boy for forty years; seen him in divers moods; watched him through
+various occupations. These have been so many that I have had time to
+forget he was once Chancellor of the Exchequer; but he was, and
+upon my word, listening to him to-night, and knowing something
+about figures myself, I believe he would have made a splash at the
+Treasury."
+
+[Illustration: Genial George.]
+
+JOKIM doesn't enjoy performance quite so much as GENIAL GEORGE. Oddly
+enough, Budget Night, which ought to be the apex of comfort and
+glory for CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, is with him ever the season of
+tribulation. House of Commons is, regarded as audience, always at its
+best on Budget Night. Will laugh immoderately at feeblest joke
+uttered by CHANCELLOR; cheers to the echo his moral sentiments; sits
+enraptured when he soars into eloquence; and is undisguisedly grateful
+when he has completed his peroration. JOKIM'S muddle of Thursday
+night made the best of. Opposition silenced by promised legislation
+establishing Free Education. Everything in sunshine-glow of
+prosperity. Thought JOKIM might keep some of the sunbeams for himself.
+Then comes HARCOURT with the abhorrëd shears of facts and figures,
+and slits the thin-spun web of JOKIM'S ingenious fancy; shows that,
+instead of a surplus, he has, when honest arithmetic is set to work, a
+deficit; instead of increasing the rate of reduction of National Debt,
+he has done less in that direction than his predecessors; and that
+whilst expenditure on Army and Navy has exceeded any figures reached
+by former Chancellors of the Exchequer, the floating debt is ever
+growing.
+
+JOKIM sits on Treasury Bench affecting the virtue of a smile though
+he has it not. Wriggles like a snail under dispensation of salt. When
+HARCOURT finished, HENRY FOWLER stepped in, and with fresh array of
+figures and new marshalling of argument, completed the demolition of
+JOKIM'S system of finance. Mr. G. looked smilingly on, delighting in
+the energy and aptitude of his Young Men. JOKIM, anxious to change the
+subject on any terms, tried to draw Mr. G. into the controversy. "I
+think not," said Mr. G., with a smile of ineffable sweetness. "Right
+Hon. Gentleman need not go so far afield: will have pretty tough job
+in answering HARCOURT."
+
+A pretty scene; admirable Parliamentary play. Oddly enough boxes
+empty; stalls a wilderness; pit only half full. Energies of House
+so sapped with dreary flood of talk on Irish Land Bill cannot be
+reanimated even for a brisk battle over the Budget.
+
+_Business done_.--JOKIM pummelled to pulp.
+
+
+_Tuesday_.--OLD MORALITY walked out of House just now, his back
+suffused with sense of duty done, alike to QUEEN and Country. Irish
+Land Bill, which, as CAMPBELL-BANNERMAN says, makes a Moated Grange of
+House of Commons, on again all day. SAGE OF QUEEN ANNE'S GATE and
+his Party active as usual. The PARTY a little doubtful of the SAGE.
+Sometimes, in blessed intervals of silence, is discovered gazing on
+a bald space on back of SAGE'S head, striving, as it were, to pierce
+through this weak spot, and discover what is in the SAGE'S mind. The
+SAGE in outward manner most deferential and encouraging. Misses no
+opportunity of publicly applauding him. It is true that when the SAGE
+has got him on his legs, starting afresh on new Amendment, he seizes
+the opportunity to slink out of the House, and take another cigarette,
+quite certain that the PARTY is good for half-an-hour. This, and one
+or two other little things, create a suspicion in the mind of the
+PARTY, who was not brought up in India for nothing. WILFRID LAWSON,
+who sits close by, and keenly watches progress of events, says he has
+no doubt the time will come when the PARTY will revolt.
+
+"KEAY," says WILFRID, "occupies a strategical position, which gives
+him a great pull over LABBY. His respected Leader sits on the bench
+immediately below him. Some day SEYMOUR KEAY'S wild Mahratta blood may
+boil over, an unsuspected scimitar may flash forth from his trouser
+pocket, and the SAGE'S head, falling gory on the floor of the House,
+may gently, from mere force of habit, roll in the direction of Queen
+Anne's Gate."
+
+"For a real sanguinary-minded man," said RITCHIE, to whom I told this
+story, "give me a teetotaller."
+
+The PARTY, with some assistance from Windbag SEXTON, wasted sitting
+till quarter to seven. By this time, all Amendments to Clause 3 being
+wearily worn off, opportunity just left to pass Clause before Sitting
+adjourned. Question put that Clause 3 pass. Then SAGE, smelling
+obtrusively of cigarettes, interposed, and declared it "would be
+indecent" to accept the Clause without further discussion. Nothing
+House shrinks from just now more abjectly than from charge of
+indecency. Accordingly debate stood over, and Thursday may, if
+the SAGE and his Party please, and the Closure is not invoked, be
+appropriated for further discussion of Clause 3.
+
+OLD MORALITY might have moved Closure at twelve minutes to seven,
+and carried Clause 3. Committee naturally expected he would. But OLD
+MORALITY had another card up his sleeve. At very last moment, whilst
+Members trooped out, and it was thought all was over, OLD MORALITY
+gave notice of motion to take the whole time of House, including
+Tuesday and Friday nights' evening sittings.
+
+"I think you had them there," I said, as we walked across to Grosvenor
+Place.
+
+"Yes, TOBY," he said, a little flush mantling his modest face; "we've
+given them rope enough, and now we'll hang them. They've had their
+run, now we'll take ours. It's the main thing I always look to. Never
+forget when I was still in the seminary writing out copy of verses
+about a shipwreck. A graphic scene; the riven vessel, the raging seas,
+the panic-stricken crowd on deck, and then this little self-drawn
+picture of the sole survivor, the one man left to tell the story:
+
+ Some fell upon their bended knees
+ And others fell down fainting,
+ But I fell to on bread and cheese;
+ For that, Sir, was the main thing.
+
+It's the bread and cheese I look to, TOBY, dear boy. For others the
+glory of debate, the prize of Parliamentary oratory. Give me the bread
+and cheese of seeing business advancing, and I'm content."
+
+_Business done_.--Once more Committee on Irish Land Bill.
+
+
+_Thursday_.--A pretty little game on to-night. OLD MORALITY moved his
+Resolution taking power to appropriate Tuesdays and Fridays evening
+sittings, and all Wednesdays for Irish Land Bill. In ordinary
+circumstances there would have been stormy protest led from Front
+Opposition Bench against this inroad on time of private Members. Other
+fish to fry to-night. Wednesday week assigned for Second Reading of
+Woman's Suffrage Bill; if Government take that day for Irish Land
+Bill, obviously can't be utilised for furtherance of Woman's Rights.
+This an awkward question for some Members; don't like it, but daren't
+vote against it. Here's opportunity of getting rid of it by side-wind.
+Not necessary in arranging proceedings to mention Suffrage Bill,
+or even Wednesday, 13th of May. It was principle for which Members
+struggled; "the principle of uniformity," as Mr. G. beautifully put
+it. "Let us," he said, though perhaps not quite in this phrase, "go
+the whole hog or none; take all the Wednesdays, or leave them."
+
+Pretty to see OLD MORALITY protesting against this unprecedented
+access of generosity. The very picture, as MCEWAN said, of a good
+man struggling with the adversity of overwhelming good fortune. Was
+prepared to take a Wednesday here and there: but, really, too much to
+appropriate everyone. "Not at all--not at all," said Mr. G.
+
+But it was only under compulsion of a Division that he consented to
+accept the endowment. In meanwhile, the Woman's Suffrage Debate on
+Wednesday week snuffed out, and final opportunity of Session lost.
+
+"I'm inclined," said WM. WOODALL, "as a rule, to take kindly views of
+my fellow men, to put the best construction upon their actions; but,
+upon my word, I'm not satisfied in my own mind that we advocates of
+Woman's Rights have not been made the victims of deep and dastardly
+design."
+
+"Order! Order!" said COURTNEY; "no more am I."
+
+_Business done_.--Woman's Rights men dished.
+
+_Friday_.--Brer FOX looked in to-night, and, finding Brer RABBIT
+absent, undertook charge of Irish affairs. Desirous of introducing
+novelty into situation, began by patronising Prince ARTHUR. "So
+conciliatory, you know; so anxious to meet the views of Irish Members;
+really, they ought to meet him half-way, and refrain from annoying him
+by unnecessary Amendments."
+
+Brer FOX'S voice faltered as he spoke, and, bringing round his tail,
+he gently brushed away a falling tear. Unfortunately for him, TIM
+HEALY present. TIM jumped up, and fell upon his ancient chief,
+flouting his counsel, and repudiating his right to leadership. Effect
+upon Brer FOX something like that which followed on the flight of the
+piece of old red sandstone which struck in the abdomen a gentleman,
+who chanced to be standing round. The subsequent proceedings
+interested him no more. He walked out, and was not seen again.
+"Exceedingly rude man," he said; "never come near TIM HEALY but I feel
+an infinite yearning for a fire-escape." _Business done_.--Land Bill
+again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"MORE FREE THAN WELCOME."--MR. GOSCHEN'S Education Scheme, to the
+Tories.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A REGIMENT OF "THE LINE."--The Royal Academicians.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: GRANDOLPH THE PRODIGAL.
+
+(_A Parliamentary Drama too good for words, after "L'Enfant Prodigue"
+at the Prince of Wales's Theatre._)]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PICK OF THE PICTURES. (AT THE ROYAL ACADEMY.)
+
+[Illustration: No. 199. Doctor Dubitans. "I'm afraid I've
+given him the wrong stuff." Luke Fildes, R.A.]
+
+[Illustration: No. 742. "He's got 'em on!" or, Nanny, wilt
+thou gang with me in that new suit and those tight boots? By Phil. R.
+Morris, A.]
+
+[Illustration: Grand Combination Picture, "Liddell and
+Scott!" [Liddell (289) by H. Herkomer, R.A., and Scott (281) by G(ee)
+W(oa) Joy! "Joy and Woe!" Comedy and Tragedy.]]
+
+[Illustration: No. 226. The Penance of Zæo in the presence
+of some Members of the County Council. P.H. Calderon, R.A.]
+
+No. 5. "_Long Ago_." LONG (EDWIN, R.A.) and more or less of "a go."
+Instead of "_Long Ago_" which is egotistical, why not _Long Egit_ or
+_Long Fecit?_
+
+Nos. 21, 22, 23. "_The Lyons Mail_" (and Female). BRITON RIVIÈRE,
+R.A. [N.B.--"R.A.," _i.e._, "Royal Academician" and "Royal
+Animal-painter."]
+
+No. 27. The Viscount CROSS looking quite Viscount Cheerful. "_Painted
+for the Grand Jury Room, Lancaster Castle_," the Catalogue informs
+us. Suggestive of their arguing among themselves "at cross purposes."
+Painted by SYDNEY HODGES.
+
+No. 77. "_On Strike_." Very striking. Who could have painted this? Ah!
+_Who but_ HERKOMER. R.A.
+
+No. 82. Apparently this must have been intended for a portrait of the
+late Mr. DION BOUCICAULT, but subsequently adapted to represent
+WALTER GILBEY, Esq. Looks quite the GILBEY'S "fine, old, dry," but
+not "crusted." No doubt whatever of its being the excellent work of
+W(erry) Q(uaint) ORCHARDSON, R.A.
+
+No. 112. "_Hanson is as Hanson does_." By J. HANSON WALKER. Naturally
+pleased with "the promise of May," and
+
+No. 118. Another Young Lady only Younger. By the same Artist.
+
+No. 143. The Right Hon. A.J. BALFOUR, M.P., as seen by L. ALMA-TADEMA,
+R.A. Taken while considering
+
+No. 147. The Irish Question as represented by Sir FREDERICK LEIGHTON,
+P.R.A.'s "_Perseus and Andromeda_." Allegory, _Andromeda_, Ireland.
+_The Monster_, "Parnellism and Crime;" and _Perseus_, BALFOUR.
+Marvellous Monster! DRURIOLANUS should at once order a dozen of
+'em, hot and strong, for next Christmas Pantomime. Poor Miss ANNE
+DROMEDA,--"a dainty morsel _à croquer_," quoth the Monster.
+
+No. 148. No possible doubt whatever about this being A. BERTIE;
+FREEMAN-MITFORD, C.B., painted by the President of the Painters, who
+has hit him off to the life. B.M. is taken at the moment when, as a
+spectator of the Perseus and Andromeda _ballet d'action_, he remembers
+having seen something like it in "Old Japan."
+
+No. 201. "_Poor Tom's a Cold!_" LAURENCE SCOTT. Picture illustrating
+the shortest and easiest way of catching his death of cold.
+
+No. 206. "_Two's company, Three's none_," observed the Sun, as
+blushing deeply, he sank away in the far distance. By MAURICE GREIFFEN
+LAGEN.
+
+No. 209. The original Pieman met by SIMON going to the fair in very
+full dress. ARTHUR S. COPE.
+
+No.220. "_A Student_" of ALMA-TADEMA'S style. THOMAS R. SPENCE.
+
+No. 231. "Is it one o'clock?" she said to herself, anxiously. "I
+hope luncheon will be punctual." The picture will be known as "_Grace
+before Meals_," delightfully (of course) painted by Sir JOHN E.
+MILLAIS.
+
+No. 232. By the P.R.A. "What's that?" said one well-educated clerical
+visitor to his matronly wife. She read it out, pronouncing it thusly,
+"_Return of Percy Fone_." "What!" exclaimed the Clergyman. Then,
+taking the Catalogue into his own hands, he read "_Return of
+Persephone_." "It's pronounced," he informed his help-mate,
+"Për-s[)e]ph-[)o]-n[)e]." "Is it?" she returned, in a tone expressive
+of unmitigated incredulity. "Then," she asked suddenly, as a
+brilliant idea struck her, "why isn't 'telephone' pronounced
+'tel-[)e]ph-[)o]-n[)e]'?" And turning her back on him, would not hear
+another word on the subject.
+
+No. 283. _Not Crossley, but Kindly_. CLAUDE CALTHROP.
+
+No. 333. _Professor Huxley_. By Hon. JOHN COLLIER. When it isn't the
+Professor, it might serve for Sir GEORGE GROVE. Bravo, Honourable
+JOHN! "Hang him, JOHN COLLIER!" (SHAKSPEARE adapted.)
+
+No. 390. A Boy to the very life, or a Life Boy. JAMES SANT, R.A. It's
+a picture of Master HUGH BURDETT MONEY COUTTS. How well this name will
+look on a cheque for a cool thousand or so! But to see the _Hue_ of
+health on his cheek is better than seeing the colour of that HUGH'S
+money.
+
+No. 414. Portrait of Author W. PINERO, Esq. Painted by JOSEPH
+MORDECAI, who has done to Author PINERO what HAMAN would have done to
+MORDECAI, _i.e._, hung him.
+
+No. 439. Sitting for Don Quixote. WILLIAM E. LOCKHART.
+
+No. 459. _Stiff Collar Day; or, Just Back from the Wash_, "And,
+confound it! she's been washing my shirt and tie together, and spoilt
+'em both. Wish I had another lot ready, but haven't, so must go to
+Academy as I am," said WALTER S-WASH-BUCKLER LETHBRIDGE, and finished
+up with an impetuous and irrepressible "Hang it!" "I will," replied
+the Artist, JOHN PETTIE, R.A.
+
+No. 544. _Josephine Grimaldina; or, Female Clown_, the next novelty
+in Pantomime, dedicated to the author and composer of _L'Enfant
+Prodigue_. JOHN S. SARGENT.
+
+No. 667. _Feeling his Bumps; or, Phrenology in the Olden Time._"
+ERNEST NORMAND.
+
+No. 651. Gentleman ready for riding, but no spurs. "Where the deuce
+have I put them?" he is evidently saying. "All ready but that. Can't
+find 'em anywhere!" A picture which quite tells its own (JULIAN)
+STORY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE RIGHTS AND WRONGS OF LABOUR.
+
+(_At the service of the Ch-nc-ll-r of the Exch-qu-r, if he purposes
+writing a Prophetic Romance._)
+
+MACAULAY'S New Zealander had arrived prematurely. London Bridge was
+not reduced to its centre pier, and St. Paul's Cathedral was certainly
+not in ruins. Still there was an uncanny look about town. On the
+Embankment electric tram-cars were running, but they seemed to be
+little patronised. Here and there he noticed a pedestrian leisurely
+going his way, but the side-walks appeared, to all intents and
+purposes, abandoned. At length he reached a garden-seat, upon which
+was sprawling a Typical Working Man. The New Zealander gave this
+interesting individual "Good morning," and made some common-place
+remark about the weather.
+
+"Fine day!" returned the T.W.M., rather surlily. "Well, what does it
+matter to me? If it rains, I stay at home; if it don't, why I don't
+either."
+
+"I am a stranger seeking for information," explained the New
+Zealander; "so I am sure you will excuse me if I ask you how much do
+you pay for your house?"
+
+"Pay for my house!" ejaculated the T.W.M. "Why, nothing of course! And
+I pay nothing too for my sons at Oxford, and the girls at Cambridge.
+And I get my clothes free, and my food comes in gratuitously. Why, you
+must be a stranger if you don't know that! Why everything and anything
+is paid by the Government--out of the Income Tax."
+
+"And don't you ever work?"
+
+"Work! bless you, no. I can't afford to work! If I did, I should have
+to pay the Income Tax myself!" returned the T.W.M., with a grin.
+
+"Then who does contribute to this evidently highly-important source of
+revenue?
+
+"Why, the professional men, under Schedule D!" cried the hardy son of
+toil. "The authors with families, and the City clerks. All _that_ set,
+you know. They pay the Income Tax, sure enough. It's as much as they
+can do to keep bodies and souls together. But _somebody_ must pay--why
+not they?--pay for themselves--and for me!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DUMB SHOW.--It sounds odd that the serious pantomime, _L'Enfant
+Prodigue_, the play without words, should be "the talk of London."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LEAVES FROM A CANDIDATE'S DIARY.
+
+[Illustration: Canvas and Scrutiny.]
+
+"_George Hotel," Billsbury, Friday, April 25th_.--Arrived this morning
+in order to attend a "Monstre Open Air Conservative Fête, which was
+held in the grounds of the Billsbury Summer Palace. The programme
+was a very attractive one. First, there was a "reception of town
+and county delegates and their ladies" by the Earl and Countess of
+ROCHEVIEILLE. The Earl is a scrubby little fellow of about sixty,
+who looks more like an old-clothes-man than anything else. Norman
+noses--at least their descendants in this generation--are curiously
+like the Semitic variety sometimes. The name is pronounced "Rovail,"
+and both the Earl and Countess get blue with rage if anybody makes
+a mistake about it, as nearly all the delegates did. They stood on a
+raised daïs, and received delegates' addresses to the number of about
+thirty. Lady ROCHEVIEILLE is a stout lady--very. It was a blazing hot
+day, and she was "overcome" just as she was shaking hands with Colonel
+and Mrs. CHORKLE, who were accompanied by BENJAMIN DISRAELI CHORKLE.
+The rest of the CHORKLE family, including WILLIAMINA HENRIETTA SMITH
+CHORKLE, who was in a nurse's arms, were somewhere about the grounds
+looking for the "Magic Haunts of the Fairy Bulbul," and eating
+enormous quantities of macaroons, which I had given them. Colonel
+CHORKLE rather lost his head when Lady R. collapsed. He made an effort
+to pick her up, but had to drop her heavily on the boards of the
+daïs. Eventually, however, she was carried away and revived, and
+the proceedings went on. There were Conservative merry-go-rounds,
+Conservative negro-minstrels, Conservative acrobats and Conservative
+dancing bears, distributed about the grounds. I was taken about by
+Alderman MOFFAT and HOLLEBONE, who introduced me right and left to
+hundreds of my supporters and their wives and daughters. At the end
+of it all I felt as if I had got a heavy sort of how-do-you-do
+smile regularly glued on my face. One of my chief supporters is an
+undertaker named JOBSON. HOLLEBONE brought him up to me and said, "Mr.
+JOBSON, permit me to introduce you to our popular young Candidate, Mr.
+PATTLE. Mr. PATTLE let me have the honour of introducing you to our
+popular young undertaker, Mr. JOBSON." Gave me rather a shock, but
+JOBSON seemed quite a pleasant man. His wife was there too, gorgeously
+dressed in red plush with an Indian shawl on her shoulders, and a
+sealskin muff. She must have felt the heat horribly.
+
+Later in the afternoon there was a political meeting, at which we all
+spoke, but we had to make it short, as everybody was anxious to get
+away to the "Refined Musical _Mélange_ (with incidental dances) of
+the Sisters WILKINS," which was held in a specially erected tent.
+Fireworks, illuminations, and dancing, ended the affair.
+
+_April 26_.--Was made an Oddfellow to-day. Initiation didn't last
+long. CHORKLE and JERRAM were initiated with me, and we all had to
+make speeches afterwards, declaring our devotion to the great cause of
+Oddfellowship. Afterwards sentiments were called for. The only one I
+remember was given by a man called TABSEY, a tailor, who seems to be
+rather famous for this kind of thing. After holding his hand to his
+head for some time, and knitting his brows, he cleared his throat, and
+said, in a loud voice,--"May the tear of true sympathy crystallise
+as it falls, and be worn as a radiant jewel upon the finger of
+affliction." This was vociferously applauded. I congratulated TABSEY
+afterwards, and paid him a compliment about it. He told me he found
+it a great relief, after a hard day's work in the shop, to throw off
+a sentiment or two. He's going to publish a book of them, and I've had
+to subscribe for six copies, at half a guinea each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM A WATCHFUL OBSERVER.--SIR,--The other day I saw advertised in a
+shop-window, "The Invisible Trouser Stretcher." Who wears "Invisible
+Trousers"? Do you remember the story of _The Emperor of China's
+Clothes?_--when they all cried, "He's got 'em on," and he hadn't. That
+Invisible Trousers should exist is quite enough stretch of imagination
+without any further stretcher.--Yours, THE DAY WATCHMAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. R. AT THE OPERA.--Mrs. RAMSBOTHAM Junior went to hear _La
+Traviata_. She expressed her sympathy with _Violetta_, between
+two _Gourmands_. Remarking on the touching finish to the converted
+_Traviata's_ career, Mrs. R. observed that it reminded her of the
+poet's line about "She who stopped to cough, remained to pray."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+-->NOTICE,--Rejected Communications or Contributions, whether MS.,
+Printed Matter, Drawings, or Pictures of any description, will in no
+case be returned, not even when accompanied by a Stamped and Addressed
+Envelope, Cover, or Wrapper. To this rule there will be no exception.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume
+100, May 9, 1891, by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13313 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13313 ***</div>
+
+ <h1>PUNCH,<br />
+ OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.</h1>
+
+ <h2>Vol. 100.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <h2>May 9, 1891.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page217"
+ id="page217"></a>[pg 217]</span>
+
+ <h2>A FIRST VISIT TO THE "NAVERIES."</h2>
+
+ <p>"Shiver my timbers!" said the Scribe.</p>
+
+ <p>"Haul down my yard-arm with a marling-spike!" cried the
+ Artist.</p>
+
+ <p>And with these strictly nautical expressions, two of <i>Mr.
+ Punch's</i> Own entered the Royal Naval Exhibition, which now
+ occupies the larger portion of the grounds of the Military
+ Hospital, Chelsea. That so popular a show should be allowed to
+ occupy so large a site speaks wonders for the amiability of the
+ British Public. When the Sodgeries appeared last year, it was,
+ so to speak, with fear and trembling that "the powers that
+ were" appropriated a little of the ground usually over-run by
+ the Nobility and Gentry of the Pimlico Road and its vicinity;
+ or, rather, by their haughty offspring. This year the tough old
+ sea-dogs of the Admiralty have had no hesitation in taking what
+ they required, apparently without causing comment, much less
+ objection. And the result? In lieu of the dusty arena of 1890,
+ scarcely large enough for a ladies' cricket-match, there
+ appears in 1891 an enclosure containing lakes and lighthouses,
+ panoramas, and full-size models of men-of-war! And the Public
+ take their exclusion philosophically, either paying their
+ shillings at the door, or attempting to get a view of the hoofs
+ of the nautical horses through the gaps in the surrounding
+ hoardings.</p>
+
+ <p>The Scribe and the Artist, having been ordered by He Who
+ Must Be Obeyed in the world generally, and at 85, Fleet Street,
+ in particular, to make a sort of preliminary cruise through the
+ wonders of the (Admiralty) Deep, hastened from the inviting
+ grounds into the main building, with its pictures, its plans,
+ and last, but (it is only just to say) least, its pickles. The
+ first object that attracted their favourable attention was a
+ trophy of arms, representing the fashions of the past and the
+ present. On one side were shrapnel and magazine rifles, on the
+ other flint-locks and the ordnance of an age long gone by. Next
+ they passed through the Arctic section, wherein they found
+ dummies drawing a sledge through the canvas snow of a
+ corded-off North Pole. Then they entered the Picture Galleries
+ called after NELSON and BENBOW, wherein magnificent paintings
+ by POWELL, full of smoke and action, served as an appropriate
+ background to the collection of plate, lent by that gallant
+ sailor-warrior and industrious collector of well-considered
+ trifles, H.R.H. the Duke of EDINBURGH. They glanced at the
+ relics of Trafalgar, and then hurried away to the HOWE Gallery,
+ which, containing as it did specimens of the implements used in
+ the game of golf, might have as appropriately been christened
+ the WHEREFORE. Next they skirted a corridor full of plans, and
+ here they discovered that the Committee of the Exhibition must
+ be wags, every Jack Tar of them! This corridor was close to the
+ Dining-rooms, and the Committee (ha! ha! ha!) had called it
+ (he! he! he!) after COOK! (Ho! ho! ho!) Oh, the wit of it! How
+ the Members of the Executive must have nudged one another in
+ the ribs as the quaint idea dawned upon them! And how they must
+ have laughed, too, on the Opening Day, when the Guard of
+ Honour, presenting arms, and the "Greenwich Boys" singing
+ "<i>Ye Mariners of England</i>," were drenched in the rain! And
+ what a capital notion it was on that occasion to put "the
+ Representatives of the Fourth Estate" (no doubt called by
+ <i>them</i>, with many a sly twinkle of the eye, "the Press
+ Gang") into a pen that soon, thanks to a series of
+ water-spouts, assumed the appearance of a tank!</p>
+
+ <p>After leaving the Galleries, the Scribe and the Artist
+ looked up at the model of Eddystone Lighthouse, and entered a
+ shed declared to be an "Arctic Scene." Here they were reminded
+ by the introduced ship of those happy days of their boyhood
+ spent in the toy-shops of the Lowther Arcade. Next they visited
+ the Panorama of Trafalgar, and revelled in the carnage of a
+ sea-fight that only required Margate in the distance to be
+ entirely convincing. They glanced at the arena, and gazed with
+ awe at the lake which is to be devoted to the manoeuvring of
+ miniature ironclads. It will be interesting to note whether
+ these mimic combats will hold their own in the coming season
+ against the introduction of capsized clowns, drenched old
+ women, and comic police. Keeping the best for the last, the
+ Scribe and the Artist now entered the model of the
+ <i>Victory</i>&mdash;a really admirable exhibition. There they
+ saw before them the old battle-ship with its full equipment, as
+ it was in the days of NELSON&mdash;when that deathless hero
+ expected every Englishman (not excluding even those passing the
+ Custom House&mdash;as the Committee would say) "to <i>do</i>
+ his duty." To make the illusion complete, the great sea-captain
+ was observed dying in the cook-pit in the agonies of wax. And
+ to think that this work was executed by a firm of
+ house-decorators! Why, who would not, after this, have his back
+ drawing-room converted into the quarter-deck of the
+ <i>Shannon</i>, and his spare bed-room into a tiny reproduction
+ of the Battle of Copenhagen!</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/217.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/217.png"
+ alt="Mr. Punch's Representatives, after partaking of Chelsea Hospitality" />
+ </a>Mr. Punch's Representatives, after partaking of Chelsea
+ Hospitality (<i>a purely fancy sketch</i>).
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The Scribe and the Artist, on their visit, were invited by
+ all sorts and conditions of men to partake of champagne. The
+ moment it was discovered that they were "connected with the
+ Press," the offerers of hospitality were absolutely
+ overwhelming. But, obeying the best traditions of their order,
+ they sternly, but courteously, refused all refreshment. It is
+ fortunate they pursued this course, for had they received the
+ entirely disinterested kindness of their would-be hosts, their
+ recollections of the marvels of the Royal Naval Exhibition
+ would no doubt have been of the haziest character imaginable.
+ As it was, they were able to take their departure through the
+ main entrance with some show of dignity, and not in a less
+ imposing manner (as the Committee&mdash;<i>Cook's</i> Gallery
+ near the Dining-rooms&mdash;ho! ho! ho! ha! ha! ha!&mdash;would
+ probably and amusingly suggest), by Tite Street.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>AMONG THE IMMORTALS.</h3>
+
+ <p>Mr. PUNCH would be failing in his duty to Art and the
+ British Public if he did not place on imperishable record his
+ notes of the exceptionally brilliant Royal Academy Banquet of
+ last Saturday. H.R.H. the Prince of WALES made one of his best
+ and briefest speeches, in which he feelingly alluded to the
+ late Sir EDGAR BO&Euml;HM, R.A. Never was the President, Sir
+ FREDERICK, more eloquent, or his themes more varied; for this
+ occasion is noteworthy as being the first time in the history
+ of this great annual representative gathering that the toast of
+ Music and the Drama has been duly honoured. Sir ARTHUR SULLIVAN
+ responded for the first, and HENRY IRVING for the second. Both
+ made excellent speeches. Sir ARTHUR'S solo was most effective;
+ his notes were in his head; he gave us several variations on
+ the original theme, and cleverly played upon one word in saying
+ that music had been "instrumental" on various historical
+ occasions. HENRY IRVING followed suit; he spoke of Mrs.
+ SIDDONS, Sir JOSHUA REYNOLDS, and of a professional gentleman,
+ one ROSCIUS, mentioned, we believe, by <i>Hamlet</i> as having
+ been, some considerable time ago, "a man of parts," that is an
+ Actor, in Rome. It was a great success. Sir FREDERICK then
+ proposed the LORD MAYOR, which may be briefly expressed as "a
+ toast with a Savory to follow." For "The Visitors," Lord
+ Justice BOWEN, catching sight of the President's classical
+ picture (No. 232), made a happy hit about the delights of a
+ honeymoon in the Infernal Regions, ending in the return of
+ Proserpine to her mother Ceres by order of the Court above.
+ Finally, the President, in summing up the losses to Art during
+ the past year, paid a graceful tribute to the memory of CHARLES
+ KEENE, who, but a short while ago, was our fellow-worker on the
+ staff of <i>Mr. Punch</i> With a hopeful allusion to the
+ Storage of Artistic Force in the near future, the President
+ concluded: but this Banquet of 1891 will long live in the
+ recollection of all whose privilege it was to be present on so
+ memorable an occasion.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>MUSICAL NOTES.</h3>
+
+ <p>I SAY! YSAYE! <i>Why say?</i> Why <i>not</i> say that YSAYE
+ is a grand Yolinist, since he is this; and, as 'ARRY would
+ observe, "No error!" and whoever says the contrary, is not
+ speaking the absolute truth, but "<i>Ysaye Worsay</i>." The
+ Yolinist had the advantage of the co-operation of a fine
+ Orchestra, under the Magic Wand of Conductor COWEN.</p>
+
+ <p>On the 27th, Heard young JEAN GERARDY, Little boy, but
+ player hardy, Not the slightest Lardy-Dardy, Not yet out of
+ care of "Guardy," Heard him <i>Lundi</i>, not on <i>Mardi</i>.
+ But, whene'er he plays, your Bardy, Always spry, and never
+ tardy, Will again hear JEAN GERARDY.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>GENERAL SUMMARY OF CARICATURES OF MR.
+ GLADSTONE.&mdash;"Collarable Imitations."</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page218"
+ id="page218"></a>[pg 218]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/218.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/218.png"
+ alt="FASHION'S FLORALIA" /></a>
+
+ <h3>FASHION'S FLORALIA: OR, THE URBAN QUEEN OF THE
+ MAY.</h3>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page219"
+ id="page219"></a>[pg 219]</span>
+
+ <h2>FASHION'S FLORALIA;</h2>
+
+ <h4>OR, THE URBAN QUEEN OF THE MAY.</h4>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>A Song of the Season, a very long way after
+ Herrick</i>.)</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"London town is another affair</p>
+
+ <p>Since HERRICK wrote his perfect rhymes."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="center">MORTIMER COLLINS.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>True, sadly true, shaper of rattling rhymes,</p>
+
+ <p>London hath changed with process of the times.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Aurora now may "throw her faire</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Fresh-quilted colours through the
+ aire,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But our conditions atmospheric</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Are not as in the days of HERRICK.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Nathless the Muse to-day may see</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Flora at urban revelry.</p>
+
+ <p>See how the goddess trippeth from the West,</p>
+
+ <p>Fragrant, though something fashionably drest;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The Season waketh at her tread,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Art lifteth a long-drooping head;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Music doth make a merry din.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">'Tis profanation, keeping in,</p>
+
+ <p>Whenas a hundred Shows upon this day</p>
+
+ <p>Spring, lightly as the lark to fetch in May.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Rise, Nymph, put on fresh finery, and be seen,</p>
+
+ <p>To come forth like the Spring-time, fresh and
+ green!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And gay as Flora. Art is there,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With flowing hyacinthine hair.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Fear not, the throng will strew</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Largess abundant upon <i>you</i>,</p>
+
+ <p>When Burlington's great Opening Day is kept.</p>
+
+ <p>Gone is thy Grosvenor rival, not unwept;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But a New Nymph, with footing light,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Trips it beside thee, nor hath night</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Shadowed sweet "Aquarelle" whose
+ skill,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As of a Water-Nymph, is still</p>
+
+ <p>Well to the fore. Pipe up! playing means paying,</p>
+
+ <p>When Fashion's Urban Flora goes a-Maying.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Come, my CORINNA, come; and, coming, mark</p>
+
+ <p>How each street turns a grove, each square a
+ park,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Made green and trimmed with trees: see
+ how</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The pinky hawthorn decks the bough!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Each Bond Street porch, or door, ere
+ this</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of Art a Tabernacle is;</p>
+
+ <p>Nor Art alone. With May is interwove</p>
+
+ <p>Seaweed, which Neptune's favourites love.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">SWINBURNE should sing in stanzas
+ fleet,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">How NELSON may, at Chelsea, meet</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">ARMSTRONG! Sound conch-shell! Let's
+ obey</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Thy Proclamation made for May.</p>
+
+ <p>Wild marine whiffs from the salt sea are
+ straying,</p>
+
+ <p>And the brine greets us as we go a-Maying.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>There's not a London-Teuton but this day</p>
+
+ <p>Hath a new welcome for the English May.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Germania from her distant home</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In Flora's train this year doth come.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">She hath despatched her country's
+ cream</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of things, to make the Cockney dream.</p>
+
+ <p>Neptune and she have wooed and plighted troth,</p>
+
+ <p>And her we give May-welcome, nothing loth,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As many a welcome we have given</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To France, Spain, Italy! War hath
+ riven</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Many true hearts, but we're content</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of Peace to make experiment.</p>
+
+ <p>Blow Teuton horn&mdash;(not like "<i>Hernani's</i>"
+ braying!)&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>It makes new music as we go a-Maying!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Come, let us go, while May is in its prime,</p>
+
+ <p>And make the best of the brief Season's time.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">HERRICK'S CORINNA might not see</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">An Urban May Queen such as we</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Behold disport in our rare sun.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Rouse, Nymph! The Season is begun!</p>
+
+ <p>We'll trust no blizzard, and no boreal rain</p>
+
+ <p>May mar "Our Opening Day." Sound flutes again!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Pipe, Sir FREDERICK! Ah, well played!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Tootle thy new strains, fair Maid.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Blow, oh Briny One, with might!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Teuton BRUNEHILD, glad our sight!</p>
+
+ <p>Fashion's Floralia, Nymph, invite our straying;</p>
+
+ <p>Come, my CORINNA, come; let's go a-Maying!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:70%;">
+ <a href="images/219.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/219.png"
+ alt="THINGS ONE WOULD RATHER HAVE LEFT UNSAID." /></a>
+
+ <h3>THINGS ONE WOULD RATHER HAVE LEFT UNSAID.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>Painter</i>. "WOULD YOU BELIEVE IT? THIS IS THE
+ PICTURE THEY'VE THOUGHT PROPER TO REJECT! I'LL BE SO BOLD
+ AS TO SAY, THERE ARE NOT TWENTY BETTER IN THE WHOLE
+ EXHIBITION!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Friend</i>. "DEAR ME! IS IT SUCH A POOR ACADEMY AS
+ THAT?"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>THE HUMOUR O'T!</h3>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>Namely of Parliament, as seen through Harry Furniss's
+ fancy.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p class="center">AIR&mdash;"<i>The Wooing o't.</i>"</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>LIKA JOKO makes us laugh,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ha! ha! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>With caricature and caustic chaff;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He! he! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>Parliament strikes some as slow,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">LIKA JOKO deems not so;</p>
+
+ <p>Visit <i>his</i> St. Stephen's Show!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Humph! humph! the humour o't!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>GLADSTONE stern and GLADSTONE staid,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ha! ha! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>GLADSTONE in war-paint arrayed,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He! he! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>GLADSTONE "Out" and GLADSTONE "In,"</p>
+
+ <p>GLADSTONE with colossal chin,</p>
+
+ <p>Giant collars plunged within,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Humph! humph! the humour o't!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>SMITH with bland perennial smile,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ha! ha! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>BALFOUR, pet of the Green Isle,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He! he! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>HARCOURT, big as Babel's tower,</p>
+
+ <p>GOSCHEN, with myopic glower,</p>
+
+ <p>JOSEPH of the orchid-flower.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Humph! humph! the humour o't!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>How they muster, how they "tell,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ha! ha! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>Woes of the Division Bell,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He! he! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p><i>All</i>&mdash;from Prayers to "Who goes
+ Home?"</p>
+
+ <p>O'er St. Stephens you may roam;</p>
+
+ <p>LIKA JOKO bids you. Come!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Humph! humph! the humour o't!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>LIKA JOKO is a wag,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ha! ha! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>All the tricks are in his bag,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He! he! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>He can mimic, he can mime,</p>
+
+ <p>Draw, and act, and&mdash;what is prime&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p><i>Keep you laughing all the time.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Humph! humph! the humour o't!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Why doesn't some Musical Photographic Artist of Scotch
+ Nationality compose a March for his fellow Professors and
+ Practisers, and call it "<i>The March of the Camera Men</i>"?
+ Sure to be popular.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>AN UN-"COMMON" GOOD HORSE.&mdash;The Winner of this Year's
+ Two Thousand.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page220"
+ id="page220"></a>[pg 220]</span>
+
+ <h2>MR. PUNCH'S POCKET IBSEN.</h2>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>Condensed and Revised Version by Mr. P.'s
+ Own Harmless Ibsenite.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p class="center">No. III.&mdash;HEDDA GABLER.</p>
+
+ <p class="center">ACT. III.</p>
+
+ <p class="scene">SCENE.&mdash;<i>The same Room, but&mdash;it
+ being evening&mdash;darker than ever&mdash;The crape curtains
+ are drawn. A Servant, with black ribbons in her cap, and red
+ eyes, comes in and lights the gas quietly and carefully. Chords
+ are heard on the piano in the back Drawing-room. Presently</i>
+ HEDDA <i>comes in and looks out into the darkness. A short
+ pause. Enter</i> GEORGE TESMAN.</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. I am <i>so</i> uneasy about poor
+ L&Ouml;VBORG. Fancy! he is not at home. Mrs. ELVSTED told me he
+ had been here early this morning, so I suppose you gave him
+ back his manuscript, eh?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>cold and immovable, supported by
+ arm-chair</i>). No, I put it on the fire instead.</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. On the fire! L&Ouml;VBORG'S wonderful new
+ book that he read to me at BRACK'S party, when we had that wild
+ revelry last night! Fancy <i>that!</i> But, I say,
+ HEDDA&mdash;isn't that <i>rather</i>&mdash;eh? <i>Too</i> bad,
+ you know&mdash;really. A great work like that. How on earth did
+ you come to think of it?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>suppressing an almost imperceptible
+ smile</i>). Well, dear GEORGE, you gave me a tolerably strong
+ hint.</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. Me? Well, to be sure&mdash;that <i>is</i> a
+ joke! Why, I only said that I envied him for writing such a
+ book, and it would put me entirely in the shade if it came out,
+ and if anything was to happen to it, I should never forgive
+ myself, as poor L&Ouml;VBORG couldn't write it all over again,
+ and so we must take the greatest care of it! And then I left it
+ on a chair and went away&mdash;that was all! And you went and
+ burnt the book all up! Bless me, who <i>would</i> have expected
+ it?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i>. Nobody, you dear simple old soul! But I did it
+ for your sake&mdash;it was <i>love</i>, GEORGE!</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i> (<i>in an outburst between doubt and joy</i>).
+ HEDDA, you don't mean that! Your love takes such queer forms
+ sometimes, Yes, but yes&mdash;(<i>laughing in excess of
+ joy</i>), why, you <i>must</i> be fond of me! Just think of
+ that now! Well, you <i>are</i> fun, HEDDA! Look here, I must
+ just run and tell the housemaid that&mdash;she will enjoy the
+ joke so, eh?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>coldly, in self-command</i>). It is surely
+ not necessary, even for a clever Norwegian man of letters in a
+ realistic social drama, to make quite such a fool of himself as
+ all that?</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. No, that's true too. Perhaps we'd better keep
+ it quiet&mdash;though I <i>must</i> tell Aunt JULIE&mdash;it
+ will make her so happy to hear that you burnt a manuscript on
+ my account! And, besides, I should like to ask her whether
+ that's a usual thing with young wives. (<i>Looks uneasy and
+ pensive again.</i>) But poor old EJLERT'S manuscript! Oh Lor,
+ you know! Well, well! [Mrs. ELVSTED <i>comes in</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> Oh, please, I'm so uneasy about dear Mr.
+ L&Ouml;VBORG. Something has happened to him, I'm sure!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Judge Brack</i> (<i>comes in from the hall, with a new
+ hat in his hand</i>). You have guessed it, first time.
+ Something <i>has!</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> Oh, dear, good gracious! What is it?
+ Something distressing, I'm certain of it! [<i>d.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i> (<i>pleasantly</i>). That depends on how one
+ takes it. He has shot himself, and is in a hospital now, that's
+ all!</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i> (<i>sympathetically</i>). That's sad, eh? poor
+ old L&Ouml;VBORG! Well, I <i>am</i> cut up to hear that. Fancy,
+ though, eh?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i>. Was it through the temple, or through the
+ breast? The breast? Well, one can do it beautifully through the
+ breast, too. Do you know, as an advanced woman, I like an act
+ of that sort&mdash;it's so positive, to have the courage to
+ settle the account with himself&mdash;it's beautiful,
+ really!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> Oh, HEDDA, what an odd way to look at it! But
+ never mind poor dear Mr. L&Ouml;VBORG now. What <i>we've</i>
+ got to do is to see if we can't put his wonderful manuscript,
+ that he said he had torn to pieces, together again. (<i>Takes a
+ bundle of small pages out of the pocket of her mantle.</i>)
+ There are the loose scraps he dictated it to me from. I hid
+ them on the chance of some such emergency. And if dear Mr.
+ TESMAN and I were to put our heads together, I <i>do</i> think
+ something might come of it.</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. Fancy! I will dedicate my life&mdash;or all I
+ can spare of it&mdash;to the task. I seem to feel I owe him
+ some slight amends, perhaps. No use crying over spilt milk, eh,
+ Mrs. ELVSTED? We'll sit down&mdash;just you and I&mdash;in the
+ back drawing-room, and see if you can't inspire me as you did
+ him, eh?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> Oh, goodness, yes! I should like it&mdash;if
+ it only might be possible!</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[GEORGE <i>and</i> Mrs. E. <i>go into the
+ back Drawing-room and become absorbed in eager
+ conversation</i>; HEDDA <i>sits in a chair in the front room,
+ and a little later</i> BRACK <i>crosses over to her.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>in a low tone</i>). Oh, Judge, <i>what</i>
+ a relief to know that everything&mdash;including L&Ouml;VBORG'S
+ pistol&mdash;went off so well! In the breast! Isn't there a
+ veil of unintentional beauty in that? Such an act of voluntary
+ courage, too!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i> (<i>smiles</i>). Hm!&mdash;perhaps, dear Mrs.
+ HEDDA&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>enthusiastically</i>). But <i>wasn't</i> it
+ sweet of him! To have the courage to live his own life after
+ his own fashion&mdash;to break away from the banquet of
+ life&mdash;<i>so</i> early and <i>so</i> drunk! A beautiful act
+ like that <i>does</i> appeal to a superior woman's
+ imagination!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i>. Sorry to shatter your poetical illusions,
+ little Mrs. HEDDA, but, as a matter of fact, our lamented
+ friend met his end under other circumstances. The shot did
+ <i>not</i> strike him in the <i>breast</i>&mdash;but&mdash;
+ [<i>Pauses.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>excitedly</i>). General GABLER'S pistols! I
+ might have known it! Did they <i>ever</i> shoot straight? Where
+ <i>was</i> he hit, then?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i> (<i>in a discreet undertone</i>). A little
+ lower down!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i>. Oh, <i>how</i> disgusting!&mdash;how
+ vulgar!&mdash;how ridiculous!&mdash;like everything else about
+ me!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i>. Yes, we're realistic types of human nature,
+ and all that&mdash;but a trifle squalid, perhaps. And why did
+ you give L&Ouml;VBORG your pistol, when it was certain to be
+ traced by the police? For a charming cold-blooded woman with a
+ clear head and no scruples, wasn't it just a leetle
+ foolish?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i>. Perhaps; but I wanted him to do it
+ beautifully, and he didn't! Oh, I've just admitted that I
+ <i>did</i> give him the pistol&mdash;how annoyingly unwise of
+ me! Now I'm in <i>your</i> power, I suppose?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i>. Precisely&mdash;for some reason it's not easy
+ to understand. But it's inevitable, and you know how you dread
+ anything approaching scandal. All your past proceedings show
+ that. (<i>To</i> GEORGE <i>and</i> Mrs. E., <i>who come in
+ together from the back-room.</i>) Well, how are you getting on
+ with the reconstruction of poor L&Ouml;VBORG'S great work,
+ eh?</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:35%;">
+ <a href="images/220.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/220.png"
+ alt="What! the accounts of all those everlasting bores settled?" />
+ </a>"What! the accounts of all those everlasting bores
+ settled?"
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. Capitally; we've made out the first two parts
+ already. And really, HEDDA, I do believe Mrs. ELVSTED <i>is</i>
+ inspiring me; I begin to feel it coming on. Fancy that!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> Yes, goodness! HEDDA, <i>won't</i> it be
+ lovely if I can. I mean to try <i>so</i> hard!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i>. Do, you dear little silly rabbit; and while
+ you are trying I will go into the back drawing-room and lie
+ down.</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>She goes into the back-room and draws
+ the curtains. Short pause. Suddenly she is heard playing</i>
+ "The Bogie Man" <i>within on the piano.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. But, dearest HEDDA, don't play "<i>The Bogie
+ Man</i>" this evening. As one of my aunts is dead, and poor old
+ L&Ouml;VBORG has shot himself, it seems just a little pointed,
+ eh?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>puts her head out between the
+ curtains</i>). All right! I'll be quiet after this. I'm going
+ to practise with the late General GABLER'S pistol!</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>Closes the curtains again</i>; GEORGE
+ <i>gets behind the stove</i>, Judge BRACK <i>under the table,
+ and</i> Mrs. ELVSTED <i>under the sofa. A shot is heard
+ within.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i> (<i>behind the stove</i>). Eh, look here, I
+ tell you what&mdash;she's hit <i>me!</i> Think of that!</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>His legs are visibly agitated for a
+ short time. Another shot is heard.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> (<i>under the sofa</i>). Oh, please, not me!
+ Oh, goodness, now I can't inspire anybody any more. Oh!</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>Her feet, which can be seen under the
+ valance, quiver a little, and then are suddenly still.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i> (<i>vivaciously, from under the table</i>). I
+ say, Mrs. HEDDA, I'm coming in every evening&mdash;we will have
+ great fun here togeth&mdash;
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page221"
+ id="page221"></a>[pg 221]</span> (<i>Another shot is
+ heard.</i>) Bless me! to bring down the poor old
+ cock-of-the-walk&mdash;it's
+ unsportsmanlike!&mdash;it's&mdash;.</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>The table-cloth is violently agitated
+ for a minute, and presently the curtains open, and</i> HEDDA
+ <i>appears.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>clearly and firmly</i>). I've been trying
+ in there to shoot myself beautifully&mdash;but with General
+ GABLER'S pistol&mdash;(<i>She lifts the tablecloth, then looks
+ behind the stove and under the sofa.</i>) What! the accounts of
+ all those everlasting bores settled? Then my suicide becomes
+ unnecessary. Yes, I feel the courage of life once more!</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>She goes into the back-room and
+ plays</i> "The Funeral March of a Marionette" <i>as the Curtain
+ falls.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="center">THE END (<i>with the usual
+ apologies</i>).</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>OPERATIC NOTES.</h2>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:20%;">
+ <a href="images/221.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/221.png"
+ alt="Man with opera glasses" /></a>"J'y suis."<br />
+ Pro Arris et focus.
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>Monday.&mdash;Le Proph&ecirc;te</i>.&mdash;Notable
+ performance. Profit to those who were there; loss to those who
+ weren't. The two Poles, NED and JOHN DE RESZK&Eacute;,
+ excellent as the Tipster, or Prophet, and the Chief Anabaptist
+ Swindler. Madame RICHARD&mdash;"<i>O Richard, Oma Reine!</i>"
+ repeated her grand impersonation of <i>Fides</i>, but being a
+ trifle "out of it" as to tune occasionally, I cannot be
+ <i>Fidei Defensor</i>, and swear she was quite correct, so can
+ only report that RICHARD was a bit "dicky"; otherwise, sings
+ like a Dicky-Bird. Cathedral Scene magnificent. Rites are
+ wrong, probably; but these are trifles, except to strict
+ ritualists. Skating Scene not up to date; it was a novelty once
+ upon a time, but rinks have done for it. There was an
+ unrehearsed effect in the Prison Scene, when the walls
+ collapsed&mdash;the imprisoned Madame RICHARD escaped, and the
+ Curtain descended. Nobody hurt. The walls, which had fallen,
+ like those of Jericho, to the sound of the trumpet, were put
+ away carefully, for alteration and repairs. The prisoner,
+ issuing from her narrow fire-escape, was recaptured, and the
+ Opera ended with the Drinking Scene, the Prophet among the
+ Peris, a peri-lous situation, which makes the Opera go, at the
+ climax, "like a house-a-fire." Burns Justice is done to the
+ Impostor, and, at a late hour, we call our cabs, and return to
+ hum "<i>b&eacute;viam</i>" over "a modest quencher."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Saturday</i>.&mdash;BO&Iuml;TO'S <i>Mefistofele</i>.
+ Strong combination. Excellent. But big "waits" made it
+ heavy.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>AN AGRICULTURAL TRIPOS.</h3>
+
+ <h4>PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION PAPER.</h4>
+
+ <p>1. A field is ploughed three years running. Can it still
+ have a shy at its little go? Examine this, and say all you know
+ about "PIERS, or PEARS, the Ploughman." Did he use his own
+ soap?</p>
+
+ <p>2. How do you extract the square of a Beet-root? In
+ connection with this, say how much it will take to square a
+ "Swede?"</p>
+
+ <p>3. Explain the use of the "Sewing-machine" for agricultural
+ purposes. What do you mean by "going against the grain?"</p>
+
+ <p>4. You plant a field of corn. What plaster do you adopt when
+ it begins to shoot? Also give the best remedy you know for
+ <i>corn in the ear</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>5. Write a Sentimental History of the Harvest Moon. Is it
+ really twice as big as any other moon, or does it only look so,
+ after drinking the landlord's health several times over?</p>
+
+ <p>6. To what <i>gourmet</i> giving a dinner-party in January
+ is attributed the historical saying, "<i>Peas</i> at any
+ price"?</p>
+
+ <p>7. How many black beans will make five white ones? Given the
+ number, explain the process, and solve the equation.</p>
+
+ <p>8. What pomade do you recommend for "top-dressing"?</p>
+
+ <p>9. What would be an M.P.'s first step towards squaring a
+ circle of Agricultural Voters?</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>SAD STORY.&mdash;A painter, who had on several occasions
+ aspired to a place in the Chantrey Collection, and invariably
+ been refused, on being encouraged to launch a fresh venture,
+ and spread his canvas, which would be soon filled, for a sale,
+ replied dejectedly, "Chantrey be blowed; I <i>shan't try</i>
+ any more!" Poor fellow! He must indeed have been bad. He has
+ not been heard of since. The Serpentine has been dragged.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>THE HANSOM CAB STRIKE!&mdash;Remarkable Conversion!! Not yet
+ concluded! Last week another lot of Hansoms became
+ Growlers.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>REPARTEE TO A SPOUSE.</h3>
+
+ <p>Both parties in the recent extraordinary abduction case,
+ where a Mrs. JONES was carried off down a rope-ladder at
+ midnight by her own husband, Mr. JONES, have published
+ statements defending their own line of conduct. The following
+ is Mrs. JONES'S version:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"As public opinion appears to have erroneously taken
+ my&mdash;so-called&mdash;husband's side, as far as I can gather
+ from my having been twice chased through the streets by an
+ infuriated mob, and four separate attempts having been made to
+ blow up my house with nitro-glycerine, I feel compelled to
+ explain&mdash;with much reluctance&mdash;why it was that I
+ declined to live with Mr. JONES.</p>
+
+ <p>"To begin with, it was only under <i>the most awful
+ threats</i> that Mr. JONES prevailed on me to become his wife.
+ His words&mdash;I remember them well&mdash;were, 'My darling,
+ you know how tenderly I adore you; if you don't marry me <i>at
+ once</i> I'll break every bone in your body!' He then snatched
+ my bonnet, a <i>new one</i>, from my head, and so acted on my
+ <i>nerves</i> that I went off to the Registry Office and was
+ married. That he was actuated by merely mercenary motives is
+ proved by the fact that the gratuity (of half-a-crown), which
+ he presented to the Registry Clerk, he actually <i>borrowed
+ from me!</i> I knew him already to be unprincipled; but never
+ until that moment had it flashed upon me that he was a
+ <i>fortune-hunter!</i> However, as he had the drawing-room
+ poker with him&mdash;he kept it concealed up his back during
+ the ceremony at the Registry Office&mdash;I did not at that
+ time say anything, but handed him the coin. I do not know if I
+ should have left him at once, had he not aggravated the
+ baseness of his conduct by using the vulgar expression, 'Fork
+ it out quick!' But I regret to say that his origin is painfully
+ <i>low</i>. Whereas, anybody who consults <i>my</i> relatives
+ will hear from them that they belong to the very highest County
+ Families. Indeed, he would hear it all day long if he lived
+ with them, as I do!</p>
+
+ <p>"On the day of the abduction, I was treated
+ <i>barbarously!</i> Even the cab in which I was taken off was,
+ so the coachman informed me, 'put down to my account.' Oh, had
+ I but guessed the truth about Mr. JONES when I went to the
+ Altar&mdash;I mean the Registry Office! Supper consisted of
+ <i>cold mutton and pickles</i> (!) which latter he upset, and I
+ had a dress <i>ruined</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>On perusing the above, Mr. JONES decided that he could no
+ longer keep silence, and has made public the subjoined
+ explanation:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"When I first saw Mrs. JONES&mdash;then Miss
+ THOMPSON&mdash;her youthful grace quite captivated me. Her age
+ was under fifty-six, and mine was just sixty. She was, in fact,
+ as I told her at the time, almost old enough to know her own
+ mind. It is true that she was wealthy, but that had no
+ influence on my conduct. On the contrary I felt it as a
+ positive drawback, as my domestic ideal has always been Love in
+ a Cottage! But as she was bent upon our marrying, I agreed to
+ waive this objection.</p>
+
+ <p>"In proof of this assertion I need only say that on the
+ <i>very day after</i> our first meeting, I received the
+ following letter:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"'PRICELESS AND ADORABLE PET,&mdash;How <i>are</i> your
+ little tootsy-wootsicums? <i>Did</i> they get wet in conducting
+ me home after that <i>delicious</i> interview? If so, and you
+ were to catch cold in your precious head, I should never
+ forgive myself. Oh, come and see me <i>soon!</i> Your Own, till
+ Death, ANGELINA.'</p>
+
+ <p>"Possibly I may be blamed for publishing this letter. I do
+ it for <i>her</i> sake, not for mine. Even now I believe that,
+ were I left alone with her for an hour, with none of her
+ relatives nor a policeman near, I could persuade her to retract
+ her calumnious statement about the poker. I conclude by saying
+ that it is my belief that her relatives, who are all of them
+ powerful mesmerists, have <i>hypnotised her!</i>"</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.</h2>
+
+ <p><i>My Face is My Fortune</i>, by Messrs. PHILIPS and
+ FENDALL. Why don't they agree to spell both names with an "F,"
+ and make it FILLIPS and FENDALL. I fancy that FENDALL couldn't
+ do without the sensational fillips. This story excites
+ curiosity throughout the first volume, and then, in the other
+ volume, satisfies it in so disappointing and commonplace a
+ fashion as to suggest the idea that one of the authors,
+ becoming weary of his share in the work, suddenly chucked it
+ up, and said, "Oh, bother! let's finish anyhow;" and then the
+ other <i>collaborateur</i>, whichever it was, did finish it as
+ best and as quickly as he could. There is evidence of laziness
+ or of lack of invention in the story. If it were for the first
+ time in fiction that a secret is learnt by some one hiding
+ behind some pantomime plants in a conservatory, then too much
+ praise could not be bestowed on the ingenious devisers of so
+ strong and original a situation. But as "we know that
+ situation,&mdash;he comes from Sheffield," and as it has done
+ duty some scores of times before, on or off the stage, why, the
+ thoroughgoing novel-reader shakes his head and asks, "Couldn't
+ they have devised something better than this between them?" "I
+ expected much from this combination in Authorship, and am
+ disappointed," says the candid BARON DE BOOK-WORMS.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page222"
+ id="page222"></a>[pg 222]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/222.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/222.png"
+ alt="&lt;h3&gt;WHAT OUR ARTIST (THE NEWLY-MARRIED ONE) HAS TO PUT" />
+ </a>
+
+ <h3>WHAT OUR ARTIST (THE NEWLY-MARRIED ONE) HAS TO PUT UP
+ WITH.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>Our Artist</i>. "JUST LOOK, DARLING! I WAS SHORT OF
+ CANVASSES, SO I'VE STRETCHED A CLEAN
+ POCKET-HANDKERCHIEF!&mdash;SEE HOW SPLENDIDLY IT TAKES THE
+ PAINT!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>His Prudent Little Wife.</i>. "OH, JOHN DEAR, HOW
+ EXTRAVAGANT OF YOU! <i>IT'LL NEVER COME OUT!</i>"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>THE ADOPTED CHILD.</h3>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="note">"Last year the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER
+ frittered away his resources in a number of small
+ remissions, for which hardly anyone was grateful. This year
+ he squanders the greater part of his surplus in providing
+ for Free, or&mdash;as the phrase is&mdash;Assisted
+ Education&mdash;an innovation for which there is hardly any
+ genuine demand, and which a very large class of the
+ community, including many of the most loyal supporters of
+ the Government, view with rooted distrust."&mdash;<i>The
+ Standard</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>MRS. GAMP (<i>the "Old Regular</i>")
+ <i>loquitur</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"More changes, too, to come afore we have done with
+ changes!"</p>
+
+ <p>Ah! I said that to good Mister MOULD years agone;
+ which 'ow memory ranges</p>
+
+ <p>All over them dear "Good Old Times," as I wish them
+ wos back agen, bless 'em!</p>
+
+ <p>Which the new ones ain't much to <i>my</i> mind;
+ there's too many fresh "monthlies" to mess 'em.</p>
+
+ <p>No; monthlying ain't wot it were; the perfession's
+ too open, a lump.</p>
+
+ <p>Nusses now ain't no more like old SAIREY, no not
+ than the old Aldgit Pump.</p>
+
+ <p>Like the Cristial Palluses fountings; A Pilgjian's
+ Projiss is life,</p>
+
+ <p>And a Nuss ain't no more <i>like</i> a Nuss than a
+ Wife now resembles a Wife.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Heigho! Which it's no use a frettin'. But
+ <i>Fondlings</i>! Ah, well, I <i>did</i> think</p>
+
+ <p>Our respectable fam'lies, <i>though</i> mixed, from
+ sich ojus demeaning would shrink,</p>
+
+ <p>Which no greater hinsult to <i>me</i>, the old
+ reglar, could well be deviged;</p>
+
+ <p>And though I've to live and to learn, I confess as
+ this turn I'm serpriged.</p>
+
+ <p>A Fondling!!! Turned up unbeknownst on a doorstep
+ permiskus, no doubt.</p>
+
+ <p>And then to <i>adopt</i> him! Oh dear, wot the
+ plague is our Party about?</p>
+
+ <p>Wich to monthly to <i>it</i> were my pride; its
+ legitermit offspring I've nussed</p>
+
+ <p>Many years with the greatest success, but to-day I
+ feels flurried and fussed,</p>
+
+ <p>And my eyes is Saint Polge's fontin with tears, and
+ this brat is their source;</p>
+
+ <p>As it isn't no offspring of <i>ourn</i>&mdash;of the
+ fam'ly I mean, Ma'am, in course;</p>
+
+ <p>But a Brummagem bantling, picked hup, as were not
+ worth its swaddlin' and food,</p>
+
+ <p>And I never yet knowed any brat from <i>that</i>
+ source as turned out any good.</p>
+
+ <p>Missis G., Mum, it's all a mistake, as you know in
+ your 'art all the same,</p>
+
+ <p>For you turned up your nose at the child when JOE
+ CHAMBERLING give him a name,</p>
+
+ <p>Afore we was thick with his set, when you snubbed
+ him, and laughed him to scorn,</p>
+
+ <p>And heaped naughty names on this kid, as you swore
+ was his nat'ral fust-born.</p>
+
+ <p>And now you come dandling, and doddling, and patting
+ the brat on the 'ed,</p>
+
+ <p>And forgetting the things as you promiged, and
+ backing on all as you said.</p>
+
+ <p>Missis G., you do raly amaze me! This comes of our
+ precious mix-up;</p>
+
+ <p>Which the child's no more like one of ourn than a
+ pug's like a tarrier-pup.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>In the best-regulated o' fam'lies things will go
+ askew, I'm aweer;</p>
+
+ <p>As I says to my friend Mrs. HARRIS, as says to me,
+ "SAIREY, my dear,</p>
+
+ <p>You looks dragged, my sweet creetur," she says.
+ "Missis HARRIS," I makes 'er reply,</p>
+
+ <p>"When the 'art in one's buzzum beats 'ot, there's
+ excuge for the tear in one's heye.</p>
+
+ <p>Which wales isn't in it for worrit, my love, with
+ your poor old pal, SAIREY,</p>
+
+ <p>Along o' the Fam'ly," I says; "as things <i>do</i>
+ seem to go that contrairey,</p>
+
+ <p><i>My</i> services now ain't required, with
+ 'adoptions' all over the shop,</p>
+
+ <p>From Brummagem, yus, and elsewheres; and I ast
+ 'Where is this thing to stop?'</p>
+
+ <p>RITCHIE'S 'pick-up' was tryin', most tryin'; and as
+ to those bad Irish brats,</p>
+
+ <p>As BALFOUR interjuced&mdash;dear! jest fancy our
+ Party adopting small Pats!</p>
+
+ <p>And now this here Brummagem babby! You say he's a
+ promising cheild,</p>
+
+ <p>Missis G., and 'you're learning to love him!' All
+ this makes old SAIREY feel wild.</p>
+
+ <p>It's wus than kidnapping, this bizness of picking up
+ 'Fondlings' all round.</p>
+
+ <p>You're nussing a wiper, <i>I</i> say, and you'll
+ soon feel 'is bite, <i>I'll</i> be bound.</p>
+
+ <p>Who arsked for 'im, BETSY&mdash;I mean Missis
+ G.&mdash;who demanded the brat?</p>
+
+ <p><i>You</i>'ve altered your mind, and you pet him;
+ you'd much better mind what you're at.</p>
+
+ <p>Drat the boy's bragian imperence! <i>I</i> says.
+ He's a halien, a fondling, a waif,</p>
+
+ <p>And <i>I</i> never knew, for my part, <i>any</i>
+ Brummagem goods as wos <i>safe!</i>"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page223"
+ id="page223"></a>[pg 223]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/223.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/223.png"
+ alt="THE ADOPTED CHILD." /></a>
+
+ <h3>THE ADOPTED CHILD.</h3>
+
+ <p>MOTHER GOSCHEN. "FOUND 'IM IN BIRMINGHAM, MY DEAR!
+ DIDN'T LIKE 'IM AT FIRST,&mdash;BUT, SOMEHOW, I'VE QUITE
+ TOOK A FANCY TO 'IM!!"</p>
+
+ <p>MRS. GAMP. "A FONDLING INDEED!&mdash;WHICH ALL I CAN SAY
+ IS I DON'T LIKE THE LOOKS OF 'IM!!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <!--blank page 224-->
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page225"
+ id="page225"></a>[pg 225]</span>
+
+ <h2>ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.</h2>
+
+ <h3>EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>House of Commons, Monday, April 27</i>.&mdash;"Well, I
+ never!" said GEORGE ELLIOT, beaming on House from back bench;
+ "have known HARCOURT man and boy for forty years; seen him in
+ divers moods; watched him through various occupations. These
+ have been so many that I have had time to forget he was once
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer; but he was, and upon my word,
+ listening to him to-night, and knowing something about figures
+ myself, I believe he would have made a splash at the
+ Treasury."</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:20%;">
+ <a href="images/225.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/225.png"
+ alt="Genial George." /></a>Genial George.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>JOKIM doesn't enjoy performance quite so much as GENIAL
+ GEORGE. Oddly enough, Budget Night, which ought to be the apex
+ of comfort and glory for CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, is with
+ him ever the season of tribulation. House of Commons is,
+ regarded as audience, always at its best on Budget Night. Will
+ laugh immoderately at feeblest joke uttered by CHANCELLOR;
+ cheers to the echo his moral sentiments; sits enraptured when
+ he soars into eloquence; and is undisguisedly grateful when he
+ has completed his peroration. JOKIM'S muddle of Thursday night
+ made the best of. Opposition silenced by promised legislation
+ establishing Free Education. Everything in sunshine-glow of
+ prosperity. Thought JOKIM might keep some of the sunbeams for
+ himself. Then comes HARCOURT with the abhorr&euml;d shears of
+ facts and figures, and slits the thin-spun web of JOKIM'S
+ ingenious fancy; shows that, instead of a surplus, he has, when
+ honest arithmetic is set to work, a deficit; instead of
+ increasing the rate of reduction of National Debt, he has done
+ less in that direction than his predecessors; and that whilst
+ expenditure on Army and Navy has exceeded any figures reached
+ by former Chancellors of the Exchequer, the floating debt is
+ ever growing.</p>
+
+ <p>JOKIM sits on Treasury Bench affecting the virtue of a smile
+ though he has it not. Wriggles like a snail under dispensation
+ of salt. When HARCOURT finished, HENRY FOWLER stepped in, and
+ with fresh array of figures and new marshalling of argument,
+ completed the demolition of JOKIM'S system of finance. Mr. G.
+ looked smilingly on, delighting in the energy and aptitude of
+ his Young Men. JOKIM, anxious to change the subject on any
+ terms, tried to draw Mr. G. into the controversy. "I think
+ not," said Mr. G., with a smile of ineffable sweetness. "Right
+ Hon. Gentleman need not go so far afield: will have pretty
+ tough job in answering HARCOURT."</p>
+
+ <p>A pretty scene; admirable Parliamentary play. Oddly enough
+ boxes empty; stalls a wilderness; pit only half full. Energies
+ of House so sapped with dreary flood of talk on Irish Land Bill
+ cannot be reanimated even for a brisk battle over the
+ Budget.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Business done</i>.&mdash;JOKIM pummelled to pulp.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Tuesday</i>.&mdash;OLD MORALITY walked out of House just
+ now, his back suffused with sense of duty done, alike to QUEEN
+ and Country. Irish Land Bill, which, as CAMPBELL-BANNERMAN
+ says, makes a Moated Grange of House of Commons, on again all
+ day. SAGE OF QUEEN ANNE'S GATE and his Party active as usual.
+ The PARTY a little doubtful of the SAGE. Sometimes, in blessed
+ intervals of silence, is discovered gazing on a bald space on
+ back of SAGE'S head, striving, as it were, to pierce through
+ this weak spot, and discover what is in the SAGE'S mind. The
+ SAGE in outward manner most deferential and encouraging. Misses
+ no opportunity of publicly applauding him. It is true that when
+ the SAGE has got him on his legs, starting afresh on new
+ Amendment, he seizes the opportunity to slink out of the House,
+ and take another cigarette, quite certain that the PARTY is
+ good for half-an-hour. This, and one or two other little
+ things, create a suspicion in the mind of the PARTY, who was
+ not brought up in India for nothing. WILFRID LAWSON, who sits
+ close by, and keenly watches progress of events, says he has no
+ doubt the time will come when the PARTY will revolt.</p>
+
+ <p>"KEAY," says WILFRID, "occupies a strategical position,
+ which gives him a great pull over LABBY. His respected Leader
+ sits on the bench immediately below him. Some day SEYMOUR
+ KEAY'S wild Mahratta blood may boil over, an unsuspected
+ scimitar may flash forth from his trouser pocket, and the
+ SAGE'S head, falling gory on the floor of the House, may
+ gently, from mere force of habit, roll in the direction of
+ Queen Anne's Gate."</p>
+
+ <p>"For a real sanguinary-minded man," said RITCHIE, to whom I
+ told this story, "give me a teetotaller."</p>
+
+ <p>The PARTY, with some assistance from Windbag SEXTON, wasted
+ sitting till quarter to seven. By this time, all Amendments to
+ Clause 3 being wearily worn off, opportunity just left to pass
+ Clause before Sitting adjourned. Question put that Clause 3
+ pass. Then SAGE, smelling obtrusively of cigarettes,
+ interposed, and declared it "would be indecent" to accept the
+ Clause without further discussion. Nothing House shrinks from
+ just now more abjectly than from charge of indecency.
+ Accordingly debate stood over, and Thursday may, if the SAGE
+ and his Party please, and the Closure is not invoked, be
+ appropriated for further discussion of Clause 3.</p>
+
+ <p>OLD MORALITY might have moved Closure at twelve minutes to
+ seven, and carried Clause 3. Committee naturally expected he
+ would. But OLD MORALITY had another card up his sleeve. At very
+ last moment, whilst Members trooped out, and it was thought all
+ was over, OLD MORALITY gave notice of motion to take the whole
+ time of House, including Tuesday and Friday nights' evening
+ sittings.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think you had them there," I said, as we walked across to
+ Grosvenor Place.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, TOBY," he said, a little flush mantling his modest
+ face; "we've given them rope enough, and now we'll hang them.
+ They've had their run, now we'll take ours. It's the main thing
+ I always look to. Never forget when I was still in the seminary
+ writing out copy of verses about a shipwreck. A graphic scene;
+ the riven vessel, the raging seas, the panic-stricken crowd on
+ deck, and then this little self-drawn picture of the sole
+ survivor, the one man left to tell the story:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Some fell upon their bended knees</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And others fell down fainting,</p>
+
+ <p>But I fell to on bread and cheese;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For that, Sir, was the main thing.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It's the bread and cheese I look to, TOBY, dear boy. For
+ others the glory of debate, the prize of Parliamentary oratory.
+ Give me the bread and cheese of seeing business advancing, and
+ I'm content."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Business done</i>.&mdash;Once more Committee on Irish
+ Land Bill.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Thursday</i>.&mdash;A pretty little game on to-night. OLD
+ MORALITY moved his Resolution taking power to appropriate
+ Tuesdays and Fridays evening sittings, and all Wednesdays for
+ Irish Land Bill. In ordinary circumstances there would have
+ been stormy protest led from Front Opposition Bench against
+ this inroad on time of private Members. Other fish to fry
+ to-night. Wednesday week assigned for Second Reading of Woman's
+ Suffrage Bill; if Government take that day for Irish Land Bill,
+ obviously can't be utilised for furtherance of Woman's Rights.
+ This an awkward question for some Members; don't like it, but
+ daren't vote against it. Here's opportunity of getting rid of
+ it by side-wind. Not necessary in arranging proceedings to
+ mention Suffrage Bill, or even Wednesday, 13th of May. It was
+ principle for which Members struggled; "the principle of
+ uniformity," as Mr. G. beautifully put it. "Let us," he said,
+ though perhaps not quite in this phrase, "go the whole hog or
+ none; take all the Wednesdays, or leave them."</p>
+
+ <p>Pretty to see OLD MORALITY protesting against this
+ unprecedented access of generosity. The very picture, as MCEWAN
+ said, of a good man struggling with the adversity of
+ overwhelming good fortune. Was prepared to take a Wednesday
+ here and there: but, really, too much to appropriate everyone.
+ "Not at all&mdash;not at all," said Mr. G.</p>
+
+ <p>But it was only under compulsion of a Division that he
+ consented to accept the endowment. In meanwhile, the Woman's
+ Suffrage Debate on Wednesday week snuffed out, and final
+ opportunity of Session lost.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm inclined," said WM. WOODALL, "as a rule, to take kindly
+ views of my fellow men, to put the best construction upon their
+ actions; but, upon my word, I'm not satisfied in my own mind
+ that we advocates of Woman's Rights have not been made the
+ victims of deep and dastardly design."</p>
+
+ <p>"Order! Order!" said COURTNEY; "no more am I."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Business done</i>.&mdash;Woman's Rights men dished.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Friday</i>.&mdash;Brer FOX looked in to-night, and,
+ finding Brer RABBIT absent, undertook charge of Irish affairs.
+ Desirous of introducing novelty into situation, began by
+ patronising Prince ARTHUR. "So conciliatory, you know; so
+ anxious to meet the views of Irish Members; really, they ought
+ to meet him half-way, and refrain from annoying him by
+ unnecessary Amendments."</p>
+
+ <p>Brer FOX'S voice faltered as he spoke, and, bringing round
+ his tail, he gently brushed away a falling tear. Unfortunately
+ for him, TIM HEALY present. TIM jumped up, and fell upon his
+ ancient chief, flouting his counsel, and repudiating his right
+ to leadership. Effect upon Brer FOX something like that which
+ followed on the flight of the piece of old red sandstone which
+ struck in the abdomen a gentleman, who chanced to be standing
+ round. The subsequent proceedings interested him no more. He
+ walked out, and was not seen again. "Exceedingly rude man," he
+ said; "never come near TIM HEALY but I feel an infinite
+ yearning for a fire-escape." <i>Business done</i>.&mdash;Land
+ Bill again.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>"MORE FREE THAN WELCOME."&mdash;MR. GOSCHEN'S Education
+ Scheme, to the Tories.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>A REGIMENT OF "THE LINE."&mdash;The Royal Academicians.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page226"
+ id="page226"></a>[pg 226]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/226.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/226.png"
+ alt="GRANDOLPH THE PRODIGAL." /></a>
+
+ <h3>GRANDOLPH THE PRODIGAL.</h3>
+
+ <p>(<i>A Parliamentary Drama too good for words, after
+ "L'Enfant Prodigue" at the Prince of Wales's
+ Theatre.</i>)</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page227"
+ id="page227"></a>[pg 227]</span>
+
+ <h3>THE PICK OF THE PICTURES. (AT THE ROYAL ACADEMY.)</h3>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:65%; margin-top:6em;">
+ <a href="images/227-1.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/227-1.png"
+ alt="No. 199. Doctor Dubitans." /></a>
+
+ <p>No. 199. Doctor Dubitans. "I'm afraid I've given him the
+ wrong stuff." Luke Fildes, R.A.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:25%;">
+ <a href="images/227-2.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/227-2.png"
+ alt="No. 742. He's got 'em on!" /></a>
+
+ <p>No. 742. "He's got 'em on!" or, Nanny, wilt thou gang
+ with me in that new suit and those tight boots? By Phil. R.
+ Morris, A.</p>
+ </div><br clear="all" />
+
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:40%;">
+ <a href="images/227-3.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/227-3.png"
+ alt="Grand Combination Picture, 'Liddell and Scott!'" />
+ </a>
+
+ <p>Grand Combination Picture, "Liddell and Scott!" [Liddell
+ (289) by H. Herkomer, R.A., and Scott (281) by G(ee) W(oa)
+ Joy! "Joy and Woe!" Comedy and Tragedy.]</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:40%;">
+ <a href="images/227-4.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/227-4.png"
+ alt="No. 226. The Penance of Z&aelig;o in the presence of some" />
+ </a>
+
+ <p>No. 226. The Penance of Z&aelig;o in the presence of
+ some Members of the County Council. P.H. Calderon, R.A.</p>
+ </div><br clear="all" />
+
+ <p>No. 5. "<i>Long Ago</i>." LONG (EDWIN, R.A.) and more or
+ less of "a go." Instead of "<i>Long Ago</i>" which is
+ egotistical, why not <i>Long Egit</i> or <i>Long Fecit?</i></p>
+
+ <p>Nos. 21, 22, 23. "<i>The Lyons Mail</i>" (and Female).
+ BRITON RIVI&Egrave;RE, R.A. [N.B.&mdash;"R.A.," <i>i.e.</i>,
+ "Royal Academician" and "Royal Animal-painter."]</p>
+
+ <p>No. 27. The Viscount CROSS looking quite Viscount Cheerful.
+ "<i>Painted for the Grand Jury Room, Lancaster Castle</i>," the
+ Catalogue informs us. Suggestive of their arguing among
+ themselves "at cross purposes." Painted by SYDNEY HODGES.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 77. "<i>On Strike</i>." Very striking. Who could have
+ painted this? Ah! <i>Who but</i> HERKOMER. R.A.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 82. Apparently this must have been intended for a
+ portrait of the late Mr. DION BOUCICAULT, but subsequently
+ adapted to represent WALTER GILBEY, Esq. Looks quite the
+ GILBEY'S "fine, old, dry," but not "crusted." No doubt whatever
+ of its being the excellent work of W(erry) Q(uaint) ORCHARDSON,
+ R.A.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 112. "<i>Hanson is as Hanson does</i>." By J. HANSON
+ WALKER. Naturally pleased with "the promise of May," and</p>
+
+ <p>No. 118. Another Young Lady only Younger. By the same
+ Artist.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 143. The Right Hon. A.J. BALFOUR, M.P., as seen by L.
+ ALMA-TADEMA, R.A. Taken while considering</p>
+
+ <p>No. 147. The Irish Question as represented by Sir FREDERICK
+ LEIGHTON, P.R.A.'s "<i>Perseus and Andromeda</i>." Allegory,
+ <i>Andromeda</i>, Ireland. <i>The Monster</i>, "Parnellism and
+ Crime;" and <i>Perseus</i>, BALFOUR. Marvellous Monster!
+ DRURIOLANUS should at once order a dozen of 'em, hot and
+ strong, for next Christmas Pantomime. Poor Miss ANNE
+ DROMEDA,&mdash;"a dainty morsel <i>&agrave; croquer</i>," quoth
+ the Monster.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 148. No possible doubt whatever about this being A.
+ BERTIE; FREEMAN-MITFORD, C.B., painted by the President of the
+ Painters, who has hit him off to the life. B.M. is taken at the
+ moment when, as a spectator of the Perseus and Andromeda
+ <i>ballet d'action</i>, he remembers having seen something like
+ it in "Old Japan."</p>
+
+ <p>No. 201. "<i>Poor Tom's a Cold!</i>" LAURENCE SCOTT. Picture
+ illustrating the shortest and easiest way of catching his death
+ of cold.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 206. "<i>Two's company, Three's none</i>," observed the
+ Sun, as blushing deeply, he sank away in the far distance. By
+ MAURICE GREIFFEN LAGEN.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 209. The original Pieman met by SIMON going to the fair
+ in very full dress. ARTHUR S.
+ COPE.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page228"
+ id="page228"></a>[pg 228]</span>
+
+ <p>No.220. "<i>A Student</i>" of ALMA-TADEMA'S style. THOMAS R.
+ SPENCE.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 231. "Is it one o'clock?" she said to herself,
+ anxiously. "I hope luncheon will be punctual." The picture will
+ be known as "<i>Grace before Meals</i>," delightfully (of
+ course) painted by Sir JOHN E. MILLAIS.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 232. By the P.R.A. "What's that?" said one well-educated
+ clerical visitor to his matronly wife. She read it out,
+ pronouncing it thusly, "<i>Return of Percy Fone</i>." "What!"
+ exclaimed the Clergyman. Then, taking the Catalogue into his
+ own hands, he read "<i>Return of Persephone</i>." "It's
+ pronounced," he informed his help-mate,
+ "P&euml;r-s[)e]ph-[)o]-n[)e]." "Is it?" she returned, in a tone
+ expressive of unmitigated incredulity. "Then," she asked
+ suddenly, as a brilliant idea struck her, "why isn't
+ 'telephone' pronounced 'tel-[)e]ph-[)o]-n[)e]'?" And turning
+ her back on him, would not hear another word on the
+ subject.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 283. <i>Not Crossley, but Kindly</i>. CLAUDE
+ CALTHROP.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 333. <i>Professor Huxley</i>. By Hon. JOHN COLLIER. When
+ it isn't the Professor, it might serve for Sir GEORGE GROVE.
+ Bravo, Honourable JOHN! "Hang him, JOHN COLLIER!" (SHAKSPEARE
+ adapted.)</p>
+
+ <p>No. 390. A Boy to the very life, or a Life Boy. JAMES SANT,
+ R.A. It's a picture of Master HUGH BURDETT MONEY COUTTS. How
+ well this name will look on a cheque for a cool thousand or so!
+ But to see the <i>Hue</i> of health on his cheek is better than
+ seeing the colour of that HUGH'S money.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 414. Portrait of Author W. PINERO, Esq. Painted by
+ JOSEPH MORDECAI, who has done to Author PINERO what HAMAN would
+ have done to MORDECAI, <i>i.e.</i>, hung him.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 439. Sitting for Don Quixote. WILLIAM E. LOCKHART.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 459. <i>Stiff Collar Day; or, Just Back from the
+ Wash</i>, "And, confound it! she's been washing my shirt and
+ tie together, and spoilt 'em both. Wish I had another lot
+ ready, but haven't, so must go to Academy as I am," said WALTER
+ S-WASH-BUCKLER LETHBRIDGE, and finished up with an impetuous
+ and irrepressible "Hang it!" "I will," replied the Artist, JOHN
+ PETTIE, R.A.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 544. <i>Josephine Grimaldina; or, Female Clown</i>, the
+ next novelty in Pantomime, dedicated to the author and composer
+ of <i>L'Enfant Prodigue</i>. JOHN S. SARGENT.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 667. <i>Feeling his Bumps; or, Phrenology in the Olden
+ Time.</i>" ERNEST NORMAND.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 651. Gentleman ready for riding, but no spurs. "Where
+ the deuce have I put them?" he is evidently saying. "All ready
+ but that. Can't find 'em anywhere!" A picture which quite tells
+ its own (JULIAN) STORY.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>THE RIGHTS AND WRONGS OF LABOUR.</h3>
+
+ <p class="center">
+ (<i>At the service of the Ch-nc-ll-r of the Exch-qu-r, if he
+ purposes writing a Prophetic Romance.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p>MACAULAY'S New Zealander had arrived prematurely. London
+ Bridge was not reduced to its centre pier, and St. Paul's
+ Cathedral was certainly not in ruins. Still there was an
+ uncanny look about town. On the Embankment electric tram-cars
+ were running, but they seemed to be little patronised. Here and
+ there he noticed a pedestrian leisurely going his way, but the
+ side-walks appeared, to all intents and purposes, abandoned. At
+ length he reached a garden-seat, upon which was sprawling a
+ Typical Working Man. The New Zealander gave this interesting
+ individual "Good morning," and made some common-place remark
+ about the weather.</p>
+
+ <p>"Fine day!" returned the T.W.M., rather surlily. "Well, what
+ does it matter to me? If it rains, I stay at home; if it don't,
+ why I don't either."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am a stranger seeking for information," explained the New
+ Zealander; "so I am sure you will excuse me if I ask you how
+ much do you pay for your house?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Pay for my house!" ejaculated the T.W.M. "Why, nothing of
+ course! And I pay nothing too for my sons at Oxford, and the
+ girls at Cambridge. And I get my clothes free, and my food
+ comes in gratuitously. Why, you must be a stranger if you don't
+ know that! Why everything and anything is paid by the
+ Government&mdash;out of the Income Tax."</p>
+
+ <p>"And don't you ever work?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Work! bless you, no. I can't afford to work! If I did, I
+ should have to pay the Income Tax myself!" returned the T.W.M.,
+ with a grin.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then who does contribute to this evidently highly-important
+ source of revenue?</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, the professional men, under Schedule D!" cried the
+ hardy son of toil. "The authors with families, and the City
+ clerks. All <i>that</i> set, you know. They pay the Income Tax,
+ sure enough. It's as much as they can do to keep bodies and
+ souls together. But <i>somebody</i> must pay&mdash;why not
+ they?&mdash;pay for themselves&mdash;and for me!"</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>THE DUMB SHOW.&mdash;It sounds odd that the serious
+ pantomime, <i>L'Enfant Prodigue</i>, the play without words,
+ should be "the talk of London."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>LEAVES FROM A CANDIDATE'S DIARY.</h2>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:30%;">
+ <a href="images/228.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/228.png"
+ alt="Canvas and Scrutiny." /></a>Canvas and Scrutiny.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"<i>George Hotel," Billsbury, Friday, April
+ 25th</i>.&mdash;Arrived this morning in order to attend a
+ "Monstre Open Air Conservative F&ecirc;te, which was held in
+ the grounds of the Billsbury Summer Palace. The programme was a
+ very attractive one. First, there was a "reception of town and
+ county delegates and their ladies" by the Earl and Countess of
+ ROCHEVIEILLE. The Earl is a scrubby little fellow of about
+ sixty, who looks more like an old-clothes-man than anything
+ else. Norman noses&mdash;at least their descendants in this
+ generation&mdash;are curiously like the Semitic variety
+ sometimes. The name is pronounced "Rovail," and both the Earl
+ and Countess get blue with rage if anybody makes a mistake
+ about it, as nearly all the delegates did. They stood on a
+ raised da&iuml;s, and received delegates' addresses to the
+ number of about thirty. Lady ROCHEVIEILLE is a stout
+ lady&mdash;very. It was a blazing hot day, and she was
+ "overcome" just as she was shaking hands with Colonel and Mrs.
+ CHORKLE, who were accompanied by BENJAMIN DISRAELI CHORKLE. The
+ rest of the CHORKLE family, including WILLIAMINA HENRIETTA
+ SMITH CHORKLE, who was in a nurse's arms, were somewhere about
+ the grounds looking for the "Magic Haunts of the Fairy Bulbul,"
+ and eating enormous quantities of macaroons, which I had given
+ them. Colonel CHORKLE rather lost his head when Lady R.
+ collapsed. He made an effort to pick her up, but had to drop
+ her heavily on the boards of the da&iuml;s. Eventually,
+ however, she was carried away and revived, and the proceedings
+ went on. There were Conservative merry-go-rounds, Conservative
+ negro-minstrels, Conservative acrobats and Conservative dancing
+ bears, distributed about the grounds. I was taken about by
+ Alderman MOFFAT and HOLLEBONE, who introduced me right and left
+ to hundreds of my supporters and their wives and daughters. At
+ the end of it all I felt as if I had got a heavy sort of
+ how-do-you-do smile regularly glued on my face. One of my chief
+ supporters is an undertaker named JOBSON. HOLLEBONE brought him
+ up to me and said, "Mr. JOBSON, permit me to introduce you to
+ our popular young Candidate, Mr. PATTLE. Mr. PATTLE let me have
+ the honour of introducing you to our popular young undertaker,
+ Mr. JOBSON." Gave me rather a shock, but JOBSON seemed quite a
+ pleasant man. His wife was there too, gorgeously dressed in red
+ plush with an Indian shawl on her shoulders, and a sealskin
+ muff. She must have felt the heat horribly.</p>
+
+ <p>Later in the afternoon there was a political meeting, at
+ which we all spoke, but we had to make it short, as everybody
+ was anxious to get away to the "Refined Musical
+ <i>M&eacute;lange</i> (with incidental dances) of the Sisters
+ WILKINS," which was held in a specially erected tent.
+ Fireworks, illuminations, and dancing, ended the affair.</p>
+
+ <p><i>April 26</i>.&mdash;Was made an Oddfellow to-day.
+ Initiation didn't last long. CHORKLE and JERRAM were initiated
+ with me, and we all had to make speeches afterwards, declaring
+ our devotion to the great cause of Oddfellowship. Afterwards
+ sentiments were called for. The only one I remember was given
+ by a man called TABSEY, a tailor, who seems to be rather famous
+ for this kind of thing. After holding his hand to his head for
+ some time, and knitting his brows, he cleared his throat, and
+ said, in a loud voice,&mdash;"May the tear of true sympathy
+ crystallise as it falls, and be worn as a radiant jewel upon
+ the finger of affliction." This was vociferously applauded. I
+ congratulated TABSEY afterwards, and paid him a compliment
+ about it. He told me he found it a great relief, after a hard
+ day's work in the shop, to throw off a sentiment or two. He's
+ going to publish a book of them, and I've had to subscribe for
+ six copies, at half a guinea each.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>FROM A WATCHFUL OBSERVER.&mdash;SIR,&mdash;The other day I
+ saw advertised in a shop-window, "The Invisible Trouser
+ Stretcher." Who wears "Invisible Trousers"? Do you remember the
+ story of <i>The Emperor of China's Clothes?</i>&mdash;when they
+ all cried, "He's got 'em on," and he hadn't. That Invisible
+ Trousers should exist is quite enough stretch of imagination
+ without any further stretcher.&mdash;Yours, THE DAY
+ WATCHMAN.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>MRS. R. AT THE OPERA.&mdash;Mrs. RAMSBOTHAM Junior went to
+ hear <i>La Traviata</i>. She expressed her sympathy with
+ <i>Violetta</i>, between two <i>Gourmands</i>. Remarking on the
+ touching finish to the converted <i>Traviata's</i> career, Mrs.
+ R. observed that it reminded her of the poet's line about "She
+ who stopped to cough, remained to pray."</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="margin-bottom:4em">
+ <img src="images/pointer.png"
+ alt="pointer" />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>NOTICE.&mdash;Rejected Communications or Contributions,
+ whether MS., Printed Matter, Drawings, or Pictures of any
+ description, will in no case be returned, not even when
+ accompanied by a Stamped and Addressed Envelope, Cover, or
+ Wrapper. To this rule there will be no
+ exception.</p><br clear="all" />
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13313 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #13313 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13313)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 100,
+May 9, 1891, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 100, May 9, 1891
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: August 28, 2004 [EBook #13313]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, Sandra Brown and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOLUME 100.
+
+
+
+May 9, 1891.
+
+
+
+
+A FIRST VISIT TO THE "NAVERIES."
+
+"Shiver my timbers!" said the Scribe.
+
+"Haul down my yard-arm with a marling-spike!" cried the Artist.
+
+And with these strictly nautical expressions, two of _Mr. Punch's_
+Own entered the Royal Naval Exhibition, which now occupies the larger
+portion of the grounds of the Military Hospital, Chelsea. That so
+popular a show should be allowed to occupy so large a site speaks
+wonders for the amiability of the British Public. When the Sodgeries
+appeared last year, it was, so to speak, with fear and trembling that
+"the powers that were" appropriated a little of the ground usually
+over-run by the Nobility and Gentry of the Pimlico Road and its
+vicinity; or, rather, by their haughty offspring. This year the tough
+old sea-dogs of the Admiralty have had no hesitation in taking
+what they required, apparently without causing comment, much less
+objection. And the result? In lieu of the dusty arena of 1890,
+scarcely large enough for a ladies' cricket-match, there appears in
+1891 an enclosure containing lakes and lighthouses, panoramas, and
+full-size models of men-of-war! And the Public take their exclusion
+philosophically, either paying their shillings at the door, or
+attempting to get a view of the hoofs of the nautical horses through
+the gaps in the surrounding hoardings.
+
+The Scribe and the Artist, having been ordered by He Who Must Be
+Obeyed in the world generally, and at 85, Fleet Street, in particular,
+to make a sort of preliminary cruise through the wonders of the
+(Admiralty) Deep, hastened from the inviting grounds into the main
+building, with its pictures, its plans, and last, but (it is only
+just to say) least, its pickles. The first object that attracted their
+favourable attention was a trophy of arms, representing the fashions
+of the past and the present. On one side were shrapnel and magazine
+rifles, on the other flint-locks and the ordnance of an age long gone
+by. Next they passed through the Arctic section, wherein they found
+dummies drawing a sledge through the canvas snow of a corded-off North
+Pole. Then they entered the Picture Galleries called after NELSON and
+BENBOW, wherein magnificent paintings by POWELL, full of smoke and
+action, served as an appropriate background to the collection of
+plate, lent by that gallant sailor-warrior and industrious collector
+of well-considered trifles, H.R.H. the Duke of EDINBURGH. They glanced
+at the relics of Trafalgar, and then hurried away to the HOWE Gallery,
+which, containing as it did specimens of the implements used in
+the game of golf, might have as appropriately been christened the
+WHEREFORE. Next they skirted a corridor full of plans, and here they
+discovered that the Committee of the Exhibition must be wags, every
+Jack Tar of them! This corridor was close to the Dining-rooms, and the
+Committee (ha! ha! ha!) had called it (he! he! he!) after COOK! (Ho!
+ho! ho!) Oh, the wit of it! How the Members of the Executive must have
+nudged one another in the ribs as the quaint idea dawned upon them!
+And how they must have laughed, too, on the Opening Day, when the
+Guard of Honour, presenting arms, and the "Greenwich Boys" singing
+"_Ye Mariners of England_," were drenched in the rain! And what a
+capital notion it was on that occasion to put "the Representatives of
+the Fourth Estate" (no doubt called by _them_, with many a sly twinkle
+of the eye, "the Press Gang") into a pen that soon, thanks to a series
+of water-spouts, assumed the appearance of a tank!
+
+After leaving the Galleries, the Scribe and the Artist looked up at
+the model of Eddystone Lighthouse, and entered a shed declared to be
+an "Arctic Scene." Here they were reminded by the introduced ship
+of those happy days of their boyhood spent in the toy-shops of the
+Lowther Arcade. Next they visited the Panorama of Trafalgar, and
+revelled in the carnage of a sea-fight that only required Margate in
+the distance to be entirely convincing. They glanced at the arena, and
+gazed with awe at the lake which is to be devoted to the manoeuvring
+of miniature ironclads. It will be interesting to note whether these
+mimic combats will hold their own in the coming season against the
+introduction of capsized clowns, drenched old women, and comic police.
+Keeping the best for the last, the Scribe and the Artist now entered
+the model of the _Victory_--a really admirable exhibition. There they
+saw before them the old battle-ship with its full equipment, as it
+was in the days of NELSON--when that deathless hero expected every
+Englishman (not excluding even those passing the Custom House--as
+the Committee would say) "to _do_ his duty." To make the illusion
+complete, the great sea-captain was observed dying in the cook-pit in
+the agonies of wax. And to think that this work was executed by a firm
+of house-decorators! Why, who would not, after this, have his back
+drawing-room converted into the quarter-deck of the _Shannon_, and his
+spare bed-room into a tiny reproduction of the Battle of Copenhagen!
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Punch's Representatives, after partaking of
+Chelsea Hospitality (_a purely fancy sketch_).]
+
+The Scribe and the Artist, on their visit, were invited by all sorts
+and conditions of men to partake of champagne. The moment it was
+discovered that they were "connected with the Press," the offerers
+of hospitality were absolutely overwhelming. But, obeying the best
+traditions of their order, they sternly, but courteously, refused all
+refreshment. It is fortunate they pursued this course, for had they
+received the entirely disinterested kindness of their would-be hosts,
+their recollections of the marvels of the Royal Naval Exhibition would
+no doubt have been of the haziest character imaginable. As it was,
+they were able to take their departure through the main entrance
+with some show of dignity, and not in a less imposing manner (as the
+Committee--_Cook's_ Gallery near the Dining-rooms--ho! ho! ho! ha! ha!
+ha!--would probably and amusingly suggest), by Tite Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AMONG THE IMMORTALS.
+
+Mr. PUNCH would be failing in his duty to Art and the British
+Public if he did not place on imperishable record his notes of the
+exceptionally brilliant Royal Academy Banquet of last Saturday. H.R.H.
+the Prince of WALES made one of his best and briefest speeches, in
+which he feelingly alluded to the late Sir EDGAR BOHM, R.A. Never
+was the President, Sir FREDERICK, more eloquent, or his themes more
+varied; for this occasion is noteworthy as being the first time in the
+history of this great annual representative gathering that the toast
+of Music and the Drama has been duly honoured. Sir ARTHUR SULLIVAN
+responded for the first, and HENRY IRVING for the second. Both made
+excellent speeches. Sir ARTHUR'S solo was most effective; his notes
+were in his head; he gave us several variations on the original
+theme, and cleverly played upon one word in saying that music had been
+"instrumental" on various historical occasions. HENRY IRVING followed
+suit; he spoke of Mrs. SIDDONS, Sir JOSHUA REYNOLDS, and of a
+professional gentleman, one ROSCIUS, mentioned, we believe, by
+_Hamlet_ as having been, some considerable time ago, "a man of parts,"
+that is an Actor, in Rome. It was a great success. Sir FREDERICK then
+proposed the LORD MAYOR, which may be briefly expressed as "a toast
+with a Savory to follow." For "The Visitors," Lord Justice BOWEN,
+catching sight of the President's classical picture (No. 232), made a
+happy hit about the delights of a honeymoon in the Infernal Regions,
+ending in the return of Proserpine to her mother Ceres by order of the
+Court above. Finally, the President, in summing up the losses to Art
+during the past year, paid a graceful tribute to the memory of CHARLES
+KEENE, who, but a short while ago, was our fellow-worker on the staff
+of _Mr. Punch_ With a hopeful allusion to the Storage of Artistic
+Force in the near future, the President concluded: but this Banquet of
+1891 will long live in the recollection of all whose privilege it was
+to be present on so memorable an occasion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MUSICAL NOTES.
+
+I SAY! YSAYE! _Why say?_ Why _not_ say that YSAYE is a grand Yolinist,
+since he is this; and, as 'ARRY would observe, "No error!" and whoever
+says the contrary, is not speaking the absolute truth, but "_Ysaye
+Worsay_." The Yolinist had the advantage of the co-operation of a fine
+Orchestra, under the Magic Wand of Conductor COWEN.
+
+On the 27th, Heard young JEAN GERARDY, Little boy, but player hardy,
+Not the slightest Lardy-Dardy, Not yet out of care of "Guardy," Heard
+him _Lundi_, not on _Mardi_. But, whene'er he plays, your Bardy,
+Always spry, and never tardy, Will again hear JEAN GERARDY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GENERAL SUMMARY OF CARICATURES OF MR. GLADSTONE.--"Collarable
+Imitations."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FASHION'S FLORALIA: OR, THE URBAN QUEEN OF
+THE MAY.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FASHION'S FLORALIA;
+
+OR, THE URBAN QUEEN OF THE MAY.
+
+(_A Song of the Season, a very long way after Herrick_.)
+
+ "London town is another affair
+ Since HERRICK wrote his perfect rhymes."
+
+MORTIMER COLLINS.
+
+ True, sadly true, shaper of rattling rhymes,
+ London hath changed with process of the times.
+ Aurora now may "throw her faire
+ Fresh-quilted colours through the aire,"
+ But our conditions atmospheric
+ Are not as in the days of HERRICK.
+ Nathless the Muse to-day may see
+ Flora at urban revelry.
+ See how the goddess trippeth from the West,
+ Fragrant, though something fashionably drest;
+ The Season waketh at her tread,
+ Art lifteth a long-drooping head;
+ Music doth make a merry din.
+ 'Tis profanation, keeping in,
+ Whenas a hundred Shows upon this day
+ Spring, lightly as the lark to fetch in May.
+
+ Rise, Nymph, put on fresh finery, and be seen,
+ To come forth like the Spring-time, fresh and green!
+ And gay as Flora. Art is there,
+ With flowing hyacinthine hair.
+ Fear not, the throng will strew
+ Largess abundant upon _you_,
+ When Burlington's great Opening Day is kept.
+ Gone is thy Grosvenor rival, not unwept;
+ But a New Nymph, with footing light,
+ Trips it beside thee, nor hath night
+ Shadowed sweet "Aquarelle" whose skill,
+ As of a Water-Nymph, is still
+ Well to the fore. Pipe up! playing means paying,
+ When Fashion's Urban Flora goes a-Maying.
+
+ Come, my CORINNA, come; and, coming, mark
+ How each street turns a grove, each square a park,
+ Made green and trimmed with trees: see how
+ The pinky hawthorn decks the bough!
+ Each Bond Street porch, or door, ere this
+ Of Art a Tabernacle is;
+ Nor Art alone. With May is interwove
+ Seaweed, which Neptune's favourites love.
+ SWINBURNE should sing in stanzas fleet,
+ How NELSON may, at Chelsea, meet
+ ARMSTRONG! Sound conch-shell! Let's obey
+ Thy Proclamation made for May.
+ Wild marine whiffs from the salt sea are straying,
+ And the brine greets us as we go a-Maying.
+
+ There's not a London-Teuton but this day
+ Hath a new welcome for the English May.
+ Germania from her distant home
+ In Flora's train this year doth come.
+ She hath despatched her country's cream
+ Of things, to make the Cockney dream.
+ Neptune and she have wooed and plighted troth,
+ And her we give May-welcome, nothing loth,
+ As many a welcome we have given
+ To France, Spain, Italy! War hath riven
+ Many true hearts, but we're content
+ Of Peace to make experiment.
+ Blow Teuton horn--(not like "_Hernani's_" braying!)--
+ It makes new music as we go a-Maying!
+
+ Come, let us go, while May is in its prime,
+ And make the best of the brief Season's time.
+ HERRICK'S CORINNA might not see
+ An Urban May Queen such as we
+ Behold disport in our rare sun.
+ Rouse, Nymph! The Season is begun!
+ We'll trust no blizzard, and no boreal rain
+ May mar "Our Opening Day." Sound flutes again!
+ Pipe, Sir FREDERICK! Ah, well played!
+ Tootle thy new strains, fair Maid.
+ Blow, oh Briny One, with might!
+ Teuton BRUNEHILD, glad our sight!
+ Fashion's Floralia, Nymph, invite our straying;
+ Come, my CORINNA, come; let's go a-Maying!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THINGS ONE WOULD RATHER HAVE LEFT
+UNSAID.
+
+_Painter_. "WOULD YOU BELIEVE IT? THIS IS THE PICTURE THEY'VE THOUGHT
+PROPER TO REJECT! I'LL BE SO BOLD AS TO SAY, THERE ARE NOT TWENTY
+BETTER IN THE WHOLE EXHIBITION!"
+
+_Friend_. "DEAR ME! IS IT SUCH A POOR ACADEMY AS THAT?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HUMOUR O'T!
+
+(_Namely of Parliament, as seen through Harry Furniss's fancy._)
+
+AIR--"_The Wooing o't._"
+
+ LIKA JOKO makes us laugh,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ With caricature and caustic chaff;
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ Parliament strikes some as slow,
+ LIKA JOKO deems not so;
+ Visit _his_ St. Stephen's Show!
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ GLADSTONE stern and GLADSTONE staid,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ GLADSTONE in war-paint arrayed,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ GLADSTONE "Out" and GLADSTONE "In,"
+ GLADSTONE with colossal chin,
+ Giant collars plunged within,
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ SMITH with bland perennial smile,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ BALFOUR, pet of the Green Isle,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ HARCOURT, big as Babel's tower,
+ GOSCHEN, with myopic glower,
+ JOSEPH of the orchid-flower.
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ How they muster, how they "tell,"
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ Woes of the Division Bell,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ _All_--from Prayers to "Who goes Home?"
+ O'er St. Stephens you may roam;
+ LIKA JOKO bids you. Come!
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ LIKA JOKO is a wag,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ All the tricks are in his bag,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ He can mimic, he can mime,
+ Draw, and act, and--what is prime--
+ _Keep you laughing all the time._
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Why doesn't some Musical Photographic Artist of Scotch Nationality
+compose a March for his fellow Professors and Practisers, and call it
+"_The March of the Camera Men_"? Sure to be popular.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN UN-"COMMON" GOOD HORSE.--The Winner of this Year's Two Thousand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. PUNCH'S POCKET IBSEN.
+
+(_Condensed and Revised Version by Mr. P.'s Own Harmless Ibsenite._)
+
+No. III.--HEDDA GABLER.
+
+ACT. III.
+
+SCENE.--_The same Room, but--it being evening--darker than ever--The
+crape curtains are drawn. A Servant, with black ribbons in her cap,
+and red eyes, comes in and lights the gas quietly and carefully.
+Chords are heard on the piano in the back Drawing-room. Presently_
+HEDDA _comes in and looks out into the darkness. A short pause. Enter_
+GEORGE TESMAN.
+
+_George_. I am _so_ uneasy about poor LVBORG. Fancy! he is not at
+home. Mrs. ELVSTED told me he had been here early this morning, so I
+suppose you gave him back his manuscript, eh?
+
+_Hedda_ (_cold and immovable, supported by arm-chair_). No, I put it
+on the fire instead.
+
+_George_. On the fire! LVBORG'S wonderful new book that he read to
+me at BRACK'S party, when we had that wild revelry last night! Fancy
+_that!_ But, I say, HEDDA--isn't that _rather_--eh? _Too_ bad, you
+know--really. A great work like that. How on earth did you come to
+think of it?
+
+_Hedda_ (_suppressing an almost imperceptible smile_). Well, dear
+GEORGE, you gave me a tolerably strong hint.
+
+_George_. Me? Well, to be sure--that _is_ a joke! Why, I only said
+that I envied him for writing such a book, and it would put me
+entirely in the shade if it came out, and if anything was to happen to
+it, I should never forgive myself, as poor LVBORG couldn't write it
+all over again, and so we must take the greatest care of it! And then
+I left it on a chair and went away--that was all! And you went and
+burnt the book all up! Bless me, who _would_ have expected it?
+
+_Hedda_. Nobody, you dear simple old soul! But I did it for your
+sake--it was _love_, GEORGE!
+
+_George_ (_in an outburst between doubt and joy_). HEDDA, you don't
+mean that! Your love takes such queer forms sometimes, Yes, but
+yes--(_laughing in excess of joy_), why, you _must_ be fond of me!
+Just think of that now! Well, you _are_ fun, HEDDA! Look here, I must
+just run and tell the housemaid that--she will enjoy the joke so, eh?
+
+_Hedda_ (_coldly, in self-command_). It is surely not necessary, even
+for a clever Norwegian man of letters in a realistic social drama, to
+make quite such a fool of himself as all that?
+
+_George_. No, that's true too. Perhaps we'd better keep it
+quiet--though I _must_ tell Aunt JULIE--it will make her so happy to
+hear that you burnt a manuscript on my account! And, besides, I should
+like to ask her whether that's a usual thing with young wives. (_Looks
+uneasy and pensive again._) But poor old EJLERT'S manuscript! Oh Lor,
+you know! Well, well! [Mrs. ELVSTED _comes in_.
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, please, I'm so uneasy about dear Mr. LVBORG. Something
+has happened to him, I'm sure!
+
+_Judge Brack_ (_comes in from the hall, with a new hat in his hand_).
+You have guessed it, first time. Something _has!_
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, dear, good gracious! What is it? Something distressing,
+I'm certain of it! [_d._
+
+_Brack_ (_pleasantly_). That depends on how one takes it. He has shot
+himself, and is in a hospital now, that's all!
+
+_George_ (_sympathetically_). That's sad, eh? poor old LVBORG! Well,
+I _am_ cut up to hear that. Fancy, though, eh?
+
+_Hedda_. Was it through the temple, or through the breast? The breast?
+Well, one can do it beautifully through the breast, too. Do you know,
+as an advanced woman, I like an act of that sort--it's so positive, to
+have the courage to settle the account with himself--it's beautiful,
+really!
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, HEDDA, what an odd way to look at it! But never mind
+poor dear Mr. LVBORG now. What _we've_ got to do is to see if we
+can't put his wonderful manuscript, that he said he had torn to
+pieces, together again. (_Takes a bundle of small pages out of the
+pocket of her mantle._) There are the loose scraps he dictated it to
+me from. I hid them on the chance of some such emergency. And if
+dear Mr. TESMAN and I were to put our heads together, I _do_ think
+something might come of it.
+
+_George_. Fancy! I will dedicate my life--or all I can spare of it--to
+the task. I seem to feel I owe him some slight amends, perhaps. No use
+crying over spilt milk, eh, Mrs. ELVSTED? We'll sit down--just you and
+I--in the back drawing-room, and see if you can't inspire me as you
+did him, eh?
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, goodness, yes! I should like it--if it only might be
+possible!
+
+[GEORGE _and_ Mrs. E. _go into the back Drawing-room and
+become absorbed in eager conversation_; HEDDA _sits in a chair in the
+front room, and a little later_ BRACK _crosses over to her._
+
+_Hedda_ (_in a low tone_). Oh, Judge, _what_ a relief to know that
+everything--including LVBORG'S pistol--went off so well! In the
+breast! Isn't there a veil of unintentional beauty in that? Such an
+act of voluntary courage, too!
+
+_Brack_ (_smiles_). Hm!--perhaps, dear Mrs. HEDDA--
+
+_Hedda_ (_enthusiastically_). But _wasn't_ it sweet of him! To have
+the courage to live his own life after his own fashion--to break away
+from the banquet of life--_so_ early and _so_ drunk! A beautiful act
+like that _does_ appeal to a superior woman's imagination!
+
+_Brack_. Sorry to shatter your poetical illusions, little Mrs. HEDDA,
+but, as a matter of fact, our lamented friend met his end under other
+circumstances. The shot did _not_ strike him in the _breast_--but--
+[_Pauses._
+
+_Hedda_ (_excitedly_). General GABLER'S pistols! I might have known
+it! Did they _ever_ shoot straight? Where _was_ he hit, then?
+
+_Brack_ (_in a discreet undertone_). A little lower down!
+
+_Hedda_. Oh, _how_ disgusting!--how vulgar!--how ridiculous!--like
+everything else about me!
+
+_Brack_. Yes, we're realistic types of human nature, and all that--but
+a trifle squalid, perhaps. And why did you give LVBORG your pistol,
+when it was certain to be traced by the police? For a charming
+cold-blooded woman with a clear head and no scruples, wasn't it just a
+leetle foolish?
+
+_Hedda_. Perhaps; but I wanted him to do it beautifully, and he
+didn't! Oh, I've just admitted that I _did_ give him the pistol--how
+annoyingly unwise of me! Now I'm in _your_ power, I suppose?
+
+_Brack_. Precisely--for some reason it's not easy to understand.
+But it's inevitable, and you know how you dread anything approaching
+scandal. All your past proceedings show that. (_To_ GEORGE _and_ Mrs.
+E., _who come in together from the back-room._) Well, how are you
+getting on with the reconstruction of poor LVBORG'S great work, eh?
+
+[Illustration: "What! the accounts of all those everlasting
+bores settled?"]
+
+_George_. Capitally; we've made out the first two parts already. And
+really, HEDDA, I do believe Mrs. ELVSTED _is_ inspiring me; I begin to
+feel it coming on. Fancy that!
+
+_Mrs. E._ Yes, goodness! HEDDA, _won't_ it be lovely if I can. I mean
+to try _so_ hard!
+
+_Hedda_. Do, you dear little silly rabbit; and while you are trying I
+will go into the back drawing-room and lie down.
+
+[_She goes into the back-room and draws the curtains. Short pause.
+Suddenly she is heard playing_ "The Bogie Man" _within on the piano._
+
+_George_. But, dearest HEDDA, don't play "_The Bogie Man_" this
+evening. As one of my aunts is dead, and poor old LVBORG has shot
+himself, it seems just a little pointed, eh?
+
+_Hedda_ (_puts her head out between the curtains_). All right! I'll be
+quiet after this. I'm going to practise with the late General GABLER'S
+pistol!
+
+[_Closes the curtains again_; GEORGE _gets behind the stove_, Judge
+BRACK _under the table, and_ Mrs. ELVSTED _under the sofa. A shot is
+heard within._
+
+_George_ (_behind the stove_). Eh, look here, I tell you what--she's
+hit _me!_ Think of that!
+
+[_His legs are visibly agitated for a short
+time. Another shot is heard._
+
+_Mrs. E._ (_under the sofa_). Oh, please, not me! Oh, goodness, now
+I can't inspire anybody any more. Oh!
+
+[_Her feet, which can be seen
+under the valance, quiver a little, and then are suddenly still._
+
+_Brack_ (_vivaciously, from under the table_). I say, Mrs. HEDDA,
+I'm coming in every evening--we will have great fun here togeth--
+(_Another shot is heard._) Bless me! to bring down the poor old
+cock-of-the-walk--it's unsportsmanlike!--it's--.
+
+[_The table-cloth is violently agitated for a minute, and presently
+the curtains open, and_ HEDDA _appears._
+
+_Hedda_ (_clearly and firmly_). I've been trying in there to shoot
+myself beautifully--but with General GABLER'S pistol--(_She lifts the
+tablecloth, then looks behind the stove and under the sofa._) What!
+the accounts of all those everlasting bores settled? Then my suicide
+becomes unnecessary. Yes, I feel the courage of life once more!
+
+[_She goes into the back-room and plays_ "The Funeral March of a
+Marionette" _as the Curtain falls._
+
+THE END (_with the usual apologies_).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OPERATIC NOTES.
+
+[Illustration: "J'y suis."
+Pro Arris et focus.]
+
+
+_Monday.--Le Prophte_.--Notable performance. Profit to those who
+were there; loss to those who weren't. The two Poles, NED and JOHN DE
+RESZK, excellent as the Tipster, or Prophet, and the Chief Anabaptist
+Swindler. Madame RICHARD--"_O Richard, Oma Reine!_" repeated her grand
+impersonation of _Fides_, but being a trifle "out of it" as to tune
+occasionally, I cannot be _Fidei Defensor_, and swear she was quite
+correct, so can only report that RICHARD was a bit "dicky"; otherwise,
+sings like a Dicky-Bird. Cathedral Scene magnificent. Rites are wrong,
+probably; but these are trifles, except to strict ritualists. Skating
+Scene not up to date; it was a novelty once upon a time, but rinks
+have done for it. There was an unrehearsed effect in the Prison Scene,
+when the walls collapsed--the imprisoned Madame RICHARD escaped, and
+the Curtain descended. Nobody hurt. The walls, which had fallen,
+like those of Jericho, to the sound of the trumpet, were put away
+carefully, for alteration and repairs. The prisoner, issuing from
+her narrow fire-escape, was recaptured, and the Opera ended with the
+Drinking Scene, the Prophet among the Peris, a peri-lous situation,
+which makes the Opera go, at the climax, "like a house-a-fire." Burns
+Justice is done to the Impostor, and, at a late hour, we call our
+cabs, and return to hum "_bviam_" over "a modest quencher."
+
+_Saturday_.--BOTO'S _Mefistofele_. Strong combination. Excellent. But
+big "waits" made it heavy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN AGRICULTURAL TRIPOS.
+
+PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION PAPER.
+
+1. A field is ploughed three years running. Can it still have a shy
+at its little go? Examine this, and say all you know about "PIERS, or
+PEARS, the Ploughman." Did he use his own soap?
+
+2. How do you extract the square of a Beet-root? In connection with
+this, say how much it will take to square a "Swede?"
+
+3. Explain the use of the "Sewing-machine" for agricultural purposes.
+What do you mean by "going against the grain?"
+
+4. You plant a field of corn. What plaster do you adopt when it begins
+to shoot? Also give the best remedy you know for _corn in the ear_.
+
+5. Write a Sentimental History of the Harvest Moon. Is it really twice
+as big as any other moon, or does it only look so, after drinking the
+landlord's health several times over?
+
+6. To what _gourmet_ giving a dinner-party in January is attributed
+the historical saying, "_Peas_ at any price"?
+
+7. How many black beans will make five white ones? Given the number,
+explain the process, and solve the equation.
+
+8. What pomade do you recommend for "top-dressing"?
+
+9. What would be an M.P.'s first step towards squaring a circle of
+Agricultural Voters?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAD STORY.--A painter, who had on several occasions aspired to a place
+in the Chantrey Collection, and invariably been refused, on being
+encouraged to launch a fresh venture, and spread his canvas, which
+would be soon filled, for a sale, replied dejectedly, "Chantrey be
+blowed; I _shan't try_ any more!" Poor fellow! He must indeed have
+been bad. He has not been heard of since. The Serpentine has been
+dragged.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HANSOM CAB STRIKE!--Remarkable Conversion!! Not yet concluded!
+Last week another lot of Hansoms became Growlers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REPARTEE TO A SPOUSE.
+
+Both parties in the recent extraordinary abduction case, where a
+Mrs. JONES was carried off down a rope-ladder at midnight by her own
+husband, Mr. JONES, have published statements defending their own line
+of conduct. The following is Mrs. JONES'S version:--
+
+"As public opinion appears to have erroneously taken
+my--so-called--husband's side, as far as I can gather from my having
+been twice chased through the streets by an infuriated mob, and
+four separate attempts having been made to blow up my house
+with nitro-glycerine, I feel compelled to explain--with much
+reluctance--why it was that I declined to live with Mr. JONES.
+
+"To begin with, it was only under _the most awful threats_ that Mr.
+JONES prevailed on me to become his wife. His words--I remember them
+well--were, 'My darling, you know how tenderly I adore you; if you
+don't marry me _at once_ I'll break every bone in your body!' He then
+snatched my bonnet, a _new one_, from my head, and so acted on my
+_nerves_ that I went off to the Registry Office and was married. That
+he was actuated by merely mercenary motives is proved by the fact that
+the gratuity (of half-a-crown), which he presented to the Registry
+Clerk, he actually _borrowed from me!_ I knew him already to be
+unprincipled; but never until that moment had it flashed upon me that
+he was a _fortune-hunter!_ However, as he had the drawing-room poker
+with him--he kept it concealed up his back during the ceremony at the
+Registry Office--I did not at that time say anything, but handed him
+the coin. I do not know if I should have left him at once, had he not
+aggravated the baseness of his conduct by using the vulgar expression,
+'Fork it out quick!' But I regret to say that his origin is painfully
+_low_. Whereas, anybody who consults _my_ relatives will hear from
+them that they belong to the very highest County Families. Indeed, he
+would hear it all day long if he lived with them, as I do!
+
+"On the day of the abduction, I was treated _barbarously!_ Even the
+cab in which I was taken off was, so the coachman informed me, 'put
+down to my account.' Oh, had I but guessed the truth about Mr. JONES
+when I went to the Altar--I mean the Registry Office! Supper consisted
+of _cold mutton and pickles_ (!) which latter he upset, and I had a
+dress _ruined_."
+
+On perusing the above, Mr. JONES decided that he could no longer keep
+silence, and has made public the subjoined explanation:--
+
+"When I first saw Mrs. JONES--then Miss THOMPSON--her youthful grace
+quite captivated me. Her age was under fifty-six, and mine was just
+sixty. She was, in fact, as I told her at the time, almost old enough
+to know her own mind. It is true that she was wealthy, but that had
+no influence on my conduct. On the contrary I felt it as a positive
+drawback, as my domestic ideal has always been Love in a Cottage! But
+as she was bent upon our marrying, I agreed to waive this objection.
+
+"In proof of this assertion I need only say that on the _very day
+after_ our first meeting, I received the following letter:--
+
+"'PRICELESS AND ADORABLE PET,--How _are_ your little
+tootsy-wootsicums? _Did_ they get wet in conducting me home after
+that _delicious_ interview? If so, and you were to catch cold in your
+precious head, I should never forgive myself. Oh, come and see me
+_soon!_ Your Own, till Death, ANGELINA.'
+
+"Possibly I may be blamed for publishing this letter. I do it for
+_her_ sake, not for mine. Even now I believe that, were I left alone
+with her for an hour, with none of her relatives nor a policeman near,
+I could persuade her to retract her calumnious statement about the
+poker. I conclude by saying that it is my belief that her relatives,
+who are all of them powerful mesmerists, have _hypnotised her!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+_My Face is My Fortune_, by Messrs. PHILIPS and FENDALL. Why don't
+they agree to spell both names with an "F," and make it FILLIPS and
+FENDALL. I fancy that FENDALL couldn't do without the sensational
+fillips. This story excites curiosity throughout the first volume,
+and then, in the other volume, satisfies it in so disappointing and
+commonplace a fashion as to suggest the idea that one of the authors,
+becoming weary of his share in the work, suddenly chucked it up,
+and said, "Oh, bother! let's finish anyhow;" and then the other
+_collaborateur_, whichever it was, did finish it as best and as
+quickly as he could. There is evidence of laziness or of lack of
+invention in the story. If it were for the first time in fiction that
+a secret is learnt by some one hiding behind some pantomime plants
+in a conservatory, then too much praise could not be bestowed on the
+ingenious devisers of so strong and original a situation. But as "we
+know that situation,--he comes from Sheffield," and as it has done
+duty some scores of times before, on or off the stage, why, the
+thoroughgoing novel-reader shakes his head and asks, "Couldn't they
+have devised something better than this between them?" "I expected
+much from this combination in Authorship, and am disappointed," says
+the candid BARON DE BOOK-WORMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WHAT OUR ARTIST (THE NEWLY-MARRIED ONE)
+HAS TO PUT UP WITH.
+
+_Our Artist_. "JUST LOOK, DARLING! I WAS SHORT OF CANVASSES, SO I'VE
+STRETCHED A CLEAN POCKET-HANDKERCHIEF!--SEE HOW SPLENDIDLY IT TAKES
+THE PAINT!"
+
+_His Prudent Little Wife._. "OH, JOHN DEAR, HOW EXTRAVAGANT OF YOU!
+_IT'LL NEVER COME OUT!_"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ADOPTED CHILD.
+
+ "Last year the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER frittered away his
+ resources in a number of small remissions, for which hardly
+ anyone was grateful. This year he squanders the greater
+ part of his surplus in providing for Free, or--as the phrase
+ is--Assisted Education--an innovation for which there is
+ hardly any genuine demand, and which a very large class of the
+ community, including many of the most loyal supporters of the
+ Government, view with rooted distrust."--_The Standard_.
+
+MRS. GAMP (_the "Old Regular_") _loquitur_:--
+
+ "More changes, too, to come afore we have done with changes!"
+ Ah! I said that to good Mister MOULD years agone; which 'ow memory
+ ranges
+ All over them dear "Good Old Times," as I wish them wos back agen,
+ bless 'em!
+ Which the new ones ain't much to _my_ mind; there's too many fresh
+ "monthlies" to mess 'em.
+ No; monthlying ain't wot it were; the perfession's too open, a lump.
+ Nusses now ain't no more like old SAIREY, no not than the old Aldgit
+ Pump.
+ Like the Cristial Palluses fountings; A Pilgjian's Projiss is life,
+ And a Nuss ain't no more _like_ a Nuss than a Wife now resembles a
+ Wife.
+
+ Heigho! Which it's no use a frettin'. But _Fondlings_! Ah, well, I
+ _did_ think
+ Our respectable fam'lies, _though_ mixed, from sich ojus demeaning
+ would shrink,
+ Which no greater hinsult to _me_, the old reglar, could well be
+ deviged;
+ And though I've to live and to learn, I confess as this turn I'm
+ serpriged.
+ A Fondling!!! Turned up unbeknownst on a doorstep permiskus, no doubt.
+ And then to _adopt_ him! Oh dear, wot the plague is our Party about?
+ Wich to monthly to _it_ were my pride; its legitermit offspring I've
+ nussed
+ Many years with the greatest success, but to-day I feels flurried and
+ fussed,
+ And my eyes is Saint Polge's fontin with tears, and this brat is their
+ source;
+ As it isn't no offspring of _ourn_--of the fam'ly I mean, Ma'am, in
+ course;
+ But a Brummagem bantling, picked hup, as were not worth its swaddlin'
+ and food,
+ And I never yet knowed any brat from _that_ source as turned out any
+ good.
+ Missis G., Mum, it's all a mistake, as you know in your 'art all the
+ same,
+ For you turned up your nose at the child when JOE CHAMBERLING give him
+ a name,
+ Afore we was thick with his set, when you snubbed him, and laughed him
+ to scorn,
+ And heaped naughty names on this kid, as you swore was his nat'ral
+ fust-born.
+ And now you come dandling, and doddling, and patting the brat on the
+ 'ed,
+ And forgetting the things as you promiged, and backing on all as you
+ said.
+ Missis G., you do raly amaze me! This comes of our precious mix-up;
+ Which the child's no more like one of ourn than a pug's like a
+ tarrier-pup.
+
+ In the best-regulated o' fam'lies things will go askew, I'm aweer;
+ As I says to my friend Mrs. HARRIS, as says to me, "SAIREY, my dear,
+ You looks dragged, my sweet creetur," she says. "Missis HARRIS," I
+ makes 'er reply,
+ "When the 'art in one's buzzum beats 'ot, there's excuge for the tear
+ in one's heye.
+ Which wales isn't in it for worrit, my love, with your poor old pal,
+ SAIREY,
+ Along o' the Fam'ly," I says; "as things _do_ seem to go that
+ contrairey,
+ _My_ services now ain't required, with 'adoptions' all over the shop,
+ From Brummagem, yus, and elsewheres; and I ast 'Where is this thing to
+ stop?'
+ RITCHIE'S 'pick-up' was tryin', most tryin'; and as to those bad Irish
+ brats,
+ As BALFOUR interjuced--dear! jest fancy our Party adopting small Pats!
+ And now this here Brummagem babby! You say he's a promising cheild,
+ Missis G., and 'you're learning to love him!' All this makes old
+ SAIREY feel wild.
+ It's wus than kidnapping, this bizness of picking up 'Fondlings' all
+ round.
+ You're nussing a wiper, _I_ say, and you'll soon feel 'is bite, _I'll_
+ be bound.
+ Who arsked for 'im, BETSY--I mean Missis G.--who demanded the brat?
+ _You_'ve altered your mind, and you pet him; you'd much better mind
+ what you're at.
+ Drat the boy's bragian imperence! _I_ says. He's a halien, a fondling,
+ a waif,
+ And _I_ never knew, for my part, _any_ Brummagem goods as wos _safe!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE ADOPTED CHILD.
+
+MOTHER GOSCHEN. "FOUND 'IM IN BIRMINGHAM, MY DEAR! DIDN'T LIKE 'IM AT
+FIRST,--BUT, SOMEHOW, I'VE QUITE TOOK A FANCY TO 'IM!!"
+
+MRS. GAMP. "A FONDLING INDEED!--WHICH ALL I CAN SAY IS I DON'T LIKE
+THE LOOKS OF 'IM!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.
+
+_House of Commons, Monday, April 27_.--"Well, I never!" said GEORGE
+ELLIOT, beaming on House from back bench; "have known HARCOURT man
+and boy for forty years; seen him in divers moods; watched him through
+various occupations. These have been so many that I have had time to
+forget he was once Chancellor of the Exchequer; but he was, and
+upon my word, listening to him to-night, and knowing something
+about figures myself, I believe he would have made a splash at the
+Treasury."
+
+[Illustration: Genial George.]
+
+JOKIM doesn't enjoy performance quite so much as GENIAL GEORGE. Oddly
+enough, Budget Night, which ought to be the apex of comfort and
+glory for CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, is with him ever the season of
+tribulation. House of Commons is, regarded as audience, always at its
+best on Budget Night. Will laugh immoderately at feeblest joke
+uttered by CHANCELLOR; cheers to the echo his moral sentiments; sits
+enraptured when he soars into eloquence; and is undisguisedly grateful
+when he has completed his peroration. JOKIM'S muddle of Thursday
+night made the best of. Opposition silenced by promised legislation
+establishing Free Education. Everything in sunshine-glow of
+prosperity. Thought JOKIM might keep some of the sunbeams for himself.
+Then comes HARCOURT with the abhorrd shears of facts and figures,
+and slits the thin-spun web of JOKIM'S ingenious fancy; shows that,
+instead of a surplus, he has, when honest arithmetic is set to work, a
+deficit; instead of increasing the rate of reduction of National Debt,
+he has done less in that direction than his predecessors; and that
+whilst expenditure on Army and Navy has exceeded any figures reached
+by former Chancellors of the Exchequer, the floating debt is ever
+growing.
+
+JOKIM sits on Treasury Bench affecting the virtue of a smile though
+he has it not. Wriggles like a snail under dispensation of salt. When
+HARCOURT finished, HENRY FOWLER stepped in, and with fresh array of
+figures and new marshalling of argument, completed the demolition of
+JOKIM'S system of finance. Mr. G. looked smilingly on, delighting in
+the energy and aptitude of his Young Men. JOKIM, anxious to change the
+subject on any terms, tried to draw Mr. G. into the controversy. "I
+think not," said Mr. G., with a smile of ineffable sweetness. "Right
+Hon. Gentleman need not go so far afield: will have pretty tough job
+in answering HARCOURT."
+
+A pretty scene; admirable Parliamentary play. Oddly enough boxes
+empty; stalls a wilderness; pit only half full. Energies of House
+so sapped with dreary flood of talk on Irish Land Bill cannot be
+reanimated even for a brisk battle over the Budget.
+
+_Business done_.--JOKIM pummelled to pulp.
+
+
+_Tuesday_.--OLD MORALITY walked out of House just now, his back
+suffused with sense of duty done, alike to QUEEN and Country. Irish
+Land Bill, which, as CAMPBELL-BANNERMAN says, makes a Moated Grange of
+House of Commons, on again all day. SAGE OF QUEEN ANNE'S GATE and
+his Party active as usual. The PARTY a little doubtful of the SAGE.
+Sometimes, in blessed intervals of silence, is discovered gazing on
+a bald space on back of SAGE'S head, striving, as it were, to pierce
+through this weak spot, and discover what is in the SAGE'S mind. The
+SAGE in outward manner most deferential and encouraging. Misses no
+opportunity of publicly applauding him. It is true that when the SAGE
+has got him on his legs, starting afresh on new Amendment, he seizes
+the opportunity to slink out of the House, and take another cigarette,
+quite certain that the PARTY is good for half-an-hour. This, and one
+or two other little things, create a suspicion in the mind of the
+PARTY, who was not brought up in India for nothing. WILFRID LAWSON,
+who sits close by, and keenly watches progress of events, says he has
+no doubt the time will come when the PARTY will revolt.
+
+"KEAY," says WILFRID, "occupies a strategical position, which gives
+him a great pull over LABBY. His respected Leader sits on the bench
+immediately below him. Some day SEYMOUR KEAY'S wild Mahratta blood may
+boil over, an unsuspected scimitar may flash forth from his trouser
+pocket, and the SAGE'S head, falling gory on the floor of the House,
+may gently, from mere force of habit, roll in the direction of Queen
+Anne's Gate."
+
+"For a real sanguinary-minded man," said RITCHIE, to whom I told this
+story, "give me a teetotaller."
+
+The PARTY, with some assistance from Windbag SEXTON, wasted sitting
+till quarter to seven. By this time, all Amendments to Clause 3 being
+wearily worn off, opportunity just left to pass Clause before Sitting
+adjourned. Question put that Clause 3 pass. Then SAGE, smelling
+obtrusively of cigarettes, interposed, and declared it "would be
+indecent" to accept the Clause without further discussion. Nothing
+House shrinks from just now more abjectly than from charge of
+indecency. Accordingly debate stood over, and Thursday may, if
+the SAGE and his Party please, and the Closure is not invoked, be
+appropriated for further discussion of Clause 3.
+
+OLD MORALITY might have moved Closure at twelve minutes to seven,
+and carried Clause 3. Committee naturally expected he would. But OLD
+MORALITY had another card up his sleeve. At very last moment, whilst
+Members trooped out, and it was thought all was over, OLD MORALITY
+gave notice of motion to take the whole time of House, including
+Tuesday and Friday nights' evening sittings.
+
+"I think you had them there," I said, as we walked across to Grosvenor
+Place.
+
+"Yes, TOBY," he said, a little flush mantling his modest face; "we've
+given them rope enough, and now we'll hang them. They've had their
+run, now we'll take ours. It's the main thing I always look to. Never
+forget when I was still in the seminary writing out copy of verses
+about a shipwreck. A graphic scene; the riven vessel, the raging seas,
+the panic-stricken crowd on deck, and then this little self-drawn
+picture of the sole survivor, the one man left to tell the story:
+
+ Some fell upon their bended knees
+ And others fell down fainting,
+ But I fell to on bread and cheese;
+ For that, Sir, was the main thing.
+
+It's the bread and cheese I look to, TOBY, dear boy. For others the
+glory of debate, the prize of Parliamentary oratory. Give me the bread
+and cheese of seeing business advancing, and I'm content."
+
+_Business done_.--Once more Committee on Irish Land Bill.
+
+
+_Thursday_.--A pretty little game on to-night. OLD MORALITY moved his
+Resolution taking power to appropriate Tuesdays and Fridays evening
+sittings, and all Wednesdays for Irish Land Bill. In ordinary
+circumstances there would have been stormy protest led from Front
+Opposition Bench against this inroad on time of private Members. Other
+fish to fry to-night. Wednesday week assigned for Second Reading of
+Woman's Suffrage Bill; if Government take that day for Irish Land
+Bill, obviously can't be utilised for furtherance of Woman's Rights.
+This an awkward question for some Members; don't like it, but daren't
+vote against it. Here's opportunity of getting rid of it by side-wind.
+Not necessary in arranging proceedings to mention Suffrage Bill,
+or even Wednesday, 13th of May. It was principle for which Members
+struggled; "the principle of uniformity," as Mr. G. beautifully put
+it. "Let us," he said, though perhaps not quite in this phrase, "go
+the whole hog or none; take all the Wednesdays, or leave them."
+
+Pretty to see OLD MORALITY protesting against this unprecedented
+access of generosity. The very picture, as MCEWAN said, of a good
+man struggling with the adversity of overwhelming good fortune. Was
+prepared to take a Wednesday here and there: but, really, too much to
+appropriate everyone. "Not at all--not at all," said Mr. G.
+
+But it was only under compulsion of a Division that he consented to
+accept the endowment. In meanwhile, the Woman's Suffrage Debate on
+Wednesday week snuffed out, and final opportunity of Session lost.
+
+"I'm inclined," said WM. WOODALL, "as a rule, to take kindly views of
+my fellow men, to put the best construction upon their actions; but,
+upon my word, I'm not satisfied in my own mind that we advocates of
+Woman's Rights have not been made the victims of deep and dastardly
+design."
+
+"Order! Order!" said COURTNEY; "no more am I."
+
+_Business done_.--Woman's Rights men dished.
+
+_Friday_.--Brer FOX looked in to-night, and, finding Brer RABBIT
+absent, undertook charge of Irish affairs. Desirous of introducing
+novelty into situation, began by patronising Prince ARTHUR. "So
+conciliatory, you know; so anxious to meet the views of Irish Members;
+really, they ought to meet him half-way, and refrain from annoying him
+by unnecessary Amendments."
+
+Brer FOX'S voice faltered as he spoke, and, bringing round his tail,
+he gently brushed away a falling tear. Unfortunately for him, TIM
+HEALY present. TIM jumped up, and fell upon his ancient chief,
+flouting his counsel, and repudiating his right to leadership. Effect
+upon Brer FOX something like that which followed on the flight of the
+piece of old red sandstone which struck in the abdomen a gentleman,
+who chanced to be standing round. The subsequent proceedings
+interested him no more. He walked out, and was not seen again.
+"Exceedingly rude man," he said; "never come near TIM HEALY but I feel
+an infinite yearning for a fire-escape." _Business done_.--Land Bill
+again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"MORE FREE THAN WELCOME."--MR. GOSCHEN'S Education Scheme, to the
+Tories.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A REGIMENT OF "THE LINE."--The Royal Academicians.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: GRANDOLPH THE PRODIGAL.
+
+(_A Parliamentary Drama too good for words, after "L'Enfant Prodigue"
+at the Prince of Wales's Theatre._)]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PICK OF THE PICTURES. (AT THE ROYAL ACADEMY.)
+
+[Illustration: No. 199. Doctor Dubitans. "I'm afraid I've
+given him the wrong stuff." Luke Fildes, R.A.]
+
+[Illustration: No. 742. "He's got 'em on!" or, Nanny, wilt
+thou gang with me in that new suit and those tight boots? By Phil. R.
+Morris, A.]
+
+[Illustration: Grand Combination Picture, "Liddell and
+Scott!" [Liddell (289) by H. Herkomer, R.A., and Scott (281) by G(ee)
+W(oa) Joy! "Joy and Woe!" Comedy and Tragedy.]]
+
+[Illustration: No. 226. The Penance of Zo in the presence
+of some Members of the County Council. P.H. Calderon, R.A.]
+
+No. 5. "_Long Ago_." LONG (EDWIN, R.A.) and more or less of "a go."
+Instead of "_Long Ago_" which is egotistical, why not _Long Egit_ or
+_Long Fecit?_
+
+Nos. 21, 22, 23. "_The Lyons Mail_" (and Female). BRITON RIVIRE,
+R.A. [N.B.--"R.A.," _i.e._, "Royal Academician" and "Royal
+Animal-painter."]
+
+No. 27. The Viscount CROSS looking quite Viscount Cheerful. "_Painted
+for the Grand Jury Room, Lancaster Castle_," the Catalogue informs
+us. Suggestive of their arguing among themselves "at cross purposes."
+Painted by SYDNEY HODGES.
+
+No. 77. "_On Strike_." Very striking. Who could have painted this? Ah!
+_Who but_ HERKOMER. R.A.
+
+No. 82. Apparently this must have been intended for a portrait of the
+late Mr. DION BOUCICAULT, but subsequently adapted to represent
+WALTER GILBEY, Esq. Looks quite the GILBEY'S "fine, old, dry," but
+not "crusted." No doubt whatever of its being the excellent work of
+W(erry) Q(uaint) ORCHARDSON, R.A.
+
+No. 112. "_Hanson is as Hanson does_." By J. HANSON WALKER. Naturally
+pleased with "the promise of May," and
+
+No. 118. Another Young Lady only Younger. By the same Artist.
+
+No. 143. The Right Hon. A.J. BALFOUR, M.P., as seen by L. ALMA-TADEMA,
+R.A. Taken while considering
+
+No. 147. The Irish Question as represented by Sir FREDERICK LEIGHTON,
+P.R.A.'s "_Perseus and Andromeda_." Allegory, _Andromeda_, Ireland.
+_The Monster_, "Parnellism and Crime;" and _Perseus_, BALFOUR.
+Marvellous Monster! DRURIOLANUS should at once order a dozen of
+'em, hot and strong, for next Christmas Pantomime. Poor Miss ANNE
+DROMEDA,--"a dainty morsel _ croquer_," quoth the Monster.
+
+No. 148. No possible doubt whatever about this being A. BERTIE;
+FREEMAN-MITFORD, C.B., painted by the President of the Painters, who
+has hit him off to the life. B.M. is taken at the moment when, as a
+spectator of the Perseus and Andromeda _ballet d'action_, he remembers
+having seen something like it in "Old Japan."
+
+No. 201. "_Poor Tom's a Cold!_" LAURENCE SCOTT. Picture illustrating
+the shortest and easiest way of catching his death of cold.
+
+No. 206. "_Two's company, Three's none_," observed the Sun, as
+blushing deeply, he sank away in the far distance. By MAURICE GREIFFEN
+LAGEN.
+
+No. 209. The original Pieman met by SIMON going to the fair in very
+full dress. ARTHUR S. COPE.
+
+No.220. "_A Student_" of ALMA-TADEMA'S style. THOMAS R. SPENCE.
+
+No. 231. "Is it one o'clock?" she said to herself, anxiously. "I
+hope luncheon will be punctual." The picture will be known as "_Grace
+before Meals_," delightfully (of course) painted by Sir JOHN E.
+MILLAIS.
+
+No. 232. By the P.R.A. "What's that?" said one well-educated clerical
+visitor to his matronly wife. She read it out, pronouncing it thusly,
+"_Return of Percy Fone_." "What!" exclaimed the Clergyman. Then,
+taking the Catalogue into his own hands, he read "_Return of
+Persephone_." "It's pronounced," he informed his help-mate,
+"Pr-s[)e]ph-[)o]-n[)e]." "Is it?" she returned, in a tone expressive
+of unmitigated incredulity. "Then," she asked suddenly, as a
+brilliant idea struck her, "why isn't 'telephone' pronounced
+'tel-[)e]ph-[)o]-n[)e]'?" And turning her back on him, would not hear
+another word on the subject.
+
+No. 283. _Not Crossley, but Kindly_. CLAUDE CALTHROP.
+
+No. 333. _Professor Huxley_. By Hon. JOHN COLLIER. When it isn't the
+Professor, it might serve for Sir GEORGE GROVE. Bravo, Honourable
+JOHN! "Hang him, JOHN COLLIER!" (SHAKSPEARE adapted.)
+
+No. 390. A Boy to the very life, or a Life Boy. JAMES SANT, R.A. It's
+a picture of Master HUGH BURDETT MONEY COUTTS. How well this name will
+look on a cheque for a cool thousand or so! But to see the _Hue_ of
+health on his cheek is better than seeing the colour of that HUGH'S
+money.
+
+No. 414. Portrait of Author W. PINERO, Esq. Painted by JOSEPH
+MORDECAI, who has done to Author PINERO what HAMAN would have done to
+MORDECAI, _i.e._, hung him.
+
+No. 439. Sitting for Don Quixote. WILLIAM E. LOCKHART.
+
+No. 459. _Stiff Collar Day; or, Just Back from the Wash_, "And,
+confound it! she's been washing my shirt and tie together, and spoilt
+'em both. Wish I had another lot ready, but haven't, so must go to
+Academy as I am," said WALTER S-WASH-BUCKLER LETHBRIDGE, and finished
+up with an impetuous and irrepressible "Hang it!" "I will," replied
+the Artist, JOHN PETTIE, R.A.
+
+No. 544. _Josephine Grimaldina; or, Female Clown_, the next novelty
+in Pantomime, dedicated to the author and composer of _L'Enfant
+Prodigue_. JOHN S. SARGENT.
+
+No. 667. _Feeling his Bumps; or, Phrenology in the Olden Time._"
+ERNEST NORMAND.
+
+No. 651. Gentleman ready for riding, but no spurs. "Where the deuce
+have I put them?" he is evidently saying. "All ready but that. Can't
+find 'em anywhere!" A picture which quite tells its own (JULIAN)
+STORY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE RIGHTS AND WRONGS OF LABOUR.
+
+(_At the service of the Ch-nc-ll-r of the Exch-qu-r, if he purposes
+writing a Prophetic Romance._)
+
+MACAULAY'S New Zealander had arrived prematurely. London Bridge was
+not reduced to its centre pier, and St. Paul's Cathedral was certainly
+not in ruins. Still there was an uncanny look about town. On the
+Embankment electric tram-cars were running, but they seemed to be
+little patronised. Here and there he noticed a pedestrian leisurely
+going his way, but the side-walks appeared, to all intents and
+purposes, abandoned. At length he reached a garden-seat, upon which
+was sprawling a Typical Working Man. The New Zealander gave this
+interesting individual "Good morning," and made some common-place
+remark about the weather.
+
+"Fine day!" returned the T.W.M., rather surlily. "Well, what does it
+matter to me? If it rains, I stay at home; if it don't, why I don't
+either."
+
+"I am a stranger seeking for information," explained the New
+Zealander; "so I am sure you will excuse me if I ask you how much do
+you pay for your house?"
+
+"Pay for my house!" ejaculated the T.W.M. "Why, nothing of course! And
+I pay nothing too for my sons at Oxford, and the girls at Cambridge.
+And I get my clothes free, and my food comes in gratuitously. Why, you
+must be a stranger if you don't know that! Why everything and anything
+is paid by the Government--out of the Income Tax."
+
+"And don't you ever work?"
+
+"Work! bless you, no. I can't afford to work! If I did, I should have
+to pay the Income Tax myself!" returned the T.W.M., with a grin.
+
+"Then who does contribute to this evidently highly-important source of
+revenue?
+
+"Why, the professional men, under Schedule D!" cried the hardy son of
+toil. "The authors with families, and the City clerks. All _that_ set,
+you know. They pay the Income Tax, sure enough. It's as much as they
+can do to keep bodies and souls together. But _somebody_ must pay--why
+not they?--pay for themselves--and for me!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DUMB SHOW.--It sounds odd that the serious pantomime, _L'Enfant
+Prodigue_, the play without words, should be "the talk of London."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LEAVES FROM A CANDIDATE'S DIARY.
+
+[Illustration: Canvas and Scrutiny.]
+
+"_George Hotel," Billsbury, Friday, April 25th_.--Arrived this morning
+in order to attend a "Monstre Open Air Conservative Fte, which was
+held in the grounds of the Billsbury Summer Palace. The programme
+was a very attractive one. First, there was a "reception of town
+and county delegates and their ladies" by the Earl and Countess of
+ROCHEVIEILLE. The Earl is a scrubby little fellow of about sixty,
+who looks more like an old-clothes-man than anything else. Norman
+noses--at least their descendants in this generation--are curiously
+like the Semitic variety sometimes. The name is pronounced "Rovail,"
+and both the Earl and Countess get blue with rage if anybody makes
+a mistake about it, as nearly all the delegates did. They stood on a
+raised das, and received delegates' addresses to the number of about
+thirty. Lady ROCHEVIEILLE is a stout lady--very. It was a blazing hot
+day, and she was "overcome" just as she was shaking hands with Colonel
+and Mrs. CHORKLE, who were accompanied by BENJAMIN DISRAELI CHORKLE.
+The rest of the CHORKLE family, including WILLIAMINA HENRIETTA SMITH
+CHORKLE, who was in a nurse's arms, were somewhere about the grounds
+looking for the "Magic Haunts of the Fairy Bulbul," and eating
+enormous quantities of macaroons, which I had given them. Colonel
+CHORKLE rather lost his head when Lady R. collapsed. He made an effort
+to pick her up, but had to drop her heavily on the boards of the
+das. Eventually, however, she was carried away and revived, and
+the proceedings went on. There were Conservative merry-go-rounds,
+Conservative negro-minstrels, Conservative acrobats and Conservative
+dancing bears, distributed about the grounds. I was taken about by
+Alderman MOFFAT and HOLLEBONE, who introduced me right and left to
+hundreds of my supporters and their wives and daughters. At the end
+of it all I felt as if I had got a heavy sort of how-do-you-do
+smile regularly glued on my face. One of my chief supporters is an
+undertaker named JOBSON. HOLLEBONE brought him up to me and said, "Mr.
+JOBSON, permit me to introduce you to our popular young Candidate, Mr.
+PATTLE. Mr. PATTLE let me have the honour of introducing you to our
+popular young undertaker, Mr. JOBSON." Gave me rather a shock, but
+JOBSON seemed quite a pleasant man. His wife was there too, gorgeously
+dressed in red plush with an Indian shawl on her shoulders, and a
+sealskin muff. She must have felt the heat horribly.
+
+Later in the afternoon there was a political meeting, at which we all
+spoke, but we had to make it short, as everybody was anxious to get
+away to the "Refined Musical _Mlange_ (with incidental dances) of
+the Sisters WILKINS," which was held in a specially erected tent.
+Fireworks, illuminations, and dancing, ended the affair.
+
+_April 26_.--Was made an Oddfellow to-day. Initiation didn't last
+long. CHORKLE and JERRAM were initiated with me, and we all had to
+make speeches afterwards, declaring our devotion to the great cause of
+Oddfellowship. Afterwards sentiments were called for. The only one I
+remember was given by a man called TABSEY, a tailor, who seems to be
+rather famous for this kind of thing. After holding his hand to his
+head for some time, and knitting his brows, he cleared his throat, and
+said, in a loud voice,--"May the tear of true sympathy crystallise
+as it falls, and be worn as a radiant jewel upon the finger of
+affliction." This was vociferously applauded. I congratulated TABSEY
+afterwards, and paid him a compliment about it. He told me he found
+it a great relief, after a hard day's work in the shop, to throw off
+a sentiment or two. He's going to publish a book of them, and I've had
+to subscribe for six copies, at half a guinea each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM A WATCHFUL OBSERVER.--SIR,--The other day I saw advertised in a
+shop-window, "The Invisible Trouser Stretcher." Who wears "Invisible
+Trousers"? Do you remember the story of _The Emperor of China's
+Clothes?_--when they all cried, "He's got 'em on," and he hadn't. That
+Invisible Trousers should exist is quite enough stretch of imagination
+without any further stretcher.--Yours, THE DAY WATCHMAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. R. AT THE OPERA.--Mrs. RAMSBOTHAM Junior went to hear _La
+Traviata_. She expressed her sympathy with _Violetta_, between
+two _Gourmands_. Remarking on the touching finish to the converted
+_Traviata's_ career, Mrs. R. observed that it reminded her of the
+poet's line about "She who stopped to cough, remained to pray."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+-->NOTICE,--Rejected Communications or Contributions, whether MS.,
+Printed Matter, Drawings, or Pictures of any description, will in no
+case be returned, not even when accompanied by a Stamped and Addressed
+Envelope, Cover, or Wrapper. To this rule there will be no exception.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume
+100, May 9, 1891, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 100,
+May 9, 1891, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 100, May 9, 1891
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: August 28, 2004 [EBook #13313]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, Sandra Brown and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h1>PUNCH,<br />
+ OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.</h1>
+
+ <h2>Vol. 100.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <h2>May 9, 1891.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page217"
+ id="page217"></a>[pg 217]</span>
+
+ <h2>A FIRST VISIT TO THE "NAVERIES."</h2>
+
+ <p>"Shiver my timbers!" said the Scribe.</p>
+
+ <p>"Haul down my yard-arm with a marling-spike!" cried the
+ Artist.</p>
+
+ <p>And with these strictly nautical expressions, two of <i>Mr.
+ Punch's</i> Own entered the Royal Naval Exhibition, which now
+ occupies the larger portion of the grounds of the Military
+ Hospital, Chelsea. That so popular a show should be allowed to
+ occupy so large a site speaks wonders for the amiability of the
+ British Public. When the Sodgeries appeared last year, it was,
+ so to speak, with fear and trembling that "the powers that
+ were" appropriated a little of the ground usually over-run by
+ the Nobility and Gentry of the Pimlico Road and its vicinity;
+ or, rather, by their haughty offspring. This year the tough old
+ sea-dogs of the Admiralty have had no hesitation in taking what
+ they required, apparently without causing comment, much less
+ objection. And the result? In lieu of the dusty arena of 1890,
+ scarcely large enough for a ladies' cricket-match, there
+ appears in 1891 an enclosure containing lakes and lighthouses,
+ panoramas, and full-size models of men-of-war! And the Public
+ take their exclusion philosophically, either paying their
+ shillings at the door, or attempting to get a view of the hoofs
+ of the nautical horses through the gaps in the surrounding
+ hoardings.</p>
+
+ <p>The Scribe and the Artist, having been ordered by He Who
+ Must Be Obeyed in the world generally, and at 85, Fleet Street,
+ in particular, to make a sort of preliminary cruise through the
+ wonders of the (Admiralty) Deep, hastened from the inviting
+ grounds into the main building, with its pictures, its plans,
+ and last, but (it is only just to say) least, its pickles. The
+ first object that attracted their favourable attention was a
+ trophy of arms, representing the fashions of the past and the
+ present. On one side were shrapnel and magazine rifles, on the
+ other flint-locks and the ordnance of an age long gone by. Next
+ they passed through the Arctic section, wherein they found
+ dummies drawing a sledge through the canvas snow of a
+ corded-off North Pole. Then they entered the Picture Galleries
+ called after NELSON and BENBOW, wherein magnificent paintings
+ by POWELL, full of smoke and action, served as an appropriate
+ background to the collection of plate, lent by that gallant
+ sailor-warrior and industrious collector of well-considered
+ trifles, H.R.H. the Duke of EDINBURGH. They glanced at the
+ relics of Trafalgar, and then hurried away to the HOWE Gallery,
+ which, containing as it did specimens of the implements used in
+ the game of golf, might have as appropriately been christened
+ the WHEREFORE. Next they skirted a corridor full of plans, and
+ here they discovered that the Committee of the Exhibition must
+ be wags, every Jack Tar of them! This corridor was close to the
+ Dining-rooms, and the Committee (ha! ha! ha!) had called it
+ (he! he! he!) after COOK! (Ho! ho! ho!) Oh, the wit of it! How
+ the Members of the Executive must have nudged one another in
+ the ribs as the quaint idea dawned upon them! And how they must
+ have laughed, too, on the Opening Day, when the Guard of
+ Honour, presenting arms, and the "Greenwich Boys" singing
+ "<i>Ye Mariners of England</i>," were drenched in the rain! And
+ what a capital notion it was on that occasion to put "the
+ Representatives of the Fourth Estate" (no doubt called by
+ <i>them</i>, with many a sly twinkle of the eye, "the Press
+ Gang") into a pen that soon, thanks to a series of
+ water-spouts, assumed the appearance of a tank!</p>
+
+ <p>After leaving the Galleries, the Scribe and the Artist
+ looked up at the model of Eddystone Lighthouse, and entered a
+ shed declared to be an "Arctic Scene." Here they were reminded
+ by the introduced ship of those happy days of their boyhood
+ spent in the toy-shops of the Lowther Arcade. Next they visited
+ the Panorama of Trafalgar, and revelled in the carnage of a
+ sea-fight that only required Margate in the distance to be
+ entirely convincing. They glanced at the arena, and gazed with
+ awe at the lake which is to be devoted to the manoeuvring of
+ miniature ironclads. It will be interesting to note whether
+ these mimic combats will hold their own in the coming season
+ against the introduction of capsized clowns, drenched old
+ women, and comic police. Keeping the best for the last, the
+ Scribe and the Artist now entered the model of the
+ <i>Victory</i>&mdash;a really admirable exhibition. There they
+ saw before them the old battle-ship with its full equipment, as
+ it was in the days of NELSON&mdash;when that deathless hero
+ expected every Englishman (not excluding even those passing the
+ Custom House&mdash;as the Committee would say) "to <i>do</i>
+ his duty." To make the illusion complete, the great sea-captain
+ was observed dying in the cook-pit in the agonies of wax. And
+ to think that this work was executed by a firm of
+ house-decorators! Why, who would not, after this, have his back
+ drawing-room converted into the quarter-deck of the
+ <i>Shannon</i>, and his spare bed-room into a tiny reproduction
+ of the Battle of Copenhagen!</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/217.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/217.png"
+ alt="Mr. Punch's Representatives, after partaking of Chelsea Hospitality" />
+ </a>Mr. Punch's Representatives, after partaking of Chelsea
+ Hospitality (<i>a purely fancy sketch</i>).
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The Scribe and the Artist, on their visit, were invited by
+ all sorts and conditions of men to partake of champagne. The
+ moment it was discovered that they were "connected with the
+ Press," the offerers of hospitality were absolutely
+ overwhelming. But, obeying the best traditions of their order,
+ they sternly, but courteously, refused all refreshment. It is
+ fortunate they pursued this course, for had they received the
+ entirely disinterested kindness of their would-be hosts, their
+ recollections of the marvels of the Royal Naval Exhibition
+ would no doubt have been of the haziest character imaginable.
+ As it was, they were able to take their departure through the
+ main entrance with some show of dignity, and not in a less
+ imposing manner (as the Committee&mdash;<i>Cook's</i> Gallery
+ near the Dining-rooms&mdash;ho! ho! ho! ha! ha! ha!&mdash;would
+ probably and amusingly suggest), by Tite Street.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>AMONG THE IMMORTALS.</h3>
+
+ <p>Mr. PUNCH would be failing in his duty to Art and the
+ British Public if he did not place on imperishable record his
+ notes of the exceptionally brilliant Royal Academy Banquet of
+ last Saturday. H.R.H. the Prince of WALES made one of his best
+ and briefest speeches, in which he feelingly alluded to the
+ late Sir EDGAR BO&Euml;HM, R.A. Never was the President, Sir
+ FREDERICK, more eloquent, or his themes more varied; for this
+ occasion is noteworthy as being the first time in the history
+ of this great annual representative gathering that the toast of
+ Music and the Drama has been duly honoured. Sir ARTHUR SULLIVAN
+ responded for the first, and HENRY IRVING for the second. Both
+ made excellent speeches. Sir ARTHUR'S solo was most effective;
+ his notes were in his head; he gave us several variations on
+ the original theme, and cleverly played upon one word in saying
+ that music had been "instrumental" on various historical
+ occasions. HENRY IRVING followed suit; he spoke of Mrs.
+ SIDDONS, Sir JOSHUA REYNOLDS, and of a professional gentleman,
+ one ROSCIUS, mentioned, we believe, by <i>Hamlet</i> as having
+ been, some considerable time ago, "a man of parts," that is an
+ Actor, in Rome. It was a great success. Sir FREDERICK then
+ proposed the LORD MAYOR, which may be briefly expressed as "a
+ toast with a Savory to follow." For "The Visitors," Lord
+ Justice BOWEN, catching sight of the President's classical
+ picture (No. 232), made a happy hit about the delights of a
+ honeymoon in the Infernal Regions, ending in the return of
+ Proserpine to her mother Ceres by order of the Court above.
+ Finally, the President, in summing up the losses to Art during
+ the past year, paid a graceful tribute to the memory of CHARLES
+ KEENE, who, but a short while ago, was our fellow-worker on the
+ staff of <i>Mr. Punch</i> With a hopeful allusion to the
+ Storage of Artistic Force in the near future, the President
+ concluded: but this Banquet of 1891 will long live in the
+ recollection of all whose privilege it was to be present on so
+ memorable an occasion.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>MUSICAL NOTES.</h3>
+
+ <p>I SAY! YSAYE! <i>Why say?</i> Why <i>not</i> say that YSAYE
+ is a grand Yolinist, since he is this; and, as 'ARRY would
+ observe, "No error!" and whoever says the contrary, is not
+ speaking the absolute truth, but "<i>Ysaye Worsay</i>." The
+ Yolinist had the advantage of the co-operation of a fine
+ Orchestra, under the Magic Wand of Conductor COWEN.</p>
+
+ <p>On the 27th, Heard young JEAN GERARDY, Little boy, but
+ player hardy, Not the slightest Lardy-Dardy, Not yet out of
+ care of "Guardy," Heard him <i>Lundi</i>, not on <i>Mardi</i>.
+ But, whene'er he plays, your Bardy, Always spry, and never
+ tardy, Will again hear JEAN GERARDY.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>GENERAL SUMMARY OF CARICATURES OF MR.
+ GLADSTONE.&mdash;"Collarable Imitations."</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page218"
+ id="page218"></a>[pg 218]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/218.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/218.png"
+ alt="FASHION'S FLORALIA" /></a>
+
+ <h3>FASHION'S FLORALIA: OR, THE URBAN QUEEN OF THE
+ MAY.</h3>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page219"
+ id="page219"></a>[pg 219]</span>
+
+ <h2>FASHION'S FLORALIA;</h2>
+
+ <h4>OR, THE URBAN QUEEN OF THE MAY.</h4>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>A Song of the Season, a very long way after
+ Herrick</i>.)</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"London town is another affair</p>
+
+ <p>Since HERRICK wrote his perfect rhymes."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="center">MORTIMER COLLINS.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>True, sadly true, shaper of rattling rhymes,</p>
+
+ <p>London hath changed with process of the times.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Aurora now may "throw her faire</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Fresh-quilted colours through the
+ aire,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But our conditions atmospheric</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Are not as in the days of HERRICK.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Nathless the Muse to-day may see</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Flora at urban revelry.</p>
+
+ <p>See how the goddess trippeth from the West,</p>
+
+ <p>Fragrant, though something fashionably drest;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The Season waketh at her tread,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Art lifteth a long-drooping head;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Music doth make a merry din.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">'Tis profanation, keeping in,</p>
+
+ <p>Whenas a hundred Shows upon this day</p>
+
+ <p>Spring, lightly as the lark to fetch in May.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Rise, Nymph, put on fresh finery, and be seen,</p>
+
+ <p>To come forth like the Spring-time, fresh and
+ green!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And gay as Flora. Art is there,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With flowing hyacinthine hair.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Fear not, the throng will strew</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Largess abundant upon <i>you</i>,</p>
+
+ <p>When Burlington's great Opening Day is kept.</p>
+
+ <p>Gone is thy Grosvenor rival, not unwept;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But a New Nymph, with footing light,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Trips it beside thee, nor hath night</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Shadowed sweet "Aquarelle" whose
+ skill,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As of a Water-Nymph, is still</p>
+
+ <p>Well to the fore. Pipe up! playing means paying,</p>
+
+ <p>When Fashion's Urban Flora goes a-Maying.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Come, my CORINNA, come; and, coming, mark</p>
+
+ <p>How each street turns a grove, each square a
+ park,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Made green and trimmed with trees: see
+ how</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The pinky hawthorn decks the bough!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Each Bond Street porch, or door, ere
+ this</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of Art a Tabernacle is;</p>
+
+ <p>Nor Art alone. With May is interwove</p>
+
+ <p>Seaweed, which Neptune's favourites love.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">SWINBURNE should sing in stanzas
+ fleet,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">How NELSON may, at Chelsea, meet</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">ARMSTRONG! Sound conch-shell! Let's
+ obey</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Thy Proclamation made for May.</p>
+
+ <p>Wild marine whiffs from the salt sea are
+ straying,</p>
+
+ <p>And the brine greets us as we go a-Maying.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>There's not a London-Teuton but this day</p>
+
+ <p>Hath a new welcome for the English May.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Germania from her distant home</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In Flora's train this year doth come.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">She hath despatched her country's
+ cream</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of things, to make the Cockney dream.</p>
+
+ <p>Neptune and she have wooed and plighted troth,</p>
+
+ <p>And her we give May-welcome, nothing loth,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As many a welcome we have given</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To France, Spain, Italy! War hath
+ riven</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Many true hearts, but we're content</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of Peace to make experiment.</p>
+
+ <p>Blow Teuton horn&mdash;(not like "<i>Hernani's</i>"
+ braying!)&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>It makes new music as we go a-Maying!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Come, let us go, while May is in its prime,</p>
+
+ <p>And make the best of the brief Season's time.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">HERRICK'S CORINNA might not see</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">An Urban May Queen such as we</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Behold disport in our rare sun.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Rouse, Nymph! The Season is begun!</p>
+
+ <p>We'll trust no blizzard, and no boreal rain</p>
+
+ <p>May mar "Our Opening Day." Sound flutes again!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Pipe, Sir FREDERICK! Ah, well played!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Tootle thy new strains, fair Maid.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Blow, oh Briny One, with might!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Teuton BRUNEHILD, glad our sight!</p>
+
+ <p>Fashion's Floralia, Nymph, invite our straying;</p>
+
+ <p>Come, my CORINNA, come; let's go a-Maying!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:70%;">
+ <a href="images/219.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/219.png"
+ alt="THINGS ONE WOULD RATHER HAVE LEFT UNSAID." /></a>
+
+ <h3>THINGS ONE WOULD RATHER HAVE LEFT UNSAID.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>Painter</i>. "WOULD YOU BELIEVE IT? THIS IS THE
+ PICTURE THEY'VE THOUGHT PROPER TO REJECT! I'LL BE SO BOLD
+ AS TO SAY, THERE ARE NOT TWENTY BETTER IN THE WHOLE
+ EXHIBITION!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Friend</i>. "DEAR ME! IS IT SUCH A POOR ACADEMY AS
+ THAT?"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>THE HUMOUR O'T!</h3>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>Namely of Parliament, as seen through Harry Furniss's
+ fancy.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p class="center">AIR&mdash;"<i>The Wooing o't.</i>"</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>LIKA JOKO makes us laugh,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ha! ha! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>With caricature and caustic chaff;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He! he! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>Parliament strikes some as slow,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">LIKA JOKO deems not so;</p>
+
+ <p>Visit <i>his</i> St. Stephen's Show!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Humph! humph! the humour o't!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>GLADSTONE stern and GLADSTONE staid,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ha! ha! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>GLADSTONE in war-paint arrayed,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He! he! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>GLADSTONE "Out" and GLADSTONE "In,"</p>
+
+ <p>GLADSTONE with colossal chin,</p>
+
+ <p>Giant collars plunged within,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Humph! humph! the humour o't!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>SMITH with bland perennial smile,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ha! ha! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>BALFOUR, pet of the Green Isle,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He! he! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>HARCOURT, big as Babel's tower,</p>
+
+ <p>GOSCHEN, with myopic glower,</p>
+
+ <p>JOSEPH of the orchid-flower.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Humph! humph! the humour o't!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>How they muster, how they "tell,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ha! ha! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>Woes of the Division Bell,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He! he! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p><i>All</i>&mdash;from Prayers to "Who goes
+ Home?"</p>
+
+ <p>O'er St. Stephens you may roam;</p>
+
+ <p>LIKA JOKO bids you. Come!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Humph! humph! the humour o't!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>LIKA JOKO is a wag,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ha! ha! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>All the tricks are in his bag,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He! he! the humour o't!</p>
+
+ <p>He can mimic, he can mime,</p>
+
+ <p>Draw, and act, and&mdash;what is prime&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p><i>Keep you laughing all the time.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Humph! humph! the humour o't!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Why doesn't some Musical Photographic Artist of Scotch
+ Nationality compose a March for his fellow Professors and
+ Practisers, and call it "<i>The March of the Camera Men</i>"?
+ Sure to be popular.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>AN UN-"COMMON" GOOD HORSE.&mdash;The Winner of this Year's
+ Two Thousand.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page220"
+ id="page220"></a>[pg 220]</span>
+
+ <h2>MR. PUNCH'S POCKET IBSEN.</h2>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>Condensed and Revised Version by Mr. P.'s
+ Own Harmless Ibsenite.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p class="center">No. III.&mdash;HEDDA GABLER.</p>
+
+ <p class="center">ACT. III.</p>
+
+ <p class="scene">SCENE.&mdash;<i>The same Room, but&mdash;it
+ being evening&mdash;darker than ever&mdash;The crape curtains
+ are drawn. A Servant, with black ribbons in her cap, and red
+ eyes, comes in and lights the gas quietly and carefully. Chords
+ are heard on the piano in the back Drawing-room. Presently</i>
+ HEDDA <i>comes in and looks out into the darkness. A short
+ pause. Enter</i> GEORGE TESMAN.</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. I am <i>so</i> uneasy about poor
+ L&Ouml;VBORG. Fancy! he is not at home. Mrs. ELVSTED told me he
+ had been here early this morning, so I suppose you gave him
+ back his manuscript, eh?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>cold and immovable, supported by
+ arm-chair</i>). No, I put it on the fire instead.</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. On the fire! L&Ouml;VBORG'S wonderful new
+ book that he read to me at BRACK'S party, when we had that wild
+ revelry last night! Fancy <i>that!</i> But, I say,
+ HEDDA&mdash;isn't that <i>rather</i>&mdash;eh? <i>Too</i> bad,
+ you know&mdash;really. A great work like that. How on earth did
+ you come to think of it?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>suppressing an almost imperceptible
+ smile</i>). Well, dear GEORGE, you gave me a tolerably strong
+ hint.</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. Me? Well, to be sure&mdash;that <i>is</i> a
+ joke! Why, I only said that I envied him for writing such a
+ book, and it would put me entirely in the shade if it came out,
+ and if anything was to happen to it, I should never forgive
+ myself, as poor L&Ouml;VBORG couldn't write it all over again,
+ and so we must take the greatest care of it! And then I left it
+ on a chair and went away&mdash;that was all! And you went and
+ burnt the book all up! Bless me, who <i>would</i> have expected
+ it?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i>. Nobody, you dear simple old soul! But I did it
+ for your sake&mdash;it was <i>love</i>, GEORGE!</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i> (<i>in an outburst between doubt and joy</i>).
+ HEDDA, you don't mean that! Your love takes such queer forms
+ sometimes, Yes, but yes&mdash;(<i>laughing in excess of
+ joy</i>), why, you <i>must</i> be fond of me! Just think of
+ that now! Well, you <i>are</i> fun, HEDDA! Look here, I must
+ just run and tell the housemaid that&mdash;she will enjoy the
+ joke so, eh?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>coldly, in self-command</i>). It is surely
+ not necessary, even for a clever Norwegian man of letters in a
+ realistic social drama, to make quite such a fool of himself as
+ all that?</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. No, that's true too. Perhaps we'd better keep
+ it quiet&mdash;though I <i>must</i> tell Aunt JULIE&mdash;it
+ will make her so happy to hear that you burnt a manuscript on
+ my account! And, besides, I should like to ask her whether
+ that's a usual thing with young wives. (<i>Looks uneasy and
+ pensive again.</i>) But poor old EJLERT'S manuscript! Oh Lor,
+ you know! Well, well! [Mrs. ELVSTED <i>comes in</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> Oh, please, I'm so uneasy about dear Mr.
+ L&Ouml;VBORG. Something has happened to him, I'm sure!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Judge Brack</i> (<i>comes in from the hall, with a new
+ hat in his hand</i>). You have guessed it, first time.
+ Something <i>has!</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> Oh, dear, good gracious! What is it?
+ Something distressing, I'm certain of it! [<i>d.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i> (<i>pleasantly</i>). That depends on how one
+ takes it. He has shot himself, and is in a hospital now, that's
+ all!</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i> (<i>sympathetically</i>). That's sad, eh? poor
+ old L&Ouml;VBORG! Well, I <i>am</i> cut up to hear that. Fancy,
+ though, eh?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i>. Was it through the temple, or through the
+ breast? The breast? Well, one can do it beautifully through the
+ breast, too. Do you know, as an advanced woman, I like an act
+ of that sort&mdash;it's so positive, to have the courage to
+ settle the account with himself&mdash;it's beautiful,
+ really!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> Oh, HEDDA, what an odd way to look at it! But
+ never mind poor dear Mr. L&Ouml;VBORG now. What <i>we've</i>
+ got to do is to see if we can't put his wonderful manuscript,
+ that he said he had torn to pieces, together again. (<i>Takes a
+ bundle of small pages out of the pocket of her mantle.</i>)
+ There are the loose scraps he dictated it to me from. I hid
+ them on the chance of some such emergency. And if dear Mr.
+ TESMAN and I were to put our heads together, I <i>do</i> think
+ something might come of it.</p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. Fancy! I will dedicate my life&mdash;or all I
+ can spare of it&mdash;to the task. I seem to feel I owe him
+ some slight amends, perhaps. No use crying over spilt milk, eh,
+ Mrs. ELVSTED? We'll sit down&mdash;just you and I&mdash;in the
+ back drawing-room, and see if you can't inspire me as you did
+ him, eh?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> Oh, goodness, yes! I should like it&mdash;if
+ it only might be possible!</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[GEORGE <i>and</i> Mrs. E. <i>go into the
+ back Drawing-room and become absorbed in eager
+ conversation</i>; HEDDA <i>sits in a chair in the front room,
+ and a little later</i> BRACK <i>crosses over to her.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>in a low tone</i>). Oh, Judge, <i>what</i>
+ a relief to know that everything&mdash;including L&Ouml;VBORG'S
+ pistol&mdash;went off so well! In the breast! Isn't there a
+ veil of unintentional beauty in that? Such an act of voluntary
+ courage, too!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i> (<i>smiles</i>). Hm!&mdash;perhaps, dear Mrs.
+ HEDDA&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>enthusiastically</i>). But <i>wasn't</i> it
+ sweet of him! To have the courage to live his own life after
+ his own fashion&mdash;to break away from the banquet of
+ life&mdash;<i>so</i> early and <i>so</i> drunk! A beautiful act
+ like that <i>does</i> appeal to a superior woman's
+ imagination!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i>. Sorry to shatter your poetical illusions,
+ little Mrs. HEDDA, but, as a matter of fact, our lamented
+ friend met his end under other circumstances. The shot did
+ <i>not</i> strike him in the <i>breast</i>&mdash;but&mdash;
+ [<i>Pauses.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>excitedly</i>). General GABLER'S pistols! I
+ might have known it! Did they <i>ever</i> shoot straight? Where
+ <i>was</i> he hit, then?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i> (<i>in a discreet undertone</i>). A little
+ lower down!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i>. Oh, <i>how</i> disgusting!&mdash;how
+ vulgar!&mdash;how ridiculous!&mdash;like everything else about
+ me!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i>. Yes, we're realistic types of human nature,
+ and all that&mdash;but a trifle squalid, perhaps. And why did
+ you give L&Ouml;VBORG your pistol, when it was certain to be
+ traced by the police? For a charming cold-blooded woman with a
+ clear head and no scruples, wasn't it just a leetle
+ foolish?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i>. Perhaps; but I wanted him to do it
+ beautifully, and he didn't! Oh, I've just admitted that I
+ <i>did</i> give him the pistol&mdash;how annoyingly unwise of
+ me! Now I'm in <i>your</i> power, I suppose?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i>. Precisely&mdash;for some reason it's not easy
+ to understand. But it's inevitable, and you know how you dread
+ anything approaching scandal. All your past proceedings show
+ that. (<i>To</i> GEORGE <i>and</i> Mrs. E., <i>who come in
+ together from the back-room.</i>) Well, how are you getting on
+ with the reconstruction of poor L&Ouml;VBORG'S great work,
+ eh?</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:35%;">
+ <a href="images/220.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/220.png"
+ alt="What! the accounts of all those everlasting bores settled?" />
+ </a>"What! the accounts of all those everlasting bores
+ settled?"
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. Capitally; we've made out the first two parts
+ already. And really, HEDDA, I do believe Mrs. ELVSTED <i>is</i>
+ inspiring me; I begin to feel it coming on. Fancy that!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> Yes, goodness! HEDDA, <i>won't</i> it be
+ lovely if I can. I mean to try <i>so</i> hard!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i>. Do, you dear little silly rabbit; and while
+ you are trying I will go into the back drawing-room and lie
+ down.</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>She goes into the back-room and draws
+ the curtains. Short pause. Suddenly she is heard playing</i>
+ "The Bogie Man" <i>within on the piano.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i>. But, dearest HEDDA, don't play "<i>The Bogie
+ Man</i>" this evening. As one of my aunts is dead, and poor old
+ L&Ouml;VBORG has shot himself, it seems just a little pointed,
+ eh?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>puts her head out between the
+ curtains</i>). All right! I'll be quiet after this. I'm going
+ to practise with the late General GABLER'S pistol!</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>Closes the curtains again</i>; GEORGE
+ <i>gets behind the stove</i>, Judge BRACK <i>under the table,
+ and</i> Mrs. ELVSTED <i>under the sofa. A shot is heard
+ within.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>George</i> (<i>behind the stove</i>). Eh, look here, I
+ tell you what&mdash;she's hit <i>me!</i> Think of that!</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>His legs are visibly agitated for a
+ short time. Another shot is heard.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. E.</i> (<i>under the sofa</i>). Oh, please, not me!
+ Oh, goodness, now I can't inspire anybody any more. Oh!</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>Her feet, which can be seen under the
+ valance, quiver a little, and then are suddenly still.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Brack</i> (<i>vivaciously, from under the table</i>). I
+ say, Mrs. HEDDA, I'm coming in every evening&mdash;we will have
+ great fun here togeth&mdash;
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page221"
+ id="page221"></a>[pg 221]</span> (<i>Another shot is
+ heard.</i>) Bless me! to bring down the poor old
+ cock-of-the-walk&mdash;it's
+ unsportsmanlike!&mdash;it's&mdash;.</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>The table-cloth is violently agitated
+ for a minute, and presently the curtains open, and</i> HEDDA
+ <i>appears.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Hedda</i> (<i>clearly and firmly</i>). I've been trying
+ in there to shoot myself beautifully&mdash;but with General
+ GABLER'S pistol&mdash;(<i>She lifts the tablecloth, then looks
+ behind the stove and under the sofa.</i>) What! the accounts of
+ all those everlasting bores settled? Then my suicide becomes
+ unnecessary. Yes, I feel the courage of life once more!</p>
+
+ <p class="bracket">[<i>She goes into the back-room and
+ plays</i> "The Funeral March of a Marionette" <i>as the Curtain
+ falls.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="center">THE END (<i>with the usual
+ apologies</i>).</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>OPERATIC NOTES.</h2>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:20%;">
+ <a href="images/221.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/221.png"
+ alt="Man with opera glasses" /></a>"J'y suis."<br />
+ Pro Arris et focus.
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>Monday.&mdash;Le Proph&ecirc;te</i>.&mdash;Notable
+ performance. Profit to those who were there; loss to those who
+ weren't. The two Poles, NED and JOHN DE RESZK&Eacute;,
+ excellent as the Tipster, or Prophet, and the Chief Anabaptist
+ Swindler. Madame RICHARD&mdash;"<i>O Richard, Oma Reine!</i>"
+ repeated her grand impersonation of <i>Fides</i>, but being a
+ trifle "out of it" as to tune occasionally, I cannot be
+ <i>Fidei Defensor</i>, and swear she was quite correct, so can
+ only report that RICHARD was a bit "dicky"; otherwise, sings
+ like a Dicky-Bird. Cathedral Scene magnificent. Rites are
+ wrong, probably; but these are trifles, except to strict
+ ritualists. Skating Scene not up to date; it was a novelty once
+ upon a time, but rinks have done for it. There was an
+ unrehearsed effect in the Prison Scene, when the walls
+ collapsed&mdash;the imprisoned Madame RICHARD escaped, and the
+ Curtain descended. Nobody hurt. The walls, which had fallen,
+ like those of Jericho, to the sound of the trumpet, were put
+ away carefully, for alteration and repairs. The prisoner,
+ issuing from her narrow fire-escape, was recaptured, and the
+ Opera ended with the Drinking Scene, the Prophet among the
+ Peris, a peri-lous situation, which makes the Opera go, at the
+ climax, "like a house-a-fire." Burns Justice is done to the
+ Impostor, and, at a late hour, we call our cabs, and return to
+ hum "<i>b&eacute;viam</i>" over "a modest quencher."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Saturday</i>.&mdash;BO&Iuml;TO'S <i>Mefistofele</i>.
+ Strong combination. Excellent. But big "waits" made it
+ heavy.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>AN AGRICULTURAL TRIPOS.</h3>
+
+ <h4>PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION PAPER.</h4>
+
+ <p>1. A field is ploughed three years running. Can it still
+ have a shy at its little go? Examine this, and say all you know
+ about "PIERS, or PEARS, the Ploughman." Did he use his own
+ soap?</p>
+
+ <p>2. How do you extract the square of a Beet-root? In
+ connection with this, say how much it will take to square a
+ "Swede?"</p>
+
+ <p>3. Explain the use of the "Sewing-machine" for agricultural
+ purposes. What do you mean by "going against the grain?"</p>
+
+ <p>4. You plant a field of corn. What plaster do you adopt when
+ it begins to shoot? Also give the best remedy you know for
+ <i>corn in the ear</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>5. Write a Sentimental History of the Harvest Moon. Is it
+ really twice as big as any other moon, or does it only look so,
+ after drinking the landlord's health several times over?</p>
+
+ <p>6. To what <i>gourmet</i> giving a dinner-party in January
+ is attributed the historical saying, "<i>Peas</i> at any
+ price"?</p>
+
+ <p>7. How many black beans will make five white ones? Given the
+ number, explain the process, and solve the equation.</p>
+
+ <p>8. What pomade do you recommend for "top-dressing"?</p>
+
+ <p>9. What would be an M.P.'s first step towards squaring a
+ circle of Agricultural Voters?</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>SAD STORY.&mdash;A painter, who had on several occasions
+ aspired to a place in the Chantrey Collection, and invariably
+ been refused, on being encouraged to launch a fresh venture,
+ and spread his canvas, which would be soon filled, for a sale,
+ replied dejectedly, "Chantrey be blowed; I <i>shan't try</i>
+ any more!" Poor fellow! He must indeed have been bad. He has
+ not been heard of since. The Serpentine has been dragged.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>THE HANSOM CAB STRIKE!&mdash;Remarkable Conversion!! Not yet
+ concluded! Last week another lot of Hansoms became
+ Growlers.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>REPARTEE TO A SPOUSE.</h3>
+
+ <p>Both parties in the recent extraordinary abduction case,
+ where a Mrs. JONES was carried off down a rope-ladder at
+ midnight by her own husband, Mr. JONES, have published
+ statements defending their own line of conduct. The following
+ is Mrs. JONES'S version:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"As public opinion appears to have erroneously taken
+ my&mdash;so-called&mdash;husband's side, as far as I can gather
+ from my having been twice chased through the streets by an
+ infuriated mob, and four separate attempts having been made to
+ blow up my house with nitro-glycerine, I feel compelled to
+ explain&mdash;with much reluctance&mdash;why it was that I
+ declined to live with Mr. JONES.</p>
+
+ <p>"To begin with, it was only under <i>the most awful
+ threats</i> that Mr. JONES prevailed on me to become his wife.
+ His words&mdash;I remember them well&mdash;were, 'My darling,
+ you know how tenderly I adore you; if you don't marry me <i>at
+ once</i> I'll break every bone in your body!' He then snatched
+ my bonnet, a <i>new one</i>, from my head, and so acted on my
+ <i>nerves</i> that I went off to the Registry Office and was
+ married. That he was actuated by merely mercenary motives is
+ proved by the fact that the gratuity (of half-a-crown), which
+ he presented to the Registry Clerk, he actually <i>borrowed
+ from me!</i> I knew him already to be unprincipled; but never
+ until that moment had it flashed upon me that he was a
+ <i>fortune-hunter!</i> However, as he had the drawing-room
+ poker with him&mdash;he kept it concealed up his back during
+ the ceremony at the Registry Office&mdash;I did not at that
+ time say anything, but handed him the coin. I do not know if I
+ should have left him at once, had he not aggravated the
+ baseness of his conduct by using the vulgar expression, 'Fork
+ it out quick!' But I regret to say that his origin is painfully
+ <i>low</i>. Whereas, anybody who consults <i>my</i> relatives
+ will hear from them that they belong to the very highest County
+ Families. Indeed, he would hear it all day long if he lived
+ with them, as I do!</p>
+
+ <p>"On the day of the abduction, I was treated
+ <i>barbarously!</i> Even the cab in which I was taken off was,
+ so the coachman informed me, 'put down to my account.' Oh, had
+ I but guessed the truth about Mr. JONES when I went to the
+ Altar&mdash;I mean the Registry Office! Supper consisted of
+ <i>cold mutton and pickles</i> (!) which latter he upset, and I
+ had a dress <i>ruined</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>On perusing the above, Mr. JONES decided that he could no
+ longer keep silence, and has made public the subjoined
+ explanation:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"When I first saw Mrs. JONES&mdash;then Miss
+ THOMPSON&mdash;her youthful grace quite captivated me. Her age
+ was under fifty-six, and mine was just sixty. She was, in fact,
+ as I told her at the time, almost old enough to know her own
+ mind. It is true that she was wealthy, but that had no
+ influence on my conduct. On the contrary I felt it as a
+ positive drawback, as my domestic ideal has always been Love in
+ a Cottage! But as she was bent upon our marrying, I agreed to
+ waive this objection.</p>
+
+ <p>"In proof of this assertion I need only say that on the
+ <i>very day after</i> our first meeting, I received the
+ following letter:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"'PRICELESS AND ADORABLE PET,&mdash;How <i>are</i> your
+ little tootsy-wootsicums? <i>Did</i> they get wet in conducting
+ me home after that <i>delicious</i> interview? If so, and you
+ were to catch cold in your precious head, I should never
+ forgive myself. Oh, come and see me <i>soon!</i> Your Own, till
+ Death, ANGELINA.'</p>
+
+ <p>"Possibly I may be blamed for publishing this letter. I do
+ it for <i>her</i> sake, not for mine. Even now I believe that,
+ were I left alone with her for an hour, with none of her
+ relatives nor a policeman near, I could persuade her to retract
+ her calumnious statement about the poker. I conclude by saying
+ that it is my belief that her relatives, who are all of them
+ powerful mesmerists, have <i>hypnotised her!</i>"</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.</h2>
+
+ <p><i>My Face is My Fortune</i>, by Messrs. PHILIPS and
+ FENDALL. Why don't they agree to spell both names with an "F,"
+ and make it FILLIPS and FENDALL. I fancy that FENDALL couldn't
+ do without the sensational fillips. This story excites
+ curiosity throughout the first volume, and then, in the other
+ volume, satisfies it in so disappointing and commonplace a
+ fashion as to suggest the idea that one of the authors,
+ becoming weary of his share in the work, suddenly chucked it
+ up, and said, "Oh, bother! let's finish anyhow;" and then the
+ other <i>collaborateur</i>, whichever it was, did finish it as
+ best and as quickly as he could. There is evidence of laziness
+ or of lack of invention in the story. If it were for the first
+ time in fiction that a secret is learnt by some one hiding
+ behind some pantomime plants in a conservatory, then too much
+ praise could not be bestowed on the ingenious devisers of so
+ strong and original a situation. But as "we know that
+ situation,&mdash;he comes from Sheffield," and as it has done
+ duty some scores of times before, on or off the stage, why, the
+ thoroughgoing novel-reader shakes his head and asks, "Couldn't
+ they have devised something better than this between them?" "I
+ expected much from this combination in Authorship, and am
+ disappointed," says the candid BARON DE BOOK-WORMS.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page222"
+ id="page222"></a>[pg 222]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/222.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/222.png"
+ alt="&lt;h3&gt;WHAT OUR ARTIST (THE NEWLY-MARRIED ONE) HAS TO PUT" />
+ </a>
+
+ <h3>WHAT OUR ARTIST (THE NEWLY-MARRIED ONE) HAS TO PUT UP
+ WITH.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>Our Artist</i>. "JUST LOOK, DARLING! I WAS SHORT OF
+ CANVASSES, SO I'VE STRETCHED A CLEAN
+ POCKET-HANDKERCHIEF!&mdash;SEE HOW SPLENDIDLY IT TAKES THE
+ PAINT!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>His Prudent Little Wife.</i>. "OH, JOHN DEAR, HOW
+ EXTRAVAGANT OF YOU! <i>IT'LL NEVER COME OUT!</i>"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>THE ADOPTED CHILD.</h3>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="note">"Last year the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER
+ frittered away his resources in a number of small
+ remissions, for which hardly anyone was grateful. This year
+ he squanders the greater part of his surplus in providing
+ for Free, or&mdash;as the phrase is&mdash;Assisted
+ Education&mdash;an innovation for which there is hardly any
+ genuine demand, and which a very large class of the
+ community, including many of the most loyal supporters of
+ the Government, view with rooted distrust."&mdash;<i>The
+ Standard</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>MRS. GAMP (<i>the "Old Regular</i>")
+ <i>loquitur</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"More changes, too, to come afore we have done with
+ changes!"</p>
+
+ <p>Ah! I said that to good Mister MOULD years agone;
+ which 'ow memory ranges</p>
+
+ <p>All over them dear "Good Old Times," as I wish them
+ wos back agen, bless 'em!</p>
+
+ <p>Which the new ones ain't much to <i>my</i> mind;
+ there's too many fresh "monthlies" to mess 'em.</p>
+
+ <p>No; monthlying ain't wot it were; the perfession's
+ too open, a lump.</p>
+
+ <p>Nusses now ain't no more like old SAIREY, no not
+ than the old Aldgit Pump.</p>
+
+ <p>Like the Cristial Palluses fountings; A Pilgjian's
+ Projiss is life,</p>
+
+ <p>And a Nuss ain't no more <i>like</i> a Nuss than a
+ Wife now resembles a Wife.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Heigho! Which it's no use a frettin'. But
+ <i>Fondlings</i>! Ah, well, I <i>did</i> think</p>
+
+ <p>Our respectable fam'lies, <i>though</i> mixed, from
+ sich ojus demeaning would shrink,</p>
+
+ <p>Which no greater hinsult to <i>me</i>, the old
+ reglar, could well be deviged;</p>
+
+ <p>And though I've to live and to learn, I confess as
+ this turn I'm serpriged.</p>
+
+ <p>A Fondling!!! Turned up unbeknownst on a doorstep
+ permiskus, no doubt.</p>
+
+ <p>And then to <i>adopt</i> him! Oh dear, wot the
+ plague is our Party about?</p>
+
+ <p>Wich to monthly to <i>it</i> were my pride; its
+ legitermit offspring I've nussed</p>
+
+ <p>Many years with the greatest success, but to-day I
+ feels flurried and fussed,</p>
+
+ <p>And my eyes is Saint Polge's fontin with tears, and
+ this brat is their source;</p>
+
+ <p>As it isn't no offspring of <i>ourn</i>&mdash;of the
+ fam'ly I mean, Ma'am, in course;</p>
+
+ <p>But a Brummagem bantling, picked hup, as were not
+ worth its swaddlin' and food,</p>
+
+ <p>And I never yet knowed any brat from <i>that</i>
+ source as turned out any good.</p>
+
+ <p>Missis G., Mum, it's all a mistake, as you know in
+ your 'art all the same,</p>
+
+ <p>For you turned up your nose at the child when JOE
+ CHAMBERLING give him a name,</p>
+
+ <p>Afore we was thick with his set, when you snubbed
+ him, and laughed him to scorn,</p>
+
+ <p>And heaped naughty names on this kid, as you swore
+ was his nat'ral fust-born.</p>
+
+ <p>And now you come dandling, and doddling, and patting
+ the brat on the 'ed,</p>
+
+ <p>And forgetting the things as you promiged, and
+ backing on all as you said.</p>
+
+ <p>Missis G., you do raly amaze me! This comes of our
+ precious mix-up;</p>
+
+ <p>Which the child's no more like one of ourn than a
+ pug's like a tarrier-pup.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>In the best-regulated o' fam'lies things will go
+ askew, I'm aweer;</p>
+
+ <p>As I says to my friend Mrs. HARRIS, as says to me,
+ "SAIREY, my dear,</p>
+
+ <p>You looks dragged, my sweet creetur," she says.
+ "Missis HARRIS," I makes 'er reply,</p>
+
+ <p>"When the 'art in one's buzzum beats 'ot, there's
+ excuge for the tear in one's heye.</p>
+
+ <p>Which wales isn't in it for worrit, my love, with
+ your poor old pal, SAIREY,</p>
+
+ <p>Along o' the Fam'ly," I says; "as things <i>do</i>
+ seem to go that contrairey,</p>
+
+ <p><i>My</i> services now ain't required, with
+ 'adoptions' all over the shop,</p>
+
+ <p>From Brummagem, yus, and elsewheres; and I ast
+ 'Where is this thing to stop?'</p>
+
+ <p>RITCHIE'S 'pick-up' was tryin', most tryin'; and as
+ to those bad Irish brats,</p>
+
+ <p>As BALFOUR interjuced&mdash;dear! jest fancy our
+ Party adopting small Pats!</p>
+
+ <p>And now this here Brummagem babby! You say he's a
+ promising cheild,</p>
+
+ <p>Missis G., and 'you're learning to love him!' All
+ this makes old SAIREY feel wild.</p>
+
+ <p>It's wus than kidnapping, this bizness of picking up
+ 'Fondlings' all round.</p>
+
+ <p>You're nussing a wiper, <i>I</i> say, and you'll
+ soon feel 'is bite, <i>I'll</i> be bound.</p>
+
+ <p>Who arsked for 'im, BETSY&mdash;I mean Missis
+ G.&mdash;who demanded the brat?</p>
+
+ <p><i>You</i>'ve altered your mind, and you pet him;
+ you'd much better mind what you're at.</p>
+
+ <p>Drat the boy's bragian imperence! <i>I</i> says.
+ He's a halien, a fondling, a waif,</p>
+
+ <p>And <i>I</i> never knew, for my part, <i>any</i>
+ Brummagem goods as wos <i>safe!</i>"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page223"
+ id="page223"></a>[pg 223]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/223.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/223.png"
+ alt="THE ADOPTED CHILD." /></a>
+
+ <h3>THE ADOPTED CHILD.</h3>
+
+ <p>MOTHER GOSCHEN. "FOUND 'IM IN BIRMINGHAM, MY DEAR!
+ DIDN'T LIKE 'IM AT FIRST,&mdash;BUT, SOMEHOW, I'VE QUITE
+ TOOK A FANCY TO 'IM!!"</p>
+
+ <p>MRS. GAMP. "A FONDLING INDEED!&mdash;WHICH ALL I CAN SAY
+ IS I DON'T LIKE THE LOOKS OF 'IM!!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <!--blank page 224-->
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page225"
+ id="page225"></a>[pg 225]</span>
+
+ <h2>ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.</h2>
+
+ <h3>EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>House of Commons, Monday, April 27</i>.&mdash;"Well, I
+ never!" said GEORGE ELLIOT, beaming on House from back bench;
+ "have known HARCOURT man and boy for forty years; seen him in
+ divers moods; watched him through various occupations. These
+ have been so many that I have had time to forget he was once
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer; but he was, and upon my word,
+ listening to him to-night, and knowing something about figures
+ myself, I believe he would have made a splash at the
+ Treasury."</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:20%;">
+ <a href="images/225.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/225.png"
+ alt="Genial George." /></a>Genial George.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>JOKIM doesn't enjoy performance quite so much as GENIAL
+ GEORGE. Oddly enough, Budget Night, which ought to be the apex
+ of comfort and glory for CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, is with
+ him ever the season of tribulation. House of Commons is,
+ regarded as audience, always at its best on Budget Night. Will
+ laugh immoderately at feeblest joke uttered by CHANCELLOR;
+ cheers to the echo his moral sentiments; sits enraptured when
+ he soars into eloquence; and is undisguisedly grateful when he
+ has completed his peroration. JOKIM'S muddle of Thursday night
+ made the best of. Opposition silenced by promised legislation
+ establishing Free Education. Everything in sunshine-glow of
+ prosperity. Thought JOKIM might keep some of the sunbeams for
+ himself. Then comes HARCOURT with the abhorr&euml;d shears of
+ facts and figures, and slits the thin-spun web of JOKIM'S
+ ingenious fancy; shows that, instead of a surplus, he has, when
+ honest arithmetic is set to work, a deficit; instead of
+ increasing the rate of reduction of National Debt, he has done
+ less in that direction than his predecessors; and that whilst
+ expenditure on Army and Navy has exceeded any figures reached
+ by former Chancellors of the Exchequer, the floating debt is
+ ever growing.</p>
+
+ <p>JOKIM sits on Treasury Bench affecting the virtue of a smile
+ though he has it not. Wriggles like a snail under dispensation
+ of salt. When HARCOURT finished, HENRY FOWLER stepped in, and
+ with fresh array of figures and new marshalling of argument,
+ completed the demolition of JOKIM'S system of finance. Mr. G.
+ looked smilingly on, delighting in the energy and aptitude of
+ his Young Men. JOKIM, anxious to change the subject on any
+ terms, tried to draw Mr. G. into the controversy. "I think
+ not," said Mr. G., with a smile of ineffable sweetness. "Right
+ Hon. Gentleman need not go so far afield: will have pretty
+ tough job in answering HARCOURT."</p>
+
+ <p>A pretty scene; admirable Parliamentary play. Oddly enough
+ boxes empty; stalls a wilderness; pit only half full. Energies
+ of House so sapped with dreary flood of talk on Irish Land Bill
+ cannot be reanimated even for a brisk battle over the
+ Budget.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Business done</i>.&mdash;JOKIM pummelled to pulp.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Tuesday</i>.&mdash;OLD MORALITY walked out of House just
+ now, his back suffused with sense of duty done, alike to QUEEN
+ and Country. Irish Land Bill, which, as CAMPBELL-BANNERMAN
+ says, makes a Moated Grange of House of Commons, on again all
+ day. SAGE OF QUEEN ANNE'S GATE and his Party active as usual.
+ The PARTY a little doubtful of the SAGE. Sometimes, in blessed
+ intervals of silence, is discovered gazing on a bald space on
+ back of SAGE'S head, striving, as it were, to pierce through
+ this weak spot, and discover what is in the SAGE'S mind. The
+ SAGE in outward manner most deferential and encouraging. Misses
+ no opportunity of publicly applauding him. It is true that when
+ the SAGE has got him on his legs, starting afresh on new
+ Amendment, he seizes the opportunity to slink out of the House,
+ and take another cigarette, quite certain that the PARTY is
+ good for half-an-hour. This, and one or two other little
+ things, create a suspicion in the mind of the PARTY, who was
+ not brought up in India for nothing. WILFRID LAWSON, who sits
+ close by, and keenly watches progress of events, says he has no
+ doubt the time will come when the PARTY will revolt.</p>
+
+ <p>"KEAY," says WILFRID, "occupies a strategical position,
+ which gives him a great pull over LABBY. His respected Leader
+ sits on the bench immediately below him. Some day SEYMOUR
+ KEAY'S wild Mahratta blood may boil over, an unsuspected
+ scimitar may flash forth from his trouser pocket, and the
+ SAGE'S head, falling gory on the floor of the House, may
+ gently, from mere force of habit, roll in the direction of
+ Queen Anne's Gate."</p>
+
+ <p>"For a real sanguinary-minded man," said RITCHIE, to whom I
+ told this story, "give me a teetotaller."</p>
+
+ <p>The PARTY, with some assistance from Windbag SEXTON, wasted
+ sitting till quarter to seven. By this time, all Amendments to
+ Clause 3 being wearily worn off, opportunity just left to pass
+ Clause before Sitting adjourned. Question put that Clause 3
+ pass. Then SAGE, smelling obtrusively of cigarettes,
+ interposed, and declared it "would be indecent" to accept the
+ Clause without further discussion. Nothing House shrinks from
+ just now more abjectly than from charge of indecency.
+ Accordingly debate stood over, and Thursday may, if the SAGE
+ and his Party please, and the Closure is not invoked, be
+ appropriated for further discussion of Clause 3.</p>
+
+ <p>OLD MORALITY might have moved Closure at twelve minutes to
+ seven, and carried Clause 3. Committee naturally expected he
+ would. But OLD MORALITY had another card up his sleeve. At very
+ last moment, whilst Members trooped out, and it was thought all
+ was over, OLD MORALITY gave notice of motion to take the whole
+ time of House, including Tuesday and Friday nights' evening
+ sittings.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think you had them there," I said, as we walked across to
+ Grosvenor Place.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, TOBY," he said, a little flush mantling his modest
+ face; "we've given them rope enough, and now we'll hang them.
+ They've had their run, now we'll take ours. It's the main thing
+ I always look to. Never forget when I was still in the seminary
+ writing out copy of verses about a shipwreck. A graphic scene;
+ the riven vessel, the raging seas, the panic-stricken crowd on
+ deck, and then this little self-drawn picture of the sole
+ survivor, the one man left to tell the story:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Some fell upon their bended knees</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And others fell down fainting,</p>
+
+ <p>But I fell to on bread and cheese;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For that, Sir, was the main thing.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It's the bread and cheese I look to, TOBY, dear boy. For
+ others the glory of debate, the prize of Parliamentary oratory.
+ Give me the bread and cheese of seeing business advancing, and
+ I'm content."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Business done</i>.&mdash;Once more Committee on Irish
+ Land Bill.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Thursday</i>.&mdash;A pretty little game on to-night. OLD
+ MORALITY moved his Resolution taking power to appropriate
+ Tuesdays and Fridays evening sittings, and all Wednesdays for
+ Irish Land Bill. In ordinary circumstances there would have
+ been stormy protest led from Front Opposition Bench against
+ this inroad on time of private Members. Other fish to fry
+ to-night. Wednesday week assigned for Second Reading of Woman's
+ Suffrage Bill; if Government take that day for Irish Land Bill,
+ obviously can't be utilised for furtherance of Woman's Rights.
+ This an awkward question for some Members; don't like it, but
+ daren't vote against it. Here's opportunity of getting rid of
+ it by side-wind. Not necessary in arranging proceedings to
+ mention Suffrage Bill, or even Wednesday, 13th of May. It was
+ principle for which Members struggled; "the principle of
+ uniformity," as Mr. G. beautifully put it. "Let us," he said,
+ though perhaps not quite in this phrase, "go the whole hog or
+ none; take all the Wednesdays, or leave them."</p>
+
+ <p>Pretty to see OLD MORALITY protesting against this
+ unprecedented access of generosity. The very picture, as MCEWAN
+ said, of a good man struggling with the adversity of
+ overwhelming good fortune. Was prepared to take a Wednesday
+ here and there: but, really, too much to appropriate everyone.
+ "Not at all&mdash;not at all," said Mr. G.</p>
+
+ <p>But it was only under compulsion of a Division that he
+ consented to accept the endowment. In meanwhile, the Woman's
+ Suffrage Debate on Wednesday week snuffed out, and final
+ opportunity of Session lost.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm inclined," said WM. WOODALL, "as a rule, to take kindly
+ views of my fellow men, to put the best construction upon their
+ actions; but, upon my word, I'm not satisfied in my own mind
+ that we advocates of Woman's Rights have not been made the
+ victims of deep and dastardly design."</p>
+
+ <p>"Order! Order!" said COURTNEY; "no more am I."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Business done</i>.&mdash;Woman's Rights men dished.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Friday</i>.&mdash;Brer FOX looked in to-night, and,
+ finding Brer RABBIT absent, undertook charge of Irish affairs.
+ Desirous of introducing novelty into situation, began by
+ patronising Prince ARTHUR. "So conciliatory, you know; so
+ anxious to meet the views of Irish Members; really, they ought
+ to meet him half-way, and refrain from annoying him by
+ unnecessary Amendments."</p>
+
+ <p>Brer FOX'S voice faltered as he spoke, and, bringing round
+ his tail, he gently brushed away a falling tear. Unfortunately
+ for him, TIM HEALY present. TIM jumped up, and fell upon his
+ ancient chief, flouting his counsel, and repudiating his right
+ to leadership. Effect upon Brer FOX something like that which
+ followed on the flight of the piece of old red sandstone which
+ struck in the abdomen a gentleman, who chanced to be standing
+ round. The subsequent proceedings interested him no more. He
+ walked out, and was not seen again. "Exceedingly rude man," he
+ said; "never come near TIM HEALY but I feel an infinite
+ yearning for a fire-escape." <i>Business done</i>.&mdash;Land
+ Bill again.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>"MORE FREE THAN WELCOME."&mdash;MR. GOSCHEN'S Education
+ Scheme, to the Tories.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>A REGIMENT OF "THE LINE."&mdash;The Royal Academicians.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page226"
+ id="page226"></a>[pg 226]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/226.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/226.png"
+ alt="GRANDOLPH THE PRODIGAL." /></a>
+
+ <h3>GRANDOLPH THE PRODIGAL.</h3>
+
+ <p>(<i>A Parliamentary Drama too good for words, after
+ "L'Enfant Prodigue" at the Prince of Wales's
+ Theatre.</i>)</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page227"
+ id="page227"></a>[pg 227]</span>
+
+ <h3>THE PICK OF THE PICTURES. (AT THE ROYAL ACADEMY.)</h3>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:65%; margin-top:6em;">
+ <a href="images/227-1.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/227-1.png"
+ alt="No. 199. Doctor Dubitans." /></a>
+
+ <p>No. 199. Doctor Dubitans. "I'm afraid I've given him the
+ wrong stuff." Luke Fildes, R.A.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:25%;">
+ <a href="images/227-2.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/227-2.png"
+ alt="No. 742. He's got 'em on!" /></a>
+
+ <p>No. 742. "He's got 'em on!" or, Nanny, wilt thou gang
+ with me in that new suit and those tight boots? By Phil. R.
+ Morris, A.</p>
+ </div><br clear="all" />
+
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:40%;">
+ <a href="images/227-3.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/227-3.png"
+ alt="Grand Combination Picture, 'Liddell and Scott!'" />
+ </a>
+
+ <p>Grand Combination Picture, "Liddell and Scott!" [Liddell
+ (289) by H. Herkomer, R.A., and Scott (281) by G(ee) W(oa)
+ Joy! "Joy and Woe!" Comedy and Tragedy.]</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:40%;">
+ <a href="images/227-4.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/227-4.png"
+ alt="No. 226. The Penance of Z&aelig;o in the presence of some" />
+ </a>
+
+ <p>No. 226. The Penance of Z&aelig;o in the presence of
+ some Members of the County Council. P.H. Calderon, R.A.</p>
+ </div><br clear="all" />
+
+ <p>No. 5. "<i>Long Ago</i>." LONG (EDWIN, R.A.) and more or
+ less of "a go." Instead of "<i>Long Ago</i>" which is
+ egotistical, why not <i>Long Egit</i> or <i>Long Fecit?</i></p>
+
+ <p>Nos. 21, 22, 23. "<i>The Lyons Mail</i>" (and Female).
+ BRITON RIVI&Egrave;RE, R.A. [N.B.&mdash;"R.A.," <i>i.e.</i>,
+ "Royal Academician" and "Royal Animal-painter."]</p>
+
+ <p>No. 27. The Viscount CROSS looking quite Viscount Cheerful.
+ "<i>Painted for the Grand Jury Room, Lancaster Castle</i>," the
+ Catalogue informs us. Suggestive of their arguing among
+ themselves "at cross purposes." Painted by SYDNEY HODGES.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 77. "<i>On Strike</i>." Very striking. Who could have
+ painted this? Ah! <i>Who but</i> HERKOMER. R.A.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 82. Apparently this must have been intended for a
+ portrait of the late Mr. DION BOUCICAULT, but subsequently
+ adapted to represent WALTER GILBEY, Esq. Looks quite the
+ GILBEY'S "fine, old, dry," but not "crusted." No doubt whatever
+ of its being the excellent work of W(erry) Q(uaint) ORCHARDSON,
+ R.A.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 112. "<i>Hanson is as Hanson does</i>." By J. HANSON
+ WALKER. Naturally pleased with "the promise of May," and</p>
+
+ <p>No. 118. Another Young Lady only Younger. By the same
+ Artist.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 143. The Right Hon. A.J. BALFOUR, M.P., as seen by L.
+ ALMA-TADEMA, R.A. Taken while considering</p>
+
+ <p>No. 147. The Irish Question as represented by Sir FREDERICK
+ LEIGHTON, P.R.A.'s "<i>Perseus and Andromeda</i>." Allegory,
+ <i>Andromeda</i>, Ireland. <i>The Monster</i>, "Parnellism and
+ Crime;" and <i>Perseus</i>, BALFOUR. Marvellous Monster!
+ DRURIOLANUS should at once order a dozen of 'em, hot and
+ strong, for next Christmas Pantomime. Poor Miss ANNE
+ DROMEDA,&mdash;"a dainty morsel <i>&agrave; croquer</i>," quoth
+ the Monster.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 148. No possible doubt whatever about this being A.
+ BERTIE; FREEMAN-MITFORD, C.B., painted by the President of the
+ Painters, who has hit him off to the life. B.M. is taken at the
+ moment when, as a spectator of the Perseus and Andromeda
+ <i>ballet d'action</i>, he remembers having seen something like
+ it in "Old Japan."</p>
+
+ <p>No. 201. "<i>Poor Tom's a Cold!</i>" LAURENCE SCOTT. Picture
+ illustrating the shortest and easiest way of catching his death
+ of cold.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 206. "<i>Two's company, Three's none</i>," observed the
+ Sun, as blushing deeply, he sank away in the far distance. By
+ MAURICE GREIFFEN LAGEN.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 209. The original Pieman met by SIMON going to the fair
+ in very full dress. ARTHUR S.
+ COPE.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page228"
+ id="page228"></a>[pg 228]</span>
+
+ <p>No.220. "<i>A Student</i>" of ALMA-TADEMA'S style. THOMAS R.
+ SPENCE.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 231. "Is it one o'clock?" she said to herself,
+ anxiously. "I hope luncheon will be punctual." The picture will
+ be known as "<i>Grace before Meals</i>," delightfully (of
+ course) painted by Sir JOHN E. MILLAIS.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 232. By the P.R.A. "What's that?" said one well-educated
+ clerical visitor to his matronly wife. She read it out,
+ pronouncing it thusly, "<i>Return of Percy Fone</i>." "What!"
+ exclaimed the Clergyman. Then, taking the Catalogue into his
+ own hands, he read "<i>Return of Persephone</i>." "It's
+ pronounced," he informed his help-mate,
+ "P&euml;r-s[)e]ph-[)o]-n[)e]." "Is it?" she returned, in a tone
+ expressive of unmitigated incredulity. "Then," she asked
+ suddenly, as a brilliant idea struck her, "why isn't
+ 'telephone' pronounced 'tel-[)e]ph-[)o]-n[)e]'?" And turning
+ her back on him, would not hear another word on the
+ subject.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 283. <i>Not Crossley, but Kindly</i>. CLAUDE
+ CALTHROP.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 333. <i>Professor Huxley</i>. By Hon. JOHN COLLIER. When
+ it isn't the Professor, it might serve for Sir GEORGE GROVE.
+ Bravo, Honourable JOHN! "Hang him, JOHN COLLIER!" (SHAKSPEARE
+ adapted.)</p>
+
+ <p>No. 390. A Boy to the very life, or a Life Boy. JAMES SANT,
+ R.A. It's a picture of Master HUGH BURDETT MONEY COUTTS. How
+ well this name will look on a cheque for a cool thousand or so!
+ But to see the <i>Hue</i> of health on his cheek is better than
+ seeing the colour of that HUGH'S money.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 414. Portrait of Author W. PINERO, Esq. Painted by
+ JOSEPH MORDECAI, who has done to Author PINERO what HAMAN would
+ have done to MORDECAI, <i>i.e.</i>, hung him.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 439. Sitting for Don Quixote. WILLIAM E. LOCKHART.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 459. <i>Stiff Collar Day; or, Just Back from the
+ Wash</i>, "And, confound it! she's been washing my shirt and
+ tie together, and spoilt 'em both. Wish I had another lot
+ ready, but haven't, so must go to Academy as I am," said WALTER
+ S-WASH-BUCKLER LETHBRIDGE, and finished up with an impetuous
+ and irrepressible "Hang it!" "I will," replied the Artist, JOHN
+ PETTIE, R.A.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 544. <i>Josephine Grimaldina; or, Female Clown</i>, the
+ next novelty in Pantomime, dedicated to the author and composer
+ of <i>L'Enfant Prodigue</i>. JOHN S. SARGENT.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 667. <i>Feeling his Bumps; or, Phrenology in the Olden
+ Time.</i>" ERNEST NORMAND.</p>
+
+ <p>No. 651. Gentleman ready for riding, but no spurs. "Where
+ the deuce have I put them?" he is evidently saying. "All ready
+ but that. Can't find 'em anywhere!" A picture which quite tells
+ its own (JULIAN) STORY.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>THE RIGHTS AND WRONGS OF LABOUR.</h3>
+
+ <p class="center">
+ (<i>At the service of the Ch-nc-ll-r of the Exch-qu-r, if he
+ purposes writing a Prophetic Romance.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p>MACAULAY'S New Zealander had arrived prematurely. London
+ Bridge was not reduced to its centre pier, and St. Paul's
+ Cathedral was certainly not in ruins. Still there was an
+ uncanny look about town. On the Embankment electric tram-cars
+ were running, but they seemed to be little patronised. Here and
+ there he noticed a pedestrian leisurely going his way, but the
+ side-walks appeared, to all intents and purposes, abandoned. At
+ length he reached a garden-seat, upon which was sprawling a
+ Typical Working Man. The New Zealander gave this interesting
+ individual "Good morning," and made some common-place remark
+ about the weather.</p>
+
+ <p>"Fine day!" returned the T.W.M., rather surlily. "Well, what
+ does it matter to me? If it rains, I stay at home; if it don't,
+ why I don't either."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am a stranger seeking for information," explained the New
+ Zealander; "so I am sure you will excuse me if I ask you how
+ much do you pay for your house?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Pay for my house!" ejaculated the T.W.M. "Why, nothing of
+ course! And I pay nothing too for my sons at Oxford, and the
+ girls at Cambridge. And I get my clothes free, and my food
+ comes in gratuitously. Why, you must be a stranger if you don't
+ know that! Why everything and anything is paid by the
+ Government&mdash;out of the Income Tax."</p>
+
+ <p>"And don't you ever work?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Work! bless you, no. I can't afford to work! If I did, I
+ should have to pay the Income Tax myself!" returned the T.W.M.,
+ with a grin.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then who does contribute to this evidently highly-important
+ source of revenue?</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, the professional men, under Schedule D!" cried the
+ hardy son of toil. "The authors with families, and the City
+ clerks. All <i>that</i> set, you know. They pay the Income Tax,
+ sure enough. It's as much as they can do to keep bodies and
+ souls together. But <i>somebody</i> must pay&mdash;why not
+ they?&mdash;pay for themselves&mdash;and for me!"</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>THE DUMB SHOW.&mdash;It sounds odd that the serious
+ pantomime, <i>L'Enfant Prodigue</i>, the play without words,
+ should be "the talk of London."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>LEAVES FROM A CANDIDATE'S DIARY.</h2>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:30%;">
+ <a href="images/228.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/228.png"
+ alt="Canvas and Scrutiny." /></a>Canvas and Scrutiny.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"<i>George Hotel," Billsbury, Friday, April
+ 25th</i>.&mdash;Arrived this morning in order to attend a
+ "Monstre Open Air Conservative F&ecirc;te, which was held in
+ the grounds of the Billsbury Summer Palace. The programme was a
+ very attractive one. First, there was a "reception of town and
+ county delegates and their ladies" by the Earl and Countess of
+ ROCHEVIEILLE. The Earl is a scrubby little fellow of about
+ sixty, who looks more like an old-clothes-man than anything
+ else. Norman noses&mdash;at least their descendants in this
+ generation&mdash;are curiously like the Semitic variety
+ sometimes. The name is pronounced "Rovail," and both the Earl
+ and Countess get blue with rage if anybody makes a mistake
+ about it, as nearly all the delegates did. They stood on a
+ raised da&iuml;s, and received delegates' addresses to the
+ number of about thirty. Lady ROCHEVIEILLE is a stout
+ lady&mdash;very. It was a blazing hot day, and she was
+ "overcome" just as she was shaking hands with Colonel and Mrs.
+ CHORKLE, who were accompanied by BENJAMIN DISRAELI CHORKLE. The
+ rest of the CHORKLE family, including WILLIAMINA HENRIETTA
+ SMITH CHORKLE, who was in a nurse's arms, were somewhere about
+ the grounds looking for the "Magic Haunts of the Fairy Bulbul,"
+ and eating enormous quantities of macaroons, which I had given
+ them. Colonel CHORKLE rather lost his head when Lady R.
+ collapsed. He made an effort to pick her up, but had to drop
+ her heavily on the boards of the da&iuml;s. Eventually,
+ however, she was carried away and revived, and the proceedings
+ went on. There were Conservative merry-go-rounds, Conservative
+ negro-minstrels, Conservative acrobats and Conservative dancing
+ bears, distributed about the grounds. I was taken about by
+ Alderman MOFFAT and HOLLEBONE, who introduced me right and left
+ to hundreds of my supporters and their wives and daughters. At
+ the end of it all I felt as if I had got a heavy sort of
+ how-do-you-do smile regularly glued on my face. One of my chief
+ supporters is an undertaker named JOBSON. HOLLEBONE brought him
+ up to me and said, "Mr. JOBSON, permit me to introduce you to
+ our popular young Candidate, Mr. PATTLE. Mr. PATTLE let me have
+ the honour of introducing you to our popular young undertaker,
+ Mr. JOBSON." Gave me rather a shock, but JOBSON seemed quite a
+ pleasant man. His wife was there too, gorgeously dressed in red
+ plush with an Indian shawl on her shoulders, and a sealskin
+ muff. She must have felt the heat horribly.</p>
+
+ <p>Later in the afternoon there was a political meeting, at
+ which we all spoke, but we had to make it short, as everybody
+ was anxious to get away to the "Refined Musical
+ <i>M&eacute;lange</i> (with incidental dances) of the Sisters
+ WILKINS," which was held in a specially erected tent.
+ Fireworks, illuminations, and dancing, ended the affair.</p>
+
+ <p><i>April 26</i>.&mdash;Was made an Oddfellow to-day.
+ Initiation didn't last long. CHORKLE and JERRAM were initiated
+ with me, and we all had to make speeches afterwards, declaring
+ our devotion to the great cause of Oddfellowship. Afterwards
+ sentiments were called for. The only one I remember was given
+ by a man called TABSEY, a tailor, who seems to be rather famous
+ for this kind of thing. After holding his hand to his head for
+ some time, and knitting his brows, he cleared his throat, and
+ said, in a loud voice,&mdash;"May the tear of true sympathy
+ crystallise as it falls, and be worn as a radiant jewel upon
+ the finger of affliction." This was vociferously applauded. I
+ congratulated TABSEY afterwards, and paid him a compliment
+ about it. He told me he found it a great relief, after a hard
+ day's work in the shop, to throw off a sentiment or two. He's
+ going to publish a book of them, and I've had to subscribe for
+ six copies, at half a guinea each.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>FROM A WATCHFUL OBSERVER.&mdash;SIR,&mdash;The other day I
+ saw advertised in a shop-window, "The Invisible Trouser
+ Stretcher." Who wears "Invisible Trousers"? Do you remember the
+ story of <i>The Emperor of China's Clothes?</i>&mdash;when they
+ all cried, "He's got 'em on," and he hadn't. That Invisible
+ Trousers should exist is quite enough stretch of imagination
+ without any further stretcher.&mdash;Yours, THE DAY
+ WATCHMAN.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>MRS. R. AT THE OPERA.&mdash;Mrs. RAMSBOTHAM Junior went to
+ hear <i>La Traviata</i>. She expressed her sympathy with
+ <i>Violetta</i>, between two <i>Gourmands</i>. Remarking on the
+ touching finish to the converted <i>Traviata's</i> career, Mrs.
+ R. observed that it reminded her of the poet's line about "She
+ who stopped to cough, remained to pray."</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="margin-bottom:4em">
+ <img src="images/pointer.png"
+ alt="pointer" />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>NOTICE.&mdash;Rejected Communications or Contributions,
+ whether MS., Printed Matter, Drawings, or Pictures of any
+ description, will in no case be returned, not even when
+ accompanied by a Stamped and Addressed Envelope, Cover, or
+ Wrapper. To this rule there will be no
+ exception.</p><br clear="all" />
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume
+100, May 9, 1891, by Various
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 100,
+May 9, 1891, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 100, May 9, 1891
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: August 28, 2004 [EBook #13313]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, Sandra Brown and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOLUME 100.
+
+
+
+May 9, 1891.
+
+
+
+
+A FIRST VISIT TO THE "NAVERIES."
+
+"Shiver my timbers!" said the Scribe.
+
+"Haul down my yard-arm with a marling-spike!" cried the Artist.
+
+And with these strictly nautical expressions, two of _Mr. Punch's_
+Own entered the Royal Naval Exhibition, which now occupies the larger
+portion of the grounds of the Military Hospital, Chelsea. That so
+popular a show should be allowed to occupy so large a site speaks
+wonders for the amiability of the British Public. When the Sodgeries
+appeared last year, it was, so to speak, with fear and trembling that
+"the powers that were" appropriated a little of the ground usually
+over-run by the Nobility and Gentry of the Pimlico Road and its
+vicinity; or, rather, by their haughty offspring. This year the tough
+old sea-dogs of the Admiralty have had no hesitation in taking
+what they required, apparently without causing comment, much less
+objection. And the result? In lieu of the dusty arena of 1890,
+scarcely large enough for a ladies' cricket-match, there appears in
+1891 an enclosure containing lakes and lighthouses, panoramas, and
+full-size models of men-of-war! And the Public take their exclusion
+philosophically, either paying their shillings at the door, or
+attempting to get a view of the hoofs of the nautical horses through
+the gaps in the surrounding hoardings.
+
+The Scribe and the Artist, having been ordered by He Who Must Be
+Obeyed in the world generally, and at 85, Fleet Street, in particular,
+to make a sort of preliminary cruise through the wonders of the
+(Admiralty) Deep, hastened from the inviting grounds into the main
+building, with its pictures, its plans, and last, but (it is only
+just to say) least, its pickles. The first object that attracted their
+favourable attention was a trophy of arms, representing the fashions
+of the past and the present. On one side were shrapnel and magazine
+rifles, on the other flint-locks and the ordnance of an age long gone
+by. Next they passed through the Arctic section, wherein they found
+dummies drawing a sledge through the canvas snow of a corded-off North
+Pole. Then they entered the Picture Galleries called after NELSON and
+BENBOW, wherein magnificent paintings by POWELL, full of smoke and
+action, served as an appropriate background to the collection of
+plate, lent by that gallant sailor-warrior and industrious collector
+of well-considered trifles, H.R.H. the Duke of EDINBURGH. They glanced
+at the relics of Trafalgar, and then hurried away to the HOWE Gallery,
+which, containing as it did specimens of the implements used in
+the game of golf, might have as appropriately been christened the
+WHEREFORE. Next they skirted a corridor full of plans, and here they
+discovered that the Committee of the Exhibition must be wags, every
+Jack Tar of them! This corridor was close to the Dining-rooms, and the
+Committee (ha! ha! ha!) had called it (he! he! he!) after COOK! (Ho!
+ho! ho!) Oh, the wit of it! How the Members of the Executive must have
+nudged one another in the ribs as the quaint idea dawned upon them!
+And how they must have laughed, too, on the Opening Day, when the
+Guard of Honour, presenting arms, and the "Greenwich Boys" singing
+"_Ye Mariners of England_," were drenched in the rain! And what a
+capital notion it was on that occasion to put "the Representatives of
+the Fourth Estate" (no doubt called by _them_, with many a sly twinkle
+of the eye, "the Press Gang") into a pen that soon, thanks to a series
+of water-spouts, assumed the appearance of a tank!
+
+After leaving the Galleries, the Scribe and the Artist looked up at
+the model of Eddystone Lighthouse, and entered a shed declared to be
+an "Arctic Scene." Here they were reminded by the introduced ship
+of those happy days of their boyhood spent in the toy-shops of the
+Lowther Arcade. Next they visited the Panorama of Trafalgar, and
+revelled in the carnage of a sea-fight that only required Margate in
+the distance to be entirely convincing. They glanced at the arena, and
+gazed with awe at the lake which is to be devoted to the manoeuvring
+of miniature ironclads. It will be interesting to note whether these
+mimic combats will hold their own in the coming season against the
+introduction of capsized clowns, drenched old women, and comic police.
+Keeping the best for the last, the Scribe and the Artist now entered
+the model of the _Victory_--a really admirable exhibition. There they
+saw before them the old battle-ship with its full equipment, as it
+was in the days of NELSON--when that deathless hero expected every
+Englishman (not excluding even those passing the Custom House--as
+the Committee would say) "to _do_ his duty." To make the illusion
+complete, the great sea-captain was observed dying in the cook-pit in
+the agonies of wax. And to think that this work was executed by a firm
+of house-decorators! Why, who would not, after this, have his back
+drawing-room converted into the quarter-deck of the _Shannon_, and his
+spare bed-room into a tiny reproduction of the Battle of Copenhagen!
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Punch's Representatives, after partaking of
+Chelsea Hospitality (_a purely fancy sketch_).]
+
+The Scribe and the Artist, on their visit, were invited by all sorts
+and conditions of men to partake of champagne. The moment it was
+discovered that they were "connected with the Press," the offerers
+of hospitality were absolutely overwhelming. But, obeying the best
+traditions of their order, they sternly, but courteously, refused all
+refreshment. It is fortunate they pursued this course, for had they
+received the entirely disinterested kindness of their would-be hosts,
+their recollections of the marvels of the Royal Naval Exhibition would
+no doubt have been of the haziest character imaginable. As it was,
+they were able to take their departure through the main entrance
+with some show of dignity, and not in a less imposing manner (as the
+Committee--_Cook's_ Gallery near the Dining-rooms--ho! ho! ho! ha! ha!
+ha!--would probably and amusingly suggest), by Tite Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AMONG THE IMMORTALS.
+
+Mr. PUNCH would be failing in his duty to Art and the British
+Public if he did not place on imperishable record his notes of the
+exceptionally brilliant Royal Academy Banquet of last Saturday. H.R.H.
+the Prince of WALES made one of his best and briefest speeches, in
+which he feelingly alluded to the late Sir EDGAR BOEHM, R.A. Never
+was the President, Sir FREDERICK, more eloquent, or his themes more
+varied; for this occasion is noteworthy as being the first time in the
+history of this great annual representative gathering that the toast
+of Music and the Drama has been duly honoured. Sir ARTHUR SULLIVAN
+responded for the first, and HENRY IRVING for the second. Both made
+excellent speeches. Sir ARTHUR'S solo was most effective; his notes
+were in his head; he gave us several variations on the original
+theme, and cleverly played upon one word in saying that music had been
+"instrumental" on various historical occasions. HENRY IRVING followed
+suit; he spoke of Mrs. SIDDONS, Sir JOSHUA REYNOLDS, and of a
+professional gentleman, one ROSCIUS, mentioned, we believe, by
+_Hamlet_ as having been, some considerable time ago, "a man of parts,"
+that is an Actor, in Rome. It was a great success. Sir FREDERICK then
+proposed the LORD MAYOR, which may be briefly expressed as "a toast
+with a Savory to follow." For "The Visitors," Lord Justice BOWEN,
+catching sight of the President's classical picture (No. 232), made a
+happy hit about the delights of a honeymoon in the Infernal Regions,
+ending in the return of Proserpine to her mother Ceres by order of the
+Court above. Finally, the President, in summing up the losses to Art
+during the past year, paid a graceful tribute to the memory of CHARLES
+KEENE, who, but a short while ago, was our fellow-worker on the staff
+of _Mr. Punch_ With a hopeful allusion to the Storage of Artistic
+Force in the near future, the President concluded: but this Banquet of
+1891 will long live in the recollection of all whose privilege it was
+to be present on so memorable an occasion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MUSICAL NOTES.
+
+I SAY! YSAYE! _Why say?_ Why _not_ say that YSAYE is a grand Yolinist,
+since he is this; and, as 'ARRY would observe, "No error!" and whoever
+says the contrary, is not speaking the absolute truth, but "_Ysaye
+Worsay_." The Yolinist had the advantage of the co-operation of a fine
+Orchestra, under the Magic Wand of Conductor COWEN.
+
+On the 27th, Heard young JEAN GERARDY, Little boy, but player hardy,
+Not the slightest Lardy-Dardy, Not yet out of care of "Guardy," Heard
+him _Lundi_, not on _Mardi_. But, whene'er he plays, your Bardy,
+Always spry, and never tardy, Will again hear JEAN GERARDY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GENERAL SUMMARY OF CARICATURES OF MR. GLADSTONE.--"Collarable
+Imitations."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FASHION'S FLORALIA: OR, THE URBAN QUEEN OF
+THE MAY.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FASHION'S FLORALIA;
+
+OR, THE URBAN QUEEN OF THE MAY.
+
+(_A Song of the Season, a very long way after Herrick_.)
+
+ "London town is another affair
+ Since HERRICK wrote his perfect rhymes."
+
+MORTIMER COLLINS.
+
+ True, sadly true, shaper of rattling rhymes,
+ London hath changed with process of the times.
+ Aurora now may "throw her faire
+ Fresh-quilted colours through the aire,"
+ But our conditions atmospheric
+ Are not as in the days of HERRICK.
+ Nathless the Muse to-day may see
+ Flora at urban revelry.
+ See how the goddess trippeth from the West,
+ Fragrant, though something fashionably drest;
+ The Season waketh at her tread,
+ Art lifteth a long-drooping head;
+ Music doth make a merry din.
+ 'Tis profanation, keeping in,
+ Whenas a hundred Shows upon this day
+ Spring, lightly as the lark to fetch in May.
+
+ Rise, Nymph, put on fresh finery, and be seen,
+ To come forth like the Spring-time, fresh and green!
+ And gay as Flora. Art is there,
+ With flowing hyacinthine hair.
+ Fear not, the throng will strew
+ Largess abundant upon _you_,
+ When Burlington's great Opening Day is kept.
+ Gone is thy Grosvenor rival, not unwept;
+ But a New Nymph, with footing light,
+ Trips it beside thee, nor hath night
+ Shadowed sweet "Aquarelle" whose skill,
+ As of a Water-Nymph, is still
+ Well to the fore. Pipe up! playing means paying,
+ When Fashion's Urban Flora goes a-Maying.
+
+ Come, my CORINNA, come; and, coming, mark
+ How each street turns a grove, each square a park,
+ Made green and trimmed with trees: see how
+ The pinky hawthorn decks the bough!
+ Each Bond Street porch, or door, ere this
+ Of Art a Tabernacle is;
+ Nor Art alone. With May is interwove
+ Seaweed, which Neptune's favourites love.
+ SWINBURNE should sing in stanzas fleet,
+ How NELSON may, at Chelsea, meet
+ ARMSTRONG! Sound conch-shell! Let's obey
+ Thy Proclamation made for May.
+ Wild marine whiffs from the salt sea are straying,
+ And the brine greets us as we go a-Maying.
+
+ There's not a London-Teuton but this day
+ Hath a new welcome for the English May.
+ Germania from her distant home
+ In Flora's train this year doth come.
+ She hath despatched her country's cream
+ Of things, to make the Cockney dream.
+ Neptune and she have wooed and plighted troth,
+ And her we give May-welcome, nothing loth,
+ As many a welcome we have given
+ To France, Spain, Italy! War hath riven
+ Many true hearts, but we're content
+ Of Peace to make experiment.
+ Blow Teuton horn--(not like "_Hernani's_" braying!)--
+ It makes new music as we go a-Maying!
+
+ Come, let us go, while May is in its prime,
+ And make the best of the brief Season's time.
+ HERRICK'S CORINNA might not see
+ An Urban May Queen such as we
+ Behold disport in our rare sun.
+ Rouse, Nymph! The Season is begun!
+ We'll trust no blizzard, and no boreal rain
+ May mar "Our Opening Day." Sound flutes again!
+ Pipe, Sir FREDERICK! Ah, well played!
+ Tootle thy new strains, fair Maid.
+ Blow, oh Briny One, with might!
+ Teuton BRUNEHILD, glad our sight!
+ Fashion's Floralia, Nymph, invite our straying;
+ Come, my CORINNA, come; let's go a-Maying!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THINGS ONE WOULD RATHER HAVE LEFT
+UNSAID.
+
+_Painter_. "WOULD YOU BELIEVE IT? THIS IS THE PICTURE THEY'VE THOUGHT
+PROPER TO REJECT! I'LL BE SO BOLD AS TO SAY, THERE ARE NOT TWENTY
+BETTER IN THE WHOLE EXHIBITION!"
+
+_Friend_. "DEAR ME! IS IT SUCH A POOR ACADEMY AS THAT?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HUMOUR O'T!
+
+(_Namely of Parliament, as seen through Harry Furniss's fancy._)
+
+AIR--"_The Wooing o't._"
+
+ LIKA JOKO makes us laugh,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ With caricature and caustic chaff;
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ Parliament strikes some as slow,
+ LIKA JOKO deems not so;
+ Visit _his_ St. Stephen's Show!
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ GLADSTONE stern and GLADSTONE staid,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ GLADSTONE in war-paint arrayed,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ GLADSTONE "Out" and GLADSTONE "In,"
+ GLADSTONE with colossal chin,
+ Giant collars plunged within,
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ SMITH with bland perennial smile,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ BALFOUR, pet of the Green Isle,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ HARCOURT, big as Babel's tower,
+ GOSCHEN, with myopic glower,
+ JOSEPH of the orchid-flower.
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ How they muster, how they "tell,"
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ Woes of the Division Bell,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ _All_--from Prayers to "Who goes Home?"
+ O'er St. Stephens you may roam;
+ LIKA JOKO bids you. Come!
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ LIKA JOKO is a wag,
+ Ha! ha! the humour o't!
+ All the tricks are in his bag,
+ He! he! the humour o't!
+ He can mimic, he can mime,
+ Draw, and act, and--what is prime--
+ _Keep you laughing all the time._
+ Humph! humph! the humour o't!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Why doesn't some Musical Photographic Artist of Scotch Nationality
+compose a March for his fellow Professors and Practisers, and call it
+"_The March of the Camera Men_"? Sure to be popular.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN UN-"COMMON" GOOD HORSE.--The Winner of this Year's Two Thousand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. PUNCH'S POCKET IBSEN.
+
+(_Condensed and Revised Version by Mr. P.'s Own Harmless Ibsenite._)
+
+No. III.--HEDDA GABLER.
+
+ACT. III.
+
+SCENE.--_The same Room, but--it being evening--darker than ever--The
+crape curtains are drawn. A Servant, with black ribbons in her cap,
+and red eyes, comes in and lights the gas quietly and carefully.
+Chords are heard on the piano in the back Drawing-room. Presently_
+HEDDA _comes in and looks out into the darkness. A short pause. Enter_
+GEORGE TESMAN.
+
+_George_. I am _so_ uneasy about poor LOeVBORG. Fancy! he is not at
+home. Mrs. ELVSTED told me he had been here early this morning, so I
+suppose you gave him back his manuscript, eh?
+
+_Hedda_ (_cold and immovable, supported by arm-chair_). No, I put it
+on the fire instead.
+
+_George_. On the fire! LOeVBORG'S wonderful new book that he read to
+me at BRACK'S party, when we had that wild revelry last night! Fancy
+_that!_ But, I say, HEDDA--isn't that _rather_--eh? _Too_ bad, you
+know--really. A great work like that. How on earth did you come to
+think of it?
+
+_Hedda_ (_suppressing an almost imperceptible smile_). Well, dear
+GEORGE, you gave me a tolerably strong hint.
+
+_George_. Me? Well, to be sure--that _is_ a joke! Why, I only said
+that I envied him for writing such a book, and it would put me
+entirely in the shade if it came out, and if anything was to happen to
+it, I should never forgive myself, as poor LOeVBORG couldn't write it
+all over again, and so we must take the greatest care of it! And then
+I left it on a chair and went away--that was all! And you went and
+burnt the book all up! Bless me, who _would_ have expected it?
+
+_Hedda_. Nobody, you dear simple old soul! But I did it for your
+sake--it was _love_, GEORGE!
+
+_George_ (_in an outburst between doubt and joy_). HEDDA, you don't
+mean that! Your love takes such queer forms sometimes, Yes, but
+yes--(_laughing in excess of joy_), why, you _must_ be fond of me!
+Just think of that now! Well, you _are_ fun, HEDDA! Look here, I must
+just run and tell the housemaid that--she will enjoy the joke so, eh?
+
+_Hedda_ (_coldly, in self-command_). It is surely not necessary, even
+for a clever Norwegian man of letters in a realistic social drama, to
+make quite such a fool of himself as all that?
+
+_George_. No, that's true too. Perhaps we'd better keep it
+quiet--though I _must_ tell Aunt JULIE--it will make her so happy to
+hear that you burnt a manuscript on my account! And, besides, I should
+like to ask her whether that's a usual thing with young wives. (_Looks
+uneasy and pensive again._) But poor old EJLERT'S manuscript! Oh Lor,
+you know! Well, well! [Mrs. ELVSTED _comes in_.
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, please, I'm so uneasy about dear Mr. LOeVBORG. Something
+has happened to him, I'm sure!
+
+_Judge Brack_ (_comes in from the hall, with a new hat in his hand_).
+You have guessed it, first time. Something _has!_
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, dear, good gracious! What is it? Something distressing,
+I'm certain of it! [_d._
+
+_Brack_ (_pleasantly_). That depends on how one takes it. He has shot
+himself, and is in a hospital now, that's all!
+
+_George_ (_sympathetically_). That's sad, eh? poor old LOeVBORG! Well,
+I _am_ cut up to hear that. Fancy, though, eh?
+
+_Hedda_. Was it through the temple, or through the breast? The breast?
+Well, one can do it beautifully through the breast, too. Do you know,
+as an advanced woman, I like an act of that sort--it's so positive, to
+have the courage to settle the account with himself--it's beautiful,
+really!
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, HEDDA, what an odd way to look at it! But never mind
+poor dear Mr. LOeVBORG now. What _we've_ got to do is to see if we
+can't put his wonderful manuscript, that he said he had torn to
+pieces, together again. (_Takes a bundle of small pages out of the
+pocket of her mantle._) There are the loose scraps he dictated it to
+me from. I hid them on the chance of some such emergency. And if
+dear Mr. TESMAN and I were to put our heads together, I _do_ think
+something might come of it.
+
+_George_. Fancy! I will dedicate my life--or all I can spare of it--to
+the task. I seem to feel I owe him some slight amends, perhaps. No use
+crying over spilt milk, eh, Mrs. ELVSTED? We'll sit down--just you and
+I--in the back drawing-room, and see if you can't inspire me as you
+did him, eh?
+
+_Mrs. E._ Oh, goodness, yes! I should like it--if it only might be
+possible!
+
+[GEORGE _and_ Mrs. E. _go into the back Drawing-room and
+become absorbed in eager conversation_; HEDDA _sits in a chair in the
+front room, and a little later_ BRACK _crosses over to her._
+
+_Hedda_ (_in a low tone_). Oh, Judge, _what_ a relief to know that
+everything--including LOeVBORG'S pistol--went off so well! In the
+breast! Isn't there a veil of unintentional beauty in that? Such an
+act of voluntary courage, too!
+
+_Brack_ (_smiles_). Hm!--perhaps, dear Mrs. HEDDA--
+
+_Hedda_ (_enthusiastically_). But _wasn't_ it sweet of him! To have
+the courage to live his own life after his own fashion--to break away
+from the banquet of life--_so_ early and _so_ drunk! A beautiful act
+like that _does_ appeal to a superior woman's imagination!
+
+_Brack_. Sorry to shatter your poetical illusions, little Mrs. HEDDA,
+but, as a matter of fact, our lamented friend met his end under other
+circumstances. The shot did _not_ strike him in the _breast_--but--
+[_Pauses._
+
+_Hedda_ (_excitedly_). General GABLER'S pistols! I might have known
+it! Did they _ever_ shoot straight? Where _was_ he hit, then?
+
+_Brack_ (_in a discreet undertone_). A little lower down!
+
+_Hedda_. Oh, _how_ disgusting!--how vulgar!--how ridiculous!--like
+everything else about me!
+
+_Brack_. Yes, we're realistic types of human nature, and all that--but
+a trifle squalid, perhaps. And why did you give LOeVBORG your pistol,
+when it was certain to be traced by the police? For a charming
+cold-blooded woman with a clear head and no scruples, wasn't it just a
+leetle foolish?
+
+_Hedda_. Perhaps; but I wanted him to do it beautifully, and he
+didn't! Oh, I've just admitted that I _did_ give him the pistol--how
+annoyingly unwise of me! Now I'm in _your_ power, I suppose?
+
+_Brack_. Precisely--for some reason it's not easy to understand.
+But it's inevitable, and you know how you dread anything approaching
+scandal. All your past proceedings show that. (_To_ GEORGE _and_ Mrs.
+E., _who come in together from the back-room._) Well, how are you
+getting on with the reconstruction of poor LOeVBORG'S great work, eh?
+
+[Illustration: "What! the accounts of all those everlasting
+bores settled?"]
+
+_George_. Capitally; we've made out the first two parts already. And
+really, HEDDA, I do believe Mrs. ELVSTED _is_ inspiring me; I begin to
+feel it coming on. Fancy that!
+
+_Mrs. E._ Yes, goodness! HEDDA, _won't_ it be lovely if I can. I mean
+to try _so_ hard!
+
+_Hedda_. Do, you dear little silly rabbit; and while you are trying I
+will go into the back drawing-room and lie down.
+
+[_She goes into the back-room and draws the curtains. Short pause.
+Suddenly she is heard playing_ "The Bogie Man" _within on the piano._
+
+_George_. But, dearest HEDDA, don't play "_The Bogie Man_" this
+evening. As one of my aunts is dead, and poor old LOeVBORG has shot
+himself, it seems just a little pointed, eh?
+
+_Hedda_ (_puts her head out between the curtains_). All right! I'll be
+quiet after this. I'm going to practise with the late General GABLER'S
+pistol!
+
+[_Closes the curtains again_; GEORGE _gets behind the stove_, Judge
+BRACK _under the table, and_ Mrs. ELVSTED _under the sofa. A shot is
+heard within._
+
+_George_ (_behind the stove_). Eh, look here, I tell you what--she's
+hit _me!_ Think of that!
+
+[_His legs are visibly agitated for a short
+time. Another shot is heard._
+
+_Mrs. E._ (_under the sofa_). Oh, please, not me! Oh, goodness, now
+I can't inspire anybody any more. Oh!
+
+[_Her feet, which can be seen
+under the valance, quiver a little, and then are suddenly still._
+
+_Brack_ (_vivaciously, from under the table_). I say, Mrs. HEDDA,
+I'm coming in every evening--we will have great fun here togeth--
+(_Another shot is heard._) Bless me! to bring down the poor old
+cock-of-the-walk--it's unsportsmanlike!--it's--.
+
+[_The table-cloth is violently agitated for a minute, and presently
+the curtains open, and_ HEDDA _appears._
+
+_Hedda_ (_clearly and firmly_). I've been trying in there to shoot
+myself beautifully--but with General GABLER'S pistol--(_She lifts the
+tablecloth, then looks behind the stove and under the sofa._) What!
+the accounts of all those everlasting bores settled? Then my suicide
+becomes unnecessary. Yes, I feel the courage of life once more!
+
+[_She goes into the back-room and plays_ "The Funeral March of a
+Marionette" _as the Curtain falls._
+
+THE END (_with the usual apologies_).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OPERATIC NOTES.
+
+[Illustration: "J'y suis."
+Pro Arris et focus.]
+
+
+_Monday.--Le Prophete_.--Notable performance. Profit to those who
+were there; loss to those who weren't. The two Poles, NED and JOHN DE
+RESZKE, excellent as the Tipster, or Prophet, and the Chief Anabaptist
+Swindler. Madame RICHARD--"_O Richard, Oma Reine!_" repeated her grand
+impersonation of _Fides_, but being a trifle "out of it" as to tune
+occasionally, I cannot be _Fidei Defensor_, and swear she was quite
+correct, so can only report that RICHARD was a bit "dicky"; otherwise,
+sings like a Dicky-Bird. Cathedral Scene magnificent. Rites are wrong,
+probably; but these are trifles, except to strict ritualists. Skating
+Scene not up to date; it was a novelty once upon a time, but rinks
+have done for it. There was an unrehearsed effect in the Prison Scene,
+when the walls collapsed--the imprisoned Madame RICHARD escaped, and
+the Curtain descended. Nobody hurt. The walls, which had fallen,
+like those of Jericho, to the sound of the trumpet, were put away
+carefully, for alteration and repairs. The prisoner, issuing from
+her narrow fire-escape, was recaptured, and the Opera ended with the
+Drinking Scene, the Prophet among the Peris, a peri-lous situation,
+which makes the Opera go, at the climax, "like a house-a-fire." Burns
+Justice is done to the Impostor, and, at a late hour, we call our
+cabs, and return to hum "_beviam_" over "a modest quencher."
+
+_Saturday_.--BOITO'S _Mefistofele_. Strong combination. Excellent. But
+big "waits" made it heavy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN AGRICULTURAL TRIPOS.
+
+PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION PAPER.
+
+1. A field is ploughed three years running. Can it still have a shy
+at its little go? Examine this, and say all you know about "PIERS, or
+PEARS, the Ploughman." Did he use his own soap?
+
+2. How do you extract the square of a Beet-root? In connection with
+this, say how much it will take to square a "Swede?"
+
+3. Explain the use of the "Sewing-machine" for agricultural purposes.
+What do you mean by "going against the grain?"
+
+4. You plant a field of corn. What plaster do you adopt when it begins
+to shoot? Also give the best remedy you know for _corn in the ear_.
+
+5. Write a Sentimental History of the Harvest Moon. Is it really twice
+as big as any other moon, or does it only look so, after drinking the
+landlord's health several times over?
+
+6. To what _gourmet_ giving a dinner-party in January is attributed
+the historical saying, "_Peas_ at any price"?
+
+7. How many black beans will make five white ones? Given the number,
+explain the process, and solve the equation.
+
+8. What pomade do you recommend for "top-dressing"?
+
+9. What would be an M.P.'s first step towards squaring a circle of
+Agricultural Voters?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAD STORY.--A painter, who had on several occasions aspired to a place
+in the Chantrey Collection, and invariably been refused, on being
+encouraged to launch a fresh venture, and spread his canvas, which
+would be soon filled, for a sale, replied dejectedly, "Chantrey be
+blowed; I _shan't try_ any more!" Poor fellow! He must indeed have
+been bad. He has not been heard of since. The Serpentine has been
+dragged.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HANSOM CAB STRIKE!--Remarkable Conversion!! Not yet concluded!
+Last week another lot of Hansoms became Growlers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REPARTEE TO A SPOUSE.
+
+Both parties in the recent extraordinary abduction case, where a
+Mrs. JONES was carried off down a rope-ladder at midnight by her own
+husband, Mr. JONES, have published statements defending their own line
+of conduct. The following is Mrs. JONES'S version:--
+
+"As public opinion appears to have erroneously taken
+my--so-called--husband's side, as far as I can gather from my having
+been twice chased through the streets by an infuriated mob, and
+four separate attempts having been made to blow up my house
+with nitro-glycerine, I feel compelled to explain--with much
+reluctance--why it was that I declined to live with Mr. JONES.
+
+"To begin with, it was only under _the most awful threats_ that Mr.
+JONES prevailed on me to become his wife. His words--I remember them
+well--were, 'My darling, you know how tenderly I adore you; if you
+don't marry me _at once_ I'll break every bone in your body!' He then
+snatched my bonnet, a _new one_, from my head, and so acted on my
+_nerves_ that I went off to the Registry Office and was married. That
+he was actuated by merely mercenary motives is proved by the fact that
+the gratuity (of half-a-crown), which he presented to the Registry
+Clerk, he actually _borrowed from me!_ I knew him already to be
+unprincipled; but never until that moment had it flashed upon me that
+he was a _fortune-hunter!_ However, as he had the drawing-room poker
+with him--he kept it concealed up his back during the ceremony at the
+Registry Office--I did not at that time say anything, but handed him
+the coin. I do not know if I should have left him at once, had he not
+aggravated the baseness of his conduct by using the vulgar expression,
+'Fork it out quick!' But I regret to say that his origin is painfully
+_low_. Whereas, anybody who consults _my_ relatives will hear from
+them that they belong to the very highest County Families. Indeed, he
+would hear it all day long if he lived with them, as I do!
+
+"On the day of the abduction, I was treated _barbarously!_ Even the
+cab in which I was taken off was, so the coachman informed me, 'put
+down to my account.' Oh, had I but guessed the truth about Mr. JONES
+when I went to the Altar--I mean the Registry Office! Supper consisted
+of _cold mutton and pickles_ (!) which latter he upset, and I had a
+dress _ruined_."
+
+On perusing the above, Mr. JONES decided that he could no longer keep
+silence, and has made public the subjoined explanation:--
+
+"When I first saw Mrs. JONES--then Miss THOMPSON--her youthful grace
+quite captivated me. Her age was under fifty-six, and mine was just
+sixty. She was, in fact, as I told her at the time, almost old enough
+to know her own mind. It is true that she was wealthy, but that had
+no influence on my conduct. On the contrary I felt it as a positive
+drawback, as my domestic ideal has always been Love in a Cottage! But
+as she was bent upon our marrying, I agreed to waive this objection.
+
+"In proof of this assertion I need only say that on the _very day
+after_ our first meeting, I received the following letter:--
+
+"'PRICELESS AND ADORABLE PET,--How _are_ your little
+tootsy-wootsicums? _Did_ they get wet in conducting me home after
+that _delicious_ interview? If so, and you were to catch cold in your
+precious head, I should never forgive myself. Oh, come and see me
+_soon!_ Your Own, till Death, ANGELINA.'
+
+"Possibly I may be blamed for publishing this letter. I do it for
+_her_ sake, not for mine. Even now I believe that, were I left alone
+with her for an hour, with none of her relatives nor a policeman near,
+I could persuade her to retract her calumnious statement about the
+poker. I conclude by saying that it is my belief that her relatives,
+who are all of them powerful mesmerists, have _hypnotised her!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+_My Face is My Fortune_, by Messrs. PHILIPS and FENDALL. Why don't
+they agree to spell both names with an "F," and make it FILLIPS and
+FENDALL. I fancy that FENDALL couldn't do without the sensational
+fillips. This story excites curiosity throughout the first volume,
+and then, in the other volume, satisfies it in so disappointing and
+commonplace a fashion as to suggest the idea that one of the authors,
+becoming weary of his share in the work, suddenly chucked it up,
+and said, "Oh, bother! let's finish anyhow;" and then the other
+_collaborateur_, whichever it was, did finish it as best and as
+quickly as he could. There is evidence of laziness or of lack of
+invention in the story. If it were for the first time in fiction that
+a secret is learnt by some one hiding behind some pantomime plants
+in a conservatory, then too much praise could not be bestowed on the
+ingenious devisers of so strong and original a situation. But as "we
+know that situation,--he comes from Sheffield," and as it has done
+duty some scores of times before, on or off the stage, why, the
+thoroughgoing novel-reader shakes his head and asks, "Couldn't they
+have devised something better than this between them?" "I expected
+much from this combination in Authorship, and am disappointed," says
+the candid BARON DE BOOK-WORMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WHAT OUR ARTIST (THE NEWLY-MARRIED ONE)
+HAS TO PUT UP WITH.
+
+_Our Artist_. "JUST LOOK, DARLING! I WAS SHORT OF CANVASSES, SO I'VE
+STRETCHED A CLEAN POCKET-HANDKERCHIEF!--SEE HOW SPLENDIDLY IT TAKES
+THE PAINT!"
+
+_His Prudent Little Wife._. "OH, JOHN DEAR, HOW EXTRAVAGANT OF YOU!
+_IT'LL NEVER COME OUT!_"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ADOPTED CHILD.
+
+ "Last year the CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER frittered away his
+ resources in a number of small remissions, for which hardly
+ anyone was grateful. This year he squanders the greater
+ part of his surplus in providing for Free, or--as the phrase
+ is--Assisted Education--an innovation for which there is
+ hardly any genuine demand, and which a very large class of the
+ community, including many of the most loyal supporters of the
+ Government, view with rooted distrust."--_The Standard_.
+
+MRS. GAMP (_the "Old Regular_") _loquitur_:--
+
+ "More changes, too, to come afore we have done with changes!"
+ Ah! I said that to good Mister MOULD years agone; which 'ow memory
+ ranges
+ All over them dear "Good Old Times," as I wish them wos back agen,
+ bless 'em!
+ Which the new ones ain't much to _my_ mind; there's too many fresh
+ "monthlies" to mess 'em.
+ No; monthlying ain't wot it were; the perfession's too open, a lump.
+ Nusses now ain't no more like old SAIREY, no not than the old Aldgit
+ Pump.
+ Like the Cristial Palluses fountings; A Pilgjian's Projiss is life,
+ And a Nuss ain't no more _like_ a Nuss than a Wife now resembles a
+ Wife.
+
+ Heigho! Which it's no use a frettin'. But _Fondlings_! Ah, well, I
+ _did_ think
+ Our respectable fam'lies, _though_ mixed, from sich ojus demeaning
+ would shrink,
+ Which no greater hinsult to _me_, the old reglar, could well be
+ deviged;
+ And though I've to live and to learn, I confess as this turn I'm
+ serpriged.
+ A Fondling!!! Turned up unbeknownst on a doorstep permiskus, no doubt.
+ And then to _adopt_ him! Oh dear, wot the plague is our Party about?
+ Wich to monthly to _it_ were my pride; its legitermit offspring I've
+ nussed
+ Many years with the greatest success, but to-day I feels flurried and
+ fussed,
+ And my eyes is Saint Polge's fontin with tears, and this brat is their
+ source;
+ As it isn't no offspring of _ourn_--of the fam'ly I mean, Ma'am, in
+ course;
+ But a Brummagem bantling, picked hup, as were not worth its swaddlin'
+ and food,
+ And I never yet knowed any brat from _that_ source as turned out any
+ good.
+ Missis G., Mum, it's all a mistake, as you know in your 'art all the
+ same,
+ For you turned up your nose at the child when JOE CHAMBERLING give him
+ a name,
+ Afore we was thick with his set, when you snubbed him, and laughed him
+ to scorn,
+ And heaped naughty names on this kid, as you swore was his nat'ral
+ fust-born.
+ And now you come dandling, and doddling, and patting the brat on the
+ 'ed,
+ And forgetting the things as you promiged, and backing on all as you
+ said.
+ Missis G., you do raly amaze me! This comes of our precious mix-up;
+ Which the child's no more like one of ourn than a pug's like a
+ tarrier-pup.
+
+ In the best-regulated o' fam'lies things will go askew, I'm aweer;
+ As I says to my friend Mrs. HARRIS, as says to me, "SAIREY, my dear,
+ You looks dragged, my sweet creetur," she says. "Missis HARRIS," I
+ makes 'er reply,
+ "When the 'art in one's buzzum beats 'ot, there's excuge for the tear
+ in one's heye.
+ Which wales isn't in it for worrit, my love, with your poor old pal,
+ SAIREY,
+ Along o' the Fam'ly," I says; "as things _do_ seem to go that
+ contrairey,
+ _My_ services now ain't required, with 'adoptions' all over the shop,
+ From Brummagem, yus, and elsewheres; and I ast 'Where is this thing to
+ stop?'
+ RITCHIE'S 'pick-up' was tryin', most tryin'; and as to those bad Irish
+ brats,
+ As BALFOUR interjuced--dear! jest fancy our Party adopting small Pats!
+ And now this here Brummagem babby! You say he's a promising cheild,
+ Missis G., and 'you're learning to love him!' All this makes old
+ SAIREY feel wild.
+ It's wus than kidnapping, this bizness of picking up 'Fondlings' all
+ round.
+ You're nussing a wiper, _I_ say, and you'll soon feel 'is bite, _I'll_
+ be bound.
+ Who arsked for 'im, BETSY--I mean Missis G.--who demanded the brat?
+ _You_'ve altered your mind, and you pet him; you'd much better mind
+ what you're at.
+ Drat the boy's bragian imperence! _I_ says. He's a halien, a fondling,
+ a waif,
+ And _I_ never knew, for my part, _any_ Brummagem goods as wos _safe!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE ADOPTED CHILD.
+
+MOTHER GOSCHEN. "FOUND 'IM IN BIRMINGHAM, MY DEAR! DIDN'T LIKE 'IM AT
+FIRST,--BUT, SOMEHOW, I'VE QUITE TOOK A FANCY TO 'IM!!"
+
+MRS. GAMP. "A FONDLING INDEED!--WHICH ALL I CAN SAY IS I DON'T LIKE
+THE LOOKS OF 'IM!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.
+
+_House of Commons, Monday, April 27_.--"Well, I never!" said GEORGE
+ELLIOT, beaming on House from back bench; "have known HARCOURT man
+and boy for forty years; seen him in divers moods; watched him through
+various occupations. These have been so many that I have had time to
+forget he was once Chancellor of the Exchequer; but he was, and
+upon my word, listening to him to-night, and knowing something
+about figures myself, I believe he would have made a splash at the
+Treasury."
+
+[Illustration: Genial George.]
+
+JOKIM doesn't enjoy performance quite so much as GENIAL GEORGE. Oddly
+enough, Budget Night, which ought to be the apex of comfort and
+glory for CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, is with him ever the season of
+tribulation. House of Commons is, regarded as audience, always at its
+best on Budget Night. Will laugh immoderately at feeblest joke
+uttered by CHANCELLOR; cheers to the echo his moral sentiments; sits
+enraptured when he soars into eloquence; and is undisguisedly grateful
+when he has completed his peroration. JOKIM'S muddle of Thursday
+night made the best of. Opposition silenced by promised legislation
+establishing Free Education. Everything in sunshine-glow of
+prosperity. Thought JOKIM might keep some of the sunbeams for himself.
+Then comes HARCOURT with the abhorred shears of facts and figures,
+and slits the thin-spun web of JOKIM'S ingenious fancy; shows that,
+instead of a surplus, he has, when honest arithmetic is set to work, a
+deficit; instead of increasing the rate of reduction of National Debt,
+he has done less in that direction than his predecessors; and that
+whilst expenditure on Army and Navy has exceeded any figures reached
+by former Chancellors of the Exchequer, the floating debt is ever
+growing.
+
+JOKIM sits on Treasury Bench affecting the virtue of a smile though
+he has it not. Wriggles like a snail under dispensation of salt. When
+HARCOURT finished, HENRY FOWLER stepped in, and with fresh array of
+figures and new marshalling of argument, completed the demolition of
+JOKIM'S system of finance. Mr. G. looked smilingly on, delighting in
+the energy and aptitude of his Young Men. JOKIM, anxious to change the
+subject on any terms, tried to draw Mr. G. into the controversy. "I
+think not," said Mr. G., with a smile of ineffable sweetness. "Right
+Hon. Gentleman need not go so far afield: will have pretty tough job
+in answering HARCOURT."
+
+A pretty scene; admirable Parliamentary play. Oddly enough boxes
+empty; stalls a wilderness; pit only half full. Energies of House
+so sapped with dreary flood of talk on Irish Land Bill cannot be
+reanimated even for a brisk battle over the Budget.
+
+_Business done_.--JOKIM pummelled to pulp.
+
+
+_Tuesday_.--OLD MORALITY walked out of House just now, his back
+suffused with sense of duty done, alike to QUEEN and Country. Irish
+Land Bill, which, as CAMPBELL-BANNERMAN says, makes a Moated Grange of
+House of Commons, on again all day. SAGE OF QUEEN ANNE'S GATE and
+his Party active as usual. The PARTY a little doubtful of the SAGE.
+Sometimes, in blessed intervals of silence, is discovered gazing on
+a bald space on back of SAGE'S head, striving, as it were, to pierce
+through this weak spot, and discover what is in the SAGE'S mind. The
+SAGE in outward manner most deferential and encouraging. Misses no
+opportunity of publicly applauding him. It is true that when the SAGE
+has got him on his legs, starting afresh on new Amendment, he seizes
+the opportunity to slink out of the House, and take another cigarette,
+quite certain that the PARTY is good for half-an-hour. This, and one
+or two other little things, create a suspicion in the mind of the
+PARTY, who was not brought up in India for nothing. WILFRID LAWSON,
+who sits close by, and keenly watches progress of events, says he has
+no doubt the time will come when the PARTY will revolt.
+
+"KEAY," says WILFRID, "occupies a strategical position, which gives
+him a great pull over LABBY. His respected Leader sits on the bench
+immediately below him. Some day SEYMOUR KEAY'S wild Mahratta blood may
+boil over, an unsuspected scimitar may flash forth from his trouser
+pocket, and the SAGE'S head, falling gory on the floor of the House,
+may gently, from mere force of habit, roll in the direction of Queen
+Anne's Gate."
+
+"For a real sanguinary-minded man," said RITCHIE, to whom I told this
+story, "give me a teetotaller."
+
+The PARTY, with some assistance from Windbag SEXTON, wasted sitting
+till quarter to seven. By this time, all Amendments to Clause 3 being
+wearily worn off, opportunity just left to pass Clause before Sitting
+adjourned. Question put that Clause 3 pass. Then SAGE, smelling
+obtrusively of cigarettes, interposed, and declared it "would be
+indecent" to accept the Clause without further discussion. Nothing
+House shrinks from just now more abjectly than from charge of
+indecency. Accordingly debate stood over, and Thursday may, if
+the SAGE and his Party please, and the Closure is not invoked, be
+appropriated for further discussion of Clause 3.
+
+OLD MORALITY might have moved Closure at twelve minutes to seven,
+and carried Clause 3. Committee naturally expected he would. But OLD
+MORALITY had another card up his sleeve. At very last moment, whilst
+Members trooped out, and it was thought all was over, OLD MORALITY
+gave notice of motion to take the whole time of House, including
+Tuesday and Friday nights' evening sittings.
+
+"I think you had them there," I said, as we walked across to Grosvenor
+Place.
+
+"Yes, TOBY," he said, a little flush mantling his modest face; "we've
+given them rope enough, and now we'll hang them. They've had their
+run, now we'll take ours. It's the main thing I always look to. Never
+forget when I was still in the seminary writing out copy of verses
+about a shipwreck. A graphic scene; the riven vessel, the raging seas,
+the panic-stricken crowd on deck, and then this little self-drawn
+picture of the sole survivor, the one man left to tell the story:
+
+ Some fell upon their bended knees
+ And others fell down fainting,
+ But I fell to on bread and cheese;
+ For that, Sir, was the main thing.
+
+It's the bread and cheese I look to, TOBY, dear boy. For others the
+glory of debate, the prize of Parliamentary oratory. Give me the bread
+and cheese of seeing business advancing, and I'm content."
+
+_Business done_.--Once more Committee on Irish Land Bill.
+
+
+_Thursday_.--A pretty little game on to-night. OLD MORALITY moved his
+Resolution taking power to appropriate Tuesdays and Fridays evening
+sittings, and all Wednesdays for Irish Land Bill. In ordinary
+circumstances there would have been stormy protest led from Front
+Opposition Bench against this inroad on time of private Members. Other
+fish to fry to-night. Wednesday week assigned for Second Reading of
+Woman's Suffrage Bill; if Government take that day for Irish Land
+Bill, obviously can't be utilised for furtherance of Woman's Rights.
+This an awkward question for some Members; don't like it, but daren't
+vote against it. Here's opportunity of getting rid of it by side-wind.
+Not necessary in arranging proceedings to mention Suffrage Bill,
+or even Wednesday, 13th of May. It was principle for which Members
+struggled; "the principle of uniformity," as Mr. G. beautifully put
+it. "Let us," he said, though perhaps not quite in this phrase, "go
+the whole hog or none; take all the Wednesdays, or leave them."
+
+Pretty to see OLD MORALITY protesting against this unprecedented
+access of generosity. The very picture, as MCEWAN said, of a good
+man struggling with the adversity of overwhelming good fortune. Was
+prepared to take a Wednesday here and there: but, really, too much to
+appropriate everyone. "Not at all--not at all," said Mr. G.
+
+But it was only under compulsion of a Division that he consented to
+accept the endowment. In meanwhile, the Woman's Suffrage Debate on
+Wednesday week snuffed out, and final opportunity of Session lost.
+
+"I'm inclined," said WM. WOODALL, "as a rule, to take kindly views of
+my fellow men, to put the best construction upon their actions; but,
+upon my word, I'm not satisfied in my own mind that we advocates of
+Woman's Rights have not been made the victims of deep and dastardly
+design."
+
+"Order! Order!" said COURTNEY; "no more am I."
+
+_Business done_.--Woman's Rights men dished.
+
+_Friday_.--Brer FOX looked in to-night, and, finding Brer RABBIT
+absent, undertook charge of Irish affairs. Desirous of introducing
+novelty into situation, began by patronising Prince ARTHUR. "So
+conciliatory, you know; so anxious to meet the views of Irish Members;
+really, they ought to meet him half-way, and refrain from annoying him
+by unnecessary Amendments."
+
+Brer FOX'S voice faltered as he spoke, and, bringing round his tail,
+he gently brushed away a falling tear. Unfortunately for him, TIM
+HEALY present. TIM jumped up, and fell upon his ancient chief,
+flouting his counsel, and repudiating his right to leadership. Effect
+upon Brer FOX something like that which followed on the flight of the
+piece of old red sandstone which struck in the abdomen a gentleman,
+who chanced to be standing round. The subsequent proceedings
+interested him no more. He walked out, and was not seen again.
+"Exceedingly rude man," he said; "never come near TIM HEALY but I feel
+an infinite yearning for a fire-escape." _Business done_.--Land Bill
+again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"MORE FREE THAN WELCOME."--MR. GOSCHEN'S Education Scheme, to the
+Tories.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A REGIMENT OF "THE LINE."--The Royal Academicians.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: GRANDOLPH THE PRODIGAL.
+
+(_A Parliamentary Drama too good for words, after "L'Enfant Prodigue"
+at the Prince of Wales's Theatre._)]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PICK OF THE PICTURES. (AT THE ROYAL ACADEMY.)
+
+[Illustration: No. 199. Doctor Dubitans. "I'm afraid I've
+given him the wrong stuff." Luke Fildes, R.A.]
+
+[Illustration: No. 742. "He's got 'em on!" or, Nanny, wilt
+thou gang with me in that new suit and those tight boots? By Phil. R.
+Morris, A.]
+
+[Illustration: Grand Combination Picture, "Liddell and
+Scott!" [Liddell (289) by H. Herkomer, R.A., and Scott (281) by G(ee)
+W(oa) Joy! "Joy and Woe!" Comedy and Tragedy.]]
+
+[Illustration: No. 226. The Penance of Zaeo in the presence
+of some Members of the County Council. P.H. Calderon, R.A.]
+
+No. 5. "_Long Ago_." LONG (EDWIN, R.A.) and more or less of "a go."
+Instead of "_Long Ago_" which is egotistical, why not _Long Egit_ or
+_Long Fecit?_
+
+Nos. 21, 22, 23. "_The Lyons Mail_" (and Female). BRITON RIVIERE,
+R.A. [N.B.--"R.A.," _i.e._, "Royal Academician" and "Royal
+Animal-painter."]
+
+No. 27. The Viscount CROSS looking quite Viscount Cheerful. "_Painted
+for the Grand Jury Room, Lancaster Castle_," the Catalogue informs
+us. Suggestive of their arguing among themselves "at cross purposes."
+Painted by SYDNEY HODGES.
+
+No. 77. "_On Strike_." Very striking. Who could have painted this? Ah!
+_Who but_ HERKOMER. R.A.
+
+No. 82. Apparently this must have been intended for a portrait of the
+late Mr. DION BOUCICAULT, but subsequently adapted to represent
+WALTER GILBEY, Esq. Looks quite the GILBEY'S "fine, old, dry," but
+not "crusted." No doubt whatever of its being the excellent work of
+W(erry) Q(uaint) ORCHARDSON, R.A.
+
+No. 112. "_Hanson is as Hanson does_." By J. HANSON WALKER. Naturally
+pleased with "the promise of May," and
+
+No. 118. Another Young Lady only Younger. By the same Artist.
+
+No. 143. The Right Hon. A.J. BALFOUR, M.P., as seen by L. ALMA-TADEMA,
+R.A. Taken while considering
+
+No. 147. The Irish Question as represented by Sir FREDERICK LEIGHTON,
+P.R.A.'s "_Perseus and Andromeda_." Allegory, _Andromeda_, Ireland.
+_The Monster_, "Parnellism and Crime;" and _Perseus_, BALFOUR.
+Marvellous Monster! DRURIOLANUS should at once order a dozen of
+'em, hot and strong, for next Christmas Pantomime. Poor Miss ANNE
+DROMEDA,--"a dainty morsel _a croquer_," quoth the Monster.
+
+No. 148. No possible doubt whatever about this being A. BERTIE;
+FREEMAN-MITFORD, C.B., painted by the President of the Painters, who
+has hit him off to the life. B.M. is taken at the moment when, as a
+spectator of the Perseus and Andromeda _ballet d'action_, he remembers
+having seen something like it in "Old Japan."
+
+No. 201. "_Poor Tom's a Cold!_" LAURENCE SCOTT. Picture illustrating
+the shortest and easiest way of catching his death of cold.
+
+No. 206. "_Two's company, Three's none_," observed the Sun, as
+blushing deeply, he sank away in the far distance. By MAURICE GREIFFEN
+LAGEN.
+
+No. 209. The original Pieman met by SIMON going to the fair in very
+full dress. ARTHUR S. COPE.
+
+No.220. "_A Student_" of ALMA-TADEMA'S style. THOMAS R. SPENCE.
+
+No. 231. "Is it one o'clock?" she said to herself, anxiously. "I
+hope luncheon will be punctual." The picture will be known as "_Grace
+before Meals_," delightfully (of course) painted by Sir JOHN E.
+MILLAIS.
+
+No. 232. By the P.R.A. "What's that?" said one well-educated clerical
+visitor to his matronly wife. She read it out, pronouncing it thusly,
+"_Return of Percy Fone_." "What!" exclaimed the Clergyman. Then,
+taking the Catalogue into his own hands, he read "_Return of
+Persephone_." "It's pronounced," he informed his help-mate,
+"Per-s[)e]ph-[)o]-n[)e]." "Is it?" she returned, in a tone expressive
+of unmitigated incredulity. "Then," she asked suddenly, as a
+brilliant idea struck her, "why isn't 'telephone' pronounced
+'tel-[)e]ph-[)o]-n[)e]'?" And turning her back on him, would not hear
+another word on the subject.
+
+No. 283. _Not Crossley, but Kindly_. CLAUDE CALTHROP.
+
+No. 333. _Professor Huxley_. By Hon. JOHN COLLIER. When it isn't the
+Professor, it might serve for Sir GEORGE GROVE. Bravo, Honourable
+JOHN! "Hang him, JOHN COLLIER!" (SHAKSPEARE adapted.)
+
+No. 390. A Boy to the very life, or a Life Boy. JAMES SANT, R.A. It's
+a picture of Master HUGH BURDETT MONEY COUTTS. How well this name will
+look on a cheque for a cool thousand or so! But to see the _Hue_ of
+health on his cheek is better than seeing the colour of that HUGH'S
+money.
+
+No. 414. Portrait of Author W. PINERO, Esq. Painted by JOSEPH
+MORDECAI, who has done to Author PINERO what HAMAN would have done to
+MORDECAI, _i.e._, hung him.
+
+No. 439. Sitting for Don Quixote. WILLIAM E. LOCKHART.
+
+No. 459. _Stiff Collar Day; or, Just Back from the Wash_, "And,
+confound it! she's been washing my shirt and tie together, and spoilt
+'em both. Wish I had another lot ready, but haven't, so must go to
+Academy as I am," said WALTER S-WASH-BUCKLER LETHBRIDGE, and finished
+up with an impetuous and irrepressible "Hang it!" "I will," replied
+the Artist, JOHN PETTIE, R.A.
+
+No. 544. _Josephine Grimaldina; or, Female Clown_, the next novelty
+in Pantomime, dedicated to the author and composer of _L'Enfant
+Prodigue_. JOHN S. SARGENT.
+
+No. 667. _Feeling his Bumps; or, Phrenology in the Olden Time._"
+ERNEST NORMAND.
+
+No. 651. Gentleman ready for riding, but no spurs. "Where the deuce
+have I put them?" he is evidently saying. "All ready but that. Can't
+find 'em anywhere!" A picture which quite tells its own (JULIAN)
+STORY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE RIGHTS AND WRONGS OF LABOUR.
+
+(_At the service of the Ch-nc-ll-r of the Exch-qu-r, if he purposes
+writing a Prophetic Romance._)
+
+MACAULAY'S New Zealander had arrived prematurely. London Bridge was
+not reduced to its centre pier, and St. Paul's Cathedral was certainly
+not in ruins. Still there was an uncanny look about town. On the
+Embankment electric tram-cars were running, but they seemed to be
+little patronised. Here and there he noticed a pedestrian leisurely
+going his way, but the side-walks appeared, to all intents and
+purposes, abandoned. At length he reached a garden-seat, upon which
+was sprawling a Typical Working Man. The New Zealander gave this
+interesting individual "Good morning," and made some common-place
+remark about the weather.
+
+"Fine day!" returned the T.W.M., rather surlily. "Well, what does it
+matter to me? If it rains, I stay at home; if it don't, why I don't
+either."
+
+"I am a stranger seeking for information," explained the New
+Zealander; "so I am sure you will excuse me if I ask you how much do
+you pay for your house?"
+
+"Pay for my house!" ejaculated the T.W.M. "Why, nothing of course! And
+I pay nothing too for my sons at Oxford, and the girls at Cambridge.
+And I get my clothes free, and my food comes in gratuitously. Why, you
+must be a stranger if you don't know that! Why everything and anything
+is paid by the Government--out of the Income Tax."
+
+"And don't you ever work?"
+
+"Work! bless you, no. I can't afford to work! If I did, I should have
+to pay the Income Tax myself!" returned the T.W.M., with a grin.
+
+"Then who does contribute to this evidently highly-important source of
+revenue?
+
+"Why, the professional men, under Schedule D!" cried the hardy son of
+toil. "The authors with families, and the City clerks. All _that_ set,
+you know. They pay the Income Tax, sure enough. It's as much as they
+can do to keep bodies and souls together. But _somebody_ must pay--why
+not they?--pay for themselves--and for me!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DUMB SHOW.--It sounds odd that the serious pantomime, _L'Enfant
+Prodigue_, the play without words, should be "the talk of London."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LEAVES FROM A CANDIDATE'S DIARY.
+
+[Illustration: Canvas and Scrutiny.]
+
+"_George Hotel," Billsbury, Friday, April 25th_.--Arrived this morning
+in order to attend a "Monstre Open Air Conservative Fete, which was
+held in the grounds of the Billsbury Summer Palace. The programme
+was a very attractive one. First, there was a "reception of town
+and county delegates and their ladies" by the Earl and Countess of
+ROCHEVIEILLE. The Earl is a scrubby little fellow of about sixty,
+who looks more like an old-clothes-man than anything else. Norman
+noses--at least their descendants in this generation--are curiously
+like the Semitic variety sometimes. The name is pronounced "Rovail,"
+and both the Earl and Countess get blue with rage if anybody makes
+a mistake about it, as nearly all the delegates did. They stood on a
+raised dais, and received delegates' addresses to the number of about
+thirty. Lady ROCHEVIEILLE is a stout lady--very. It was a blazing hot
+day, and she was "overcome" just as she was shaking hands with Colonel
+and Mrs. CHORKLE, who were accompanied by BENJAMIN DISRAELI CHORKLE.
+The rest of the CHORKLE family, including WILLIAMINA HENRIETTA SMITH
+CHORKLE, who was in a nurse's arms, were somewhere about the grounds
+looking for the "Magic Haunts of the Fairy Bulbul," and eating
+enormous quantities of macaroons, which I had given them. Colonel
+CHORKLE rather lost his head when Lady R. collapsed. He made an effort
+to pick her up, but had to drop her heavily on the boards of the
+dais. Eventually, however, she was carried away and revived, and
+the proceedings went on. There were Conservative merry-go-rounds,
+Conservative negro-minstrels, Conservative acrobats and Conservative
+dancing bears, distributed about the grounds. I was taken about by
+Alderman MOFFAT and HOLLEBONE, who introduced me right and left to
+hundreds of my supporters and their wives and daughters. At the end
+of it all I felt as if I had got a heavy sort of how-do-you-do
+smile regularly glued on my face. One of my chief supporters is an
+undertaker named JOBSON. HOLLEBONE brought him up to me and said, "Mr.
+JOBSON, permit me to introduce you to our popular young Candidate, Mr.
+PATTLE. Mr. PATTLE let me have the honour of introducing you to our
+popular young undertaker, Mr. JOBSON." Gave me rather a shock, but
+JOBSON seemed quite a pleasant man. His wife was there too, gorgeously
+dressed in red plush with an Indian shawl on her shoulders, and a
+sealskin muff. She must have felt the heat horribly.
+
+Later in the afternoon there was a political meeting, at which we all
+spoke, but we had to make it short, as everybody was anxious to get
+away to the "Refined Musical _Melange_ (with incidental dances) of
+the Sisters WILKINS," which was held in a specially erected tent.
+Fireworks, illuminations, and dancing, ended the affair.
+
+_April 26_.--Was made an Oddfellow to-day. Initiation didn't last
+long. CHORKLE and JERRAM were initiated with me, and we all had to
+make speeches afterwards, declaring our devotion to the great cause of
+Oddfellowship. Afterwards sentiments were called for. The only one I
+remember was given by a man called TABSEY, a tailor, who seems to be
+rather famous for this kind of thing. After holding his hand to his
+head for some time, and knitting his brows, he cleared his throat, and
+said, in a loud voice,--"May the tear of true sympathy crystallise
+as it falls, and be worn as a radiant jewel upon the finger of
+affliction." This was vociferously applauded. I congratulated TABSEY
+afterwards, and paid him a compliment about it. He told me he found
+it a great relief, after a hard day's work in the shop, to throw off
+a sentiment or two. He's going to publish a book of them, and I've had
+to subscribe for six copies, at half a guinea each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM A WATCHFUL OBSERVER.--SIR,--The other day I saw advertised in a
+shop-window, "The Invisible Trouser Stretcher." Who wears "Invisible
+Trousers"? Do you remember the story of _The Emperor of China's
+Clothes?_--when they all cried, "He's got 'em on," and he hadn't. That
+Invisible Trousers should exist is quite enough stretch of imagination
+without any further stretcher.--Yours, THE DAY WATCHMAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. R. AT THE OPERA.--Mrs. RAMSBOTHAM Junior went to hear _La
+Traviata_. She expressed her sympathy with _Violetta_, between
+two _Gourmands_. Remarking on the touching finish to the converted
+_Traviata's_ career, Mrs. R. observed that it reminded her of the
+poet's line about "She who stopped to cough, remained to pray."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+-->NOTICE,--Rejected Communications or Contributions, whether MS.,
+Printed Matter, Drawings, or Pictures of any description, will in no
+case be returned, not even when accompanied by a Stamped and Addressed
+Envelope, Cover, or Wrapper. To this rule there will be no exception.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume
+100, May 9, 1891, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
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