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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol. 102,
+February 27, 1892, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol. 102, February 27, 1892
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: December 13, 2004 [EBook #14344]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, William Flis, and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH,
+
+OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 102.
+
+
+
+February 27, 1892.
+
+
+
+
+CONFESSIONS OF A DUFFER.
+
+V.--THE DUFFER AT CRICKET.
+
+To hear my remarks on the Cricket, in the Pavilion, you might think
+that I had been a great player entirely, in my day. "Who is that
+fine old English sportsman," you might ask, "who seems to have been
+so intimate with MYNN, and FULLER PILCH, and CARPENTER, and HAYWARD
+and TARRANT and JACKSON and C.D. MARSHAM? No doubt we see in him the
+remains of a sterling Cricketer of the old school." And then when I
+lay down the law on the iniquity of boundary hits, "always ran them
+out in _my_ time," and on the tame stupidity of letting balls to the
+off go unpunished, and the wickedness of dispensing with a long stop,
+you would be more and more pursuaded that I had at least, played for
+my county. Well, I _have_ played for my county, but as the county I
+played for was Berwickshire, there is perhaps nothing to be so very
+proud of in that distinction. But this I will say for the Cricketing
+Duffer; he is your true enthusiast. When I go to Lord's on a summer
+day, which of my contemporaries do I meet there? Not the men who
+played for the University, not the KENNYS and MITCHELLS and BUTLERS,
+but the surviving members of College Second Elevens in the old days of
+Cowley Marsh, when every man brought his own bottle of Oxford wine for
+luncheon. These are the veterans who contribute most to the crowd of
+lookers-on. They never were of any use as players, but their hearts
+were in the game, and from the game they will never be divorced. It is
+an ill thing for an outsider to drop a remark about Cricket among us,
+at about eleven o'clock in a country house smoking-room. After that
+the time flies in a paradise of reminiscences, till about 4 A.M. or
+some such "wee, short hour ayont the Twal'," if one may quote BURNS
+without being insulted by all the numerous and capable wits of
+Glasgow. Why is it that the Duffer keeps up his interest in Cricket,
+while the good players cease to care much about it? Perhaps _their_
+interest was selfish; his is purely ideal, and consequently immortal.
+To him Cricket was ever an unembodied joy of which he could make
+nothing palpable; nothing subject to the cold law of averages. Mine
+was 0.3.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+My own introduction to Cricket, as to Golf, was peculiarly poignant. I
+and my brother, aged more or less about six or seven, were invited to
+play by the local Club, and we each received exactly one very slow and
+considerate lob. But his lob took him on the eye, and mine, kicking on
+a bad wicket, had me on the knee-pan. The subsequent proceedings did
+not interest us very much, but there is nothing like entering children
+early at a manly pastime.
+
+Intellectual application will, to some extent, overcome physical
+difficulties. By working at least five hours a day, and by reading the
+_Cricket Field_ daily and nightly, I did learn to bowl a little, with
+a kind of twist. This, while it lasted, in a bowlerless country, was
+a delightful accomplishment. You got into much better sporting society
+than you deserved, and, in remote parts of the pastoral districts
+you were looked up to as one whose name had been in _Bell's Life_;
+we still had _Bell's Life_ then. It was no very difficult matter to
+bowl a rustic team for a score of runs or so, and all went merry as a
+wedding bell. But, alas, when Drumthwacket played Tullochgorum, there
+was a young Cambridge man staying with the latter chieftain. I began,
+as I usually did, by "yorking" Tullochgorum's Piper and his chief
+Butler, and his head Stalker, and then SMITH of King's came in. The
+ground, as usual, had four sides. He hit me over the enclosure at
+each of the four sides, for I changed my end after being knocked for
+five fours in his first over. After that, my prestige was gone. The
+rustics, instead of crawling about their wickets, took to walking
+in and smacking me. This would not have mattered, if any of the
+Drumthwacket team could have held a catch, and if the wicket-keeper
+had not let SMITH off four times in one over. My character was lost,
+and all was ended with me north of the Grampians, where the wickets
+are peculiarly suitable to my style of delivery.
+
+As to batting, there is little that is pleasant to confess. As soon as
+I got a distant view of a ball, I was ever tempted to whack wildly in
+its direction. There was no use in waiting for it, the more I looked
+at it the less I liked it. So I whacked, and, if you always do this,
+a ball will sometimes land on the driving part of the bat, and then it
+usually happened that my companion, striving for a five or a six, ran
+me out. If he did not, I did not stay long. The wicket-keeper was a
+person whose existence I always treated as _une quantité négligeable_,
+and sometimes the ball would bound off his pads into the stumps. The
+fielders would occasionally hold a catch, anything _may_ happen. On
+the other hand there was this to be said for my style of batting,
+that the most experienced Cricketer could not tell where or in what
+direction I would hit any given ball. If it was on the off, that was
+no reason why I should not bang it to square-leg, a stroke which has
+become fashionable since my time, but in those old days, you did not
+often see it in first-class Cricket. It was rather regarded as "an
+agrarian outrage." Foreigners and ladies would find Cricket a more
+buoyant diversion if all the world, and especially LEWIS HALL and
+SHREWSBURY, played on my principles. Innings would not last so long.
+Not so many matches would be drawn. The fielders would not catch cold.
+
+To speak of fielding is to revive unspeakable sorrows. For a
+short-sighted man, whose fingers are thumbs, no post in the field
+is exactly grateful. I have been at long-leg, and, watching the game
+intently, have perceived the batters running, and have heard cries of
+"well fielded!" These cries were ironical. The ball had been hit past
+me, but I was not fortunate enough to observe the circumstance. A
+fielder of this _calibre_ always ends by finding his way to short-leg.
+A prudent man can do a good deal here by watching the umpire, dodging
+when he dodges, and getting behind him on occasion. But I was not
+prudent. I observed that a certain player hit very much behind the
+leg, so there, "in the mad pride of intellectuality," I privily
+stationed myself. He _did_ it very fine, very fine indeed, into my
+eye. The same misfortune has attended me at short-slip; it should have
+been a wicket, it was a black eye, or the loss of a tooth or two, as
+might happen. In fact, I sometimes wonder myself at the contemptuous
+frankness of my own remarks on the fielding at Lord's. For if a catch
+could be missed (and most catches can), I was the man to miss it.
+Swift ones used to hit me and hurt me, long ones I always misjudged,
+little simple poppy ones spun out of my fingers. Now the unlucky thing
+about Cricket, for a Duffer, is that your misfortunes do not hurt
+yourself alone. It is not as in a single at Golf, it is not as in
+fishing, or riding, or wherever you have no partner. To drop catches
+is to madden the bowler not unnaturally, and to lengthen the period
+of leather-hunting. Cricket is a social game, and its proficients
+soon give the cold shoulder to the Duffer. He has his place, however,
+in the nature of things. It is he who keeps up the enthusiasm, who
+remembers every run that anybody I made in any given match. In fact,
+at Cricket, the Duffer's mission is to be a "judge of the game;" I
+don't mean an Umpire, very far from that. If you once let the Duffer
+umpire he could ruin the stoutest side, and secure victory to the
+feeblest. I may say that, at least in this capacity, I have proved
+really useful to my party in country matches. But, in the long run,
+my capacity even for umpiring came to be doubted, and now I am only
+a critic of Cricket. There is none more relentless, not one with a
+higher standard, at least where no personal feelings are concerned.
+For I have remarked that, if a Cambridge man writes about an Oxford
+victory (which he seldom has to do), or if an Oxford man writes on a
+Cambridge victory (a frequent affliction), he always leaves you with
+the impression that, in spite of figures, his side had at least a
+moral triumph. These admirable writers have all been Duffers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: TIMES CHANGE.
+
+_Shade of William the Conqueror._ "WHAT! THE PEOPLE OBJECT TO
+ENCLOSING A FEW ACRES OF THIS OPEN SPACE FOR STATE PURPOSES--FOR THEIR
+OWN BENEFIT? BY THE SPLENDOUR OF HEAVEN! I SHOULD HAVE LIKED TO HAVE
+HEARD THE VARLETS OBJECT TO MY MAKING MILES OF IT SUCH--FOR _MINE_!"
+
+_Secretary for War._ "AH, YOUR MAJESTY HAD IN _YOUR_ TIMES NO _TIMES_
+TO RECKON WITH!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TIMES CHANGE.
+
+ ["The 'Ranges Act' constitutes ... a standing menace to rights
+ of common wherever commons and open spaces exist."--_The
+ Times_.]
+
+ "The old order changes, yielding place to new."
+ By Phoebus, you are right, mellifluous TENNYSON!
+ Could Norman WILLIAM this conjuncture view,
+ He'd greet our Progress with--well, scarce a benison;
+ He, though ranked high 'midst monarchs and commanders,
+ Had the same weakness as our troops in Flanders.
+
+ ROBERT the Devil's ruthless son would clear
+ A county to make coverts, deer-runs, chaces.
+ What had he thought of modern notions queer
+ Concerning Common Rights and Open Spaces?
+ "The People--who are varlets!--still oppose them,
+ Whether the Powers that be make or enclose them!"
+
+ "The People _versus_ Powers that Be!" Ah, yes!
+ Imperious Norman, that's a modern trial
+ That's always being argued more or less;
+ The Press keeps now such vigilant espial
+ On every grasping would-be public plunderer.
+ You, Sire, had not to reckon with "The Thunderer!"
+
+ Times change, stark soldier, and we have the _Times_
+ Premier to check and snub Chief Secretaries.
+ Counting land-grabbing high among earth's crimes
+ Would have amazed you! Public judgment varies.
+ You and your wolf-hound, WILLIAM, would not now
+ Try a "clean sweep,"--without a general row.
+
+ Ask OTTO! He is somewhat in your style,
+ But he could tell you what new risks environ
+ The ancient art of Ruling. You may smile
+ At Print and Paper _versus_ Blood and Iron,
+ But Sovereign and Crown, though loved by many,
+ Stand now no chance against the Popular Penny.
+
+ Ask Malwood's Squire again! He knows right well
+ The New Democracy,--and the New Forest;
+ _Our_ great Plantagenet, a true blue "Swell,"
+ Fights for the People when their need is sorest.
+ In Norman BILLY he'd own small belief;
+ The People's WILLIAM is _his_ favourite chief.
+
+ Your ghostly presence in these verdant glades
+ Might startle STANHOPE, musing on his Ranges,
+ But not the angriest of Royal Shades
+ May now arrest the progress of Time's changes.
+ True, much is yielded yet to Swelldom's "Sport,"
+ But some aver that even _its_ time is short.
+
+ No, Clearances and Rights of Common, now
+ Own not the sway of autocrats capricious.
+ Small use, great Shade, to knit that haughty brow,
+ And swear _your_ action would be expeditious.
+ The days of Curfew and of Forest Law
+ Are passed. _We_'re swayed by Justice--and Free Jaw!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"FOR VALUE RECEIVED."--Aldgate Ward changed Alderman LUSK for one
+POUND.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WHAT OUR ARTIST HAS TO PUT UP WITH, BEFORE HE TURNS
+LIKE A CRUSHED WORM.
+
+_Our Art Critic_ (_patronisingly_). "HA--HUM! WELL, YOUR COLOUR IS
+FAIRLY DECENT, AND YOU HAVE NICISH FEELING FOR LIGHT AND SHADE, AND
+_CHIAROSCURO_. BUT WHERE YOB ALWAYS FAIL TO PLEASE, SOMEHOW, IS IN
+YOUR _EXECUTION_!"
+
+_Our Artist_. "MY _EXECUTION_? AH! JUST SO. I'VE NO DOUBT THAT
+_YOURS_, NOW WOULD BE MORE GENERALLY POPULAR!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM PARLIAMENTARY EXAMINATION PAPER.
+
+_Question_.--Explain the term "Standing Orders."
+
+_Answer_ 1.--It means that when a visitor to the House has an order
+for the Speaker's Gallery, and can't find a seat, he then becomes one
+of the Standing Orders.--SISTE VIATOR.
+
+_Answer_ 2.--When a friendly M.P. sees three of us waiting for him,
+takes us to the bar of the House, and orders drinks all round, which
+we take standing.--BIBENDUM EST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+INDIA FOR THE IRISH!--"An amended estimate of the present Paddy Crop
+has been published by the Local Government." (_Vide Times_ for Feb.
+15.) What more can the most thorough Home-Rulers want, if they would
+only be content to make their home in Burmah instead of Ireland?
+"Local Government" can soon be developed, for 'tis but Home Rule in
+the bud, and the "Paddy Crop" is already there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MOTTO FOR THE NEW RECORDER OF THE CITY OF LONDON.--"HALL There!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"COMBINING AMUSEMENT WITH INSTRUCTION."
+
+(_A SKETCH AT THE COLLECTION OF INSTRUMENTS OF TORTURE._)
+
+ SCENE--_The Maddox Street Galleries. A large and appropriately
+ lighted room. Upon walls of a sombre crimson, various
+ Implements of Torture are arranged with considerable taste,
+ and an eye for decorative effect, the central space being
+ reserved for more elaborate contrivances in wood and iron.
+ Visitors discovered inspecting the Exhibition by the aid of
+ the excellent Catalogues, with the subdued appreciation of
+ persons conscious that they are spending a very pleasant and
+ profitable afternoon._
+
+_Mr. Charnelhouse Goole_ (_as he enters, to Mrs. C.G._). Now, my dear,
+the first thing I want to see is that Iron Maiden there's so much talk
+about. I wonder whereabouts it is!
+
+_Mrs. C.G._ I think _that_ must be it, up at the other end of the
+room. But don't you _think_, dear, it would be nicer to see the
+_other_ things first, and keep that for the _last_?
+
+_Mr. C.G._ (_struck by the refinement of this suggestion_). Well,
+upon, my word, AMINA, I almost think it would!
+
+_Mr. Frederic Frivell_ (_to his wife, whom he takes a marital pleasure
+in shocking_). What fun those old fellows must have had in those days,
+mustn't they?
+
+_Mrs. Frivell_ (_a serious lady_). I don't think fun is at _all_ the
+right word, FREDERIC. I do _wish_ you wouldn't take these things so
+lightly. I'm sure it's melancholy enough to look at all these horrid
+machines, and think--
+
+_Mr. F._ That Torture is a lost art? Isn't that what you were going to
+say? But it's _not_, you know; we've refined it--that's all. Look at
+the Photographer, and the Interviewer, and the Pathetic Reciter, and
+the--
+
+ [_Mrs. F. endeavours to convince him that she didn't mean that
+ at all, and that he is comparing totally different things._
+
+_An Aphoristic Uncle_ (_to an irreverent Nephew_). No. 89. "A
+Long-spiked Wooden Roller, known as a 'Spiked Hare.'" You see, TOM,
+my boy, the victim was--(_Describes the process._) "Some of the old
+writers describe this torture as being most fearful," so the Catalogue
+tells us.
+
+_Tom-my-boy_ (_after inspecting the spikes_). Well, do you know,
+Uncle, I shouldn't be at all surprised if the old Johnnies weren't so
+far out.
+
+_The Aph. Uncle._ Another illustration, my boy, of "Man's inhumanity
+to Man"!
+
+_Tom-my-boy._ Not bad for you, Uncle--only you cribbed it out of the
+Catalogue, you know! [_The A.U. gives him up._
+
+ _An Indulgent Parent enters, leading a small boy in a tall
+ hat, and is presently recognised by the A.U._
+
+_The A.U._ So you've brought your son to see this collection,
+hey? Well, it's of the greatest educational value to a thoughtful
+youth--rich in moral and historical instruction!
+
+_The I.P._ Well, it was like this, you see. I had to take him to the
+dentist's, and, finding we should have half-an-hour or so to spare
+before he could attend to him, I thought we'd just drop in here and
+amuse ourselves--eh, BOBBY? Wonderfully ingenious, you know, in
+their way, some of these things! Now, _here's_ a thing--"A Spanish
+mouth-pear, made of iron." You see, BOBBY, they forced it into the
+mouth and touched a screw, and it sprang open, preventing the victim
+from screaming.
+
+_Bobby_. Y-yes, father. Should you think Mr. Fawcepps will have one of
+those?
+
+_The I.P._ (_annoyed_). Now, what _is_ the use of my taking you to a
+place of this sort to divert your thoughts, if your mind is running
+on something else all the time? I won't have it, do you hear. Enjoy
+yourself like a sensible boy!
+
+_Bobby_. Y-yes, Father, I am. It--it's quite cured my toothache
+already--_really_ it has!
+
+_Mrs. Frivell_ (_reading from Catalogue_). "A Penitent's Girdle, made
+of barbed wire, which, when worn next to the flesh, caused the most
+unpleasant and uncomfortable irritation." Oh, FREDERIC, just fancy
+that!
+
+_Mr. F._ My dear CECILIA, I can _quite_ fancy it!
+
+_Mrs. F._ But I thought these tortures were only for _Malefactors_.
+Why do they call it a _Penitent's_ Girdle?
+
+_Mr. F._ Can't say,--unless because he generally repented having put
+it on.
+
+_Mrs. F._ I don't think that _can_ be the real reason.
+
+_Two English House-maids_ (_to a small German Page-Boy who is
+escorting them_). Here, JOHNNIE, what's _this_ mean? (_Reads from
+Catalogue the motto on an Executioner's Sword._) "Di Herrin' sturin
+dem Unheel ick exequire ir End Urthile." Come, _you_ ought to know!
+
+_Johnnie_ (_not unnaturally at a loss_). It means--it means--somding I
+do not understandt.
+
+_The Housemaids_ (_disappointed in him_). Well, you _are_ a boy! I
+_did_ think, bein' German yourself, you'd be quite at _'ome_ 'ere!
+
+_Mr. Ernest Stodgely_ (_impressively, to Miss FEATHERHEAD, his
+fiancée_). Just look at this, FLOSSIE. (_Reading._) "Executioner's
+Cloak, very long, of red woollen material; presumably red so as not to
+show blood-spots or stains." Hideously suggestive that, is it not?
+
+_Miss Flossie._ I shouldn't call it exactly _hideous_, ERNEST. Do
+you know, I was just thinking that, with a high Astrachan collar, you
+know, and old silver fastenings, it would make rather a nice winter
+cloak. So deliciously warm! [_ERNEST avails himself of a lover's
+privileges to lecture her severely._
+
+ IN FRONT OF THE IRON MAIDEN.
+
+_Mr. Ch. Goole._ So _this_ is the Iron Maiden! Well, I expected
+something rather more dreadful-looking. The face has really quite a
+pleasant expression. [_Disappointedly._
+
+[Illustration: "Oh, but I think that makes it so much _more_ horrible,
+don't you?"]
+
+_Mrs. Ch. G._ (_with subtler appreciation_). Oh, but I think that
+makes it so much _more_ horrible, don't _you_?
+
+_Mr. Ch. G._ Well, I don't know--perhaps. But there ought to be a
+wax figure inside it. They ought to have wax figures on most of these
+things--make it much more interesting!
+
+_Mr. Frivell_ (_who is close by_). I quite agree with you,
+Sir--indeed, I would go farther. I think there should be competent
+persons engaged to provide practical illustrations of all the more
+amusing tortures--say from three to five every afternoon. Draw all
+London!
+
+_Mrs. F._ (_horrified_). FRED, you _know_ you don't mean it! And
+besides, you would _never_ get people willing to be shut up inside
+that thing!
+
+_Mr. F._ My dear, I'm perfectly serious, as I always am. And as to
+not getting subjects, why--(_He beckons to one of the Boy-Messengers
+in waiting, who advances_). Look here, my lad, you seem a bright
+intelligent youth. Would you mind just stepping inside and allowing us
+to close the door? We won't detain you an instant.
+
+_Mrs. F._ What a shame, FRED! Don't _think_ of such a thing, there's a
+good boy! Say no--and I'll give you sixpence!
+
+_The Boy_ (_grinning_). Well, Lady, make it a shillin', and I'll stay
+outside--to oblige you!
+
+_Mrs. F._ (_giving him a shilling_). There's a good sensible boy!
+FREDERIC, have you gone _quite_ mad? You know you wouldn't hurt a fly?
+
+ [_The GOOLES move away, feeling that they have been trifled
+ with._
+
+_Mr. F._ A fly? Not for the world!--but this is only a boy. I want to
+know what they're here _for_. Now, my lad, you're not engaged to be
+_idle_, you know. Just think of the amount of innocent pleasure you
+would afford by getting into this spiked cradle and letting me rock
+you. You won't? Well, will you sit on the Spanish Donkey? come! I'll
+give you a leg up and fasten the weights on your legs for you. You
+aren't afraid of a donkey?
+
+ [_Bystanders collect in hope of amusement._
+
+_The Boy_ (_sulkily_). Not of _some_ Donkeys, Sir, as ain't quite so
+sharp as that one, whatever they think theirselves!
+
+ [_Titters. Mr. F.F. feels that he has got rather the worst
+ of it, and collapses, with the dismal completeness of a Funny
+ Man; Mrs. F. remains behind to bribe the boy with another
+ shilling to promise her solemnly never on any account to play
+ with any of the tortures._
+
+_Mrs. F._ (_rejoining her husband_). FREDERIC, how _can_ you? You make
+me feel perfectly _faint_ when you act like this!
+
+_Mr. F._ (_recovering_). Faint, CECILIA? Well, I daresay they won't
+mind if you sit down in one of these spiked chairs for a minute or
+two.
+
+_Mrs. F._ (_angrily_). I shall do no such thing, FREDERIC! And you
+ought to be _ashamed_ to suggest it!
+
+_Mrs. Borrodale_ (_choosing photographs of Nuremberg_). Look, JOHN,
+what a lovely large one of the _Sebald's Kirche_! I really _must_
+have this. Oh, and the _Insel Schutt_--and this of the _Schöne
+Brunnen_--and the view from the _Burg_--that makes the half-dozen.
+They will be joys for _ever_, JOHN! And _only_ three shillings each!
+Will you pay the boy for them, JOHN, please--it's just eighteen
+shillings.
+
+_John_. Can't, my dear. Only half-a-crown in my pocket. Don't you
+remember, I lent you my last sov. not five minutes ago?
+
+_Mrs. B._ Oh, so you did. Well, on second thoughts, perhaps this
+size is rather--I think I'll take five of the sixpenny ones
+instead--they're every bit as good. You can spare me that half-crown,
+JOHN!
+
+_A Patriot_ (_coming out_). Well, it's just the same 'ere as
+everywhere else. All the things "made in Germany"! Sickenin' _I_ call
+it!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A MEETING OF THE "BANDY" ASSOCIATION
+
+FOR THE PROMOTION OF "HOCKEY ON THE ICE."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RICE AND PRUNES.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ Rice and prunes a household journal
+ Called the chief of household boons:
+ Hence my mother cooks diurnal
+ Rice and prunes.
+
+ Therefore on successive noons,
+ Sombre fruit and snowy kernel
+ Woo reluctant forks and spoons.
+
+ As the ear, when leaves are vernal,
+ Wearies of the blackbird's tunes,
+ So we weary of eternal
+ Rice and prunes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN OLD FRIEND AT THE CRITERION.--Time flies, and _Fourteen Days_,
+occupying only a couple of hours or so at the Criterion, goes
+wonderfully. CHARLES WYNDHAM is the life and soul of the piece, and
+the giddy GIDDENS is another life and soul. Miss MARY MOORE, charming
+as ever, with a clearness of "dictation," as Mrs. MALAPROP would
+say, that is in itself a delight to the ear. Every word she speaks is
+distinct, and, which is more to the purpose, every telling word tells.
+_Fourteen Days_ is a survival and revival of one of H.J. BYRON's
+fittest. If it "catches on" once more, as it ought to do, it might run
+fourteen weeks, and then,--"Next please!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: Q.E.D.
+
+"_MAY_ I ASK YOU HOW YOU MANAGE TO KEEP YOUR LITTLE PET SO SLEEK AND
+THIN?"
+
+"I DON'T KNOW. IT HAS ITS LUNCH AND DINNER WITH ME EVERY DAY."
+
+"WELL, SO DOES MINE!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.
+
+_House of Commons, Monday, February 15._--A lively sitting, with an
+unexpected ending. Debate on Address resumed by SEXTON in excellent
+speech, an effect largely contributed to by comparative brevity. Only
+an hour long; remarkable compression. Would have been better still
+had it been reduced by the twenty minutes occupied in preliminary
+observations. At twenty-five minutes past four he rose to move
+Amendment condemnatory of Land Purchase Act of last year. Precisely at
+a quarter to five came to his amendment, and began to recommend it to
+House. But mustn't complain. An excellent beginning for new Session
+that may further develop.
+
+"An oratorical eel," SAUNDERSON, later in sitting, likened Member
+for West Belfast to; charming simile, with just that mixture of
+graphicness and incongruity that only Irish wit could flash upon.
+Not meant to be uncomplimentary, for SAUNDERSON, like the rest,
+acknowledges capacity of SEXTON in debate; his clear insight, his
+capacity for grasping a subject, his aptness of illustration, his
+quickness of retort, and, alack! the embarrassment of the wealth of
+language. If he could only economise that, and guard against the
+fatal fluency that besets him, converting what might be a sharp direct
+speech of twenty minutes into a windy weariness of hour-and-a-half or
+two hours, he would take high rank among Parliamentary debaters.
+
+DIZZY once said the occasions when a man addressing House of Commons
+need exceed twenty minutes, come to him only twice or thrice in a
+lifetime. He did more than preach; he carried into practice his own
+principle with success. Very rarely in later years, even when Leader
+of House of Commons, did he exceed twenty minutes, and all his
+most successful interpositions in debate were on that plan. When,
+occasionally, he felt that circumstances demanded a long and laboured
+address, his labour was in vain.
+
+Capital speech, too, of quite another kind, from DUNBAR BARTON. Most
+promising maiden speech delivered in present Parliament; of good
+omen that best parts were not those prepared in leisure of study,
+put the earlier passages evoked by preceding debate, and necessarily
+impromptu. As for SAUNDERSON, he was in his best form.
+
+"SAUNDERSON," said the SQUIRE OF MALWOOD, recognising a kindred
+spirit, "always reminds me of those Lifeguardsmen you see at the
+Military Festival, riding round Agricultural Hall slashing off heads.
+The heads are dummies, and no harm is done; but it's a pretty sight."
+
+The Colonel rides well, and is a skilful swordsman.
+
+Delight of audience crowding in after dinner completed by TIM HEALY
+dashing in with intent to trip up Colonel. Domestic difficulties in
+the Party have not smoothed down TIM's natural truculence. With JOHN
+REDMOND sitting behind him and SAUNDERSON in front, a porcupine in
+fretful mood is a ball of spun silk compared with TIM.
+
+After this RADCLIFFE COOKE and collapse, with the prospect of
+proceedings droning on till midnight, then adjournment, and begin
+again to-morrow. Suddenly, on stroke of twelve, Closure moved. House
+completely taken aback. Whilst it sat gasping under shock SPEAKER
+declared Closure carried; bells rang through all the corridors;
+Members trooped in to find Division imminent. When figures declared,
+showing Government had been surprised into narrow majority of 21,
+fresh wave of excitement welled forth, amid which Address was,
+somehow, agreed to. Members went off into snowstorm, cheering and
+laughing as if there had never before been such larks.
+
+_Business done_.--Address agreed to.
+
+_Tuesday Night_.--GRANDOLPH turned up to-day; took his familiar
+corner seat; tugged at his old moustache; caressed his new beard, and
+listened to SEALE HAYNE recklessly attacking the sacred institution of
+Justiciary of the Peace.
+
+"Nothing changed, TOBY, dear boy," he said; "not even the Ministry.
+When I came back from Mashonaland I was told we were on the eve of
+political earthquake. The House of Commons was to be transformed into
+a cockpit; the Benches steepled in the gore of an iniquitous Ministry.
+But, except for some vacant places and some further advancement of
+privates in the little band I once officered, it's all the same, only
+a little drearier. The same throng in the Lobby, the same rows of
+Members sitting on the Benches, the same Mace on the Table, the same
+stately figure in the Chair, and the same Sergeants-at-Arms relieving
+guard at the Cross Benches. There are not quite the same two Irish
+Leaders, for BRER FOX has 'gone away.' BRER RABBIT I see sitting
+over there with his kindly face and his friendly smile, perhaps the
+only Irishman in the House who, if a coat were trailed before him,
+would turn away from temptation. It's only Irishmen, with their
+inexhaustible fund of humour, who would have put JUSTIN MCCARTHY in
+his present place. Doesn't much matter so long as TIM HEALY's around.
+I'll bet my gold mine at Mashonaland against the Kennel, Barks, that
+TIM will make up the average of fighting even when BRER RABBIT in the
+scale."
+
+[Illustration: A GIFT FROM THE GREEKS.
+
+RIGHT HON. ARTHUR. "IF I CAN ONLY GET THIS THROUGH, IT OUGHT TO SETTLE
+'EM!"]
+
+
+There's one thing changed GRANDOLPH did not allude to; perhaps
+unconscious of it. 'Tis his own appearance. In addition to the beard,
+he has put on ruddy tint that speaks well for Mashonaland as a health
+resort compared with Westminster. Amongst the pale-faced legislators
+his visage shines like the morning sun. "Quite a Colonial look about
+him," says ALGERNON BORTHWICK, fretfully. "But, after a few dinners at
+the Amphitryon and a few nights at the House and elsewhere, he'll get
+over it."
+
+Members from all parts crowd round GRANDOLPH to shake the horny hand
+of the intrepid explorer, the dauntless lion _dompter_. A cold air
+whistles along the row of Ministers as he sits behind.
+
+"What's he up to?" JOKIM hoarsely whispered, all his native gaiety
+eclipsed.
+
+"Come down, I suppose," said Prince ARTHUR, smiling, "to congratulate
+us on our great victory last night, whereby we escaped defeat in
+Debate on Address by triumphant majority of 21."
+
+"Quite a stormy petrel don't you think?" JOKIM said, nervously rubbing
+his hands.
+
+"Not exactly," said Prince ARTHUR; "that usually comes before the
+storm you know. If you must be personal and ornithological, I should
+say GRANDOLPH's appearance on the scene is more reminiscent of the
+vulture; a little hasty in his appearance perhaps, but that is none
+the less significant."
+
+_Business done._--Practically none, and so home to dinner at twenty
+minutes to eight.
+
+_Thursday Night._--Prince ARTHUR explained provisions of
+long-looked-for Local Government scheme. A remarkable, unexampled,
+scene. House crowded on every Bench, with Duke of DEVONSHIRE looking
+down from Peers' Gallery, thanking Heaven he is out of it. Prince
+ARTHUR's manner in introducing the measure in keeping with the strange
+surroundings. Might reasonably have been expected that he would have
+been at pains to recommend the Bill to acceptance of House. Not a
+bit of it. If people insisted upon regarding it as the most important
+business of Session, Prince ARTHUR couldn't help it. But he certainly
+would not foster the delusion. In its potentiality of beneficent
+effect, the Bill nothing in comparison with the Coercion Act or the
+Light Railways Act.
+
+"A poor thing," he said, in effect, and did not add, "but mine own."
+
+If it was not his, certainly no one else would own it. Irish Members
+received it with jeers. JOHN MORLEY denounced it as a monstrous
+imposture. SQUIRE OF MALWOOD benignantly affected to regard it as a
+little joke with which Ministers designed to vary a dull Session.
+But a joke may be carried too far; better drop this now, and go to
+business.
+
+Oddly enough, the storm of contumely had effect of inspiring Prince
+ARTHUR with new affection for his unwelcomed offspring, adding to the
+strength of his evidently new conviction that the proposed expedient
+was sound, and, if accepted, would prove efficacious.
+
+"And what do _you_ think of the Tory scheme of Home Rule," I asked
+JUSTIN MCCARTHY, when it was all over.
+
+"_Timeo Danaos, et dona ferentes_," he said, dropping into his native
+Celtic speech. "But in this case there is no room for apprehension.
+BALFOUR may leave this wooden horse outside the gates for a month, and
+the Trojans wouldn't touch it with a pair of tongs."
+
+Prince ARTHUR grew more confident as the clouds gathered.
+
+"I see very well," he said, "if I'm to stable this horse in the Home
+Rule Troy, I must drag it all the way myself. I shall get no help
+from either section of the garrison. But it's got to be done, and
+I'll buckle-to. Once through, it will settle the more than ten years'
+siege."
+
+_Business done._--Prince ARTHUR left tugging away at his wooden horse.
+
+_Friday Night._--House of Lords almost deserted. HALSBURY punctual in
+his place, making most of opportunities on Woolsack whilst they yet
+remain.
+
+"Here to-day and gone to-morrow, TOBY," he remarked, with forced
+gaiety; "but, when I hand in the Seals of Office, I shall at least
+have the serene assurance to cheer me in my retirement that the whole
+of my family, including collateral branches, have been provided for."
+
+Amongst the prevailing dolour, the MARKISS in high spirits.
+
+"Things not looking well in the Commons or the country, I admit," he
+says; "but all is not lost yet. I have still a card to play, and I
+believe it will score the trick. We shall presently have to go to the
+country, and fight a confident Opposition. Successful Foreign Policy
+is played out. Free Education has brought us no support; trifling
+with Home Rule in Ireland will bring us enemies. Am convinced that
+the thing to go to the country on is the fog. MIDDLETON's our man.
+Been thinking over it for a week. See it now; shall take up question
+of London fog; devise some means of battling with it; and then let
+the worst come. A Government that has fought the fog will at least
+carry London, and, London ours, we shall be able to stem the tide of
+anarchy."
+
+_Business done_.--The MARKISS takes a great resolution.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "THE HUNTING OF THE HARCOURT."
+
+_(According to Fancy Sketch by "Observer" in the "Times.") "O where
+and O where is our Harcourt Laddie gone?"_]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PADDYWHACK AND DR. BIRCH.--Everyone knows what "the Assisted Education
+(Ireland) Bill" is. Why should not an Assisted Education (England)
+Bill be brought in to enable public school-boys to secure, without
+payment of any additional fee beyond that included for "swishing"
+in the Bill sent home to the parents, the specimen of the legal
+instrument with which their education may have been most helpfully
+assisted?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"BECKY THE SECOND."--Those comparatively few who answered our query
+as to where "the good _Becky_, the very opposite of _Becky_ in _Vanity
+Fair_, was to be found in THACKERAY's works," and have referred us to
+_A Shabby Genteel Story_, are right. The many who hit upon _Rebecca_
+in the burlesque of _Ivanhoe_ mistook the question.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A CORRESPONDENT, signing himself "IGNORAMUS," writes to inquire "The
+address of a Society called 'The London French Polishers.'" He says,
+"I want my French polished up a bit before going to Paris."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"VIVE LA LIBERTÉ!"
+
+The _Era_ at one time used to enjoy a monopoly of strangely, but
+purely professionally-worded advertisements; but now the _Daily
+Telegraph_ is creeping up and commencing to occupy the _Era's_
+special domain. One day last week in the _D.T._ the following
+notice appeared:--"Mr. CHARLES SUGDEN at liberty.--Address, &c." "At
+Liberty!" How will this sound to the uninitiated millions? Taking for
+granted that the readers, whose name is Legion, know perfectly well
+who and what Mr. CHARLES SUGDEN is, having a lively recollection
+of this talented actor as among the best representatives of bad
+characters (excepting perhaps that of _William of Orange_, which was
+Mr. SUGDEN's _chef d'oeuvre_, and about whose character there are
+strong differences of opinion), will they not unnaturally be led
+to inquire how, why, when and wherefore Mr. SUGDEN ever came to be
+deprived of his liberty, and under what circumstances he has been
+restored to it, or it to him? "At Liberty!" It has a grand and
+glorious sound! This distinguished Thespian was never an "hereditary
+bondsman," then why not always "at liberty"? But, be this as it may,
+once more "the Rover is free!" SUGDEN is a name honourable behind and
+before the foot-lights. In the Courts of Law it is a Legal Light, and
+among Gas Companies the Sugden Burner is, we believe, justly famous.
+Whatever the announcement may or may not mean, all sons of Liberty
+will rejoice that this eccentric comedian is once more free, and on
+the stage he will be again most welcome.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Are you staying in town?" "No," answered Mrs. R.; "I'm going _au
+contraire_." Which, she subsequently explained, was French for going
+into the country.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FANCY PORTRAIT.
+
+GENERAL _BOOM_BASTES.
+
+_Solo and Chorus._
+
+AIR--"_Piff! Paff! Pouf!" from "La Grande Duchosse."_
+
+ "ET PUFF! PUFF! PUFF!
+ ET TARA PARA POUM!
+ JE SUIS, MOI, LE GÉNÉRAL BOOM! BOOM!"
+
+ [_Repeats it ad lib._]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ON RELIGIOUS CYMBALISM.
+
+The Salvationist Bands which perform in and out of London--(would
+that they were restricted as the Moore and Burgess Minstrels restrict
+themselves to one hall, never or "hardly ever," performing out
+of London!)--everywhere and anywhere without respecting illness,
+or the hours of public worship in our Churches and Chapels, or
+the necessities of repose, show thereby a distinct want of that
+consideration for the feelings of their fellow-citizens which simple
+Christian folk call Charity. These Booth performers--which designation
+savours suggestively of Mountebanks--would do well to play their
+peculiar music and sing their peculiar hymns within the four walls
+of their own places of worship, employing the intervals essential
+for gaining of wind and for rest of muscle in meditating, perhaps
+breathlessly, on the inspired Pauline teaching which will inform them
+that even the works of an Apostle, if he have not charity, will be as
+"sounding brass and tinkling cymbals," making indeed a great noise in
+the world, but as one WILLIAM SHAKSPEARE has said, being mere "sound
+and fury signifying nothing." "Liberty of Worship" by all means,
+but not such Liberty for any one particular form of worship which,
+interfering with the freedom of others, speedily degenerates into
+fanatical licence, and so becomes a nuisance as intolerant as it is
+intolerable.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANGLO-AMERICAN FRENCH.--A new word must be added to our French
+dictionaries. In _Le Figaro_ for Feb. 15, in an article on HECTOR
+MALOT, occurs this expression, "_en ce temps de puffisme littéraire_."
+In English we have had the word and the thing too, since the time of
+SHERIDAN's _Critic_, but is any student of French journalism familiar
+with it in the Parisian newspapers?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FANCY BALL.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ You came as GRETCHEN, hair of gold
+ And face so exquisitely sweet,
+ That I, like FAUST, had _certes_ sold
+ Myself, to win you, MARGUERITE.
+ Each plait enmeshed my struggling heart,
+ That wildly beat against my will;
+ And though at last we had to part,
+ In Dreamland I could see you still.
+
+ Another night, with tresses dark,
+ And kirtle strewn with _fleurs-de-lys_,
+ You came a flashing JOAN OF ARC,
+ Destructive of my bosom's peace.
+ The sword was girt upon your hip,
+ And thine the Maid's heroic glance;
+ I seemed to hear upon your lip,
+ The watchword of her life, "For France!"
+
+ Anon I saw thee as the Queen
+ Who held so many hearts in fee;
+ But MARY STUART scarce had been,
+ Methinks, so beautiful as thee.
+ I fain had gone and splintered lance,
+ As in the old days in our realm;
+ To win a kind approving glance,
+ And wear your glove upon my helm.
+
+ What, stately EDITH! Lives there yet
+ The lady of that royal line,
+ The peerless proud Plantagenet,
+ Will KENNETH's great emprise be mine?
+ We saw how high his hopes could soar;
+ We know the guerdon that he won.
+ Shall I find favour, as of yore
+ Did DAVID, Earl of Huntingdon?
+
+ 'Tis certain, in whatever guise
+ You come, as heroine of song
+ Or story, to my faithful eyes
+ You shine the fairest of the throng.
+ However fanciful you be,
+ Whatever fancy dress befalls;
+ My fancy paints you fancy-free,
+ To fancy me at Fancy Balls!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE REAL NINE POINTS OF THE LAW.--Costs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE UNOBSERVED OF ONE "OBSERVER."
+
+From the account given by "OBSERVER" in the _Times_, it might be
+inferred that "HARCOURT! HARCOURT!" was shouted all over the House,
+in the lobbies, through the smoking-room, in the library, through
+the cellars, in fact, everywhere within the sacred precincts, on
+one memorable night, while at that very moment the wily Sir WILLIAM,
+tucked comfortably up in his little bed, was murmuring softly to
+himself, "HARCOURT! indeed! '_Ha! not caught_,' more likely!" and
+so sweetly fell asleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. R. read aloud from the latest Report of "B. and F. Bible
+Society," "One cannot help thinking of the glorious field of labour
+which lies open here before the Colporteur, and of the pleasant way
+in which his labours are appreciated by all." But the worthy lady
+pronounced colporteur as coalporter, and so on hearing from a
+friend that "the Coalporters were on strike," Mrs. R. could not help
+exclaiming, "Dear! how ungrateful of them, when they were being 'so
+much appreciated by all!'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE WESTMINSTER WAX-WORK SHOW FOR THE SESSION 1892.
+ROOM 2.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+In _Tess of the D'Urbevilles_ (published by Messrs. OSGOOD, MCILVAINE
+& CO.), Mr. THOMAS HARDY has given us a striking work of fiction,
+bold in design, and elaborate in finish. The characters, with one
+exception, are as true to life as are his graphic descriptions of
+nature's own scenery; true that is to the types of such rural life as
+he professes to represent,--the life led in our Christian country by
+thousands and thousands of genuine Pagans, superstitious Boeotians,
+with whom the schoolmaster can do but little, and the parson still
+less. As to the clergymen who appear in this story, two of them are
+priggishly academic, a third is a comfortable antiquarian, and the
+fourth unacquainted with even the A.B.C. of his own pastoral theology.
+
+[Illustration: A BRIGHT PARTICULAR STAR IN THE MILKY WAY.
+
+Showing how an Angel without wings played on the harp to Milkmaid Tess
+of the Tubbyveals, who was so proud of her calves.]
+
+Since THACKERAY's _Captain Costigan_, and TOM ROBERTSON's dramatic
+variation of him as _Eccles_ in _Caste_, no more original type of the
+besotted, no-working working-man, has been given us ("at least, as far
+as I am aware," interpolates the Baron, with a possible reservation)
+than _Tess's_ father, _Durbeyfield_. His foolish wife, _Joan_, kindly
+in a way, a fair housewife and helpmate, yet deficient in moral sense,
+is another admirably-drawn character.
+
+The only blot on this otherwise excellent work is the absurdly
+melodramatic character of that "villain of the deepest dye," _Alec
+D'Urbeville_, who would be thoroughly in his element in an Adelphi
+Drama of the most approved type, ancient or modern. He is just the
+sort of stage-scoundrel who from time to time seeks to take some mean
+advantage of a heroine in distress, on which occasions said heroine
+(of Adelphi Drama) will request him to "unhand her," or to "stand
+aside and let her pass;" whereupon the dastardly ruffian retaliates
+with a diabolical sneer of fiendish malice, his eyes ablaze with
+passion, as, making his melodramatic exit at the O.P. wing, he growls,
+"Aha! a day will come!" or "She must and shall be mine!" or, if
+not making his exit, but remaining in centre of stage to assist in
+forming a picture, he exclaims, with fiendish glee, "Now, pretty one,
+you are in my power!" and so forth. 'Tis a great pity that such a
+penny-plain-and-two-pence-coloured scoundrel should have been allowed
+so strong a part among Mr. HARDY's excellent and unconventional
+_dramatis personæ_. Even the very, very strong ejaculations wherein
+this bold bad man indulges on the slightest provocation belong to the
+most antiquated vocabulary of theatrical ruffianism. However, there
+he is, and all the perfumes of the Vale of Blackmoor will not suffice
+for dispelling the strong odour of the footlights which pervades
+every scene where this unconscionable scoundrel makes his appearance.
+That he is ultimately disposed of by being stuck to the heart with
+the carving-knife that had been brought in for cold-beef slicing at
+breakfast, is some satisfaction. But far be it from the Baron to give
+more than this hint in anticipation of the tragic _dénoûment_. Some
+might accuse Mr. THOMAS HARDY of foolhardiness in so boldly telling
+ugly truths about the Pagan Phyllises and Corydons of our dear old
+Christian England; but we, his readers, have the author's word for
+the truth of what he has written, as "the fortunes of _Tess of the
+D'Urbevilles, a Pure Woman_," are "faithfully presented," by THOMAS
+HARDY, and so his honour is pledged to the truth of this story which
+his powers of narration have made so fascinating to a host of readers
+besides the one who is a host in himself, namely,
+
+THE BARON DE BOOK-WORMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUSTICE FOR JUSTICE!
+
+ SCENE--_A Court of Justice. Prisoner, a young man of
+ eighteen, in the dock, weeping bitterly. His Uncle stands
+ before him, and occasionally offers him smelling salts.
+ General commiseration amongst the spectators, many of whom
+ are ladies armed with opera-glasses. Police Constable under
+ cross-examination._
+
+_Counsel for the Defence._ And so, Constable, you had actually the
+heart to read the warrant to the Prisoner?
+
+_Witness._ I did, Sir, in the execution of my duty.
+
+_Coun. for the Def._ (_scornfully_). Duty! and to this he said
+nothing?
+
+_Wit._ (_in a low tone_). Nothing, Sir--nothing!
+
+_Coun. for the Def._ And I am not surprised! He might well
+say nothing to such an announcement! HE, a Gentleman by
+birth--education--everything--to be accused of forgery! It is
+_too_ cruel!
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch_ (_courteously but firmly_). I do not wish to
+control the management of your case, Mr. MCSLANGER, but the time
+for you to address the Jury has not yet arrived.
+
+_Coun. for Def._ (_submissive but sulky_). As your Lordship pleases.
+
+ [_Resumes his seat._
+
+_Usher_ (_calling_). Admiral CUTTERMAN!
+
+_Admiral_ (_in a low tone_). Here!
+
+ [_He leaves the Prisoner, first handing him the smelling
+ salts, and enters the Witness Box._
+
+_Council for the Prosecution_ (_after the Witness has been sworn_).
+I think you are here on subpoena served by the Treasury.
+
+_Witness_ (_with a glance of sadness at the Dock_). Had I not been
+summoned to be present by those in authority, not the entreaties of
+magicians would have brought me here!
+
+_Coun. for the Pros._ I take it you are an unwilling Witness?
+
+_Witness_ (_with difficulty suppressing acute emotion_). A most, a
+very most unwilling Witness!
+
+_Coun. for the Def._ (_scornfully_). Unwilling!
+
+_Coun. for the Pros._ (_in a tone of remonstrance_). I really must beg
+my learned friend to refrain from disturbing the proceedings. These
+constant interruptions are most annoying.
+
+_Coun. for the Def._ (_with force and violence_). I cannot
+sufficiently express my indignation--
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch_ (_sharply_). Then do not make the attempt.
+
+_Coun. for the Def._ (_surlily_). As your Lordship pleases.
+[_Subsides._
+
+_Coun. for the Pros._ But, in spite of being an unwilling Witness, you
+undoubtedly saw the Prisoner forge your name?
+
+_Witness_ (_with his handkerchief to his eyes_). Alas! I did!
+
+ [_A pause, during which everyone regains equanimity._
+
+_Coun. for Def._ (_on renewal of proceedings_). And so you are the
+Uncle of the Prisoner?
+
+_Witness_ (_sadly_). Yes, I am.
+
+_Coun. for Def._ Still you are here, and are pushing that poor lad to
+the prison-door! (_Prisoner snivels._) Yes, you are dealing him (one
+of your own flesh and blood) a never-to-be-recalled injury!
+
+_Witness_ (_plucking up spirit_). Only my duty, Sir. I obey only my
+duty!
+
+_Coun. for Def._ Your duty! Why, man, how can it be your duty?
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch_ (_seriously_). Again I must interpose. (_To_
+Counsel.) Mr. MCSLANGER, I must once more remind you that your
+business at present is to ask questions, not to make speeches.
+
+_Coun. for Def._ But, my Lord, the task is a difficult one.
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch._ If you find it beyond your powers, no doubt some
+of your colleagues will come willingly to your assistance.
+
+_Coun. for Def._ No, my Lord, I do not mean what your Lordship means.
+I am quite capable of performing the duties it has been my pleasure
+and pride to accept.
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch_ (_wearily_). Pray let us get on?
+
+_Coun. for Def._ Do you not think it a grossly cruel and revolting
+thing that a man should give evidence against his near relative?
+
+_Witness_ (_greatly agitated_). My Lord, I appeal to you, is it fair
+that I should be treated in this fashion?
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch_ (_emphatically_). No, it is not! You are here,
+Sir, in performance of a solemn duty--to assist the ends of justice in
+the punishment, and consequently prevention, of crime. It is not right
+that in the witness-box you should be badgered and insulted as if you
+were worthy of the dock! One can feel some sympathy with the
+relatives of the prisoner, because he appears to have had respectable
+surroundings. But if he is convicted of forgery, it will be his own
+fault! I shall accept the verdict as a proof that education and birth
+are not safeguards to prevent crime. And as for you, Sir (_turning
+angrily to_ Coun. for Def.), let me tell you that you degrade your
+office when you make the wig and the gown the shield of the brute and
+the bully. Let us have no more of it!
+
+_Coun. for Def._ (_subdued but depressed_). As your Lordship pleases.
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch._ It does so please me, and I think that it will
+equally please all my learned brothers who sit in Royal Courts
+to follow my example! It is time that the Witness, as well as the
+accused, received proper protection. I hope my words will be taken to
+heart in another place!
+
+ [_The Scene closes in on his Lordship's suggestion._
+
+ * * * * *
+
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+102, February 27, 1892, by Various
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol. 102,
+February 27, 1892, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol. 102, February 27, 1892
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: December 13, 2004 [EBook #14344]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, William Flis, and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h1>PUNCH,<br />
+ OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.</h1>
+
+ <h2>Vol. 102.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <h2>February 27, 1892.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page97"
+ id="page97"></a>[pg 97]</span>
+
+ <h2>CONFESSIONS OF A DUFFER.</h2>
+
+ <h3>V.&mdash;THE DUFFER AT CRICKET.</h3>
+
+ <p>To hear my remarks on the Cricket, in the Pavilion, you
+ might think that I had been a great player entirely, in my day.
+ "Who is that fine old English sportsman," you might ask, "who
+ seems to have been so intimate with MYNN, and FULLER PILCH, and
+ CARPENTER, and HAYWARD and TARRANT and JACKSON and C.D.
+ MARSHAM? No doubt we see in him the remains of a sterling
+ Cricketer of the old school." And then when I lay down the law
+ on the iniquity of boundary hits, "always ran them out in
+ <i>my</i> time," and on the tame stupidity of letting balls to
+ the off go unpunished, and the wickedness of dispensing with a
+ long stop, you would be more and more pursuaded that I had at
+ least, played for my county. Well, I <i>have</i> played for my
+ county, but as the county I played for was Berwickshire, there
+ is perhaps nothing to be so very proud of in that distinction.
+ But this I will say for the Cricketing Duffer; he is your true
+ enthusiast. When I go to Lord's on a summer day, which of my
+ contemporaries do I meet there? Not the men who played for the
+ University, not the KENNYS and MITCHELLS and BUTLERS, but the
+ surviving members of College Second Elevens in the old days of
+ Cowley Marsh, when every man brought his own bottle of Oxford
+ wine for luncheon. These are the veterans who contribute most
+ to the crowd of lookers-on. They never were of any use as
+ players, but their hearts were in the game, and from the game
+ they will never be divorced. It is an ill thing for an outsider
+ to drop a remark about Cricket among us, at about eleven
+ o'clock in a country house smoking-room. After that the time
+ flies in a paradise of reminiscences, till about 4 A.M. or some
+ such "wee, short hour ayont the Twal'," if one may quote BURNS
+ without being insulted by all the numerous and capable wits of
+ Glasgow. Why is it that the Duffer keeps up his interest in
+ Cricket, while the good players cease to care much about it?
+ Perhaps <i>their</i> interest was selfish; his is purely ideal,
+ and consequently immortal. To him Cricket was ever an
+ unembodied joy of which he could make nothing palpable; nothing
+ subject to the cold law of averages. Mine was 0.3.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/97.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/97.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>My own introduction to Cricket, as to Golf, was peculiarly
+ poignant. I and my brother, aged more or less about six or
+ seven, were invited to play by the local Club, and we each
+ received exactly one very slow and considerate lob. But his lob
+ took him on the eye, and mine, kicking on a bad wicket, had me
+ on the knee-pan. The subsequent proceedings did not interest us
+ very much, but there is nothing like entering children early at
+ a manly pastime.</p>
+
+ <p>Intellectual application will, to some extent, overcome
+ physical difficulties. By working at least five hours a day,
+ and by reading the <i>Cricket Field</i> daily and nightly, I
+ did learn to bowl a little, with a kind of twist. This, while
+ it lasted, in a bowlerless country, was a delightful
+ accomplishment. You got into much better sporting society than
+ you deserved, and, in remote parts of the pastoral districts
+ you were looked up to as one whose name had been in <i>Bell's
+ Life</i>; we still had <i>Bell's Life</i> then. It was no very
+ difficult matter to bowl a rustic team for a score of runs or
+ so, and all went merry as a wedding bell. But, alas, when
+ Drumthwacket played Tullochgorum, there was a young Cambridge
+ man staying with the latter chieftain. I began, as I usually
+ did, by "yorking" Tullochgorum's Piper and his chief Butler,
+ and his head Stalker, and then SMITH of King's came in. The
+ ground, as usual, had four sides. He hit me over the enclosure
+ at each of the four sides, for I changed my end after being
+ knocked for five fours in his first over. After that, my
+ prestige was gone. The rustics, instead of crawling about their
+ wickets, took to walking in and smacking me. This would not
+ have mattered, if any of the Drumthwacket team could have held
+ a catch, and if the wicket-keeper had not let SMITH off four
+ times in one over. My character was lost, and all was ended
+ with me north of the Grampians, where the wickets are
+ peculiarly suitable to my style of delivery.</p>
+
+ <p>As to batting, there is little that is pleasant to confess.
+ As soon as I got a distant view of a ball, I was ever tempted
+ to whack wildly in its direction. There was no use in waiting
+ for it, the more I looked at it the less I liked it. So I
+ whacked, and, if you always do this, a ball will sometimes land
+ on the driving part of the bat, and then it usually happened
+ that my companion, striving for a five or a six, ran me out. If
+ he did not, I did not stay long. The wicket-keeper was a person
+ whose existence I always treated as <i>une quantité
+ négligeable</i>, and sometimes the ball would bound off his
+ pads into the stumps. The fielders would occasionally hold a
+ catch, anything <i>may</i> happen. On the other hand there was
+ this to be said for my style of batting, that the most
+ experienced Cricketer could not tell where or in what direction
+ I would hit any given ball. If it was on the off, that was no
+ reason why I should not bang it to square-leg, a stroke which
+ has become fashionable since my time, but in those old days,
+ you did not often see it in first-class Cricket. It was rather
+ regarded as "an agrarian outrage." Foreigners and ladies would
+ find Cricket a more buoyant diversion if all the world, and
+ especially LEWIS HALL and SHREWSBURY, played on my principles.
+ Innings would not last so long. Not so many matches would be
+ drawn. The fielders would not catch cold.</p>
+
+ <p>To speak of fielding is to revive unspeakable sorrows. For a
+ short-sighted man, whose fingers are thumbs, no post in the
+ field is exactly grateful. I have been at long-leg, and,
+ watching the game intently, have perceived the batters running,
+ and have heard cries of "well fielded!" These cries were
+ ironical. The ball had been hit past me, but I was not
+ fortunate enough to observe the circumstance. A fielder of this
+ <i>calibre</i> always ends by finding his way to short-leg. A
+ prudent man can do a good deal here by watching the umpire,
+ dodging when he dodges, and getting behind him on occasion. But
+ I was not prudent. I observed that a certain player hit very
+ much behind the leg, so there, "in the mad pride of
+ intellectuality," I privily stationed myself. He <i>did</i> it
+ very fine, very fine indeed, into my eye. The same misfortune
+ has attended me at short-slip; it should have been a wicket, it
+ was a black eye, or the loss of a tooth or two, as might
+ happen. In fact, I sometimes wonder myself at the contemptuous
+ frankness of my own remarks on the fielding at Lord's. For if a
+ catch could be missed (and most catches can), I was the man to
+ miss it. Swift ones used to hit me and hurt me, long ones I
+ always misjudged, little simple poppy ones spun out of my
+ fingers. Now the unlucky thing about Cricket, for a Duffer, is
+ that your misfortunes do not hurt yourself alone. It is not as
+ in a single at Golf, it is not as in fishing, or riding, or
+ wherever you have no partner. To drop catches is to madden the
+ bowler not unnaturally, and to lengthen the period of
+ leather-hunting. Cricket is a social game, and its proficients
+ soon give the cold shoulder to the Duffer. He has his place,
+ however, in the nature of things. It is he who keeps up the
+ enthusiasm, who remembers every run that anybody I made in any
+ given match. In fact, at Cricket, the Duffer's mission is to be
+ a "judge of the game;" I don't mean an Umpire, very far from
+ that. If you once let the Duffer umpire he could ruin the
+ stoutest side, and secure victory to the feeblest. I may say
+ that, at least in this capacity, I have proved really useful to
+ my party in country matches. But, in the long run, my capacity
+ even for umpiring came to be doubted, and now I am only a
+ critic of Cricket. There is none more relentless, not one with
+ a higher standard, at least where no personal feelings are
+ concerned. For I have remarked that, if a Cambridge man writes
+ about an Oxford victory (which he seldom has to do), or if an
+ Oxford man writes on a Cambridge victory (a frequent
+ affliction), he always leaves you with the impression that, in
+ spite of figures, his side had at least a moral triumph. These
+ admirable writers have all been Duffers.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page98"
+ id="page98"></a>[pg 98]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/98.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/98.png"
+ alt="TIMES CHANGE." /></a>
+
+ <h3>TIMES CHANGE.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>Shade of William the Conqueror.</i> "WHAT! THE PEOPLE
+ OBJECT TO ENCLOSING A FEW ACRES OF THIS OPEN SPACE FOR
+ STATE PURPOSES&mdash;FOR THEIR OWN BENEFIT? BY THE
+ SPLENDOUR OF HEAVEN! I SHOULD HAVE LIKED TO HAVE HEARD THE
+ VARLETS OBJECT TO MY MAKING MILES OF IT SUCH&mdash;FOR
+ <i>MINE</i>!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Secretary for War.</i> "AH, YOUR MAJESTY HAD IN
+ <i>YOUR</i> TIMES NO <i>TIMES</i> TO RECKON WITH!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page99"
+ id="page99"></a>[pg 99]</span>
+
+ <h2>TIMES CHANGE.</h2>
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>["The 'Ranges Act' constitutes ... a standing menace to
+ rights of common wherever commons and open spaces
+ exist."&mdash;<i>The Times</i>.]</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"The old order changes, yielding place to new."</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">By Phoebus, you are right, mellifluous
+ TENNYSON!</p>
+
+ <p>Could Norman WILLIAM this conjuncture view,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He'd greet our Progress with&mdash;well,
+ scarce a benison;</p>
+
+ <p>He, though ranked high 'midst monarchs and
+ commanders,</p>
+
+ <p>Had the same weakness as our troops in Flanders.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>ROBERT the Devil's ruthless son would clear</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">A county to make coverts, deer-runs,
+ chaces.</p>
+
+ <p>What had he thought of modern notions queer</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Concerning Common Rights and Open
+ Spaces?</p>
+
+ <p>"The People&mdash;who are varlets!&mdash;still
+ oppose them,</p>
+
+ <p>Whether the Powers that be make or enclose
+ them!"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"The People <i>versus</i> Powers that Be!" Ah,
+ yes!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Imperious Norman, that's a modern
+ trial</p>
+
+ <p>That's always being argued more or less;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The Press keeps now such vigilant
+ espial</p>
+
+ <p>On every grasping would-be public plunderer.</p>
+
+ <p>You, Sire, had not to reckon with "The
+ Thunderer!"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Times change, stark soldier, and we have the
+ <i>Times</i></p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Premier to check and snub Chief
+ Secretaries.</p>
+
+ <p>Counting land-grabbing high among earth's crimes</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Would have amazed you! Public judgment
+ varies.</p>
+
+ <p>You and your wolf-hound, WILLIAM, would not now</p>
+
+ <p>Try a "clean sweep,"&mdash;without a general
+ row.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Ask OTTO! He is somewhat in your style,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But he could tell you what new risks
+ environ</p>
+
+ <p>The ancient art of Ruling. You may smile</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">At Print and Paper <i>versus</i> Blood
+ and Iron,</p>
+
+ <p>But Sovereign and Crown, though loved by many,</p>
+
+ <p>Stand now no chance against the Popular Penny.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Ask Malwood's Squire again! He knows right well</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The New Democracy,&mdash;and the New
+ Forest;</p>
+
+ <p><i>Our</i> great Plantagenet, a true blue
+ "Swell,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Fights for the People when their need is
+ sorest.</p>
+
+ <p>In Norman BILLY he'd own small belief;</p>
+
+ <p>The People's WILLIAM is <i>his</i> favourite
+ chief.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Your ghostly presence in these verdant glades</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Might startle STANHOPE, musing on his
+ Ranges,</p>
+
+ <p>But not the angriest of Royal Shades</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">May now arrest the progress of Time's
+ changes.</p>
+
+ <p>True, much is yielded yet to Swelldom's "Sport,"</p>
+
+ <p>But some aver that even <i>its</i> time is
+ short.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>No, Clearances and Rights of Common, now</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Own not the sway of autocrats
+ capricious.</p>
+
+ <p>Small use, great Shade, to knit that haughty
+ brow,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And swear <i>your</i> action would be
+ expeditious.</p>
+
+ <p>The days of Curfew and of Forest Law</p>
+
+ <p>Are passed. <i>We</i>'re swayed by Justice&mdash;and
+ Free Jaw!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>"FOR VALUE RECEIVED."&mdash;Aldgate Ward changed Alderman
+ LUSK for one POUND.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:67%;">
+ <a href="images/99.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/99.png"
+ alt="WHAT OUR ARTIST HAS TO PUT UP WITH, BEFORE HE TURNS LIKE A CRUSHED WORM." />
+ </a>
+
+ <h3>WHAT OUR ARTIST HAS TO PUT UP WITH, BEFORE HE TURNS
+ LIKE A CRUSHED WORM.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>Our Art Critic</i> (<i>patronisingly</i>).
+ "HA&mdash;HUM! WELL, YOUR COLOUR IS FAIRLY DECENT, AND YOU
+ HAVE NICISH FEELING FOR LIGHT AND SHADE, AND
+ <i>CHIAROSCURO</i>. BUT WHERE YOB ALWAYS FAIL TO PLEASE,
+ SOMEHOW, IS IN YOUR <i>EXECUTION</i>!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Our Artist</i>. "MY <i>EXECUTION</i>? AH! JUST SO.
+ I'VE NO DOUBT THAT <i>YOURS</i>, NOW WOULD BE MORE
+ GENERALLY POPULAR!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>From Parliamentary Examination Paper.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>Question</i>.&mdash;Explain the term "Standing
+ Orders."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Answer</i> 1.&mdash;It means that when a visitor to the
+ House has an order for the Speaker's Gallery, and can't find a
+ seat, he then becomes one of the Standing Orders.&mdash;SISTE
+ VIATOR.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Answer</i> 2.&mdash;When a friendly M.P. sees three of us
+ waiting for him, takes us to the bar of the House, and orders
+ drinks all round, which we take standing.&mdash;BIBENDUM
+ EST.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>INDIA FOR THE IRISH!&mdash;"An amended estimate of the
+ present Paddy Crop has been published by the Local Government."
+ (<i>Vide Times</i> for Feb. 15.) What more can the most
+ thorough Home-Rulers want, if they would only be content to
+ make their home in Burmah instead of Ireland? "Local
+ Government" can soon be developed, for 'tis but Home Rule in
+ the bud, and the "Paddy Crop" is already there.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>MOTTO FOR THE NEW RECORDER OF THE CITY OF
+ LONDON.&mdash;"HALL There!"</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page100"
+ id="page100"></a>[pg 100]</span>
+
+ <h2>"COMBINING AMUSEMENT WITH INSTRUCTION."</h2>
+
+ <h4>(<i>A Sketch at the Collection of Instruments of
+ Torture.</i>)</h4>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>SCENE&mdash;<i>The Maddox Street Galleries. A large and
+ appropriately lighted room. Upon walls of a sombre crimson,
+ various Implements of Torture are arranged with
+ considerable taste, and an eye for decorative effect, the
+ central space being reserved for more elaborate
+ contrivances in wood and iron. Visitors discovered
+ inspecting the Exhibition by the aid of the excellent
+ Catalogues, with the subdued appreciation of persons
+ conscious that they are spending a very pleasant and
+ profitable afternoon.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Charnelhouse Goole</i> (<i>as he enters, to</i> Mrs.
+ C.G.). Now, my dear, the first thing I want to see is that Iron
+ Maiden there's so much talk about. I wonder whereabouts it
+ is!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. C.G.</i> I think <i>that</i> must be it, up at the
+ other end of the room. But don't you <i>think</i>, dear, it
+ would be nicer to see the <i>other</i> things first, and keep
+ that for the <i>last</i>?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. C.G.</i> (<i>struck by the refinement of this
+ suggestion</i>). Well, upon, my word, AMINA, I almost think it
+ would!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Frederic Frivell</i> (<i>to his wife, whom he takes a
+ marital pleasure in shocking</i>). What fun those old fellows
+ must have had in those days, mustn't they?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. Frivell</i> (<i>a serious lady</i>). I don't think
+ fun is at <i>all</i> the right word, FREDERIC. I do <i>wish</i>
+ you wouldn't take these things so lightly. I'm sure it's
+ melancholy enough to look at all these horrid machines, and
+ think&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. F.</i> That Torture is a lost art? Isn't that what
+ you were going to say? But it's <i>not</i>, you know; we've
+ refined it&mdash;that's all. Look at the Photographer, and the
+ Interviewer, and the Pathetic Reciter, and the&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>Mrs. F. endeavours to convince him that she didn't
+ mean that at all, and that he is comparing totally
+ different things.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>An Aphoristic Uncle</i> (<i>to an irreverent Nephew</i>).
+ No. 89. "A Long-spiked Wooden Roller, known as a 'Spiked
+ Hare.'" You see, TOM, my boy, the victim
+ was&mdash;(<i>Describes the process.</i>) "Some of the old
+ writers describe this torture as being most fearful," so the
+ Catalogue tells us.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Tom-my-boy</i> (<i>after inspecting the spikes</i>).
+ Well, do you know, Uncle, I shouldn't be at all surprised if
+ the old Johnnies weren't so far out.</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Aph. Uncle.</i> Another illustration, my boy, of
+ "Man's inhumanity to Man"!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Tom-my-boy.</i> Not bad for you, Uncle&mdash;only you
+ cribbed it out of the Catalogue, you know! [<i>The A.U. gives
+ him up.</i></p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p><i>An</i> Indulgent Parent <i>enters, leading a small
+ boy in a tall hat, and is presently recognised by the</i>
+ A.U.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>The A.U.</i> So you've brought your son to see this
+ collection, hey? Well, it's of the greatest educational value
+ to a thoughtful youth&mdash;rich in moral and historical
+ instruction!</p>
+
+ <p><i>The I.P.</i> Well, it was like this, you see. I had to
+ take him to the dentist's, and, finding we should have
+ half-an-hour or so to spare before he could attend to him, I
+ thought we'd just drop in here and amuse ourselves&mdash;eh,
+ BOBBY? Wonderfully ingenious, you know, in their way, some of
+ these things! Now, <i>here's</i> a thing&mdash;"A Spanish
+ mouth-pear, made of iron." You see, BOBBY, they forced it into
+ the mouth and touched a screw, and it sprang open, preventing
+ the victim from screaming.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Bobby</i>. Y-yes, father. Should you think Mr. Fawcepps
+ will have one of those?</p>
+
+ <p><i>The I.P.</i> (<i>annoyed</i>). Now, what <i>is</i> the
+ use of my taking you to a place of this sort to divert your
+ thoughts, if your mind is running on something else all the
+ time? I won't have it, do you hear. Enjoy yourself like a
+ sensible boy!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Bobby</i>. Y-yes, Father, I am. It&mdash;it's quite cured
+ my toothache already&mdash;<i>really</i> it has!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. Frivell</i> (<i>reading from Catalogue</i>). "A
+ Penitent's Girdle, made of barbed wire, which, when worn next
+ to the flesh, caused the most unpleasant and uncomfortable
+ irritation." Oh, FREDERIC, just fancy that!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. F.</i> My dear CECILIA, I can <i>quite</i> fancy
+ it!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. F.</i> But I thought these tortures were only for
+ <i>Malefactors</i>. Why do they call it a <i>Penitent's</i>
+ Girdle?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. F.</i> Can't say,&mdash;unless because he generally
+ repented having put it on.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. F.</i> I don't think that <i>can</i> be the real
+ reason.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Two English House-maids</i> (<i>to a small German
+ Page-Boy who is escorting them</i>). Here, JOHNNIE, what's
+ <i>this</i> mean? (<i>Reads from Catalogue the motto on an
+ Executioner's Sword.</i>) "Di Herrin' sturin dem Unheel ick
+ exequire ir End Urthile." Come, <i>you</i> ought to know!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Johnnie</i> (<i>not unnaturally at a loss</i>). It
+ means&mdash;it means&mdash;somding I do not understandt.</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Housemaids</i> (<i>disappointed in him</i>). Well,
+ you <i>are</i> a boy! I <i>did</i> think, bein' German
+ yourself, you'd be quite at <i>'ome</i> 'ere!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Ernest Stodgely</i> (<i>impressively, to</i> Miss
+ FEATHERHEAD, <i>his fiancée</i>). Just look at this, FLOSSIE.
+ (<i>Reading.</i>) "Executioner's Cloak, very long, of red
+ woollen material; presumably red so as not to show blood-spots
+ or stains." Hideously suggestive that, is it not?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Miss Flossie.</i> I shouldn't call it exactly
+ <i>hideous</i>, ERNEST. Do you know, I was just thinking that,
+ with a high Astrachan collar, you know, and old silver
+ fastenings, it would make rather a nice winter cloak. So
+ deliciously warm! [ERNEST <i>avails himself of a lover's
+ privileges to lecture her severely.</i></p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>IN FRONT OF THE IRON MAIDEN.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Ch. Goole.</i> So <i>this</i> is the Iron Maiden!
+ Well, I expected something rather more dreadful-looking. The
+ face has really quite a pleasant expression.
+ [<i>Disappointedly.</i></p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:60%;">
+ <a href="images/100.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/100.png"
+ alt="'Oh, but I think that makes it so much &lt;i&gt;more&lt;/i&gt; horrible, don't you?'" />
+ </a>"Oh, but I think that makes it so much <i>more</i>
+ horrible, don't you?"
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. Ch. G.</i> (<i>with subtler appreciation</i>). Oh,
+ but I think that makes it so much <i>more</i> horrible, don't
+ <i>you</i>?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Ch. G.</i> Well, I don't know&mdash;perhaps. But
+ there ought to be a wax figure inside it. They ought to have
+ wax figures on most of these things&mdash;make it much more
+ interesting!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Frivell</i> (<i>who is close by</i>). I quite agree
+ with you, Sir&mdash;indeed, I would go farther. I think there
+ should be competent persons engaged to provide practical
+ illustrations of all the more amusing tortures&mdash;say from
+ three to five every afternoon. Draw all London!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. F.</i> (<i>horrified</i>). FRED, you <i>know</i> you
+ don't mean it! And besides, you would <i>never</i> get people
+ willing to be shut up inside that thing!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. F.</i> My dear, I'm perfectly serious, as I always
+ am. And as to not getting subjects, why&mdash;(<i>He beckons to
+ one of the</i> Boy-Messengers <i>in waiting, who advances</i>).
+ Look here, my lad, you seem a bright intelligent youth. Would
+ you mind just stepping inside and allowing us to close the
+ door? We won't detain you an
+ instant.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page101"
+ id="page101"></a>[pg 101]</span>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. F.</i> What a shame, FRED! Don't <i>think</i> of
+ such a thing, there's a good boy! Say no&mdash;and I'll give
+ you sixpence!</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Boy</i> (<i>grinning</i>). Well, Lady, make it a
+ shillin', and I'll stay outside&mdash;to oblige you!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. F.</i> (<i>giving him a shilling</i>). There's a
+ good sensible boy! FREDERIC, have you gone <i>quite</i> mad?
+ You know you wouldn't hurt a fly?</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>The</i> GOOLES <i>move away, feeling that they have
+ been trifled with.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. F.</i> A fly? Not for the world!&mdash;but this is
+ only a boy. I want to know what they're here <i>for</i>. Now,
+ my lad, you're not engaged to be <i>idle</i>, you know. Just
+ think of the amount of innocent pleasure you would afford by
+ getting into this spiked cradle and letting me rock you. You
+ won't? Well, will you sit on the Spanish Donkey? come! I'll
+ give you a leg up and fasten the weights on your legs for you.
+ You aren't afraid of a donkey?</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>Bystanders collect in hope of amusement.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>The Boy</i> (<i>sulkily</i>). Not of <i>some</i> Donkeys,
+ Sir, as ain't quite so sharp as that one, whatever they think
+ theirselves!</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>Titters</i>. Mr. F.F. <i>feels that he has got
+ rather the worst of it, and collapses, with the dismal
+ completeness of a Funny Man</i>; Mrs. F. <i>remains behind
+ to bribe the boy with another shilling to promise her
+ solemnly never on any account to play with any of the
+ tortures.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. F.</i> (<i>rejoining her husband</i>). FREDERIC, how
+ <i>can</i> you? You make me feel perfectly <i>faint</i> when
+ you act like this!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. F.</i> (<i>recovering</i>). Faint, CECILIA? Well, I
+ daresay they won't mind if you sit down in one of these spiked
+ chairs for a minute or two.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. F.</i> (<i>angrily</i>). I shall do no such thing,
+ FREDERIC! And you ought to be <i>ashamed</i> to suggest it!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. Borrodale</i> (<i>choosing photographs of
+ Nuremberg</i>). Look, JOHN, what a lovely large one of the
+ <i>Sebald's Kirche</i>! I really <i>must</i> have this. Oh, and
+ the <i>Insel Schutt</i>&mdash;and this of the <i>Schöne
+ Brunnen</i>&mdash;and the view from the <i>Burg</i>&mdash;that
+ makes the half-dozen. They will be joys for <i>ever</i>, JOHN!
+ And <i>only</i> three shillings each! Will you pay the boy for
+ them, JOHN, please&mdash;it's just eighteen shillings.</p>
+
+ <p><i>John</i>. Can't, my dear. Only half-a-crown in my pocket.
+ Don't you remember, I lent you my last sov. not five minutes
+ ago?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. B.</i> Oh, so you did. Well, on second thoughts,
+ perhaps this size is rather&mdash;I think I'll take five of the
+ sixpenny ones instead&mdash;they're every bit as good. You can
+ spare me that half-crown, JOHN!</p>
+
+ <p><i>A Patriot</i> (<i>coming out</i>). Well, it's just the
+ same 'ere as everywhere else. All the things "made in Germany"!
+ Sickenin' <i>I</i> call it!</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/101-1.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/101-1.png"
+ alt="A MEETING OF THE 'BANDY' ASSOCIATION" /></a>
+
+ <h3>A MEETING OF THE "BANDY" ASSOCIATION</h3>FOR THE
+ PROMOTION OF "HOCKEY ON THE ICE."
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>RICE AND PRUNES.</h3>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:35%;">
+ <a href="images/101-2.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/101-2.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Rice and prunes a household journal</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Called the chief of household boons:</p>
+
+ <p>Hence my mother cooks diurnal</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Rice and prunes.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Therefore on successive noons,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Sombre fruit and snowy kernel</p>
+
+ <p>Woo reluctant forks and spoons.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>As the ear, when leaves are vernal,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Wearies of the blackbird's tunes,</p>
+
+ <p>So we weary of eternal</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Rice and prunes.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>AN OLD FRIEND AT THE CRITERION.&mdash;Time flies, and
+ <i>Fourteen Days</i>, occupying only a couple of hours or so at
+ the Criterion, goes wonderfully. CHARLES WYNDHAM is the life
+ and soul of the piece, and the giddy GIDDENS is another life
+ and soul. Miss MARY MOORE, charming as ever, with a clearness
+ of "dictation," as Mrs. MALAPROP would say, that is in itself a
+ delight to the ear. Every word she speaks is distinct, and,
+ which is more to the purpose, every telling word tells.
+ <i>Fourteen Days</i> is a survival and revival of one of H.J.
+ BYRON's fittest. If it "catches on" once more, as it ought to
+ do, it might run fourteen weeks, and then,&mdash;"Next
+ please!"</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page102"
+ id="page102"></a>[pg 102]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/102.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/102.png"
+ alt="Q.E.D." /></a>
+
+ <h3>Q.E.D.</h3>
+
+ <p>"<i>MAY</i> I ASK YOU HOW YOU MANAGE TO KEEP YOUR LITTLE
+ PET SO SLEEK AND THIN?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I DON'T KNOW. IT HAS ITS LUNCH AND DINNER WITH ME EVERY
+ DAY."</p>
+
+ <p>"WELL, SO DOES MINE!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.</h2>
+
+ <h4>EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.</h4>
+
+ <p><i>House of Commons, Monday, February 15.</i>&mdash;A lively
+ sitting, with an unexpected ending. Debate on Address resumed
+ by SEXTON in excellent speech, an effect largely contributed to
+ by comparative brevity. Only an hour long; remarkable
+ compression. Would have been better still had it been reduced
+ by the twenty minutes occupied in preliminary observations. At
+ twenty-five minutes past four he rose to move Amendment
+ condemnatory of Land Purchase Act of last year. Precisely at a
+ quarter to five came to his amendment, and began to recommend
+ it to House. But mustn't complain. An excellent beginning for
+ new Session that may further develop.</p>
+
+ <p>"An oratorical eel," SAUNDERSON, later in sitting, likened
+ Member for West Belfast to; charming simile, with just that
+ mixture of graphicness and incongruity that only Irish wit
+ could flash upon. Not meant to be uncomplimentary, for
+ SAUNDERSON, like the rest, acknowledges capacity of SEXTON in
+ debate; his clear insight, his capacity for grasping a subject,
+ his aptness of illustration, his quickness of retort, and,
+ alack! the embarrassment of the wealth of language. If he could
+ only economise that, and guard against the fatal fluency that
+ besets him, converting what might be a sharp direct speech of
+ twenty minutes into a windy weariness of hour-and-a-half or two
+ hours, he would take high rank among Parliamentary
+ debaters.</p>
+
+ <p>DIZZY once said the occasions when a man addressing House of
+ Commons need exceed twenty minutes, come to him only twice or
+ thrice in a lifetime. He did more than preach; he carried into
+ practice his own principle with success. Very rarely in later
+ years, even when Leader of House of Commons, did he exceed
+ twenty minutes, and all his most successful interpositions in
+ debate were on that plan. When, occasionally, he felt that
+ circumstances demanded a long and laboured address, his labour
+ was in vain.</p>
+
+ <p>Capital speech, too, of quite another kind, from DUNBAR
+ BARTON. Most promising maiden speech delivered in present
+ Parliament; of good omen that best parts were not those
+ prepared in leisure of study, put the earlier passages evoked
+ by preceding debate, and necessarily impromptu. As for
+ SAUNDERSON, he was in his best form.</p>
+
+ <p>"SAUNDERSON," said the SQUIRE OF MALWOOD, recognising a
+ kindred spirit, "always reminds me of those Lifeguardsmen you
+ see at the Military Festival, riding round Agricultural Hall
+ slashing off heads. The heads are dummies, and no harm is done;
+ but it's a pretty sight."</p>
+
+ <p>The Colonel rides well, and is a skilful swordsman.</p>
+
+ <p>Delight of audience crowding in after dinner completed by
+ TIM HEALY dashing in with intent to trip up Colonel. Domestic
+ difficulties in the Party have not smoothed down TIM's natural
+ truculence. With JOHN REDMOND sitting behind him and SAUNDERSON
+ in front, a porcupine in fretful mood is a ball of spun silk
+ compared with TIM.</p>
+
+ <p>After this RADCLIFFE COOKE and collapse, with the prospect
+ of proceedings droning on till midnight, then adjournment, and
+ begin again to-morrow. Suddenly, on stroke of twelve, Closure
+ moved. House completely taken aback. Whilst it sat gasping
+ under shock SPEAKER declared Closure carried; bells rang
+ through all the corridors; Members trooped in to find Division
+ imminent. When figures declared, showing Government had been
+ surprised into narrow majority of 21, fresh wave of excitement
+ welled forth, amid which Address was, somehow, agreed to.
+ Members went off into snowstorm, cheering and laughing as if
+ there had never before been such larks.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Business done</i>.&mdash;Address agreed to.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Tuesday Night</i>.&mdash;GRANDOLPH turned up to-day; took
+ his familiar corner seat; tugged at his old moustache; caressed
+ his new beard, and listened to SEALE HAYNE recklessly attacking
+ the sacred institution of Justiciary of the Peace.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing changed, TOBY, dear boy," he said; "not even the
+ Ministry. When I came back from Mashonaland I was told we were
+ on the eve of political earthquake. The House of Commons was to
+ be transformed into a cockpit; the Benches steepled in the gore
+ of an iniquitous Ministry. But, except for some vacant places
+ and some further advancement of privates in the little band I
+ once officered, it's all the same, only a little drearier. The
+ same throng in the Lobby, the same rows of Members sitting on
+ the Benches, the same Mace on the Table, the same stately
+ figure in the Chair, and the same Sergeants-at-Arms relieving
+ guard at the Cross Benches. There are not quite the same two
+ Irish Leaders, for BRER FOX has 'gone away.' BRER RABBIT I see
+ sitting over there with his kindly face and his friendly smile,
+ perhaps the only Irishman in the House who, if a coat were
+ trailed before him, would turn away from temptation. It's only
+ Irishmen, with their inexhaustible fund of humour, who would
+ have put JUSTIN MCCARTHY in his present place. Doesn't much
+ matter so long as TIM HEALY's around. I'll bet my gold mine at
+ Mashonaland against the Kennel, Barks, that TIM will make up
+ the average of fighting even when BRER RABBIT in the
+ scale."</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page103"
+ id="page103"></a>[pg 103]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/103.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/103.png"
+ alt="A GIFT FROM THE GREEKS." /></a>
+
+ <h3>A GIFT FROM THE GREEKS.</h3>RIGHT HON. ARTHUR. "IF I
+ CAN ONLY GET THIS THROUGH, IT OUGHT TO SETTLE 'EM!"
+ </div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page105"
+ id="page105"></a>[pg 105]</span>
+
+ <p>There's one thing changed GRANDOLPH did not allude to;
+ perhaps unconscious of it. 'Tis his own appearance. In addition
+ to the beard, he has put on ruddy tint that speaks well for
+ Mashonaland as a health resort compared with Westminster.
+ Amongst the pale-faced legislators his visage shines like the
+ morning sun. "Quite a Colonial look about him," says ALGERNON
+ BORTHWICK, fretfully. "But, after a few dinners at the
+ Amphitryon and a few nights at the House and elsewhere, he'll
+ get over it."</p>
+
+ <p>Members from all parts crowd round GRANDOLPH to shake the
+ horny hand of the intrepid explorer, the dauntless lion
+ <i>dompter</i>. A cold air whistles along the row of Ministers
+ as he sits behind.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's he up to?" JOKIM hoarsely whispered, all his native
+ gaiety eclipsed.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come down, I suppose," said Prince ARTHUR, smiling, "to
+ congratulate us on our great victory last night, whereby we
+ escaped defeat in Debate on Address by triumphant majority of
+ 21."</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite a stormy petrel don't you think?" JOKIM said,
+ nervously rubbing his hands.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not exactly," said Prince ARTHUR; "that usually comes
+ before the storm you know. If you must be personal and
+ ornithological, I should say GRANDOLPH's appearance on the
+ scene is more reminiscent of the vulture; a little hasty in his
+ appearance perhaps, but that is none the less significant."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Business done.</i>&mdash;Practically none, and so home to
+ dinner at twenty minutes to eight.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Thursday Night.</i>&mdash;Prince ARTHUR explained
+ provisions of long-looked-for Local Government scheme. A
+ remarkable, unexampled, scene. House crowded on every Bench,
+ with Duke of DEVONSHIRE looking down from Peers' Gallery,
+ thanking Heaven he is out of it. Prince ARTHUR's manner in
+ introducing the measure in keeping with the strange
+ surroundings. Might reasonably have been expected that he would
+ have been at pains to recommend the Bill to acceptance of
+ House. Not a bit of it. If people insisted upon regarding it as
+ the most important business of Session, Prince ARTHUR couldn't
+ help it. But he certainly would not foster the delusion. In its
+ potentiality of beneficent effect, the Bill nothing in
+ comparison with the Coercion Act or the Light Railways Act.</p>
+
+ <p>"A poor thing," he said, in effect, and did not add, "but
+ mine own."</p>
+
+ <p>If it was not his, certainly no one else would own it. Irish
+ Members received it with jeers. JOHN MORLEY denounced it as a
+ monstrous imposture. SQUIRE OF MALWOOD benignantly affected to
+ regard it as a little joke with which Ministers designed to
+ vary a dull Session. But a joke may be carried too far; better
+ drop this now, and go to business.</p>
+
+ <p>Oddly enough, the storm of contumely had effect of inspiring
+ Prince ARTHUR with new affection for his unwelcomed offspring,
+ adding to the strength of his evidently new conviction that the
+ proposed expedient was sound, and, if accepted, would prove
+ efficacious.</p>
+
+ <p>"And what do <i>you</i> think of the Tory scheme of Home
+ Rule," I asked JUSTIN MCCARTHY, when it was all over.</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Timeo Danaos, et dona ferentes</i>," he said, dropping
+ into his native Celtic speech. "But in this case there is no
+ room for apprehension. BALFOUR may leave this wooden horse
+ outside the gates for a month, and the Trojans wouldn't touch
+ it with a pair of tongs."</p>
+
+ <p>Prince ARTHUR grew more confident as the clouds
+ gathered.</p>
+
+ <p>"I see very well," he said, "if I'm to stable this horse in
+ the Home Rule Troy, I must drag it all the way myself. I shall
+ get no help from either section of the garrison. But it's got
+ to be done, and I'll buckle-to. Once through, it will settle
+ the more than ten years' siege."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Business done.</i>&mdash;Prince ARTHUR left tugging away
+ at his wooden horse.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Friday Night.</i>&mdash;House of Lords almost deserted.
+ HALSBURY punctual in his place, making most of opportunities on
+ Woolsack whilst they yet remain.</p>
+
+ <p>"Here to-day and gone to-morrow, TOBY," he remarked, with
+ forced gaiety; "but, when I hand in the Seals of Office, I
+ shall at least have the serene assurance to cheer me in my
+ retirement that the whole of my family, including collateral
+ branches, have been provided for."</p>
+
+ <p>Amongst the prevailing dolour, the MARKISS in high
+ spirits.</p>
+
+ <p>"Things not looking well in the Commons or the country, I
+ admit," he says; "but all is not lost yet. I have still a card
+ to play, and I believe it will score the trick. We shall
+ presently have to go to the country, and fight a confident
+ Opposition. Successful Foreign Policy is played out. Free
+ Education has brought us no support; trifling with Home Rule in
+ Ireland will bring us enemies. Am convinced that the thing to
+ go to the country on is the fog. MIDDLETON's our man. Been
+ thinking over it for a week. See it now; shall take up question
+ of London fog; devise some means of battling with it; and then
+ let the worst come. A Government that has fought the fog will
+ at least carry London, and, London ours, we shall be able to
+ stem the tide of anarchy."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Business done</i>.&mdash;The MARKISS takes a great
+ resolution.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/105.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/105.png"
+ alt="'THE HUNTING OF THE HARCOURT.'" /></a>
+
+ <h3>"THE HUNTING OF THE HARCOURT."</h3><i>(According to
+ Fancy Sketch by "Observer" in the "Times.") "O where and O
+ where is our Harcourt Laddie gone?"</i>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>PADDYWHACK AND DR. BIRCH.&mdash;Everyone knows what "the
+ Assisted Education (Ireland) Bill" is. Why should not an
+ Assisted Education (England) Bill be brought in to enable
+ public school-boys to secure, without payment of any additional
+ fee beyond that included for "swishing" in the Bill sent home
+ to the parents, the specimen of the legal instrument with which
+ their education may have been most helpfully assisted?</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>"BECKY THE SECOND."&mdash;Those comparatively few who
+ answered our query as to where "the good <i>Becky</i>, the very
+ opposite of <i>Becky</i> in <i>Vanity Fair</i>, was to be found
+ in THACKERAY's works," and have referred us to <i>A Shabby
+ Genteel Story</i>, are right. The many who hit upon
+ <i>Rebecca</i> in the burlesque of <i>Ivanhoe</i> mistook the
+ question.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>A CORRESPONDENT, signing himself "IGNORAMUS," writes to
+ inquire "The address of a Society called 'The London French
+ Polishers.'" He says, "I want my French polished up a bit
+ before going to Paris."</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page106"
+ id="page106"></a>[pg 106]</span>
+
+ <h2>"VIVE LA LIBERTÉ!"</h2>
+
+ <p>The <i>Era</i> at one time used to enjoy a monopoly of
+ strangely, but purely professionally-worded advertisements; but
+ now the <i>Daily Telegraph</i> is creeping up and commencing to
+ occupy the <i>Era's</i> special domain. One day last week in
+ the <i>D.T.</i> the following notice appeared:&mdash;"Mr.
+ CHARLES SUGDEN at liberty.&mdash;Address, &amp;c." "At
+ Liberty!" How will this sound to the uninitiated millions?
+ Taking for granted that the readers, whose name is Legion, know
+ perfectly well who and what Mr. CHARLES SUGDEN is, having a
+ lively recollection of this talented actor as among the best
+ representatives of bad characters (excepting perhaps that of
+ <i>William of Orange</i>, which was Mr. SUGDEN's <i>chef
+ d'oeuvre</i>, and about whose character there are strong
+ differences of opinion), will they not unnaturally be led to
+ inquire how, why, when and wherefore Mr. SUGDEN ever came to be
+ deprived of his liberty, and under what circumstances he has
+ been restored to it, or it to him? "At Liberty!" It has a grand
+ and glorious sound! This distinguished Thespian was never an
+ "hereditary bondsman," then why not always "at liberty"? But,
+ be this as it may, once more "the Rover is free!" SUGDEN is a
+ name honourable behind and before the foot-lights. In the
+ Courts of Law it is a Legal Light, and among Gas Companies the
+ Sugden Burner is, we believe, justly famous. Whatever the
+ announcement may or may not mean, all sons of Liberty will
+ rejoice that this eccentric comedian is once more free, and on
+ the stage he will be again most welcome.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>"Are you staying in town?" "No," answered Mrs. R.; "I'm
+ going <i>au contraire</i>." Which, she subsequently explained,
+ was French for going into the country.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/106-1.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/106-1.png"
+ alt="FANCY PORTRAIT." /></a>
+
+ <h3>FANCY PORTRAIT.</h3>
+
+ <h4>GENERAL <i>BOOM</i>BASTES.</h4>
+
+ <center>
+ <i>Solo and Chorus.</i>
+ </center>AIR&mdash;"<i>Piff! Paff! Pouf!" from "La Grande
+ Duchosse."</i>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i6">"ET PUFF! PUFF! PUFF!</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">ET TARA PARA POUM!</p>
+
+ <p>JE SUIS, MOI, LE GÉNÉRAL BOOM! BOOM!"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>Repeats it ad lib.</i>]</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>ON RELIGIOUS CYMBALISM.</h3>
+
+ <p>The Salvationist Bands which perform in and out of
+ London&mdash;(would that they were restricted as the Moore and
+ Burgess Minstrels restrict themselves to one hall, never or
+ "hardly ever," performing out of London!)&mdash;everywhere and
+ anywhere without respecting illness, or the hours of public
+ worship in our Churches and Chapels, or the necessities of
+ repose, show thereby a distinct want of that consideration for
+ the feelings of their fellow-citizens which simple Christian
+ folk call Charity. These Booth performers&mdash;which
+ designation savours suggestively of Mountebanks&mdash;would do
+ well to play their peculiar music and sing their peculiar hymns
+ within the four walls of their own places of worship, employing
+ the intervals essential for gaining of wind and for rest of
+ muscle in meditating, perhaps breathlessly, on the inspired
+ Pauline teaching which will inform them that even the works of
+ an Apostle, if he have not charity, will be as "sounding brass
+ and tinkling cymbals," making indeed a great noise in the
+ world, but as one WILLIAM SHAKSPEARE has said, being mere
+ "sound and fury signifying nothing." "Liberty of Worship" by
+ all means, but not such Liberty for any one particular form of
+ worship which, interfering with the freedom of others, speedily
+ degenerates into fanatical licence, and so becomes a nuisance
+ as intolerant as it is intolerable.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>ANGLO-AMERICAN FRENCH.&mdash;A new word must be added to our
+ French dictionaries. In <i>Le Figaro</i> for Feb. 15, in an
+ article on HECTOR MALOT, occurs this expression, "<i>en ce
+ temps de puffisme littéraire</i>." In English we have had the
+ word and the thing too, since the time of SHERIDAN's
+ <i>Critic</i>, but is any student of French journalism familiar
+ with it in the Parisian newspapers?</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE FANCY BALL.</h2>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:15%;">
+ <a href="images/106-2.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/106-2.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>You came as GRETCHEN, hair of gold</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And face so exquisitely sweet,</p>
+
+ <p>That I, like FAUST, had <i>certes</i> sold</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Myself, to win you, MARGUERITE.</p>
+
+ <p>Each plait enmeshed my struggling heart,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That wildly beat against my will;</p>
+
+ <p>And though at last we had to part,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In Dreamland I could see you still.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Another night, with tresses dark,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And kirtle strewn with
+ <i>fleurs-de-lys</i>,</p>
+
+ <p>You came a flashing JOAN OF ARC,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Destructive of my bosom's peace.</p>
+
+ <p>The sword was girt upon your hip,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And thine the Maid's heroic glance;</p>
+
+ <p>I seemed to hear upon your lip,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The watchword of her life, "For
+ France!"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Anon I saw thee as the Queen</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Who held so many hearts in fee;</p>
+
+ <p>But MARY STUART scarce had been,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Methinks, so beautiful as thee.</p>
+
+ <p>I fain had gone and splintered lance,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As in the old days in our realm;</p>
+
+ <p>To win a kind approving glance,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And wear your glove upon my helm.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>What, stately EDITH! Lives there yet</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The lady of that royal line,</p>
+
+ <p>The peerless proud Plantagenet,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Will KENNETH's great emprise be mine?</p>
+
+ <p>We saw how high his hopes could soar;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">We know the guerdon that he won.</p>
+
+ <p>Shall I find favour, as of yore</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Did DAVID, Earl of Huntingdon?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>'Tis certain, in whatever guise</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">You come, as heroine of song</p>
+
+ <p>Or story, to my faithful eyes</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">You shine the fairest of the throng.</p>
+
+ <p>However fanciful you be,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Whatever fancy dress befalls;</p>
+
+ <p>My fancy paints you fancy-free,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To fancy me at Fancy Balls!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>THE REAL NINE POINTS OF THE LAW.&mdash;Costs.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>THE UNOBSERVED OF ONE "OBSERVER."</h3>
+
+ <p>From the account given by "OBSERVER" in the <i>Times</i>, it
+ might be inferred that "HARCOURT! HARCOURT!" was shouted all
+ over the House, in the lobbies, through the smoking-room, in
+ the library, through the cellars, in fact, everywhere within
+ the sacred precincts, on one memorable night, while at that
+ very moment the wily Sir WILLIAM, tucked comfortably up in his
+ little bed, was murmuring softly to himself, "HARCOURT! indeed!
+ '<i>Ha! not caught</i>,' more likely!" and so sweetly fell
+ asleep.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>MRS. R. read aloud from the latest Report of "B. and F.
+ Bible Society," "One cannot help thinking of the glorious field
+ of labour which lies open here before the Colporteur, and of
+ the pleasant way in which his labours are appreciated by all."
+ But the worthy lady pronounced colporteur as coalporter, and so
+ on hearing from a friend that "the Coalporters were on strike,"
+ Mrs. R. could not help exclaiming, "Dear! how ungrateful of
+ them, when they were being 'so much appreciated by all!'"</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page107"
+ id="page107"></a>[pg 107]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/107.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/107.png"
+ alt="THE WESTMINSTER WAX-WORK SHOW FOR THE SESSION 1892. ROOM 2." />
+ </a>
+
+ <h3>THE WESTMINSTER WAX-WORK SHOW FOR THE SESSION 1892.
+ ROOM 2.</h3>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page108"
+ id="page108"></a>[pg 108]</span>
+
+ <h2>OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.</h2>
+
+ <p>In <i>Tess of the D'Urbevilles</i> (published by Messrs.
+ OSGOOD, MCILVAINE &amp; CO.), Mr. THOMAS HARDY has given us a
+ striking work of fiction, bold in design, and elaborate in
+ finish. The characters, with one exception, are as true to life
+ as are his graphic descriptions of nature's own scenery; true
+ that is to the types of such rural life as he professes to
+ represent,&mdash;the life led in our Christian country by
+ thousands and thousands of genuine Pagans, superstitious
+ Boeotians, with whom the schoolmaster can do but little, and
+ the parson still less. As to the clergymen who appear in this
+ story, two of them are priggishly academic, a third is a
+ comfortable antiquarian, and the fourth unacquainted with even
+ the A.B.C. of his own pastoral theology.</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/108.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/108.png"
+ alt="A BRIGHT PARTICULAR STAR IN THE MILKY WAY." />
+ </a>
+
+ <h4>A BRIGHT PARTICULAR STAR IN THE MILKY WAY.</h4>Showing
+ how an Angel without wings played on the harp to Milkmaid
+ Tess of the Tubbyveals, who was so proud of her calves.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Since THACKERAY's <i>Captain Costigan</i>, and TOM
+ ROBERTSON's dramatic variation of him as <i>Eccles</i> in
+ <i>Caste</i>, no more original type of the besotted, no-working
+ working-man, has been given us ("at least, as far as I am
+ aware," interpolates the Baron, with a possible reservation)
+ than <i>Tess's</i> father, <i>Durbeyfield</i>. His foolish
+ wife, <i>Joan</i>, kindly in a way, a fair housewife and
+ helpmate, yet deficient in moral sense, is another
+ admirably-drawn character.</p>
+
+ <p>The only blot on this otherwise excellent work is the
+ absurdly melodramatic character of that "villain of the deepest
+ dye," <i>Alec D'Urbeville</i>, who would be thoroughly in his
+ element in an Adelphi Drama of the most approved type, ancient
+ or modern. He is just the sort of stage-scoundrel who from time
+ to time seeks to take some mean advantage of a heroine in
+ distress, on which occasions said heroine (of Adelphi Drama)
+ will request him to "unhand her," or to "stand aside and let
+ her pass;" whereupon the dastardly ruffian retaliates with a
+ diabolical sneer of fiendish malice, his eyes ablaze with
+ passion, as, making his melodramatic exit at the O.P. wing, he
+ growls, "Aha! a day will come!" or "She must and shall be
+ mine!" or, if not making his exit, but remaining in centre of
+ stage to assist in forming a picture, he exclaims, with
+ fiendish glee, "Now, pretty one, you are in my power!" and so
+ forth. 'Tis a great pity that such a
+ penny-plain-and-two-pence-coloured scoundrel should have been
+ allowed so strong a part among Mr. HARDY's excellent and
+ unconventional <i>dramatis personæ</i>. Even the very, very
+ strong ejaculations wherein this bold bad man indulges on the
+ slightest provocation belong to the most antiquated vocabulary
+ of theatrical ruffianism. However, there he is, and all the
+ perfumes of the Vale of Blackmoor will not suffice for
+ dispelling the strong odour of the footlights which pervades
+ every scene where this unconscionable scoundrel makes his
+ appearance. That he is ultimately disposed of by being stuck to
+ the heart with the carving-knife that had been brought in for
+ cold-beef slicing at breakfast, is some satisfaction. But far
+ be it from the Baron to give more than this hint in
+ anticipation of the tragic <i>dénoûment</i>. Some might accuse
+ Mr. THOMAS HARDY of foolhardiness in so boldly telling ugly
+ truths about the Pagan Phyllises and Corydons of our dear old
+ Christian England; but we, his readers, have the author's word
+ for the truth of what he has written, as "the fortunes of
+ <i>Tess of the D'Urbevilles, a Pure Woman</i>," are "faithfully
+ presented," by THOMAS HARDY, and so his honour is pledged to
+ the truth of this story which his powers of narration have made
+ so fascinating to a host of readers besides the one who is a
+ host in himself, namely,</p>
+
+ <p class="author">THE BARON DE BOOK-WORMS.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>JUSTICE FOR JUSTICE!</h2>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>SCENE&mdash;<i>A Court of Justice.</i> Prisoner, <i>a
+ young man of eighteen, in the dock, weeping bitterly. His
+ Uncle stands before him, and occasionally offers him
+ smelling salts. General commiseration amongst the
+ spectators, many of whom are ladies armed with
+ opera-glasses.</i> Police Constable <i>under
+ cross-examination.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>Counsel for the Defence.</i> And so, Constable, you had
+ actually the heart to read the warrant to the Prisoner?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Witness.</i> I did, Sir, in the execution of my duty.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for the Def.</i> (<i>scornfully</i>). Duty! and to
+ this he said nothing?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Wit.</i> (<i>in a low tone</i>). Nothing,
+ Sir&mdash;nothing!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for the Def.</i> And I am not surprised! He might
+ well say nothing to such an announcement! HE, a Gentleman by
+ birth&mdash;education&mdash;everything&mdash;to be accused of
+ forgery! It is <i>too</i> cruel!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Justice Punch</i> (<i>courteously but firmly</i>). I
+ do not wish to control the management of your case, Mr.
+ MCSLANGER, but the time for you to address the Jury has not yet
+ arrived.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for Def.</i> (<i>submissive but sulky</i>). As your
+ Lordship pleases.</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>Resumes his seat.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>Usher</i> (<i>calling</i>). Admiral CUTTERMAN!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Admiral</i> (<i>in a low tone</i>). Here!</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>He leaves the</i> Prisoner, <i>first handing him the
+ smelling salts, and enters the Witness Box.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>Council for the Prosecution</i> (<i>after the</i> Witness
+ <i>has been sworn</i>). I think you are here on subpoena served
+ by the Treasury.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Witness</i> (<i>with a glance of sadness at the
+ Dock</i>). Had I not been summoned to be present by those in
+ authority, not the entreaties of magicians would have brought
+ me here!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for the Pros.</i> I take it you are an unwilling
+ Witness?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Witness</i> (<i>with difficulty suppressing acute
+ emotion</i>). A most, a very most unwilling Witness!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for the Def.</i> (<i>scornfully</i>).
+ Unwilling!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for the Pros.</i> (<i>in a tone of
+ remonstrance</i>). I really must beg my learned friend to
+ refrain from disturbing the proceedings. These constant
+ interruptions are most annoying.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for the Def.</i> (<i>with force and violence</i>).
+ I cannot sufficiently express my indignation&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Justice Punch</i> (<i>sharply</i>). Then do not make
+ the attempt.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for the Def.</i> (<i>surlily</i>). As your Lordship
+ pleases. [<i>Subsides.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for the Pros.</i> But, in spite of being an
+ unwilling Witness, you undoubtedly saw the Prisoner forge your
+ name?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Witness</i> (<i>with his handkerchief to his eyes</i>).
+ Alas! I did!</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>A pause, during which everyone regains
+ equanimity.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for Def.</i> (<i>on renewal of proceedings</i>).
+ And so you are the Uncle of the Prisoner?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Witness</i> (<i>sadly</i>). Yes, I am.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for Def.</i> Still you are here, and are pushing
+ that poor lad to the prison-door! (<i>Prisoner snivels.</i>)
+ Yes, you are dealing him (one of your own flesh and blood) a
+ never-to-be-recalled injury!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Witness</i> (<i>plucking up spirit</i>). Only my duty,
+ Sir. I obey only my duty!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for Def.</i> Your duty! Why, man, how can it be
+ your duty?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Justice Punch</i> (<i>seriously</i>). Again I must
+ interpose. (<i>To</i> Counsel.) Mr. MCSLANGER, I must once more
+ remind you that your business at present is to ask questions,
+ not to make speeches.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for Def.</i> But, my Lord, the task is a difficult
+ one.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Justice Punch.</i> If you find it beyond your powers,
+ no doubt some of your colleagues will come willingly to your
+ assistance.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for Def.</i> No, my Lord, I do not mean what your
+ Lordship means. I am quite capable of performing the duties it
+ has been my pleasure and pride to accept.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Justice Punch</i> (<i>wearily</i>). Pray let us get
+ on?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for Def.</i> Do you not think it a grossly cruel
+ and revolting thing that a man should give evidence against his
+ near relative?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Witness</i> (<i>greatly agitated</i>). My Lord, I appeal
+ to you, is it fair that I should be treated in this
+ fashion?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Justice Punch</i> (<i>emphatically</i>). No, it is
+ not! You are here, Sir, in performance of a solemn
+ duty&mdash;to assist the ends of justice in the punishment, and
+ consequently prevention, of crime. It is not right that in the
+ witness-box you should be badgered and insulted as if you were
+ worthy of the dock! One can feel some sympathy with the
+ relatives of the prisoner, because he appears to have had
+ respectable surroundings. But if he is convicted of forgery, it
+ will be his own fault! I shall accept the verdict as a proof
+ that education and birth are not safeguards to prevent crime.
+ And as for you, Sir (<i>turning angrily to</i> Coun. for Def.),
+ let me tell you that you degrade your office when you make the
+ wig and the gown the shield of the brute and the bully. Let us
+ have no more of it!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Coun. for Def.</i> (<i>subdued but depressed</i>). As
+ your Lordship pleases.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Justice Punch.</i> It does so please me, and I think
+ that it will equally please all my learned brothers who sit in
+ Royal Courts to follow my example! It is time that the Witness,
+ as well as the accused, received proper protection. I hope my
+ words will be taken to heart in another place!</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>The Scene closes in on his Lordship's
+ suggestion.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+ <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>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol.
+102, February 27, 1892, 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, Vol. 102,
+February 27, 1892, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol. 102, February 27, 1892
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: December 13, 2004 [EBook #14344]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, William Flis, and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH,
+
+OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 102.
+
+
+
+February 27, 1892.
+
+
+
+
+CONFESSIONS OF A DUFFER.
+
+V.--THE DUFFER AT CRICKET.
+
+To hear my remarks on the Cricket, in the Pavilion, you might think
+that I had been a great player entirely, in my day. "Who is that
+fine old English sportsman," you might ask, "who seems to have been
+so intimate with MYNN, and FULLER PILCH, and CARPENTER, and HAYWARD
+and TARRANT and JACKSON and C.D. MARSHAM? No doubt we see in him the
+remains of a sterling Cricketer of the old school." And then when I
+lay down the law on the iniquity of boundary hits, "always ran them
+out in _my_ time," and on the tame stupidity of letting balls to the
+off go unpunished, and the wickedness of dispensing with a long stop,
+you would be more and more pursuaded that I had at least, played for
+my county. Well, I _have_ played for my county, but as the county I
+played for was Berwickshire, there is perhaps nothing to be so very
+proud of in that distinction. But this I will say for the Cricketing
+Duffer; he is your true enthusiast. When I go to Lord's on a summer
+day, which of my contemporaries do I meet there? Not the men who
+played for the University, not the KENNYS and MITCHELLS and BUTLERS,
+but the surviving members of College Second Elevens in the old days of
+Cowley Marsh, when every man brought his own bottle of Oxford wine for
+luncheon. These are the veterans who contribute most to the crowd of
+lookers-on. They never were of any use as players, but their hearts
+were in the game, and from the game they will never be divorced. It is
+an ill thing for an outsider to drop a remark about Cricket among us,
+at about eleven o'clock in a country house smoking-room. After that
+the time flies in a paradise of reminiscences, till about 4 A.M. or
+some such "wee, short hour ayont the Twal'," if one may quote BURNS
+without being insulted by all the numerous and capable wits of
+Glasgow. Why is it that the Duffer keeps up his interest in Cricket,
+while the good players cease to care much about it? Perhaps _their_
+interest was selfish; his is purely ideal, and consequently immortal.
+To him Cricket was ever an unembodied joy of which he could make
+nothing palpable; nothing subject to the cold law of averages. Mine
+was 0.3.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+My own introduction to Cricket, as to Golf, was peculiarly poignant. I
+and my brother, aged more or less about six or seven, were invited to
+play by the local Club, and we each received exactly one very slow and
+considerate lob. But his lob took him on the eye, and mine, kicking on
+a bad wicket, had me on the knee-pan. The subsequent proceedings did
+not interest us very much, but there is nothing like entering children
+early at a manly pastime.
+
+Intellectual application will, to some extent, overcome physical
+difficulties. By working at least five hours a day, and by reading the
+_Cricket Field_ daily and nightly, I did learn to bowl a little, with
+a kind of twist. This, while it lasted, in a bowlerless country, was
+a delightful accomplishment. You got into much better sporting society
+than you deserved, and, in remote parts of the pastoral districts
+you were looked up to as one whose name had been in _Bell's Life_;
+we still had _Bell's Life_ then. It was no very difficult matter to
+bowl a rustic team for a score of runs or so, and all went merry as a
+wedding bell. But, alas, when Drumthwacket played Tullochgorum, there
+was a young Cambridge man staying with the latter chieftain. I began,
+as I usually did, by "yorking" Tullochgorum's Piper and his chief
+Butler, and his head Stalker, and then SMITH of King's came in. The
+ground, as usual, had four sides. He hit me over the enclosure at
+each of the four sides, for I changed my end after being knocked for
+five fours in his first over. After that, my prestige was gone. The
+rustics, instead of crawling about their wickets, took to walking
+in and smacking me. This would not have mattered, if any of the
+Drumthwacket team could have held a catch, and if the wicket-keeper
+had not let SMITH off four times in one over. My character was lost,
+and all was ended with me north of the Grampians, where the wickets
+are peculiarly suitable to my style of delivery.
+
+As to batting, there is little that is pleasant to confess. As soon as
+I got a distant view of a ball, I was ever tempted to whack wildly in
+its direction. There was no use in waiting for it, the more I looked
+at it the less I liked it. So I whacked, and, if you always do this,
+a ball will sometimes land on the driving part of the bat, and then it
+usually happened that my companion, striving for a five or a six, ran
+me out. If he did not, I did not stay long. The wicket-keeper was a
+person whose existence I always treated as _une quantite negligeable_,
+and sometimes the ball would bound off his pads into the stumps. The
+fielders would occasionally hold a catch, anything _may_ happen. On
+the other hand there was this to be said for my style of batting,
+that the most experienced Cricketer could not tell where or in what
+direction I would hit any given ball. If it was on the off, that was
+no reason why I should not bang it to square-leg, a stroke which has
+become fashionable since my time, but in those old days, you did not
+often see it in first-class Cricket. It was rather regarded as "an
+agrarian outrage." Foreigners and ladies would find Cricket a more
+buoyant diversion if all the world, and especially LEWIS HALL and
+SHREWSBURY, played on my principles. Innings would not last so long.
+Not so many matches would be drawn. The fielders would not catch cold.
+
+To speak of fielding is to revive unspeakable sorrows. For a
+short-sighted man, whose fingers are thumbs, no post in the field
+is exactly grateful. I have been at long-leg, and, watching the game
+intently, have perceived the batters running, and have heard cries of
+"well fielded!" These cries were ironical. The ball had been hit past
+me, but I was not fortunate enough to observe the circumstance. A
+fielder of this _calibre_ always ends by finding his way to short-leg.
+A prudent man can do a good deal here by watching the umpire, dodging
+when he dodges, and getting behind him on occasion. But I was not
+prudent. I observed that a certain player hit very much behind the
+leg, so there, "in the mad pride of intellectuality," I privily
+stationed myself. He _did_ it very fine, very fine indeed, into my
+eye. The same misfortune has attended me at short-slip; it should have
+been a wicket, it was a black eye, or the loss of a tooth or two, as
+might happen. In fact, I sometimes wonder myself at the contemptuous
+frankness of my own remarks on the fielding at Lord's. For if a catch
+could be missed (and most catches can), I was the man to miss it.
+Swift ones used to hit me and hurt me, long ones I always misjudged,
+little simple poppy ones spun out of my fingers. Now the unlucky thing
+about Cricket, for a Duffer, is that your misfortunes do not hurt
+yourself alone. It is not as in a single at Golf, it is not as in
+fishing, or riding, or wherever you have no partner. To drop catches
+is to madden the bowler not unnaturally, and to lengthen the period
+of leather-hunting. Cricket is a social game, and its proficients
+soon give the cold shoulder to the Duffer. He has his place, however,
+in the nature of things. It is he who keeps up the enthusiasm, who
+remembers every run that anybody I made in any given match. In fact,
+at Cricket, the Duffer's mission is to be a "judge of the game;" I
+don't mean an Umpire, very far from that. If you once let the Duffer
+umpire he could ruin the stoutest side, and secure victory to the
+feeblest. I may say that, at least in this capacity, I have proved
+really useful to my party in country matches. But, in the long run,
+my capacity even for umpiring came to be doubted, and now I am only
+a critic of Cricket. There is none more relentless, not one with a
+higher standard, at least where no personal feelings are concerned.
+For I have remarked that, if a Cambridge man writes about an Oxford
+victory (which he seldom has to do), or if an Oxford man writes on a
+Cambridge victory (a frequent affliction), he always leaves you with
+the impression that, in spite of figures, his side had at least a
+moral triumph. These admirable writers have all been Duffers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: TIMES CHANGE.
+
+_Shade of William the Conqueror._ "WHAT! THE PEOPLE OBJECT TO
+ENCLOSING A FEW ACRES OF THIS OPEN SPACE FOR STATE PURPOSES--FOR THEIR
+OWN BENEFIT? BY THE SPLENDOUR OF HEAVEN! I SHOULD HAVE LIKED TO HAVE
+HEARD THE VARLETS OBJECT TO MY MAKING MILES OF IT SUCH--FOR _MINE_!"
+
+_Secretary for War._ "AH, YOUR MAJESTY HAD IN _YOUR_ TIMES NO _TIMES_
+TO RECKON WITH!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TIMES CHANGE.
+
+ ["The 'Ranges Act' constitutes ... a standing menace to rights
+ of common wherever commons and open spaces exist."--_The
+ Times_.]
+
+ "The old order changes, yielding place to new."
+ By Phoebus, you are right, mellifluous TENNYSON!
+ Could Norman WILLIAM this conjuncture view,
+ He'd greet our Progress with--well, scarce a benison;
+ He, though ranked high 'midst monarchs and commanders,
+ Had the same weakness as our troops in Flanders.
+
+ ROBERT the Devil's ruthless son would clear
+ A county to make coverts, deer-runs, chaces.
+ What had he thought of modern notions queer
+ Concerning Common Rights and Open Spaces?
+ "The People--who are varlets!--still oppose them,
+ Whether the Powers that be make or enclose them!"
+
+ "The People _versus_ Powers that Be!" Ah, yes!
+ Imperious Norman, that's a modern trial
+ That's always being argued more or less;
+ The Press keeps now such vigilant espial
+ On every grasping would-be public plunderer.
+ You, Sire, had not to reckon with "The Thunderer!"
+
+ Times change, stark soldier, and we have the _Times_
+ Premier to check and snub Chief Secretaries.
+ Counting land-grabbing high among earth's crimes
+ Would have amazed you! Public judgment varies.
+ You and your wolf-hound, WILLIAM, would not now
+ Try a "clean sweep,"--without a general row.
+
+ Ask OTTO! He is somewhat in your style,
+ But he could tell you what new risks environ
+ The ancient art of Ruling. You may smile
+ At Print and Paper _versus_ Blood and Iron,
+ But Sovereign and Crown, though loved by many,
+ Stand now no chance against the Popular Penny.
+
+ Ask Malwood's Squire again! He knows right well
+ The New Democracy,--and the New Forest;
+ _Our_ great Plantagenet, a true blue "Swell,"
+ Fights for the People when their need is sorest.
+ In Norman BILLY he'd own small belief;
+ The People's WILLIAM is _his_ favourite chief.
+
+ Your ghostly presence in these verdant glades
+ Might startle STANHOPE, musing on his Ranges,
+ But not the angriest of Royal Shades
+ May now arrest the progress of Time's changes.
+ True, much is yielded yet to Swelldom's "Sport,"
+ But some aver that even _its_ time is short.
+
+ No, Clearances and Rights of Common, now
+ Own not the sway of autocrats capricious.
+ Small use, great Shade, to knit that haughty brow,
+ And swear _your_ action would be expeditious.
+ The days of Curfew and of Forest Law
+ Are passed. _We_'re swayed by Justice--and Free Jaw!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"FOR VALUE RECEIVED."--Aldgate Ward changed Alderman LUSK for one
+POUND.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WHAT OUR ARTIST HAS TO PUT UP WITH, BEFORE HE TURNS
+LIKE A CRUSHED WORM.
+
+_Our Art Critic_ (_patronisingly_). "HA--HUM! WELL, YOUR COLOUR IS
+FAIRLY DECENT, AND YOU HAVE NICISH FEELING FOR LIGHT AND SHADE, AND
+_CHIAROSCURO_. BUT WHERE YOB ALWAYS FAIL TO PLEASE, SOMEHOW, IS IN
+YOUR _EXECUTION_!"
+
+_Our Artist_. "MY _EXECUTION_? AH! JUST SO. I'VE NO DOUBT THAT
+_YOURS_, NOW WOULD BE MORE GENERALLY POPULAR!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM PARLIAMENTARY EXAMINATION PAPER.
+
+_Question_.--Explain the term "Standing Orders."
+
+_Answer_ 1.--It means that when a visitor to the House has an order
+for the Speaker's Gallery, and can't find a seat, he then becomes one
+of the Standing Orders.--SISTE VIATOR.
+
+_Answer_ 2.--When a friendly M.P. sees three of us waiting for him,
+takes us to the bar of the House, and orders drinks all round, which
+we take standing.--BIBENDUM EST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+INDIA FOR THE IRISH!--"An amended estimate of the present Paddy Crop
+has been published by the Local Government." (_Vide Times_ for Feb.
+15.) What more can the most thorough Home-Rulers want, if they would
+only be content to make their home in Burmah instead of Ireland?
+"Local Government" can soon be developed, for 'tis but Home Rule in
+the bud, and the "Paddy Crop" is already there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MOTTO FOR THE NEW RECORDER OF THE CITY OF LONDON.--"HALL There!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"COMBINING AMUSEMENT WITH INSTRUCTION."
+
+(_A SKETCH AT THE COLLECTION OF INSTRUMENTS OF TORTURE._)
+
+ SCENE--_The Maddox Street Galleries. A large and appropriately
+ lighted room. Upon walls of a sombre crimson, various
+ Implements of Torture are arranged with considerable taste,
+ and an eye for decorative effect, the central space being
+ reserved for more elaborate contrivances in wood and iron.
+ Visitors discovered inspecting the Exhibition by the aid of
+ the excellent Catalogues, with the subdued appreciation of
+ persons conscious that they are spending a very pleasant and
+ profitable afternoon._
+
+_Mr. Charnelhouse Goole_ (_as he enters, to Mrs. C.G._). Now, my dear,
+the first thing I want to see is that Iron Maiden there's so much talk
+about. I wonder whereabouts it is!
+
+_Mrs. C.G._ I think _that_ must be it, up at the other end of the
+room. But don't you _think_, dear, it would be nicer to see the
+_other_ things first, and keep that for the _last_?
+
+_Mr. C.G._ (_struck by the refinement of this suggestion_). Well,
+upon, my word, AMINA, I almost think it would!
+
+_Mr. Frederic Frivell_ (_to his wife, whom he takes a marital pleasure
+in shocking_). What fun those old fellows must have had in those days,
+mustn't they?
+
+_Mrs. Frivell_ (_a serious lady_). I don't think fun is at _all_ the
+right word, FREDERIC. I do _wish_ you wouldn't take these things so
+lightly. I'm sure it's melancholy enough to look at all these horrid
+machines, and think--
+
+_Mr. F._ That Torture is a lost art? Isn't that what you were going to
+say? But it's _not_, you know; we've refined it--that's all. Look at
+the Photographer, and the Interviewer, and the Pathetic Reciter, and
+the--
+
+ [_Mrs. F. endeavours to convince him that she didn't mean that
+ at all, and that he is comparing totally different things._
+
+_An Aphoristic Uncle_ (_to an irreverent Nephew_). No. 89. "A
+Long-spiked Wooden Roller, known as a 'Spiked Hare.'" You see, TOM,
+my boy, the victim was--(_Describes the process._) "Some of the old
+writers describe this torture as being most fearful," so the Catalogue
+tells us.
+
+_Tom-my-boy_ (_after inspecting the spikes_). Well, do you know,
+Uncle, I shouldn't be at all surprised if the old Johnnies weren't so
+far out.
+
+_The Aph. Uncle._ Another illustration, my boy, of "Man's inhumanity
+to Man"!
+
+_Tom-my-boy._ Not bad for you, Uncle--only you cribbed it out of the
+Catalogue, you know! [_The A.U. gives him up._
+
+ _An Indulgent Parent enters, leading a small boy in a tall
+ hat, and is presently recognised by the A.U._
+
+_The A.U._ So you've brought your son to see this collection,
+hey? Well, it's of the greatest educational value to a thoughtful
+youth--rich in moral and historical instruction!
+
+_The I.P._ Well, it was like this, you see. I had to take him to the
+dentist's, and, finding we should have half-an-hour or so to spare
+before he could attend to him, I thought we'd just drop in here and
+amuse ourselves--eh, BOBBY? Wonderfully ingenious, you know, in
+their way, some of these things! Now, _here's_ a thing--"A Spanish
+mouth-pear, made of iron." You see, BOBBY, they forced it into the
+mouth and touched a screw, and it sprang open, preventing the victim
+from screaming.
+
+_Bobby_. Y-yes, father. Should you think Mr. Fawcepps will have one of
+those?
+
+_The I.P._ (_annoyed_). Now, what _is_ the use of my taking you to a
+place of this sort to divert your thoughts, if your mind is running
+on something else all the time? I won't have it, do you hear. Enjoy
+yourself like a sensible boy!
+
+_Bobby_. Y-yes, Father, I am. It--it's quite cured my toothache
+already--_really_ it has!
+
+_Mrs. Frivell_ (_reading from Catalogue_). "A Penitent's Girdle, made
+of barbed wire, which, when worn next to the flesh, caused the most
+unpleasant and uncomfortable irritation." Oh, FREDERIC, just fancy
+that!
+
+_Mr. F._ My dear CECILIA, I can _quite_ fancy it!
+
+_Mrs. F._ But I thought these tortures were only for _Malefactors_.
+Why do they call it a _Penitent's_ Girdle?
+
+_Mr. F._ Can't say,--unless because he generally repented having put
+it on.
+
+_Mrs. F._ I don't think that _can_ be the real reason.
+
+_Two English House-maids_ (_to a small German Page-Boy who is
+escorting them_). Here, JOHNNIE, what's _this_ mean? (_Reads from
+Catalogue the motto on an Executioner's Sword._) "Di Herrin' sturin
+dem Unheel ick exequire ir End Urthile." Come, _you_ ought to know!
+
+_Johnnie_ (_not unnaturally at a loss_). It means--it means--somding I
+do not understandt.
+
+_The Housemaids_ (_disappointed in him_). Well, you _are_ a boy! I
+_did_ think, bein' German yourself, you'd be quite at _'ome_ 'ere!
+
+_Mr. Ernest Stodgely_ (_impressively, to Miss FEATHERHEAD, his
+fiancee_). Just look at this, FLOSSIE. (_Reading._) "Executioner's
+Cloak, very long, of red woollen material; presumably red so as not to
+show blood-spots or stains." Hideously suggestive that, is it not?
+
+_Miss Flossie._ I shouldn't call it exactly _hideous_, ERNEST. Do
+you know, I was just thinking that, with a high Astrachan collar, you
+know, and old silver fastenings, it would make rather a nice winter
+cloak. So deliciously warm! [_ERNEST avails himself of a lover's
+privileges to lecture her severely._
+
+ IN FRONT OF THE IRON MAIDEN.
+
+_Mr. Ch. Goole._ So _this_ is the Iron Maiden! Well, I expected
+something rather more dreadful-looking. The face has really quite a
+pleasant expression. [_Disappointedly._
+
+[Illustration: "Oh, but I think that makes it so much _more_ horrible,
+don't you?"]
+
+_Mrs. Ch. G._ (_with subtler appreciation_). Oh, but I think that
+makes it so much _more_ horrible, don't _you_?
+
+_Mr. Ch. G._ Well, I don't know--perhaps. But there ought to be a
+wax figure inside it. They ought to have wax figures on most of these
+things--make it much more interesting!
+
+_Mr. Frivell_ (_who is close by_). I quite agree with you,
+Sir--indeed, I would go farther. I think there should be competent
+persons engaged to provide practical illustrations of all the more
+amusing tortures--say from three to five every afternoon. Draw all
+London!
+
+_Mrs. F._ (_horrified_). FRED, you _know_ you don't mean it! And
+besides, you would _never_ get people willing to be shut up inside
+that thing!
+
+_Mr. F._ My dear, I'm perfectly serious, as I always am. And as to
+not getting subjects, why--(_He beckons to one of the Boy-Messengers
+in waiting, who advances_). Look here, my lad, you seem a bright
+intelligent youth. Would you mind just stepping inside and allowing us
+to close the door? We won't detain you an instant.
+
+_Mrs. F._ What a shame, FRED! Don't _think_ of such a thing, there's a
+good boy! Say no--and I'll give you sixpence!
+
+_The Boy_ (_grinning_). Well, Lady, make it a shillin', and I'll stay
+outside--to oblige you!
+
+_Mrs. F._ (_giving him a shilling_). There's a good sensible boy!
+FREDERIC, have you gone _quite_ mad? You know you wouldn't hurt a fly?
+
+ [_The GOOLES move away, feeling that they have been trifled
+ with._
+
+_Mr. F._ A fly? Not for the world!--but this is only a boy. I want to
+know what they're here _for_. Now, my lad, you're not engaged to be
+_idle_, you know. Just think of the amount of innocent pleasure you
+would afford by getting into this spiked cradle and letting me rock
+you. You won't? Well, will you sit on the Spanish Donkey? come! I'll
+give you a leg up and fasten the weights on your legs for you. You
+aren't afraid of a donkey?
+
+ [_Bystanders collect in hope of amusement._
+
+_The Boy_ (_sulkily_). Not of _some_ Donkeys, Sir, as ain't quite so
+sharp as that one, whatever they think theirselves!
+
+ [_Titters. Mr. F.F. feels that he has got rather the worst
+ of it, and collapses, with the dismal completeness of a Funny
+ Man; Mrs. F. remains behind to bribe the boy with another
+ shilling to promise her solemnly never on any account to play
+ with any of the tortures._
+
+_Mrs. F._ (_rejoining her husband_). FREDERIC, how _can_ you? You make
+me feel perfectly _faint_ when you act like this!
+
+_Mr. F._ (_recovering_). Faint, CECILIA? Well, I daresay they won't
+mind if you sit down in one of these spiked chairs for a minute or
+two.
+
+_Mrs. F._ (_angrily_). I shall do no such thing, FREDERIC! And you
+ought to be _ashamed_ to suggest it!
+
+_Mrs. Borrodale_ (_choosing photographs of Nuremberg_). Look, JOHN,
+what a lovely large one of the _Sebald's Kirche_! I really _must_
+have this. Oh, and the _Insel Schutt_--and this of the _Schoene
+Brunnen_--and the view from the _Burg_--that makes the half-dozen.
+They will be joys for _ever_, JOHN! And _only_ three shillings each!
+Will you pay the boy for them, JOHN, please--it's just eighteen
+shillings.
+
+_John_. Can't, my dear. Only half-a-crown in my pocket. Don't you
+remember, I lent you my last sov. not five minutes ago?
+
+_Mrs. B._ Oh, so you did. Well, on second thoughts, perhaps this
+size is rather--I think I'll take five of the sixpenny ones
+instead--they're every bit as good. You can spare me that half-crown,
+JOHN!
+
+_A Patriot_ (_coming out_). Well, it's just the same 'ere as
+everywhere else. All the things "made in Germany"! Sickenin' _I_ call
+it!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A MEETING OF THE "BANDY" ASSOCIATION
+
+FOR THE PROMOTION OF "HOCKEY ON THE ICE."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RICE AND PRUNES.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ Rice and prunes a household journal
+ Called the chief of household boons:
+ Hence my mother cooks diurnal
+ Rice and prunes.
+
+ Therefore on successive noons,
+ Sombre fruit and snowy kernel
+ Woo reluctant forks and spoons.
+
+ As the ear, when leaves are vernal,
+ Wearies of the blackbird's tunes,
+ So we weary of eternal
+ Rice and prunes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN OLD FRIEND AT THE CRITERION.--Time flies, and _Fourteen Days_,
+occupying only a couple of hours or so at the Criterion, goes
+wonderfully. CHARLES WYNDHAM is the life and soul of the piece, and
+the giddy GIDDENS is another life and soul. Miss MARY MOORE, charming
+as ever, with a clearness of "dictation," as Mrs. MALAPROP would
+say, that is in itself a delight to the ear. Every word she speaks is
+distinct, and, which is more to the purpose, every telling word tells.
+_Fourteen Days_ is a survival and revival of one of H.J. BYRON's
+fittest. If it "catches on" once more, as it ought to do, it might run
+fourteen weeks, and then,--"Next please!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: Q.E.D.
+
+"_MAY_ I ASK YOU HOW YOU MANAGE TO KEEP YOUR LITTLE PET SO SLEEK AND
+THIN?"
+
+"I DON'T KNOW. IT HAS ITS LUNCH AND DINNER WITH ME EVERY DAY."
+
+"WELL, SO DOES MINE!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.
+
+_House of Commons, Monday, February 15._--A lively sitting, with an
+unexpected ending. Debate on Address resumed by SEXTON in excellent
+speech, an effect largely contributed to by comparative brevity. Only
+an hour long; remarkable compression. Would have been better still
+had it been reduced by the twenty minutes occupied in preliminary
+observations. At twenty-five minutes past four he rose to move
+Amendment condemnatory of Land Purchase Act of last year. Precisely at
+a quarter to five came to his amendment, and began to recommend it to
+House. But mustn't complain. An excellent beginning for new Session
+that may further develop.
+
+"An oratorical eel," SAUNDERSON, later in sitting, likened Member
+for West Belfast to; charming simile, with just that mixture of
+graphicness and incongruity that only Irish wit could flash upon.
+Not meant to be uncomplimentary, for SAUNDERSON, like the rest,
+acknowledges capacity of SEXTON in debate; his clear insight, his
+capacity for grasping a subject, his aptness of illustration, his
+quickness of retort, and, alack! the embarrassment of the wealth of
+language. If he could only economise that, and guard against the
+fatal fluency that besets him, converting what might be a sharp direct
+speech of twenty minutes into a windy weariness of hour-and-a-half or
+two hours, he would take high rank among Parliamentary debaters.
+
+DIZZY once said the occasions when a man addressing House of Commons
+need exceed twenty minutes, come to him only twice or thrice in a
+lifetime. He did more than preach; he carried into practice his own
+principle with success. Very rarely in later years, even when Leader
+of House of Commons, did he exceed twenty minutes, and all his
+most successful interpositions in debate were on that plan. When,
+occasionally, he felt that circumstances demanded a long and laboured
+address, his labour was in vain.
+
+Capital speech, too, of quite another kind, from DUNBAR BARTON. Most
+promising maiden speech delivered in present Parliament; of good
+omen that best parts were not those prepared in leisure of study,
+put the earlier passages evoked by preceding debate, and necessarily
+impromptu. As for SAUNDERSON, he was in his best form.
+
+"SAUNDERSON," said the SQUIRE OF MALWOOD, recognising a kindred
+spirit, "always reminds me of those Lifeguardsmen you see at the
+Military Festival, riding round Agricultural Hall slashing off heads.
+The heads are dummies, and no harm is done; but it's a pretty sight."
+
+The Colonel rides well, and is a skilful swordsman.
+
+Delight of audience crowding in after dinner completed by TIM HEALY
+dashing in with intent to trip up Colonel. Domestic difficulties in
+the Party have not smoothed down TIM's natural truculence. With JOHN
+REDMOND sitting behind him and SAUNDERSON in front, a porcupine in
+fretful mood is a ball of spun silk compared with TIM.
+
+After this RADCLIFFE COOKE and collapse, with the prospect of
+proceedings droning on till midnight, then adjournment, and begin
+again to-morrow. Suddenly, on stroke of twelve, Closure moved. House
+completely taken aback. Whilst it sat gasping under shock SPEAKER
+declared Closure carried; bells rang through all the corridors;
+Members trooped in to find Division imminent. When figures declared,
+showing Government had been surprised into narrow majority of 21,
+fresh wave of excitement welled forth, amid which Address was,
+somehow, agreed to. Members went off into snowstorm, cheering and
+laughing as if there had never before been such larks.
+
+_Business done_.--Address agreed to.
+
+_Tuesday Night_.--GRANDOLPH turned up to-day; took his familiar
+corner seat; tugged at his old moustache; caressed his new beard, and
+listened to SEALE HAYNE recklessly attacking the sacred institution of
+Justiciary of the Peace.
+
+"Nothing changed, TOBY, dear boy," he said; "not even the Ministry.
+When I came back from Mashonaland I was told we were on the eve of
+political earthquake. The House of Commons was to be transformed into
+a cockpit; the Benches steepled in the gore of an iniquitous Ministry.
+But, except for some vacant places and some further advancement of
+privates in the little band I once officered, it's all the same, only
+a little drearier. The same throng in the Lobby, the same rows of
+Members sitting on the Benches, the same Mace on the Table, the same
+stately figure in the Chair, and the same Sergeants-at-Arms relieving
+guard at the Cross Benches. There are not quite the same two Irish
+Leaders, for BRER FOX has 'gone away.' BRER RABBIT I see sitting
+over there with his kindly face and his friendly smile, perhaps the
+only Irishman in the House who, if a coat were trailed before him,
+would turn away from temptation. It's only Irishmen, with their
+inexhaustible fund of humour, who would have put JUSTIN MCCARTHY in
+his present place. Doesn't much matter so long as TIM HEALY's around.
+I'll bet my gold mine at Mashonaland against the Kennel, Barks, that
+TIM will make up the average of fighting even when BRER RABBIT in the
+scale."
+
+[Illustration: A GIFT FROM THE GREEKS.
+
+RIGHT HON. ARTHUR. "IF I CAN ONLY GET THIS THROUGH, IT OUGHT TO SETTLE
+'EM!"]
+
+
+There's one thing changed GRANDOLPH did not allude to; perhaps
+unconscious of it. 'Tis his own appearance. In addition to the beard,
+he has put on ruddy tint that speaks well for Mashonaland as a health
+resort compared with Westminster. Amongst the pale-faced legislators
+his visage shines like the morning sun. "Quite a Colonial look about
+him," says ALGERNON BORTHWICK, fretfully. "But, after a few dinners at
+the Amphitryon and a few nights at the House and elsewhere, he'll get
+over it."
+
+Members from all parts crowd round GRANDOLPH to shake the horny hand
+of the intrepid explorer, the dauntless lion _dompter_. A cold air
+whistles along the row of Ministers as he sits behind.
+
+"What's he up to?" JOKIM hoarsely whispered, all his native gaiety
+eclipsed.
+
+"Come down, I suppose," said Prince ARTHUR, smiling, "to congratulate
+us on our great victory last night, whereby we escaped defeat in
+Debate on Address by triumphant majority of 21."
+
+"Quite a stormy petrel don't you think?" JOKIM said, nervously rubbing
+his hands.
+
+"Not exactly," said Prince ARTHUR; "that usually comes before the
+storm you know. If you must be personal and ornithological, I should
+say GRANDOLPH's appearance on the scene is more reminiscent of the
+vulture; a little hasty in his appearance perhaps, but that is none
+the less significant."
+
+_Business done._--Practically none, and so home to dinner at twenty
+minutes to eight.
+
+_Thursday Night._--Prince ARTHUR explained provisions of
+long-looked-for Local Government scheme. A remarkable, unexampled,
+scene. House crowded on every Bench, with Duke of DEVONSHIRE looking
+down from Peers' Gallery, thanking Heaven he is out of it. Prince
+ARTHUR's manner in introducing the measure in keeping with the strange
+surroundings. Might reasonably have been expected that he would have
+been at pains to recommend the Bill to acceptance of House. Not a
+bit of it. If people insisted upon regarding it as the most important
+business of Session, Prince ARTHUR couldn't help it. But he certainly
+would not foster the delusion. In its potentiality of beneficent
+effect, the Bill nothing in comparison with the Coercion Act or the
+Light Railways Act.
+
+"A poor thing," he said, in effect, and did not add, "but mine own."
+
+If it was not his, certainly no one else would own it. Irish Members
+received it with jeers. JOHN MORLEY denounced it as a monstrous
+imposture. SQUIRE OF MALWOOD benignantly affected to regard it as a
+little joke with which Ministers designed to vary a dull Session.
+But a joke may be carried too far; better drop this now, and go to
+business.
+
+Oddly enough, the storm of contumely had effect of inspiring Prince
+ARTHUR with new affection for his unwelcomed offspring, adding to the
+strength of his evidently new conviction that the proposed expedient
+was sound, and, if accepted, would prove efficacious.
+
+"And what do _you_ think of the Tory scheme of Home Rule," I asked
+JUSTIN MCCARTHY, when it was all over.
+
+"_Timeo Danaos, et dona ferentes_," he said, dropping into his native
+Celtic speech. "But in this case there is no room for apprehension.
+BALFOUR may leave this wooden horse outside the gates for a month, and
+the Trojans wouldn't touch it with a pair of tongs."
+
+Prince ARTHUR grew more confident as the clouds gathered.
+
+"I see very well," he said, "if I'm to stable this horse in the Home
+Rule Troy, I must drag it all the way myself. I shall get no help
+from either section of the garrison. But it's got to be done, and
+I'll buckle-to. Once through, it will settle the more than ten years'
+siege."
+
+_Business done._--Prince ARTHUR left tugging away at his wooden horse.
+
+_Friday Night._--House of Lords almost deserted. HALSBURY punctual in
+his place, making most of opportunities on Woolsack whilst they yet
+remain.
+
+"Here to-day and gone to-morrow, TOBY," he remarked, with forced
+gaiety; "but, when I hand in the Seals of Office, I shall at least
+have the serene assurance to cheer me in my retirement that the whole
+of my family, including collateral branches, have been provided for."
+
+Amongst the prevailing dolour, the MARKISS in high spirits.
+
+"Things not looking well in the Commons or the country, I admit," he
+says; "but all is not lost yet. I have still a card to play, and I
+believe it will score the trick. We shall presently have to go to the
+country, and fight a confident Opposition. Successful Foreign Policy
+is played out. Free Education has brought us no support; trifling
+with Home Rule in Ireland will bring us enemies. Am convinced that
+the thing to go to the country on is the fog. MIDDLETON's our man.
+Been thinking over it for a week. See it now; shall take up question
+of London fog; devise some means of battling with it; and then let
+the worst come. A Government that has fought the fog will at least
+carry London, and, London ours, we shall be able to stem the tide of
+anarchy."
+
+_Business done_.--The MARKISS takes a great resolution.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "THE HUNTING OF THE HARCOURT."
+
+_(According to Fancy Sketch by "Observer" in the "Times.") "O where
+and O where is our Harcourt Laddie gone?"_]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PADDYWHACK AND DR. BIRCH.--Everyone knows what "the Assisted Education
+(Ireland) Bill" is. Why should not an Assisted Education (England)
+Bill be brought in to enable public school-boys to secure, without
+payment of any additional fee beyond that included for "swishing"
+in the Bill sent home to the parents, the specimen of the legal
+instrument with which their education may have been most helpfully
+assisted?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"BECKY THE SECOND."--Those comparatively few who answered our query
+as to where "the good _Becky_, the very opposite of _Becky_ in _Vanity
+Fair_, was to be found in THACKERAY's works," and have referred us to
+_A Shabby Genteel Story_, are right. The many who hit upon _Rebecca_
+in the burlesque of _Ivanhoe_ mistook the question.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A CORRESPONDENT, signing himself "IGNORAMUS," writes to inquire "The
+address of a Society called 'The London French Polishers.'" He says,
+"I want my French polished up a bit before going to Paris."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"VIVE LA LIBERTE!"
+
+The _Era_ at one time used to enjoy a monopoly of strangely, but
+purely professionally-worded advertisements; but now the _Daily
+Telegraph_ is creeping up and commencing to occupy the _Era's_
+special domain. One day last week in the _D.T._ the following
+notice appeared:--"Mr. CHARLES SUGDEN at liberty.--Address, &c." "At
+Liberty!" How will this sound to the uninitiated millions? Taking for
+granted that the readers, whose name is Legion, know perfectly well
+who and what Mr. CHARLES SUGDEN is, having a lively recollection
+of this talented actor as among the best representatives of bad
+characters (excepting perhaps that of _William of Orange_, which was
+Mr. SUGDEN's _chef d'oeuvre_, and about whose character there are
+strong differences of opinion), will they not unnaturally be led
+to inquire how, why, when and wherefore Mr. SUGDEN ever came to be
+deprived of his liberty, and under what circumstances he has been
+restored to it, or it to him? "At Liberty!" It has a grand and
+glorious sound! This distinguished Thespian was never an "hereditary
+bondsman," then why not always "at liberty"? But, be this as it may,
+once more "the Rover is free!" SUGDEN is a name honourable behind and
+before the foot-lights. In the Courts of Law it is a Legal Light, and
+among Gas Companies the Sugden Burner is, we believe, justly famous.
+Whatever the announcement may or may not mean, all sons of Liberty
+will rejoice that this eccentric comedian is once more free, and on
+the stage he will be again most welcome.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Are you staying in town?" "No," answered Mrs. R.; "I'm going _au
+contraire_." Which, she subsequently explained, was French for going
+into the country.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FANCY PORTRAIT.
+
+GENERAL _BOOM_BASTES.
+
+_Solo and Chorus._
+
+AIR--"_Piff! Paff! Pouf!" from "La Grande Duchosse."_
+
+ "ET PUFF! PUFF! PUFF!
+ ET TARA PARA POUM!
+ JE SUIS, MOI, LE GENERAL BOOM! BOOM!"
+
+ [_Repeats it ad lib._]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ON RELIGIOUS CYMBALISM.
+
+The Salvationist Bands which perform in and out of London--(would
+that they were restricted as the Moore and Burgess Minstrels restrict
+themselves to one hall, never or "hardly ever," performing out
+of London!)--everywhere and anywhere without respecting illness,
+or the hours of public worship in our Churches and Chapels, or
+the necessities of repose, show thereby a distinct want of that
+consideration for the feelings of their fellow-citizens which simple
+Christian folk call Charity. These Booth performers--which designation
+savours suggestively of Mountebanks--would do well to play their
+peculiar music and sing their peculiar hymns within the four walls
+of their own places of worship, employing the intervals essential
+for gaining of wind and for rest of muscle in meditating, perhaps
+breathlessly, on the inspired Pauline teaching which will inform them
+that even the works of an Apostle, if he have not charity, will be as
+"sounding brass and tinkling cymbals," making indeed a great noise in
+the world, but as one WILLIAM SHAKSPEARE has said, being mere "sound
+and fury signifying nothing." "Liberty of Worship" by all means,
+but not such Liberty for any one particular form of worship which,
+interfering with the freedom of others, speedily degenerates into
+fanatical licence, and so becomes a nuisance as intolerant as it is
+intolerable.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANGLO-AMERICAN FRENCH.--A new word must be added to our French
+dictionaries. In _Le Figaro_ for Feb. 15, in an article on HECTOR
+MALOT, occurs this expression, "_en ce temps de puffisme litteraire_."
+In English we have had the word and the thing too, since the time of
+SHERIDAN's _Critic_, but is any student of French journalism familiar
+with it in the Parisian newspapers?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FANCY BALL.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ You came as GRETCHEN, hair of gold
+ And face so exquisitely sweet,
+ That I, like FAUST, had _certes_ sold
+ Myself, to win you, MARGUERITE.
+ Each plait enmeshed my struggling heart,
+ That wildly beat against my will;
+ And though at last we had to part,
+ In Dreamland I could see you still.
+
+ Another night, with tresses dark,
+ And kirtle strewn with _fleurs-de-lys_,
+ You came a flashing JOAN OF ARC,
+ Destructive of my bosom's peace.
+ The sword was girt upon your hip,
+ And thine the Maid's heroic glance;
+ I seemed to hear upon your lip,
+ The watchword of her life, "For France!"
+
+ Anon I saw thee as the Queen
+ Who held so many hearts in fee;
+ But MARY STUART scarce had been,
+ Methinks, so beautiful as thee.
+ I fain had gone and splintered lance,
+ As in the old days in our realm;
+ To win a kind approving glance,
+ And wear your glove upon my helm.
+
+ What, stately EDITH! Lives there yet
+ The lady of that royal line,
+ The peerless proud Plantagenet,
+ Will KENNETH's great emprise be mine?
+ We saw how high his hopes could soar;
+ We know the guerdon that he won.
+ Shall I find favour, as of yore
+ Did DAVID, Earl of Huntingdon?
+
+ 'Tis certain, in whatever guise
+ You come, as heroine of song
+ Or story, to my faithful eyes
+ You shine the fairest of the throng.
+ However fanciful you be,
+ Whatever fancy dress befalls;
+ My fancy paints you fancy-free,
+ To fancy me at Fancy Balls!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE REAL NINE POINTS OF THE LAW.--Costs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE UNOBSERVED OF ONE "OBSERVER."
+
+From the account given by "OBSERVER" in the _Times_, it might be
+inferred that "HARCOURT! HARCOURT!" was shouted all over the House,
+in the lobbies, through the smoking-room, in the library, through
+the cellars, in fact, everywhere within the sacred precincts, on
+one memorable night, while at that very moment the wily Sir WILLIAM,
+tucked comfortably up in his little bed, was murmuring softly to
+himself, "HARCOURT! indeed! '_Ha! not caught_,' more likely!" and
+so sweetly fell asleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. R. read aloud from the latest Report of "B. and F. Bible
+Society," "One cannot help thinking of the glorious field of labour
+which lies open here before the Colporteur, and of the pleasant way
+in which his labours are appreciated by all." But the worthy lady
+pronounced colporteur as coalporter, and so on hearing from a
+friend that "the Coalporters were on strike," Mrs. R. could not help
+exclaiming, "Dear! how ungrateful of them, when they were being 'so
+much appreciated by all!'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE WESTMINSTER WAX-WORK SHOW FOR THE SESSION 1892.
+ROOM 2.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+In _Tess of the D'Urbevilles_ (published by Messrs. OSGOOD, MCILVAINE
+& CO.), Mr. THOMAS HARDY has given us a striking work of fiction,
+bold in design, and elaborate in finish. The characters, with one
+exception, are as true to life as are his graphic descriptions of
+nature's own scenery; true that is to the types of such rural life as
+he professes to represent,--the life led in our Christian country by
+thousands and thousands of genuine Pagans, superstitious Boeotians,
+with whom the schoolmaster can do but little, and the parson still
+less. As to the clergymen who appear in this story, two of them are
+priggishly academic, a third is a comfortable antiquarian, and the
+fourth unacquainted with even the A.B.C. of his own pastoral theology.
+
+[Illustration: A BRIGHT PARTICULAR STAR IN THE MILKY WAY.
+
+Showing how an Angel without wings played on the harp to Milkmaid Tess
+of the Tubbyveals, who was so proud of her calves.]
+
+Since THACKERAY's _Captain Costigan_, and TOM ROBERTSON's dramatic
+variation of him as _Eccles_ in _Caste_, no more original type of the
+besotted, no-working working-man, has been given us ("at least, as far
+as I am aware," interpolates the Baron, with a possible reservation)
+than _Tess's_ father, _Durbeyfield_. His foolish wife, _Joan_, kindly
+in a way, a fair housewife and helpmate, yet deficient in moral sense,
+is another admirably-drawn character.
+
+The only blot on this otherwise excellent work is the absurdly
+melodramatic character of that "villain of the deepest dye," _Alec
+D'Urbeville_, who would be thoroughly in his element in an Adelphi
+Drama of the most approved type, ancient or modern. He is just the
+sort of stage-scoundrel who from time to time seeks to take some mean
+advantage of a heroine in distress, on which occasions said heroine
+(of Adelphi Drama) will request him to "unhand her," or to "stand
+aside and let her pass;" whereupon the dastardly ruffian retaliates
+with a diabolical sneer of fiendish malice, his eyes ablaze with
+passion, as, making his melodramatic exit at the O.P. wing, he growls,
+"Aha! a day will come!" or "She must and shall be mine!" or, if
+not making his exit, but remaining in centre of stage to assist in
+forming a picture, he exclaims, with fiendish glee, "Now, pretty one,
+you are in my power!" and so forth. 'Tis a great pity that such a
+penny-plain-and-two-pence-coloured scoundrel should have been allowed
+so strong a part among Mr. HARDY's excellent and unconventional
+_dramatis personae_. Even the very, very strong ejaculations wherein
+this bold bad man indulges on the slightest provocation belong to the
+most antiquated vocabulary of theatrical ruffianism. However, there
+he is, and all the perfumes of the Vale of Blackmoor will not suffice
+for dispelling the strong odour of the footlights which pervades
+every scene where this unconscionable scoundrel makes his appearance.
+That he is ultimately disposed of by being stuck to the heart with
+the carving-knife that had been brought in for cold-beef slicing at
+breakfast, is some satisfaction. But far be it from the Baron to give
+more than this hint in anticipation of the tragic _denoument_. Some
+might accuse Mr. THOMAS HARDY of foolhardiness in so boldly telling
+ugly truths about the Pagan Phyllises and Corydons of our dear old
+Christian England; but we, his readers, have the author's word for
+the truth of what he has written, as "the fortunes of _Tess of the
+D'Urbevilles, a Pure Woman_," are "faithfully presented," by THOMAS
+HARDY, and so his honour is pledged to the truth of this story which
+his powers of narration have made so fascinating to a host of readers
+besides the one who is a host in himself, namely,
+
+THE BARON DE BOOK-WORMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUSTICE FOR JUSTICE!
+
+ SCENE--_A Court of Justice. Prisoner, a young man of
+ eighteen, in the dock, weeping bitterly. His Uncle stands
+ before him, and occasionally offers him smelling salts.
+ General commiseration amongst the spectators, many of whom
+ are ladies armed with opera-glasses. Police Constable under
+ cross-examination._
+
+_Counsel for the Defence._ And so, Constable, you had actually the
+heart to read the warrant to the Prisoner?
+
+_Witness._ I did, Sir, in the execution of my duty.
+
+_Coun. for the Def._ (_scornfully_). Duty! and to this he said
+nothing?
+
+_Wit._ (_in a low tone_). Nothing, Sir--nothing!
+
+_Coun. for the Def._ And I am not surprised! He might well
+say nothing to such an announcement! HE, a Gentleman by
+birth--education--everything--to be accused of forgery! It is
+_too_ cruel!
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch_ (_courteously but firmly_). I do not wish to
+control the management of your case, Mr. MCSLANGER, but the time
+for you to address the Jury has not yet arrived.
+
+_Coun. for Def._ (_submissive but sulky_). As your Lordship pleases.
+
+ [_Resumes his seat._
+
+_Usher_ (_calling_). Admiral CUTTERMAN!
+
+_Admiral_ (_in a low tone_). Here!
+
+ [_He leaves the Prisoner, first handing him the smelling
+ salts, and enters the Witness Box._
+
+_Council for the Prosecution_ (_after the Witness has been sworn_).
+I think you are here on subpoena served by the Treasury.
+
+_Witness_ (_with a glance of sadness at the Dock_). Had I not been
+summoned to be present by those in authority, not the entreaties of
+magicians would have brought me here!
+
+_Coun. for the Pros._ I take it you are an unwilling Witness?
+
+_Witness_ (_with difficulty suppressing acute emotion_). A most, a
+very most unwilling Witness!
+
+_Coun. for the Def._ (_scornfully_). Unwilling!
+
+_Coun. for the Pros._ (_in a tone of remonstrance_). I really must beg
+my learned friend to refrain from disturbing the proceedings. These
+constant interruptions are most annoying.
+
+_Coun. for the Def._ (_with force and violence_). I cannot
+sufficiently express my indignation--
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch_ (_sharply_). Then do not make the attempt.
+
+_Coun. for the Def._ (_surlily_). As your Lordship pleases.
+[_Subsides._
+
+_Coun. for the Pros._ But, in spite of being an unwilling Witness, you
+undoubtedly saw the Prisoner forge your name?
+
+_Witness_ (_with his handkerchief to his eyes_). Alas! I did!
+
+ [_A pause, during which everyone regains equanimity._
+
+_Coun. for Def._ (_on renewal of proceedings_). And so you are the
+Uncle of the Prisoner?
+
+_Witness_ (_sadly_). Yes, I am.
+
+_Coun. for Def._ Still you are here, and are pushing that poor lad to
+the prison-door! (_Prisoner snivels._) Yes, you are dealing him (one
+of your own flesh and blood) a never-to-be-recalled injury!
+
+_Witness_ (_plucking up spirit_). Only my duty, Sir. I obey only my
+duty!
+
+_Coun. for Def._ Your duty! Why, man, how can it be your duty?
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch_ (_seriously_). Again I must interpose. (_To_
+Counsel.) Mr. MCSLANGER, I must once more remind you that your
+business at present is to ask questions, not to make speeches.
+
+_Coun. for Def._ But, my Lord, the task is a difficult one.
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch._ If you find it beyond your powers, no doubt some
+of your colleagues will come willingly to your assistance.
+
+_Coun. for Def._ No, my Lord, I do not mean what your Lordship means.
+I am quite capable of performing the duties it has been my pleasure
+and pride to accept.
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch_ (_wearily_). Pray let us get on?
+
+_Coun. for Def._ Do you not think it a grossly cruel and revolting
+thing that a man should give evidence against his near relative?
+
+_Witness_ (_greatly agitated_). My Lord, I appeal to you, is it fair
+that I should be treated in this fashion?
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch_ (_emphatically_). No, it is not! You are here,
+Sir, in performance of a solemn duty--to assist the ends of justice in
+the punishment, and consequently prevention, of crime. It is not right
+that in the witness-box you should be badgered and insulted as if you
+were worthy of the dock! One can feel some sympathy with the
+relatives of the prisoner, because he appears to have had respectable
+surroundings. But if he is convicted of forgery, it will be his own
+fault! I shall accept the verdict as a proof that education and birth
+are not safeguards to prevent crime. And as for you, Sir (_turning
+angrily to_ Coun. for Def.), let me tell you that you degrade your
+office when you make the wig and the gown the shield of the brute and
+the bully. Let us have no more of it!
+
+_Coun. for Def._ (_subdued but depressed_). As your Lordship pleases.
+
+_Mr. Justice Punch._ It does so please me, and I think that it will
+equally please all my learned brothers who sit in Royal Courts
+to follow my example! It is time that the Witness, as well as the
+accused, received proper protection. I hope my words will be taken to
+heart in another place!
+
+ [_The Scene closes in on his Lordship's suggestion._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+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, Vol.
+102, February 27, 1892, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
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