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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 98,
+March 22, 1890, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 98, March 22, 1890
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 7, 2009 [EBook #30414]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH-CHARIVARI, MARCH 22, 1890 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Neville Allen, Malcolm Farmer and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PUNCH,
+
+ OR, THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+ VOLUME 98.
+
+ MARCH 22, 1890.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: MAXIMS FOR THE BAR. No. II.
+
+"Always laugh at the Judge's jokes. It is not upon such an occasion that
+his Lordship observes that he _will_ NOT have the Court turned into a
+theatre."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUSTISS FOR THE PORE.
+
+I've jest been told another staggerer. Well, it seems then that, in one
+of the werry largest and werry poppularest of all the Citty Parishes,
+sum grand old Cristian Patriots of the holden times left lots of money,
+when they was ded, and didn't want it no more, to be given to the Pore
+of the Parish, for warious good and charitable hobjecs, such as for
+rewarding good and respectabel Female Servants as managed to keep their
+places for at least four years, in despite of rampageous Marsters, and
+crustaceous Missuses; also for selling Coles to werry Pore Peeple at
+sumthink like four pence per hundredweight, be the reglar price what it
+may; also for paying what's called, I think, premeums for putting Pore
+Boys or Pore Gals as aprentisses to warious trades, so as to lern and
+laber truly to get a good living when they growd up, insted of loafing
+about in dirt and hignorence; likewise for allowing little pensions to
+poor old women as is a striving all their mite and main to keep
+themselves out of the hated Workhouse; and there are seweral other
+similar good purposes as the good Citizens of old left their money for,
+and hundreds if not thowsands of pore but honest men and women has had
+good cause to be grateful to 'em for their kind and pious thortfulness.
+
+Well, I hardly xpecs to be bleeved when I says, that a law has been
+passed that allows sutten werry respectabel but werry hignerant Gents,
+called Charity Commissioners, to sweep away ewerry one of those truly
+charitable hinstitutions, and to make use of all this money somewheres
+else, and for sum other objecs, and for sum other peeple!
+
+I ain't so werry much supprized as I ort to be, to learn that the ouse
+of Commons--ouse of "Short Commons," I shud call 'em--has passed this
+most wicked Law, _cos werry pore peeple ain't got no votes_; but I do
+confess as I am supprised at the most respectabel and harrystocrattick
+House of Lords a condesendin not merely to rob a pore man of his Beer,
+but to rob a poor Made Servant of her 2 Ginneys reward for behaviour
+like a Angel for four long weary years in the same place, be it a good
+'un or a werry ard 'un, and to purwent a lot of pore hard working Men
+and Women from getting their little stock of Coles in at about a quarter
+of the reglar price! In course it ain't to be supposed as Washupfool
+Books and Honnerabel Markisses can know or care much about the price of
+Coals, altho there is one Most Honnerabel Markis, from whom I bort a
+hole Tun larst year at rayther a high figger, who coud have told em, and
+shood have told em all about it, tho' praps he's agin cheap Coles on
+principal. And besides all this, it won't I shood think, be a werry
+plezzant thort to come across a Noble Dook's or a Wirtuous Wiscount's
+mind--if such eminent swells has em, like the rest on us--when they sees
+a lot of dirty raggid boys and gals a loafing about the streets, to
+think that if the money that was left hundreds of years ago by good men,
+had been still used _as it was ordered to be used_, and has been used
+for sentrys, these same raggid boys and gals wood have bin a learning of
+some useful trade by which they might have hearnd a desent living.
+
+In course I can hear, with my mind's ear, as _Amlet_ says, my thowsends
+of simperthising readers shouting out, "What's the use of your crying
+over spilt milk?" Well, none, of course, but I happens to have herd that
+there's still _jest one chance left_. It seems that there is what's
+called, I think, "_a appeal_" to sum werry heminent Swells called "the
+Lords of the uncommon Counsel on Eddication," and the kind-hearted
+Church Wardens, as I has before eluded to, means to make one; and ewery
+kind-hearted Cristian Man and Woman as reads my truthful statement, and
+can feel, as me, and Lords, and Ladies as well, can, and ort to, and
+must feel, will wish 'em thurrur suksess in their good, and kind, and
+mussiful atemt to hobtane justiss for them as carnt no hows obtane it
+for theirselves.
+
+ ROBERT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOW WE DO BUSINESS NOW.
+
+BEAR COURT CHAMBERS, BULL LANE, E.C.
+
+CIRCULAR 1059.
+
+TELEGRAPHIC ADDRESS--SPIDER. TELEPHONE NUMBER--BILLION.
+
+MY DEAR SIR,--Now is _the_ time to remit to me for the forthcoming big
+movements I intend to make during the current Month. If my last Circular
+proved true down to the very last letter, this one will be ten times
+truer. What did I say last month? I said there would be a big rise in
+Boomerang Rails, which were then at 11 3/4. In 57 1/2 hours after my
+Circular was issued they had risen to 110-7/16, and many of my clients
+made thousands of pounds. One of them actually making the magnificent
+sum of L27,876 11s. 4 1/4_d._ I love to be accurate, so I give the exact
+amount.
+
+Now is the time, I repeat. No one out of the millions of clients, from
+an Exalted Lady, whom delicacy forbids me to name, down to the junior
+waiter at the Pomona, ever lost by coming to me. I also advised, and I
+repeat it this month,
+
+CHUCKSTER TOLL BAR BINKSES.
+
+They were hardly quoted on the Stock Exchange--hardly known even--when I
+took them up on the 1st of April last year. Where are they now? At 119!
+And they will move on to 219 before the year ends. I have means of
+information possessed by none besides me. I have a wire of my own laid
+on to every Embassy house on the Continent; every _attache_, every
+dragoman is my correspondent, and more than one Crowned Head has
+honoured me with the secrets of his last Council, or of his resolves on
+War or Peace. I myself am a Power. I can make and unmake and ruin homes
+as well as any Czar or Emperor.
+
+But I bind the clients who trust me with bands of iron.
+
+Again I say buy
+
+CHUCKSTER TOLL BAR BINKSES.
+
+Remit the necessary Cover to me at once. Small sums combined make large
+ones, and you cannot be in too soon. Five-pence (a sum you would throw
+at a crossing-sweeper) covers Five Pounds. Here is my scale:--
+
+ L1 covers L1000.
+ L5 " L5000.
+ L20 " L200,000.
+
+But send me whatever you like, and it will prove the most important act
+of your life; one you will never forget.
+
+Again I say buy
+
+CHUCKSTER TOLL BAR BINKSES.
+
+There is fascination in their very name. Don't do the thing weakly. Act
+on the advice of that great man BARRY LYNDON, and speculate grandly.
+Take the history of one out of thousands of fortunes made by me for
+others:--
+
+A BANK CLERK, hard up, desperately pressed by his duns, had received a
+small remittance from his father, a struggling Clergyman. The sum
+amounted to L50, just enough to pay the young fellow's bills, and leave
+him a paltry sovereign. Do you think he was such a fool as to have read
+my Circular in vain? He very wisely brought the money to me. I bought
+Boomerangs at 11 3/4. In 57 1/2 hours that young man was a _millionnaire_.
+He has magnificent chambers on the Embankment; shows himself in the Row at
+the present time; would not look at a cigar under half-a-crown; and has
+not entirely forgotten the claims of his family, for to my knowledge he
+has remitted several pounds to his younger brothers.--Again I say,
+
+BUY BOOMERANGS OR CHUCKSTERS.
+
+One Word of Caution, and I conclude Circular 1059. BE VERY CAUTIOUS OF
+SOME PEOPLE I KNOW. Once trust yourself to them, and it is all
+U.P.--Wire immediately (_and send the necessary cover_) to
+
+ Yours truly,
+
+ ZACH. SPYDUR.
+
+P.S.--When once you have tasted the joys of speculation, you will think
+and care for nothing else. The click of the Tape Machine is music to
+you. I have one going all night in my bed-room.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SUGGESTION FOR ADVERTISEMENT OF ST. JAMES'S THEATRE.--"_As You Like
+It_",--come and see it!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: MADAME DIOGENES.]
+
+_Diogenes._ What are these better possessions you speak of?
+
+_Krates._ Wisdom, self-sufficiency, truth, plain-speaking, freedom.
+
+LUCIAN'S _Dialogues of the Dead_.
+
+
+ Ah! Madame La France, after trials all round
+ Of great Chiefs and their squabbling political progenies,
+ Like him of Sinope, at last you are found
+ With lantern in hand, a true Lady Diogenes.
+ The precinct is dark, and seems growing still dimmer,
+ Your wandering light shows a devious glimmer.
+
+ A right Honest Man? He was scarce in the Courts.
+ He seems very nearly as scarce in the Caucuses.
+ You've had leaders of late of all sizes and sorts,
+ And the gloom of the outlook is utter as Orcus's.
+ Imperial, Royalist, Red Flag or White,
+ Not one of them leads La Belle France to the light.
+
+ Wisdom, truth and plain-speaking? Ah, where are they found?
+ As scarce in these days as is genuine freedom!
+ They all prate of Honour, yet Honour all round
+ They'll sell for the first mess of pottage from Edom.
+ Well, Madame, _Punch_ wishes you luck with your lantern,
+ And up, soon or late, may a true Honest Man turn!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STANZAS TO RHUBARB.
+
+(_By The O'Greedy._)
+
+ O bright new-comer, I have seen,
+ I see thee, and rejoice;
+ Though what the coster-man may mean
+ I judge not, by his voice.
+ I see thee, and to either eye
+ The tears unbidden start;
+ O rhubarb! shall I call thee pie,
+ Or art thou truly tart?
+
+ I was not wont thy charms to see
+ When childhood stubborn stood
+ Fix'd in the faith, that thou must be
+ Too wholesome to be good.
+ Just as we loved the cloying jam,
+ By no effects dismay'd,
+ Regarding as a bitter sham
+ The honest marmalade.
+
+ When daffodillies deck the shops,
+ And hyacinths indoors
+ Recall the flavour of the drops
+ We used to suck by scores
+ (Pear-drops they were,--a subtle blend
+ Of hyacinthine smell,
+ And the banana's blackest end,--
+ We loved them, and were well);
+
+ When chrysalis-buds are folded thick,
+ And crocuses awake,
+ And, like celestial almonds, stick
+ In Flora's tipsy-cake;
+ Before the crews are on the Thames,
+ The swallows on the wing,
+ The radiant rhubarb-bundle flames,
+ The lictor-rod of Spring.
+
+ Still, still reluctant Winter keeps
+ Some chill surprise in store,
+ And Spring through frosty curtain peeps
+ On snowdrifts at her door;
+ The full moon smites the leafless trees,
+ So full, it bursts with light,
+ Till the sharp shadows seem to freeze
+ Along the highway white.
+
+ Yet the keen wind has heard the song
+ Of summer far away.
+ And, though he's got the music wrong,
+ We know what he would say.
+ For in the vegetable cart
+ Thy radiant stalks we spy.
+ O rhubarb, should we call thee tart,
+ Or art thou merely pie?
+
+ And why not so? The cushat dove
+ To such a shrine we trust,
+ Though in dumb protest she will shove
+ Her tootsies through the crust;
+ And larks, that sing at Heaven's gate
+ When April clouds are high,
+ Not seldom gain the gourmet's plate
+ Through portals of the pie.
+
+ So thou, sweet harbinger of Spring,
+ Gules of her blazon'd field,
+ If in a pie thy praise we sing,
+ To worthy fate wilt yield.
+ Enough! I sing; let others eat:
+ Be mine the poet's lot.
+ The thought of thee is all too sweet--
+ The taste of thee is not.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: NO FEAR FOR THE CONSCIENCE CLAUSE.
+
+_Priest_ (_teaching Catechism in Catholic School_). "NOW, SAUNDERS,
+REPEAT THE TEN----" _All the other Boys._ "PLEASE, FATHER, THIS 'ERE
+BOY'S A PRO'S'TANT!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I'LL CALL THEE HAMLET."
+
+Mr. BENSON, the enterprising young Lessee of the Globe Theatre, on two
+evenings of the week affords a spectacle of the greatest possible
+interest to every Shakspearian student. His _Hamlet_ is rather given to
+noisy declamation when greatly moved, but, barring this, seems to be a
+thoroughly good-natured harmless creature, who, as fond of dabbling in
+private theatricals, would probably be hailed as an acquisition at the
+Meistersingers Club and cognate institutions. The innovations introduced
+into the action relieve the gloom of the Tragedy. Take for instance, the
+treatment of _Ophelia_, which is full of quiet humour. That she should
+look as old as _Hamlet's_ Mother, is of course, accidental, and is
+purely attributable to the Globe _Gertrude_ being exceptionally comely
+and youthful, still it has a very quaint effect. But the idea of the
+unfortunate maid, after she has committed suicide, being carried _a la_
+GUY FAUX into the throne-room with a sort of "See what we have found"
+air, is broadly comic. The funeral with its "maimed rites," is also very
+funny. Apparently, the Bishop (whose garb, by the way, seems to be a
+compromise between an eccentric Jewish Rabbi and that of a decidedly
+demented Roman Catholic Priest) has "contracted" for the procession,
+with the result of collecting together a heterogeneous company,
+consisting of modern High Church curates, a few members of some humorous
+Confraternity, and a sprinkling of other amusing grotesques. But the fun
+reaches its climax, when the body of _Ophelia_ herself is produced in,
+what seemed to me to be, _a hamper_! The above example of what is being
+done twice a week in Newcastle Street, Strand, will show how well worthy
+of the scholar's notice is the present revival of _Hamlet_ at the Globe
+Theatre. As actors, Mr. BENSON'S company are not entirely satisfactory.
+As thinkers, however, they are worthy of the greatest possible respect.
+Under these circumstances, it is to be hoped, that should they
+ultimately, for sufficient reason, decide to give up acting, they will
+yet resolve to continue what they do so well, and, in three words--go on
+thinking. (_Signed_) BENE VESTITUS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+COVENT GARDENING PROSPECTS.--The prospectus of the Italian Opera
+Season lies on _Mr. Punch's_ table; but though this is its attitude,
+there is no reason to doubt the truthfulness of its statements.
+More anon. _En attendant_, we may say that the stage-management,
+in the hands of AUGUSTUS DRURIOLANUS, is a guarantee for the excellence
+of the _mises-en-scene_, of the misses-_en-scene_, and of the
+"hits"-_en-scene_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MODERN TYPES.
+
+(_By Mr. Punch's Own Type-Writer._)
+
+No. V.--THE DILETTANTE.
+
+The Modern Dilettante will have been in boyhood a shorn lamb, for whom
+it was necessary to temper the wind of an English education by a liberal
+admixture of foreign travel. A prolonged course of interrupted studies
+will have filled him with culture, whilst a distaste for serious effort,
+whether mental or physical, and an innate capacity for mastering no
+subject thoroughly will have produced in him that special refinement
+which is to the Dilettante as a trade-stamp to Britannia metal. In
+after-life, he will speak with regretful fondness, and with an accuracy
+which he fails to apply to other matters of his "days" (four in number)
+at a German University, and will submit with cheerfulness to the
+reputation of having drunk deep from the muddy fountains of metaphysical
+speculation, which are as abundant and as ineffective in Germany, as her
+springs of mineral water.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Having passed his period of storm and stress without committing any of
+those follies or indulging in any of those excesses by which the parents
+of ordinary young men are afflicted, he will arrive without reproach at
+the borders of an apparently blameless middle age, and, finding himself
+after the death of his father, in the enjoyment of a settled income of
+considerable size, he will set up in life as an acknowledged amateur of
+all that is truly precious. In order that nothing may be wanting to him
+for the proper pursuit of this calling, he will gather round him a
+little band of boneless enthusiasts, who after paying due devotion to
+themselves, and to one another, will join him in worshipping the dead or
+living nonentities whose laurelled photographs adorn his rooms. He will
+cover his couches with soft silks, his walls will be hung with
+impressionist etchings and engravings of undraped ladies of French
+origin, _terra-cotta_ statuettes principally of the young Apollo, will
+be placed in every corner, and a marble bust of the young AUGUSTUS will
+occupy the place of honour next to the grand piano, on which, will be
+ranged the framed cabinet photographs of interesting young men. Each
+photograph will bear upon it an appropriate inscription, announcing it
+to be, for instance, a gift "From BOBBY to TODDLEKINS." Nothing more is
+necessary for the perfect life of dilettantism, except to settle an
+afternoon for tea, and an evening for music. When this is done the
+Dilettante is complete.
+
+It is curious, however, that although he aims at being considered a
+poet, an artist, a dramatist, and a musical composer, the Dilettante
+rather affects the society of those who are amateurs of imperfect
+development, than of those who have attained fame by professional
+effort. Yet since his nature is tolerant, he does not exclude the latter
+from the scope of his benevolence, and they may occasionally be seen at
+his parties, wondering how so strange a medley of second-rate
+incompetencies can have been gathered together into one room.
+
+It is noticeable, that the Dilettante loves the society of ladies, and
+is not averse to encouraging amongst his intimates the belief, which
+none of them holds though all express it, that he is in reality a
+terrible fellow and much given to the destruction of domestic happiness.
+He finds a sense of rest and security in fancying that he is suspected
+of an intrigue. But it is somewhat remarkable, that the evil tongues
+which make sad havoc of many unwilling reputations are very slow to
+gratify the willing Dilettante in this respect. No Dilettante can be
+considered genuine, unless he expresses a pitying contempt for
+everything that is characteristically English, and for the unfortunate
+English who are imbued with the prejudices of their native land. He
+gives a practical expression to his scorn by quavering in a reedy voice,
+the feeble _chansonnettes_ of an inferior French composer, and by
+issuing a volume of poems in which the laws of English Grammar are
+trampled under foot, and the restrictions of English metre are defied.
+In his lyrical effusions he breathes the passionate desire of a great
+soul for Love that is not of the earth. He aspires to the stars, and
+invokes the memory of dead heroes, his intimates. He sets out to win
+imperishable glory amidst the embattled ranks of his country's foes. He
+lashes the cold and cruel heartlessness of the world with a noble scorn.
+He addresses the skeletons of departed friends with passionate longing.
+He finds that life and its gaudy pleasures are as dust and ashes in the
+mouth.
+
+Having read these efforts to an admiring circle, he betakes himself with
+infinite zest to the discussion of aesthetic tittle-tattle over a cup of
+tea and a toasted bun. "Dear fellow," his friends will say of him at
+such a moment, "he is so etherial; and his eyes, did you observe that
+far-away, rapt look in them?" They will then take pleasure in persuading
+one another without much difficulty, that they are the fine flower of
+created beings.
+
+The Dilettante, moreover, is a constant attendant at the first nights of
+certain theatres. He figures with equal regularity as a large element in
+the society gossip of weekly journals. He is a delicate eater and never
+drinks too much out of the Venetian glasses, which his butler ruthlessly
+breaks after the manner of domestics. There is amongst the inner circle
+of the Dilettanti a jargon, both of voice and of gesture, which passes
+muster as humour, but is unintelligible to the outer world of burly
+Philistines. They dangle hands rather than shake them, and emphasise
+their meaning by delicate finger-taps. Their phrases are distinguished
+by a plaintive cadence which is particularly to be remarked in their
+pronunciation of the word "dear."
+
+At charitable concerts in aristocratic drawing-rooms the Dilettante is
+in great request. On these occasions, he astonishes and delights his
+friends with a new song, of which, he will have composed both the words
+and the music, if he may be believed, whilst he was leaning from his
+casement "watching the procession of the moon-lit clouds." He sometimes
+smokes cigarettelets (a word must be coined to express their size and
+strength), but he never attempts cigars, and loathes the homely pipe. In
+gait and manner he affects a mincing delicacy, by which he seeks to
+impress the thoughtless with a sense of his superior refinement. In
+later life, he is apt to lose his hair, and to disguise the ravages of
+time upon his cheeks by the aid of _rouge_. Yet he deceives nobody, and
+having grown stout and wheezy is eventually carried off by a common cold
+in an odour of _pastilles_. He will be buried in a wicker-work coffin
+covered with lilies, and a rival Dilettante having written a limp and
+limping sonnet to his memory, will take his evening.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+COMIC SLAUGHTER!
+
+(_The Story of the Next Battle, written in advance for Next Month's
+"Powder Magazine," by a Soldier in the Ranks._)
+
+The Victory of Rumtumidity was certainly one of the most amusing things
+I ever saw in my life. We landed at six o'clock in the evening, and
+finding a grog-shop, were soon gone coons. Speaking for myself, I saw
+the colours of the Regiment magnified by twenty! Well, we were ordered
+to march, and off we started, staggering along in fine style. Out came
+the moon, and one of us fell down in a dead faint.
+
+"Suffering from sunstroke!" said the Surgeon, who was a Welsh Irishman.
+"Leave him in the sand, and he will soon come to himself when he finds
+you gone--if he doesn't, the vultures will hasten his movements."
+
+This jest made us all laugh. Our Captain hearing one of us roaring a
+trifle too loud, put his sword through him. Immense!
+
+We marched along to the music of the prisoners, who yelled out bravely
+when they were prodded by the guards set over them.
+
+"Did you see the like!" said TIM O'FLANAGAN (from Edinburgh), who, no
+doubt, would have developed the idea, had not his head at that moment
+been carried off by a cannon-ball. Very comic!
+
+"Now, my lads," said our Captain, who wasn't much of an orator, "look
+here--England expects every man to do his duty; and, if you don't, why
+_I_ am having you all watched, and, as sure as beans is beans, the
+laggards will be bayoneted."
+
+This little speech had the desired effect, especially after it had been
+strengthened by a double ration of grog.
+
+Then came the order to charge. We charged, and killed everyone we saw,
+including our own officers. This simplified matters. A little later the
+whole place was in our hands. Rumtumidity was taken!
+
+Then came the order to bury the dead. But we did more--_we buried the
+living with them_! Oh, how it made us laugh! Then came supper, and we
+amused ourselves by telling to one another our adventures. I was just
+recounting how I had emptied the pockets of a deceased officer,
+when--"whisk!"--up came a cannon-ball and struck me! I was able to say
+nothing more at that time; as, when the cannon-ball had passed, I found
+it had left me defunct! And I have been dead ever since. My companion
+and chum, whose name I must not give without permission, will vouch for
+every word I've said.
+
+(_Signed_) A. MUNCHAUSEN,
+
+_Late Lance-Ensign, the Lincoln Longbowers_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"ENGLISH, YOU KNOW, QUITE ENGLISH."
+
+Perhaps, the good old rule that, "You should never look a gift-horse in
+the mouth," cannot be so rigorously applied to gifts of pictures to the
+Nation as to other things. Nevertheless, Mr. TATE'S munificent proffer
+of his Collection to the National Gallery, is surely too good a thing to
+be missed through matters of mere detail. _Mr. Punch's_ view is--well,
+despite _Touchstone's_ attack on "the very false gallop of verses,"
+there are two things that come most insinuatingly in metre; offers of
+love, and of friendly advice:--
+
+ ENGLISH Art no longer paints
+ Those "squint-eyed Byzantine saints"
+ Mr. ORROCK so disparages.
+ Martyrdoms and Cana Marriages
+ Over-stock our great Art Gallery,
+ Giving ground for ORROCK'S raillery.
+ Scenes in desert dim, or dun stable,
+ Than Green English lanes by CONSTABLE
+ Are less welcome, or brown rocks
+ And grey streams by DAVID COX.
+ Saint Sebastian's death? Far sweeter
+ Sylvan scenes by honest PETER;
+ There's a charm in dear DE WINT
+ Cannot be conveyed in print.
+
+ Verdant landscapes, sea-scapes cool,
+ Painted by the English School.
+ Must be welcome to our British
+ Taste, which is not grim or skittish;
+ Rather Philistine, it may be.
+ Sweet on cornfields and the Baby;
+ Yet of ROMNEY'S grace no spurner,
+ Or the golden dreams of TURNER.
+ Moral? Will a moral, bless us!
+ Comes like that old shirt of NESSUS.
+ Still, here goes! An Art-official
+ Should be genial, but judicial.
+ When an Art-Collection's national,
+ It is obviously rational
+ It should be a bit eclectic,
+ Weeding out the crude or hectic.
+ He who'd have his country's honour,
+ As a liberal Art-donor,
+ Thinks more of his country's fame
+ Than of _his_ particular name.
+ Would you win true reputation
+ As benefactor of the Nation.
+ Trust me 'tis not "special room"
+ Keeps _that_ glory in full bloom.
+ _Punch_ is a plain-speaking chap;
+ Here's his view of things. _Verb. sap._!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+PICTURES IN THE HAYMARKET.--"And there stood the 'tater-man, In the
+midst of all the wet; A vending of his taters in the lonely Haymarket."
+So sang one of the greatest of _Mr. Punch's_ singers, years agone. If he
+had sung in the present day, he would have substituted pictures for
+'taters; for surely this pleasant thorough-fare has become a mart for
+pictures and players rather than potatoes. Look in at TOOTH'S Gallery,
+and you will stay a long while, indeed you will age considerably, and
+may be said to be "long in the TOOTH," before you come out, as you will
+find the exhibition so paletteable. Then having refreshed your eye with
+the spring sunshine--if there happens to be any about--you will turn
+into MCLEAN'S _salon_ and see a marvellous picture of Jaffa, by G.
+BAUERNFEIND, and other works by English and foreign painters. The County
+Council will have to change the title of this street into the A-market,
+"A" standing for Art, of course.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A Fancy Portrait of my Laundress, judging by her
+Handiwork.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GRAND OLD HAT.
+
+ When this old hat was new,
+ ('Tis not so many years,)
+ My followers did not view
+ My course with doubts and fears.
+ CHAMBERLAIN then would praise,
+ And HENRY JAMES was true;
+ Ah! this was in the days
+ When this old hat was new.
+
+ When this old hat was new
+ My head was smaller--yes!
+ Now I'd have much ado
+ To get it on, I guess.
+ The cause I cannot tell,
+ I only know 'tis true;
+ My head has seemed to swell
+ Since this old hat was new.
+
+ Perhaps, as some maintain,
+ My cranium may have grown,
+ Owing to stretch of brain,
+ Or thickening of bone.
+ "The hat has shrunk?" Eh? What?
+ _That_ nonsense will not do!
+ My head _has_ grown, a lot,
+ Since this old hat was new.
+
+ What TYNDALL dares to call,
+ In wrath, my "traitorous" head,
+ Is "growing still," that's all;
+ (Of "MARIAN" this was said)
+ My cranial vertex flat?
+ Pah! Tories may pooh-pooh;
+ I wore a smaller hat
+ When this old hat was new!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NEW BISHOP OF DURHAM.--WESTCOTT and,--no, Bishops don't wear
+them--so His Reverend Lordship will be known as "WESTCOTT and Apron."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ODE ON A BLACK BALL.
+
+(_A Fragment, some way after Addison, picked up in the neighbourhood of
+the Athenaeum Club._)
+
+ What though in solemn silence all
+ Drop in the dark the fatal ball?
+ What though no overt voice or sound
+ Amidst the voting throng be found?
+ In reason's ear they speak of choice,
+ And utter forth a boding voice,
+ Saying, as silent they recline,
+ "Your company we must decline!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PIPING TIMES FOR THE EMPIRE.--The bagpipes were not heard playing, "_The
+Campbells are Coming_," at the relief of Lucknow. Why? Because the
+regiment hadn't got any. The regimental bagpipes were first introduced
+by Mr. BOUCICAULT, in his drama of _The Relief of Lucknow_ (that was the
+subject, whatever the name might have been) at Astley's. Miss AMY
+ROSELLE'S recitation of the thrilling story specially written for her by
+Mr. SAVILE CLARKE is most dramatic, and thrills the audience at the
+Empire. The journalistic discussion, as to the pipes, comes in very
+appropriately, and will assist to raise the wind and pay the piper. This
+recitation, is a great "Relief" to the ordinary Music-hall
+entertainments, and the Empire has "Luck now."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"PROPRIA QUAE MARIBUS."
+
+ PENTHESILEA straddling on the pigskin?
+ Surely a male biped need not dwell
+ In a prejudiced pedantic prig's skin,
+ Not to like that prospect passing well.
+ CARLYLE, who scoffed at Man, had deemed it caddish
+ To picture _Woman_ as "a mere forked radish."
+
+ Dear Diana after hounds a riding
+ Like--a clothes-peg on a clothes-line? Nay!
+ Rub out all unnatural laws dividing
+ Sex from sex,--'tis the World's drift to-day.
+ Let ladies mount the 'bus, or Hansom Cab it,
+ But let not custom new banish old Habit.
+
+ Paint, write poems, pose as prandial wit, Ma'am,
+ Perorate upon the public platform;
+ Even in the County Council sit, Ma'am,
+ If Law lets you, and your taste takes that form;
+ But take _Punch's_ tip, and do not straddle;
+ Stick to common-sense and the side-saddle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lines on the Labour Conference.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ The youthful German Emperor may try
+ By Socialistic plans to prop his rule.
+ Some think 'twill all result in a great cry,
+ And little (Berlin) wool.
+ Still, all good souls will wish young WILLIAM luck.
+ The Teutons may not relish Swiss suggestion,
+ But anyhow it shows the Emperor's pluck
+ In handling _Berne_-ing questions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Q._ Shall Privates in uniform be admitted to the stalls and boxes in
+theatres? _A._ Certainly, if covered with "Orders." Private Boxes
+henceforth will be Boxes for Privates.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WEATHER STUDIES.
+
+"ONLY A FACE AT A WINDOW!" | "ONLY A FACE--NOTHING MORE!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"GRANDOLPHO FURIOSO!"
+
+_Mr. Punch loquitur:--_
+
+ "Begone brave army, don't kick up a row!"--
+ GRANDOLPHO mine, it were sheer superfluity
+ For you to _bid_ your forces scatter _now_.
+ The troopers two, of curious incongruity,
+ With the long drummer, and the fifer short,
+ That formed the old stage-army were more numerous
+ Than is your following. You have given us sport
+ In many scenes, but this is hardly humorous.
+
+ The general of ARTAXOMINOUS
+ Was far less terrible than--well, thrasonic.
+ To tear a thing to tatters, shout and "cuss,"
+ In an assembly callous and sardonic,
+ Savours a bit too much of sheer burlesque,
+ Scarce to the level of fine acting rises.
+ The unexpected's piquant, picturesque,
+ But a sound drama is not _all_ surprises.
+
+ Thought you had taken to the "Temperance" line,
+ This looks much more like angry inebriety.
+ A little freakishness is vastly fine,
+ But even of surprise there comes satiety.
+ If you and FUSBOS JENNINGS can't agree,
+ There seems small prospect of a growing Party,
+ _Verb. sap._ They thought BOMBASTES dead, you see.
+ But the _finale_ found him up, and hearty!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "GRANDOLPHO FURIOSO!"
+
+MR. PUNCH. "HULLO, GRANDOLPH! I THOUGHT YOU'D TAKEN TO
+'_TEMPERANCE_'!!"]
+OUT OF IT.--The Amazons who doff the skirt, and don the, the--other
+things, can never be considered in Rotten Row as "_habituees_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HE CAN'T ALP IT!
+
+ "My only desire is to meet you on the terms on which long ago we
+ stood when you gallantly offered to take me up the
+ Matterhorn."--_Mr. Gladstone's Letter to Professor Tyndall._
+
+Mr. GLADSTONE _and_ Professor TYNDALL _discovered seated on the edge of
+a Crevasse_.
+
+_Mr. Gladstone._ I didn't know a glacier was so frightfully slippery.
+
+_Prof. Tyndall._ Slippery--ha! Like _some_ politicians I might mention!
+
+_Mr. Gladstone._ That last avalanche, too, bowled us over so neatly that
+I feel distinctly limp.
+
+_Prof. Tyndall (severely)._ You should try and avoid this "subserviency
+to outside influences." I always do.
+
+_Mr. Gladstone (ignoring the remark)._ What range is that over there?
+
+_Prof. Tyndall._ The Pennine Alps, stoopid! From their name they would
+seem a suitable residence for a person who scribbles twaddle in
+Magazines--ahem! No personal allusion, of course.
+
+_Mr. Gladstone (gaily)._ Of course not! But isn't it rather dangerous
+sitting here, with that bank of snow just above us? Suppose it came down
+on us!
+
+_Prof. Tyndall._ As the Judges came down on your Parnellite allies, eh?
+Perhaps, as we're getting to some nasty places, we might be tied
+together now.
+
+_Mr. Gladstone (warmly)._ Quite so. A union of hearts, in fact.
+
+[_After a few hours' more climbing, they reach the summit of the
+Matterhorn._
+
+_Prof. Tyndall._ Sorry to leave you, but you see I only promised to take
+you up, not to see you safe down again. Ta, ta! I may as well mention
+that I consider you a "ubiquitous blast-furn----"
+
+[_Disappears suddenly over the edge._
+
+_Mr. Gladstone._ Dear me! what dreadful language! And he appears to have
+cut the rope! He must be a Separatist, after all! If it were PITT, now,
+I should call his conduct rather "base and blackguardly." Perhaps I
+shall meet the "Professor at the Tea-Table"--at Zermatt!
+
+[_Descends cautiously._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BURGLAR'S BACK.[1]
+
+ "Lord ESHER is greatly concerned about the probable condition of a
+ burglar's back after a couple of floggings."--_Times._
+
+AIR--"_Those Evening Bells._"
+
+ The burglar's back, the burglar's back!
+ 'Twill soon be rash a crib to crack.
+ BILL SIKES will sigh for happier times,
+ When "cats" were not the meed of crimes.
+
+ The burglar's back! Lord ESHER pales
+ When thinking of its crimson wales.
+ His feelings will not stand the strain,
+ Of dwelling on the ruffian's pain.
+
+ The brute may "bash," the scoundrel shoot,
+ Hack with his knife, "purr" with his boot;
+ But though he "bash," or "purr," or hack,
+ You must not touch the burglar's back.
+
+ No, let the brutal burglar burgle;
+ Whilst sentiment will calmly gurgle
+ Bland platitudes, but not attack
+ That sacred thing, the burglar's back!
+
+[Footnote: 1 "_The Burglar's Back_"--Is he? then the sooner he's caught
+and sent to penal servitude the better.--ED.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"MAY FARE WORSE!"
+
+_Or, The Difference between Goode and Baird._
+
+ What a sweet little supper!--two fire-eating "pros.,"
+ And a person "of no occupation,"
+ Who got both his eyes blacked and was cut on the nose,
+ Though "there wasn't the least provocation."
+ And they cursed and they throttled, they gouged, and they swore,
+ And they battered and bled, and they tumbled and tore,
+ And they fetched the police, and they rolled down the stair,
+ Did these blue-blooded dwellers in merry Mayfair.
+
+[Illustration: Chancery Practice.]
+
+Mr. ARTHUR COCKBURN will probably not want to see Mr. BAIRD in bed
+again, the penalty being two black eyes (no relation to the two that
+were lovely), and a cut nose. What's the good of being called GOODE if
+you are going to get your eyes gouged out, and be beaten on the head
+with a poker, and, in fact worsted all round? But there, if one
+gentleman is "slightly intoxicated," while another is "undoubtedly
+drunk," and a third is "slightly mixed," there's no knowing what may
+happen. Did GOODE "keep his hair on" when he got hit on the head with a
+poker? What a beautiful picture of genuine Mayfair manners it is! The
+case is still _sub (Punch and) judice_, and Mr. Justice _Punch_ reserves
+his decision.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+_Cassell's Cabinet Portrait Gallery._ In Number One are met together the
+Duke and Duchess of FIFE, SARAH BERNHARDT as _Theodora_, and the
+Archbishop of CANTERBURY, the last very properly looking another way. In
+Vol. II. there is rather a nice one of Mrs. STIRLING and MARY ANDERSON,
+but the photographer ought to have been more careful about the little
+finger of MARY'S right hand. In Vol. III., JAMES PAYN, reading a
+manuscript, with his spectacles up on his forehead, is very good. The
+picture of H.R.H. the Prince, in uniform, is too dark, and his
+expression is severe. Charming and clever Miss MAUD MILLETT is in Part
+IV., followed by the Duke of WESTMINSTER and Mr. LEWIS MORRIS, the Poet
+looking so awe-struck, that he must have been taken by surprise, and
+been "struck like it." Miss ANNA WILLIAMS leads off No. V., and, to
+express it musically, she is accompanied by the Duke of CONNAUGHT. Sir
+JAMES LINTON appears for the Water-colourists. In Part VI. the face of
+Mr. FRANK LOCKWOOD, Q.C., M.P., is full of light and shade, more light
+than shade, fortunately, and it is a really good likeness. The Duchess
+of LEINSTER looks lovely, and Sig. PIATTI uncommonly wise as he guards
+his 'cello.
+
+Neatly and concisely done is Mr. BESANT'S _Captain Cook_, published in
+the MACMILLAN Series of _English Men of Action_. He discovered the
+Society Islands, whence, of course, are obtained our present supply of
+Society Papers. The natives of these Society Islands made great use of
+their Clubs, some of which proved fatal to Captain COOK and his men.
+
+Captain COOK, had he been alive now, would have been among the first to
+appreciate _The Pocket Atlas_, in which the names of the chief places
+are clear enough for all practical purposes. There are seventy-two maps,
+and the publisher bears the honoured name of WALKER, though the map is
+not specially intended for the use of pedestrians.
+
+MACMILLAN & CO.'S cheap edition of CHARLES KINGSLEY'S works is
+deservedly popular; easy to carry, good clean type, so that those who
+ride may read. _Two Years Ago_ is just out. By the way, the same firm's
+CHARLOTTE YONGE and the other KINGSLEY Series, make a noble show in a
+library, on our "noble shelves." "MAC & CO."--_i.e._, the "Two
+MACS"--are to be congratulated; and, that being so, the Baron hereby and
+herewith congratulates them.
+
+ THE BARON DE BOOK-WORMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. G'S. HEAD.--A "DUKE" writing to the _St. James's Gazette_ last
+Thursday, joined in the discussion about Mr. GLADSTONE'S head, and
+observed that hats shrink, and that certain hatters, exceptionally sane,
+whose evidence can be trusted, allowed for the decrease in size. But do
+they allow for this in the bills? Is the decrease there proportionate?
+Considering what Mr. GLADSTONE once was, a Tory of the Tories, and what
+he is now, is it to be wondered at that a considerable change should
+have been going on in Mr. GLADSTONE'S head? Why he is finishing poles
+apart from where he commenced!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE King of the National Picture Donors is henceforth "the Potent TATE."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. PUNCH'S DICTIONARY OF PHRASES.
+
+(_Which will be found useful in explaining certain Conventional Forms of
+Expression. Compiled by Professor Von Hombugh._)
+
+JOURNALISTIC.
+
+"_The Police have a clue._" _Meaning_--"The Police know nothing about
+it, and are doing all they know."
+
+"_An exceptionally experienced Detective has charge of the case, and is
+actively engaged in investigating all matters concerning it_;" _i.e._,
+"A promoted constable in plain clothes is loafing about the neighbouring
+public-houses, and standing drinks, generally without the exercise of
+much discrimination, to unlikely people."
+
+"_A young Woman of prepossessing appearance_;" _i.e._, "A rather showy
+female."
+
+"_The Police are, however, very reticent about the whole affair_;"
+_i.e._, "When ignorance is rife, 'tis folly to give tongue."
+
+"_It is believed that the most important discoveries will result from
+the investigations now in progress_;" _i.e._, "Nothing is known as to
+whether anything is being done: but it finishes off the paragraph, and
+sounds well."
+
+"_I am assured on the best authority, that there is no truth in the
+rumour that H.S.H. the Prince of Katzendlenbogen has been laid up with
+chicken-pox_;" _i.e._, "As there's no news, I may as well invent some,
+for the sake of contradicting it."
+
+"_As everybody knows_;" _i.e._, "I have a certain space to fill, and
+nothing new to say, so I'll tell an ancient story, or bring in
+MACAULAY'S New Zealander."
+
+"_As all the world knows_," "except myself (the writer), who has met
+with the information for the first time in a most valuable book of
+reference."
+
+"_We regret to hear that, &c._;" _i.e._, "Our sorrow is tempered by the
+fact that we are utter strangers to the individual in question, and that
+his or her affliction provides us with a certain amount of 'copy.'"
+
+"_The hall was tastefully decorated_;" _i.e._, "two hired flags and an
+evergreen hoop."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOCIAL.
+
+"_How are you? Haven't seen you for an age!_" _i.e._, "Didn't expect to
+see you, and didn't want to."
+
+"_Not at Home_;" _i.e._, "Doesn't she know that I've got a 'day?' Not
+that I want to see her even _then_!"
+
+"_Of course I should have known it anywhere. I think you've caught the
+likeness most wonderfully!_" _i.e._, "Why the deuce doesn't he tell one
+whom it's meant for?"
+
+"_Small and early_;" _i.e._, "No supper, and something which will count
+as 'a party,' at the least possible cost and trouble."
+
+THEATRICAL.
+
+"_The Management regrets that, owing to previous arrangements, the piece
+must be withdrawn in the height of its popularity_;" _i.e._, "Not
+drawing a shilling, company fearfully expensive, sooner we shut up the
+better."
+
+"_House full! Money turned away nightly_;" _i.e._, Crammed with paper,
+two persons who wanted to pay for pit were refused admission by way of
+advertising.
+
+"_The new Play will probably be produced during the Summer at a West End
+Theatre_;" _i.e._, "The author has had his comedy returned by every
+Manager in London, with the remark, that 'although excellent, it is
+scarcely suited to his present company.'"
+
+PLATFORMULARS.
+
+"_It would ill become me, after the able and eloquent speech of your
+Chairman_;" _i.e._, "What on earth is the name of that retired
+cheesemonger who talked rubbish, and mispronounced my name?"
+
+"_When I look at this splendid meeting_;" _i.e._, "I wonder why those
+back benches are empty. Some bungling on the part of the Secretary, as
+usual."
+
+"_I shall have to return to this subject later on_;" _i.e._, "Can't
+remember anything more at present."
+
+"_If we all work shoulder to shoulder_;" _i.e._, "Must say 'shoulder to
+shoulder,' or 'shoulders to the wheel,' or, 'leave no stone unturned,'
+in every speech."
+
+WORKMEN'S.
+
+"_Well, I don't care if I do!_" _i.e._, "Haven't had a drink for half an
+hour--waiting for you to stand treat this ten minutes past."
+
+"_Ah! he's a Gentleman, he is, every hinch of him!_" _i.e._, He has
+"parted" freely, or "tipped" liberally.
+
+"_He's about as stingy as they make 'em_;" _i.e._, He has declined to be
+abominally overcharged.
+
+"_Could you tell me wot's about the right time, Guv'nor?_" _i.e._,
+"Isn't it about time to send me up some more beer?"
+
+ADVERTISING.
+
+"_A Lady is desirous of recommending_;" _i.e._, "Getting rid of."
+
+"_The Property of a Gentleman going abroad_;" _i.e._, "Mr. BROOKS (of
+Sheffield)."
+
+"_Owner's sole Reason for parting with him is_"--_i.e._, "The one he
+omits to mention." (_To be continued._)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ALL SIXES AND SEVENS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"O RARE 'BEN'!"
+
+In aid of The Actor's Benevolent Fund, the Irving Amateur Dramatic Club
+are going to give a performance of _Henry IV. (Part I.)_, at the Lyceum
+Theatre, Saturday afternoon, March 29, when in consequence of H.R.H. The
+Princess of WALES having accorded her gracious patronage, the Welsh song
+will be sung by Miss ELEANOR REES on the stage, as _Lady Mortimer_,
+which will be a melodious illustration of rhyme and REES-on. The
+Amateurs appearing for the Actors is as it should be. The President of
+the Club is HENRY, not the Fourth, but the First, yclept HENRY IRVING,
+and the Vice, with numberless virtues, is Mr. JUSTIN MCCARTHY, M.P.,
+whom if it be JUSTIN Pater (not JUSTIN MARTYR), we should like to have
+seen in spectacles in the Tavern Scene, as _Francis_ the Drawer,--a
+drawer would have been an immense attraction. If JUSTIN Junior could
+play the other Drawer, the attraction would be doubled. "Sure such a
+pair!" But we must not jest in too Shakspearian a manner. We hope the
+Actors' Benevolent will benefit largely by the acting of the Benevolent
+Amateurs. Let the Benevolent Public too go and see _Henry IV. (Part
+1st)_, and let them "part first."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NOTE (_by One who doesn't pretend to know French_). The Tirard Cabinet
+couldn't go on, because it was too Tirard!!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ARTISTIC POSTPRANDIALISM.
+
+_Painter._ "I HOPE I SHALL HAVE THE PLEASURE OF HEARING YOU PLAY
+TO-NIGHT!"
+
+_Musician._ "ACH, NO! AFTER TINNER, MUSIC IS TISCOSTING! LET US CO ROUND
+AND LOOK AT ZE PUTIFUL BICTURES TOGEZZER--JA?"
+
+_Painter._ "WHAT! _PICTURES!_ AFTER _DINNER_! THE VERY IDEA MAKES ME
+SICK!" [_Exeunt, to play Poker._]]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NEW AMAZON.
+
+ Ride-a-cock horse
+ To Banbury Cross,
+ To see a young Lady
+ A-straddle, o'course.
+ If the new notion
+ Very far goes,
+ What she'll do next
+ Nobody knows.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SPECTACULAR.--How is it that among the guests at the Livery
+Dinner--(ugh! horrid expression! Yet I dare say the dinner wasn't more
+livery than any other City banquet)--of the Spectacle Makers' Company,
+were not to be found AUGUSTUS DRURIOLANUS, quite the best spectacle
+maker in London, and that from among the list of toasts as reported,
+Art, Literature, and the Drama were omitted? Through what spectacles do
+the Spectacle Makers see?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REFLECTION ON THE RECENT VALUABLE DISCOVERY AT CANTERBURY.--If cremation
+had been the practice in 1228 there would have been no remains of
+STEPHEN LANGTON to-day. Without the remains of the Archbishop, is it
+likely that the treasures, historically so valuable, would have been
+permitted to come down to us?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. C. M. WOODFORD has just brought out a book entitled _A Naturalist
+among the Head Hunters_. Ahem! It doesn't sound nice. Is it procurable
+at every hairdresser's?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"BETTERMENT,"--Well-meant.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.
+
+_House of Commons, May 9._--This has been great occasion for Windbag
+SEXTON. Excelled himself, and there is no other point of comparison
+useful or usable. SAUNDERSON, who always takes friendly views of his
+countrymen opposite, pleads that SEXTON'S windbaggism is partly due to
+his birth. In Ireland, he assures me, a mile is longer than in other
+parts of the Empire; and so, kind-hearted Colonel pleads, some allowance
+should be made for SEXTON when he gets on the oratorical tramp. That's
+all very well; but, for a man to talk two hours and three-quarters in a
+so-called Debate, is even more than the national tendency towards
+exaggeration illustrated by the Irish mile will excuse. Why couldn't
+SEXTON have windbagged on some day of last week? Suppose, for example,
+his self-sacrificing friends had made a House for him at a quarter to
+nine on Friday night, and he had then talked for three hours and a
+quarter?--or on Wednesday there was opportunity; whilst openings might
+have been made on Tuesday or Thursday.
+
+"No, TOBY," said SEXTON, when I suggested this in interests of House and
+public time, "you're a well-meaning fellow, but you don't understand
+everything. You see in debate of this kind all principal men stand off
+till the last day. We might have twinkled on several days of last week,
+but we prefer to coruscate on last night. Sure of an audience; Whips
+out; crowds in; excitement everywhere. I and HARCOURT, and CHAMBERLAIN,
+and BALFOUR, all save ourselves for the last night. Can't all speak,
+perhaps, especially if I get on first: but they must take their chance.
+With the Universe waiting and listening for me, other things and other
+people must stand aside. Very serious thing to disappoint the Universe."
+
+So SEXTON, rising at five o'clock, with the windbag conveniently
+disposed under arm, pumped and pumped away for two mortal hours, and an
+odd three-quarters that seemed more than mortal. GRANDOLPH waiting to
+make a speech; ARTHUR BALFOUR longing to be at 'em. Members knowing what
+was in store, "expecting," as SHEEHY said, that "every moment would be
+his next." But SEXTON flowed on for ever, with aggravating pauses, with
+a smile of sublime, unruffled satisfaction, that made the position ten
+times as aggravating as it otherwise would have been. To smile and
+smile, and play such a villanous trick as this on a suffering House was
+worse than most disordered fancy painted.
+
+"If," said ARTHUR BALFOUR, in one of his agonised asides, "the fellow
+did not undisguisedly enjoy such supreme happiness, our lot would be
+more bearable."
+
+"Never mind," said OLD MORALITY. "Bad enough, I admit. But do you know
+why persons are sometimes killed by having a charcoal fire in their
+bedrooms? Because the carbon of burning charcoal unites with the oxygen
+of air, and forms carbonic acid gas, which is a narcotic poison. So it
+is here. SEXTON has got hold of some good points; he is not inapt as a
+speaker; if his inordinate vanity had only permitted him to be satisfied
+with occupying time of House for half an hour, or, say, three-quarters,
+he would have made damaging speech; as it is, he wearies House to death,
+swamps us all and himself in waste of verbiage, and the people he
+attacks escape in the general misery. In other words, his carbon of
+burning vanity, uniting with the oxygen of opportunity, forms a speech
+two hours and three-quarters long; which is a narcotic poison."
+
+Mr. G., with the ardour of youth, and the training of an athlete,
+proposed to himself to hear what SEXTON had to say. Accordingly took up
+convenient seat below Gangway. Stayed there an hour. Then walked back an
+altered man; shattered; aged; almost in a state of coma.
+
+"Well, you ought to have known better," I said, somewhat sharply, having
+no sympathies with these vagaries.
+
+"And I was so well and strong when I entered the House," Mr. G. said,
+wearily. "Quite elate with my correspondence with TYNDALL. Didn't you
+think that a nice turn in the concluding sentence?--'My only desire is
+to meet you on the terms on which, long ago, we stood when, under my
+roof, you gallantly offered to take me up the Matterhorn, _and
+guaranteed my safe return_! Wouldn't trust myself on the Matterhorn with
+TYNDALL now;" and Mr. G., warily shaking his head, walked forth in
+search of rest and refreshment.
+
+_Business done._--Mr. G.'s Amendment to OLD MORALITY'S Resolution on
+Parnell Commission Report negatived by 339 votes against 268.
+
+_Tuesday._--This has been GRANDOLPH'S night. Broke the silence of the
+still young Session with memorable speech; been in diligent attendance
+on Debate; sat through interminable speeches with patience only excelled
+by Mr. G.; sometimes looked as if were about to deliver his soul; but
+succeeded in bottling it up. To-night soul drove out the cork; burst
+the bottle, so to speak.
+
+GRANDOLPH a man of many phases. Tonight presented himself in his highest
+character; a statesman; a champion of constitutional principles at
+whatever expense to prospects and sensibilities of his most revered
+friends on Treasury Bench and elsewhere. Quite a new style of speech for
+GRANDOLPH, testifying to remarkable range of his genius. Nothing
+personal: free from acrimony; inspired with profound, unfeigned,
+reverence for constitutional principles. Here and there a touch of
+pathos as he recalled former times when, as DIZZY said of PEEL on a
+famous occasion, "they had been so proud to follow one who had been so
+proud to lead them."
+
+[Illustration: The Reverberating Colomb.]
+
+Awful splutter in Ministerial circles. A gleam of delight flashed
+through the shadow when it was discovered that JENNINGS had rebelled
+against RANDOLPH'S new revolt. "Ha! ha!" said the REVERBERATING COLOMB,
+after JENNINGS had made his speech, "the army has dismissed its
+general."
+
+This all very well; not here concerned with GRANDOLPH'S relations with
+his Party or his faithful friend; merely note that the speech itself
+lifts GRANDOLPH once more into the very front rank of political
+personages. The Liberal Party cannot ignore nor the Conservatives
+dispense with the man who made that speech.
+
+JOKIM not a particular friend of GRANDOLPH'S. "Leg quite on other boot,"
+as SHEEHY says. But he did the enemy a service to-night. To complete
+GRANDOLPH'S triumph it only required that some Member of the Ministry
+whose ineptitude he had demonstrated should rise and, with loud voice,
+ungainly gestures, drag the Debate down from the heights to which it had
+been lifted, debasing it by personal attacks hoarsely shrieked across
+the table at former friends and colleagues. JOKIM did this amidst
+uproarious cheers from JOHNSTON of Ballykilbeg, who began to think that,
+after all, there is something in the Right Hon. Gentleman.
+
+_Business done._--OLD MORALITY'S Motion carried.
+
+_Wednesday._--Attempt by some noisy outsiders who know nothing of House
+to make things unpleasant for AKERS-DOUGLAS, because House Counted Out
+last Friday. Said he has been wigged; assume he will retire. All arrant
+nonsense. Everybody in House, Conservative, Liberal, Dissentient, Irish,
+whatever we be, all know AKERS-DOUGLAS as one of best Whips of present
+generation. Assiduous, persuasive, courteous, yet firm; always at his
+post, never fussy, never cross, apparently never tired, he is a model of
+a Whip. His Party could better spare an occasional Secretary of State.
+
+[Illustration: Our Whip (at present without a Handle to his Name).]
+
+For purely business arrangements Ministers have a unique combination of
+three men. OLD MORALITY, as Leader of House; AKERS-DOUGLAS, as Whip; and
+JACKSON, as Financial Secretary, are strong enough to balance effects of
+any reasonable amount of blundering in high politics. They take care of
+the pence of efficiency and popularity, and leave the MARKISS an
+occasional pound to spend.
+
+_Business Done._--New Irish Land Bill brought in, and cast out.
+
+_Thursday._--TEYNHAM on in the Lords, but what he's on about the Lords
+only know, and not all of them. Something to do with Camperdown;
+GRANVILLE not entirely out of it; and the MARKISS at least compromised.
+TEYNHAM, standing at Cross Benches, holding on to the rail of Bench
+before him, as if he were in pulpit, swings about his body, turns to
+right and left, sometimes presenting his back to LORD CHANCELLOR, whilst
+he contemplates emptiness of Strangers' Galleries. In plaintive voice,
+full of tears, he babbles o' Camperdown, green fields, _nemine
+contradicente_, and Standing Order No. XXI.
+
+Pretty to watch HOBHOUSE whilst TEYNHAM on his legs. Sits intently
+listening; first crossed one knee, then the other; puts his two
+forefingers together as if connecting the matter of TEYNHAM'S speech;
+gradually, as muddle grows thicker, two locks of hair on top of his head
+slowly rise and remained standing, as it were, till TEYNHAM reseated
+himself. Most remarkable testimony to mental struggle. Even HOBHOUSE,
+having thus given his mind to it, couldn't make out what TEYNHAM was at.
+As for DENMAN he, after first ten minutes of speech, flouted out of
+House.
+
+[Illustration: A Mental Struggle.]
+
+"TOBY," said he, passing me in the Lobby; "if this is what the House of
+Lords is coming to, I shall vote with ROSEBERY for its immediate reform.
+Don't like to say anything disrespectful of a Peer; but I must observe
+that TEYNHAM is a little lacking in coherency. His observations fail in
+point; in short, if he were not a Peer I should say his mind was
+wandering. Whatever we do, TOBY, let us be intelligent _and_
+intelligible. I trust I am not prejudiced, but I really can't stand
+TEYNHAM."
+
+_Business done._--In Commons, Government defeated, in resisting HAMLEY'S
+proposal to stump up for Volunteers.
+
+_Friday Night._--TREVELYAN brought forward Motion proposing that
+Parliament shall rise at beginning of July, making up necessary time in
+winter months. Supported proposition in speech graceful and strong, a
+model of rare combination of literary art, with Parliamentary aptitude.
+After brisk debate, resolution negatived by 173 votes against 169. "A
+majority of four won't long stand in our way," said CHARLES FORSTER, who
+having, some Sessions ago, fortuitously found his hat, never now deserts
+it.
+
+[Illustration: Sir William Burning.
+
+(_See the Chancellor of the Exchequer's Speech, March 11th._)]
+
+_Business done._--Government vainly tried to get into Committee of
+Supply.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DIFFERENCE.--Sir GEORGE TREVELYAN wants the House of Commons to
+"rise at the beginning of July." _Mr. Punch_ wishes it to rise at all
+times--above rowdyism.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration:]NOTICE.--Rejected Communications or Contributions,
+whether MS., Printed Matter, Drawings, or Pictures of any description,
+will in no case be returned, not even when accompanied by a Stamped and
+Addressed Envelope, Cover, or Wrapper. To this rule there will be no
+exception.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume
+98, March 22, 1890, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH-CHARIVARI, MARCH 22, 1890 ***
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