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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 105,
+November 18, 1893, 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 105, November 18, 1893
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Sir Francis Burnand
+
+Release Date: April 11, 2012 [EBook #39424]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, LONDON CHARIVARI, NOV 18, 1893 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer Lesley Halamek, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Punch, or the London Charivari
+
+Volume 105, November 18th 1893
+
+_edited by Sir Francis Burnand_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+"THE PAPER OF THE DAY AFTER TO-MORROW."
+
+ [In one of the magazines an entire article has been
+ transmitted to the office, not by the post, but by mental
+ suggestion.--_News paragraph._]
+
+SCENE--_Editor's Room of "The Mental Mirror of the Universe."_
+TIME--_An hour before publication._ Editor _and_ Chief-Sub.
+_discovered in consultation_.
+
+_Editor._ Dear me, Mr. PAYSTE, this is very annoying! Debate on Africa
+in the House to-night, and our leader-writer has sent in no copy! Why
+did you not communicate with me?
+
+_Chief-Sub._ Well, Sir, as you were dining with the Duke, I did not
+like to disturb you, especially as I had arranged matters. I have got
+some one else to knock off the article.
+
+_Ed._ Very good, and where does it come from?
+
+_Chief-Sub._ I turned on the mentophone and found Lord MACAULAY
+disengaged.
+
+_Ed._ Of course he writes smartly enough, but I should have thought he
+was scarcely sufficiently well-up in the subject.
+
+_Chief-Sub._ So he said, Sir: so we applied to Sir WALTER RALEIGH, who
+has sent in a good column.
+
+_Ed._ His English, I am afraid, is a trifle old-fashioned.
+
+_Chief Sub._ Well, yes, Sir; a little. But I gave it to one of our
+subs. who has made black letter a study, and between them they have
+turned out a very decent leader. Sorry to say the wire has broken down
+between London and the seat of the war, so we have no despatches.
+
+_Ed._ Distinctly annoying! However, I think I can put myself in
+communication with our special. (_Takes a pen in his right hand, and
+commences writing._) Well, what next?
+
+_Chief Sub._ But shall I not disturb you?
+
+_Ed._ Not at all; my right hand is in sympathy with LONGBOW, so I need
+not pay any attention to what he is sending us until he gets to the
+end of his copy. Everything else right?
+
+_Chief Sub._ I think I may venture to say "Yes," Sir. Mrs. COVERS, who
+does our reviews, has neglected to send in her stuff, but I have used
+the mentophone again in that case. Put on CHARLES LAMB. And I think
+that's all, save, as there is a letter about the authorship of
+_Hamlet_, I have got WILLIAM SHAKSPEARE to answer it himself. And now,
+Sir, I would suggest that, as we are rather full up this evening, you
+might conclude that dispatch as quickly as possible.
+
+_Ed._ My hand has just done writing. (_Gives copy to_ Chief Sub.)
+Anything worth a line for the bill?
+
+_Chief Sub._ (_after perusal_). Well, yes, Sir. I find there has been
+a battle, so we may as well give that.
+
+_Ed._ Everything right now?
+
+_Chief Sub._ Everything, Sir.
+
+_Ed._ Well, now you can send down the paper to press as soon as you
+please. (_Exit_ Chief Sub. _to carry out directions_.) Dear me! It
+really simplifies matters considerably when waves of thought will do
+as well as the electric telegraph.
+
+ [_The Curtain falls upon the_ Editor's _very natural
+ reflection_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: SANCTA SIMPLICITAS.
+
+_Housemaid._ "WE'RE GETTING UP A SWEEPSTAKES, MRS. THRUPP. WON'T YOU
+JOIN?"
+
+_Housekeeper._ "GRACIOUS ME, CHILD; NOT I! WHY IF I _WON_ A HORSE I
+SHOULDN'T KNOW WHAT TO _DO_ WITH HIM!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO THE SEA.
+
+_An Expostulation._
+
+ Oh, smooth and smiling! I have loved thee well!
+ Hymned thee, and heard thee; lived beneath thy spell;
+ For years thy life-giving ozone have bless'd,
+ That makes loose garments tighter round the chest.
+ Paced in the dark thy sounding margent white,
+ And voiced my rapture in the boisterous night,
+ Striking the lurking coastguard with affright.
+
+ Now on my barque--ah, no! no barque be mine!
+ On the new packet of the Angler Line,
+ I learn, too late, when fairly out at sea,
+ How well they speak who speak not well of thee
+ Implacable, inscrutable Emirs
+ Mock not the captured foe of bloodstained years
+ As thou hast mock'd one who ne'er did thee wrong,
+ Save in the venial fault of unexpressive song.
+ Or canst thou this unmeasured vengeance take,
+ Remembering some childish duck-and-drake,
+ Forgotten long, and never done in spite?
+ How could it harm thy navy-rending might,
+ Thou, whose huge waves in wanton affluence bang
+ Their heads against the rocks, in mid-air hang,
+ Up the sheer cliffs clamber with foamy claws,
+ And backward plunge again, with mad applause
+ Of all the turbulent, tumultuous press
+ That hurl themselves to spray in wantonness?
+ Prone, but unconquered, I have roll'd to leeward,
+ Soothed by the merciless mercy of the steward.
+ How can I stand when hardest steel and teak
+ Play a vertiginous game of hide-and-seek?
+ All is a-swing and dipping and a-roll.
+ Oh, vain material creed! Th' informing soul!
+ Proves well its immateriality,
+ Defying thus the tortures of the sea,
+ That force all else to helpless surrender;
+ For aught but very Spirit would prefer
+ To seek at once the illimitable inane,
+ Than cognisant of anguish thus remain
+ The tenant of a desolated shrine,
+ A bare clay cabin, like this frame of mine.
+ Oh, rich saloons! Oh, rooms of wretched state!
+ The pomp and glory of you all I hate!
+ Ye fulsome diving dados, would ye were
+ Extinct as your vocabular congener!
+ Place me where errant icebergs, anchored deep
+ By chains of frost, a darkling vigil keep,
+ Fixed in the pole's impenetrable wall,
+ Dead to the warmer ocean's roving call!
+ Far from this liquid way that heaves and rolls,
+ This world-long switchback, bounded by the poles,
+ This path of pain, whose undulations cease
+ Only in that palæocrystic peace!
+ Nay, what is this? How steady! Here we are!
+ Field breezes mingle with the oil and tar,
+ And with a shudder I behold anear
+ The solid weed-hung timbers of the pier.
+ Perfidious sea! I'll trust thee never more,
+ And mock thy fury safely from the shore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO HEBE.
+
+(_See the Report of the Lady Commissioners on Women's Labour._)
+
+ Waitress! with the dimpled chin,
+ Cap as clean as a new pin,
+ Here's a feather to put in!
+
+ For Miss ORME'S report declares
+ That no male with you compares
+ In the showing off of wares.
+
+ Be it counter, be it bar,
+ You can "dress" it--you're its star,
+ Bright, and _most_ particular!
+
+ Grievances you have, no doubt;
+ Which of us exists without?
+ Still, you do not pine or pout.
+
+ Standing with reluctant feet
+ Always ready, trim, and neat,
+ No one tells _you_--"Take a seat!"
+
+ Hours are long, and meal-time short,
+ Mashing bores, who think it "sport,"
+ Say the things they didn't ought!
+
+ Gather, then, the tips that fall;
+ Don't let vulgar chaff appal;
+ To the Bar you've had your "call"!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CON. FOR COMPETITIVE SPORTSMEN.--_Q._ What is the most unpopular thing
+in the (sporting) world? _A._ A "record," because it is always being
+"cut," by everybody, everywhere, every day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE GREAT AFRICAN LION-TAMER.]
+
+ ["He fully admitted the difficulties of the Government and
+ Sir HENRY LOCH. Both found themselves to be in a most
+ exceptionally difficult position, created by those who had
+ gone before them by granting in the wrong way the charter to
+ the Company. He admitted that both Lord RIPON and Sir HENRY
+ LOCH did their best in the circumstances for a long time to
+ maintain peace; both urged that war should be avoided.... Mr.
+ RHODES was Prime Minister of Cape Colony, and obviously Sir
+ HENRY LOCH had an exceedingly difficult position in dealing
+ as Prime Minister and as the head of the Company with that
+ gentleman, to whom he could not say that he did not quite
+ believe him, and that he was forcing on the war."--_Mr.
+ Labouchere on the Chartered Company and Matabeleland._]
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_grandly_). "Walk up, walk up, ladies and gentlemen! See
+the great African live lion, Matabele--called Lo Ben for short--larger
+than (average) life, and thrice as natural as normal (menagerie)
+nature! Walk up! Walk up! Taming process just about to begin----
+
+_Agent of Menagerie Proprietor_ (_sotto voce_). Oh, well you
+know--subject, of course, to--ahem!--every provision being made
+for--a--_humanity_--and--ahem--every precaution being taken
+against--a--a--needless risks, you know, and--a--obvious cruelty, you
+see--and--ahem!--all that sort of thing, don't you know.
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_nettled_). No, I _don't_ know, dontcher know. And
+what's more I don't believe _you_ know, dontcher know, nor your
+guv'nors neither, for that matter. What _is_ your little game, anyhow?
+
+_Agent_ (_with some assumption of dignity_). We have _no_ "little
+game." Little Game is not the word. Lions, I believe, are generally
+called "Big Game," by NIMRODS and others.
+
+ [_Sniggers as one who has scored._
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_sardonically_). NIMROD, indeed! Ah! a mighty hunter
+before the Lords _you_ are, ain't you? You and your lot! Rural rabbits
+and parochial foxes are G----'s "Big Game," eh?
+
+_Agent._ This is neither the time nor the place to argue that point.
+Your business is lion-taming; ours is menagerie-managing.
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_scornfully_). All right, my noble swell! Manage _him_!
+
+ [_Pointing to Lion, who is ramping and roaring._
+
+_Agent._ Not at all, not at all!
+
+ [_Spectators become impatient._
+
+_Lion-Tamer._ Well, look here, do you want this lion tamed for you, or
+do you _not_?
+
+_Agent._ Why, cert'n'ly! Subject of course to the assistance--ahem!--I
+_should_ say _supervision_ of LOCH and myself.
+
+_Lion-Tamer._ Ah, "supervise" away as much as you please, only don't
+interfere with me. The old game! Stand by while I do the dangerous
+part of the business, hamper me as much as you can, and when, in spite
+of you all, I am successfully through, take the business--and the
+credit--over yourselves!
+
+_Agent_ (_aside_). Wonderful man, very. Wish I quite knew what to
+make of him. Lion-tamers, like fire, are excellent servants, but bad
+masters. All alike, all alike, CLIVE, WARREN HASTINGS, Rajah BROOKE,
+Jamaica EYRE, BARTLE FRERE, GORDON, all wonderful, and--in the
+end--very useful, but worrying, worrying!
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_proceeding_). Walk up, walk up, ladies and gentlemen!
+All in to begin! See the big black-maned African lion, fresh from
+Mashonaland wilds; bigger than CHURCHILL ever chased or SELOUS
+slew, or VAN AMBURGH subdued, tamed in the twinkling of an assegai,
+conquered in the 'tss! of a Hotchkiss, by the Great South African
+Lion-Tamer, RHODOROWDIDOW the Rumbistical.
+
+_Spectators._ Hooray! Hooray!! Hoo-_ray!!!_
+
+_Agent_ (_aside_). How wonderfully popular these thrasonical
+wild-beast tamers and prancing proconsul sort of fellows are--with the
+gallery!
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_to attendant_). I say, just hand me the loaded whip,
+and--keep the poker hot, in case of emergency----
+
+_Agent_ (_hurriedly_). Oh, here, I say; that will never do,
+RHODOROWDIDOW!
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_impatiently_). What do you mean?
+
+_Agent._ Why, you know, loaded bludgeons and red-hot pokers _read_
+too much like--_Cruelty to Animals_! What _would_ LABBY and the
+Humanitarians say? You're none too popular already, you know, in
+certain quarters. Your masterful little ways and monetary success have
+put a good many backs up. We mustn't run any needless risks, RHODO.
+_Wouldn't_ this little toy-whip and this big bottle of (_medicated_)
+rose-water do as well?
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_scornfully_). _Was it with Rose-water that "John
+Company" tamed your Indian tiger for you?_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: TWO WAYS OF LOOKING AT IT.
+
+_Sporting Farmer_ (_who has been kind enough to give a mount to our
+friend 'Arry_). "NOW THEN! THEY'RE AWAY. DON'T YOU SEE THEY'RE GONE?"
+
+_'Arry_ (_who has been having a very bad time_). "EH! GONE! AND NOT
+COMIN' BACK? WOT A BLESSIN'!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+YOU NEVER WROTE.
+
+(_To Another Man's Fiancée._)
+
+ You never wrote a single word, though I
+ Sent prompt congratulations in a note,
+ You gave my well-meant greetings the go-by--
+ You never wrote.
+
+ Do you remember when we took a boat,
+ And slowly drifted 'neath a summer sky?
+ Perhaps you don't. In fact, perhaps, you vote
+ Such memories a bore. You can't deny
+ That, politician-like, you turned your coat,
+ In fine, you jilted me. Is not that why
+ You never wrote?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. R. heard in Scotland that MONSON was always a bit of a scapegoat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+UNDER THE ROSE.
+
+(_A Story in Scenes._)
+
+SCENE XIV.--_The Study at Hornbeam Lodge._
+
+TIME--_Saturday night, about_ 11.30. Mr. TOOVEY _is alone_.
+
+_Mr. Toovey_ (_to himself_). Oh the inestimable blessing of having
+nothing on one's mind again! How providential that I found LARKINS in!
+He was a little unsympathetic at first, to be sure; he _would_ have it
+that I must have known all along what the Eldorado really was! but as
+soon as he saw how strongly I felt about it, he was _most_ helpful. I
+could _not_ have gone to that place this evening; how could I have met
+CORNELIA'S eye after it? As it is, I can face her without---- Surely
+she is later than usual from this Zenana meeting! (_Wheels are heard
+outside._) A cab? I do hope nothing is the matter! Why, that sounds
+like--like a _latchkey_! Can it be--ah!--a dispute with the cabman--it
+_must_ be CORNELIA!
+
+ [_The front door bangs._
+
+_A Voice_ (_in earnest remonstrance through the keyhole_). 'Ere, I
+say, you don't sneak off like _that_, you know! I _knowed_ you was no
+good the minnit I clapped eyes on you! Are you going to gimme my legal
+fare or not? I ain't goin' till I git it. I want another shellin' orf
+o' you I do!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_to himself_). Another shilling? Why, it's under a mile!
+He little knows my wife's principles if he expects----
+
+_The Voice._ You orter be _ashimed_ o' yourself! A lydy like you
+to tyke a man orf his rank at this toime o' noight, all the w'y
+from----(_The front door is hastily unlocked again._) Thankee,
+mum, thankee; lor, I only want what's my doo, and the distance 'ere
+from----
+
+ [_The door shuts with a bang._
+
+_Mr. Toov._ She's given him the extra shilling--she _can't_ be well!
+I'm afraid she's really poorly. She's gone into the drawing-room, but
+there are no lights there. She'll be here directly.
+
+ [_He sits up expectantly._
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself, in the hall_). Just as I expected.
+THEOPHILUS not home yet! I shall sit up for him in the study. (_She
+opens the study door, and starts_.) So _there_ you are, Pa! And pray
+when did _you_ come in?
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_mildly_). Yes, my love, here I am; I've been in a long
+while, quite a long while.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself_). And he imagines I believe _that!_
+(_Aloud._) I understood you intended to spend the evening with
+CHARLES.
+
+_Mr. Toov._ So I did, my dear, so I did. I went to his rooms.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ And you went out somewhere together, Pa? Come, you won't
+deny _that_!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_to himself_). What a mercy I didn't go to that Eldorado!
+I should have _had_ to tell her! (_Aloud._) Why you see we--we didn't
+go anywhere. I found CHARLES was engaged to dine with a friend, so I
+went away again.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself_). A very likely story! Where has THEOPHILUS
+learnt such brazen duplicity? (_Aloud._) Oh! and then of course you
+came straight home?
+
+_Mr. Toov._ Why, no, my love; not immediately. I--I suddenly
+recollected that I had to see a friend on--on a little matter of
+business which was--hem--somewhat pressing, so I went there first of
+all.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself, contemptuously_). Exactly the excuse in all
+those horrid songs! (_Aloud._) And the business kept you rather late,
+eh, Pa? Some business _is_ apt to do so, I know!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_to himself_). She makes me almost feel as if I'd gone
+after all! (_Aloud._) I _was_ a little late, my dear, not so very.
+I suppose I must have been home between eight and nine, and PH[OE]BE
+brought me up some nice cold mutton and the apple-tart, so I did very
+well, very well indeed.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself_). If he is deceiving me, I can soon find
+out from the look of the joint and tart!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ By the way, my love, surely _you_ are rather late this
+evening, are you not? it's nearly twelve!
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself, with a start_). Oh, but I will _not_ fib
+unless he forces me to. (_Aloud._) I--I was detained later than I
+expected.
+
+_Mr. Toov._ And you didn't expect to be back so very early either, for
+you took the latchkey, didn't you?
+
+MRS. TOOV. I happened to find it, Pa, and I thought I might as well
+use it--and why not?
+
+_Mr. Toov._ It was most thoughtful of you, my love, to think of
+saving PH[OE]BE. By the way, do you notice----? (_He looks round him
+suspiciously._) Ah, well, it may be my fancy. And you had a successful
+meeting? were there many interesting speeches?
+
+_Mrs. Toov_ (_choking_). As--as interesting as usual, THEOPHILUS! (_To
+herself._) I 'm sure _that's_ true enough!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ And supper provided afterwards, I suppose? Which accounts
+for your being late. Dear--dear me!
+
+ [_His face grows troubled again._
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ Is there any reason why there _shouldn't_ be supper
+afterwards, Pa?
+
+_Mr. Toov._ Not in _that_ house. Our dear friends the CUMBERBATCHES do
+everything on such a truly hospitable scale. Now, most people in their
+position would have considered tea and coffee and sandwiches _quite_
+sufficient. Was it a _hot_ supper, my love?
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_desperately_). Yes--no--_rather_ hot--I didn't notice.
+You ask such preposterous questions, THEOPHILUS!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ I didn't mean to. I was just a little surprised, do you
+know, at your taking a cab for such a short distance. I thought you
+might have felt unwell; but perhaps dear Mrs. CUMBERBATCH insisted----
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ Why, of course, Pa; you know how kind and considerate she
+is; otherwise I should never have dreamed of----
+
+_Mr. Toov._ Just what I thought, my love. But wasn't the cabman rather
+uncivil? I wonder you gave way to him--unless, of course, he was
+drunk.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ He _was_--disgracefully drunk, Pa; if you heard so much,
+you must have noticed that; and how you could sit quietly here and
+never think of coming to my assistance! Ah, it is hardly for _you_ to
+reproach me for submitting to his extortion!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ Indeed, my love, I'd no idea--you are generally so very
+firm with cabmen that---- (_Changing the subject._) By-the-bye, I
+don't know if you noticed a note for you lying on the hall table? It
+must have come after you left. It looked to me wonderfully like dear
+Mrs. CUMBERBATCH'S writing, but what could she have to write about
+when she would be seeing you directly? Did she allude to it at all?
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ From ELIZA CUMBERBATCH? No; at least, she--I'll go and
+get it. (_She goes into the hall and finds the note._) Good gracious,
+it _is_ ELIZA'S hand! (_She reads it hurriedly under the hall-lamp._)
+"Just a line. Zenana meeting postponed at last moment. Will let you
+know when another day fixed. Well, it will save me the trouble of
+writing to her; but, oh dear, the stories I've been telling Pa! But
+he's as bad--I _know_ he's as bad!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_as_ Mrs. T. _returns_). So you found the note, CORNELIA,
+and what does Mrs. CUMBERBATCH say?
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_putting the note in the fire_). It--it was only
+from--from my dressmaker. (_To herself._) He _drives_ me to this!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_again uneasy_). Do you know, CORNELIA, I--I may be
+wrong, but I've a very strong suspicion that----
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_in terror_). Pa, speak out! In--in the name of Heaven,
+_what_ is it you suspect?
+
+_Mr. Toov._ It's getting stronger every moment. I'm sure of it. My
+love, there's a strange man downstairs in the kitchen!
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_with a gasp of relief_). A man! Oh, this must be seen
+into at once! (_She rings the bell furiously; presently_ PH[OE]BE
+_appears, evidently only half-awake_.) PH[OE]BE, what does this mean?
+I insist on the truth!
+
+_Ph[oe]be_. I'm very sorry m'm, but I'd no idea you was home, and I
+was sitting up for you downstairs, and I expect I must have dropped
+asleep, and never heard you come in.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ Don't attempt to deceive _me_! You are entertaining a man
+downstairs, contrary to all my orders. Yes, it's useless to deny it,
+your master has distinctly heard sounds.
+
+_Mr. Toov._ No, my love, I can't exactly say as much as
+that--but--yes, every time the door opens it's more perceptible! (_He
+sniffs._) Don't you observe yourself, my dear, a remarkably strong
+odour of tobacco-smoke? Now, as I never have been a smoker myself, it
+stands to reason that----
+
+ [_Mrs. T. suddenly sits down, scarlet._
+
+[Illustration: "Mrs. Toovey suddenly sits down, scarlet."]
+
+_Ph[oe]be_ (_roused_). I'm sure if you and master suspect me of
+concealing followers downstairs, you're welcome to search as much as
+you please! Cook's gone up to bed hours ago, and for a poor girl to
+be kep' up to this time o' night, and then have her character took
+away--why, I'm not accustomed to such treatment, and, what's more, put
+up with it I _won't_.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself, guiltily_). It's that filthy smoke at the
+Eldorado! (_Aloud._) THEOPHILUS, how can you have such ridiculous
+fancies? Tobacco, indeed! I--_I_ don't notice anything. PH[OE]BE, it
+was a mistake of your master's; I don't blame you in the least. There,
+you've sat up long enough, go to bed, go, girl!
+
+_Ph[oe]be._ Beggin' your pardon, m'm, but insinuations have been
+descended to which I can't pass over in a hurry, and before I go I
+should wish----
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_feverishly_). I tell you it was all a mistake. Your
+master will apologise for it. Pa, say you're sorry!
+
+_Ph[oe]be._ I don't require no apologies from _master_, m'm. I can
+make allowances for _him_--more partickler as there's no mistake about
+there being a smell of tobaccer-smoke. I don't wonder at _anyone_
+noticing it. It's your sending for me like this, and trying to shift
+the blame on the innercent, when all the time----
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself_). This is too intolerable! (_Aloud._)
+Haven't I _said_ I didn't blame you, you unreasonable girl! Let us
+have no more of this impertinence! Leave us!
+
+_Ph[oe]be._ I will, m'm, as soon as ever you can get suited, for, to
+tell you the truth, I don't like such goings on as these; and I'll
+take care I get a good character, too, or I'll know the reason why!
+(_As she closes the door._) And I 'ope master will satisfy himself
+where the smell of tobacco reelly _does_ come from, I'm sure; it isn't
+from _downstairs_!
+
+ [_She vanishes, leaving Mrs. T. petrified._
+
+_Mr. Toov._ You see, my love, it couldn't have been all my fancy,
+because PH[OE]BE noticed it too. Dear me, it's late; I'd better go and
+see that everything is locked up. (_As he passes_ Mrs. T.) It's very
+extraordinary. Surely they don't allow any of the missionaries to
+smoke at these Zenana meetings, my love--do they?
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ Of course they don't. I--I am at a loss to understand
+you. THEOPHILUS, and--and I am going to bed.
+
+_Mr. Toov._ No, but really---- Why, I _see_ how it was! Depend upon
+it, my dear, that cabman must have been sitting inside the vehicle
+smoking, with the windows up, before you got in. Yes, yes; that
+accounts for everything.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_faintly_). Do you think so, THEOPHILUS? I--I remember
+noticing a smell of cigars.
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_as he goes out_). My poor dear love, _what_ a trial for
+you; and you never complained! Now, when I see dear Mrs CUMBERBATCH at
+church to-morrow, I must really caution her not to employ that cabman
+again--she may have taken his number, and he really ought to lose his
+licence--drunk, and smoking inside his cab! Oh, I shall tell her!
+
+ [_He goes out._
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_alone_). Pa shall _not_ go to church to-morrow. _I_
+will take care of that, and by the time he sees ELIZA again he will
+have forgotten all about it. Is he doing all this to cover his own
+misdoings? I can't rest till I know! I will make CHARLES tell me
+on Monday. But what if Pa is blameless? No, he must have been doing
+_something_ he oughtn't to. It would be too horrible if it turned out
+that I--_I_ am the only person who has been (_she catches her breath
+with a shudder_) "hi-tiddley-ing," as those vulgar wretches would
+call it! There 's only one comfort that I can see; nobody here is ever
+likely to know, unless I choose to betray myself. Oh dear! oh dear! I
+wish I could forget this awful evening!
+
+ [_She ascends the stairs with a heavy and dispirited tread_.
+
+END OF SCENE XIV.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN INQUIRY.--Miss QUOTA writes to ask us "where the following
+well-known lines are to be found:--
+
+ "'Eight hours to sleep, eight hours to food are given,
+ Eight hours to play, and all the rest to Heav'n.'"
+
+ [_We are not sure, but imagine that they are to be found In
+ the works of "Anon." Anyhow, better send to Editor of "Notes
+ and Queries," who knows everything._--ED.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: HUMAN NATURE REBELS!
+
+POOR MR. WIGGLES HAS JUST BEEN DESCRIBED BY A FACETIOUS WITNESS OF
+THE LOWER ORDERS AS "THAT THERE H'OLD BLOKE WIV A CHOKER, AN' A
+CAULIFLOWER ON 'IS 'ED"!!!]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO VIEWS OF VICTORY.
+
+THE PAST.
+
+THE Commander who had fought so bravely was tired out. He could go no
+farther. He had beaten back the stubborn foe, and there was nothing
+more for him to do. He waited with as much patience as he could muster
+the return of his messengers. In a short time he would learn whether
+the honour of his country had been preserved; whether his battle was a
+defeat or a victory.
+
+"Will they never come?" he murmured. "Surely by this time they should
+have learned the truth?"
+
+He had scarcely uttered these words when the scouts returned.
+
+"General," cried the leader, "your campaign has been crowned with
+success! England is herself again! Your reward is assured!"
+
+And it was. A week later he was made a K.C.B.!
+
+
+THE FUTURE.
+
+The Commander who had contended with the stubborn foe with a spirit of
+stern determination was at length exhausted. He had put to flight the
+enemies who at every step had attempted to bar his progress. But now
+the affair was over, and there was little for him to do; so he was
+waiting as patiently as he could the return of those he had sent
+forward to represent him in the proper quarter. Before long he would
+receive the intelligence for which he hungered. He would be told
+whether all was right or all was wrong; whether his battle was a
+defeat or a victory.
+
+"Will they never come?" he murmured. "Surely by this time they should
+have revealed the truth, and made the most of the opportunity."
+
+He had scarcely uttered these words when the scouts came back.
+
+"General," cried the leader, "your campaign has been crowned with
+success! Capel Court is itself again! The Stocks have gone up 15, and
+your success is assured!"
+
+And it was. A week later and he found himself a millionaire!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MEM. FROM MATABELELAND.--Most of the news from the Cape, if not true,
+is certainly _Lo Ben trovato_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: EFFECTS OF SHYNESS.
+
+_Shy Lady_ (_trying to break the ice_). "WHAT A SAD THING IT ALL IS
+ABOUT THIS WRETCHED COAL-STRIKE, _ISN'T_ IT?"
+
+_Silent Gentleman_ (_also shy_). "ER<--YES--ER--I ALMOST THINK THAT
+EVERYTHING THAT CAN BE SAID ON THAT SUBJECT--ER--ER--_HAS_ BEEN SAID!"
+
+ [_Conversation languishes after this._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"RULE, BRITANNIA!" (?)
+
+ ["Her Majesty's Government are perfectly satisfied as to the
+ adequacy and capacity of the British Navy to perform all the
+ purposes for which it exists."--_Mr. Gladstone, in House of
+ Commons, November 7, 1893._
+
+ "Everybody knows, Liberals as well as Tories, that it is
+ indispensable that we should have not only a powerful
+ Navy, but I may say an all-powerful Navy."--_Mr. Morley at
+ Manchester, November 8, 1893._]
+
+ Since "Britain First!" is Fate's command,
+ And History bids us sway the main,
+ We feel this charter of our land
+ All guardian statesmen must maintain.
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ Out on the Chief who only shirks and saves!
+
+ The nations must not rival thee,
+ Their fleets below our own must fall.
+ _Thou_ must, if thou'dst be great and free,
+ Still rise superior to them all!
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ Such primacy e'en peaceful COBDEN craves.
+
+ Russia and France are now allies!--
+ Though funny, 'tis not all a joke.
+ As their rejoicings shake the skies,
+ Think how the great Free Trader spoke!
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ Better that Hundred Millions than be slaves.
+
+ True, all thy statesmen _say_ the same,
+ MORLEY hands COBDEN'S dictum down.
+ Yet Ins and Outs do play a game
+ That hardly adds to thy renown.
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ _But_ Parties squabble and the Exchequer--saves!
+
+ If thou'dst maintain thine ocean reign,
+ And first in Commerce still would'st shine,
+ The easy optimistic strain
+ And Pangloss pose must not be thine.
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ But constant warding constant watching craves.
+
+ Devotion to the needs of home,
+ And claims parochial, is not all.
+ Beware, lest shades more darkling come,
+ With gloomier writings on the wall.
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ Britons to careless trust should ne'er be slaves.
+
+ Say, Statesman, are those figures found
+ Full warrant for your picture bold?
+ Our watch the wave-washed world around
+ Needs iron hearts, _and_ ungrudged gold.
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ Britons--free-handed--never need be slaves!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. R thinks the reason so many of the young men of the present day
+are bald is, because they don't use antimacassar oil as they did in
+her time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MARCH IN NOVEMBER.
+
+ "Blow, blow, thou winter wind,"
+ In verse some call thee wind.
+ Though Thursday's crowd was thinned
+ By blasts so unrefined,
+ And men in armour, tinnèd
+ Like lobsters, mutely pined--
+ They, later, "wined" and "ginned,"
+ Whilst guests superbly dined
+ On turtle, fish (that's finned),
+ Joints, game of matchless kind,
+ And wines, rare, old, long-binned.
+ Blow clear, before, behind,
+ The streets where lately dinned
+ The band--each man, defined,
+ Of _Vaterland_ the _kind_--
+ And sightless singers whined
+ Not much like _Jenny Lind_;
+ Would they were dumb, not blind!
+ Whilst grinders grimly grinned,
+ And ground their graceless grind.
+ I swore; perhaps I sinned.
+ But now they seem to find
+ Their rags, just tied and pinned,
+ Let in thy blast unkind,
+ By which they're almost skinned.
+ Then blow, I do not mind,
+ Thou rough November wind--
+ Pronounced by many, wind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Seasonable.
+
+ When garden lawns are a green bog,
+ And shrubbery vistas veiled in fog,
+ Reload revolvers, let dogs run!
+ The Burglar Season has begun!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "RULE, BRITANNIA!" (?)
+
+SHADE OF COBDEN (_quoting from his own speech at Rochdale, June 26,
+1861_). "I AM NOT ONE TO ADVOCATE THE REDUCING OF OUR NAVY IN ANY
+DEGREE BELOW THAT PROPORTION TO THE FRENCH NAVY WHICH THE EXIGENCIES
+OF OUR SERVICE REQUIRE. WE HAVE A LEGITIMATE PRETENSION TO HAVE A
+LARGER NAVY THAN FRANCE.... IF THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT SHOWED A SINISTER
+DESIGN TO INCREASE THEIR NAVY TO AN EQUALITY WITH OURS, I _SHOULD
+VOTE A HUNDRED MILLIONS STERLING_ RATHER THAN ALLOW THAT NAVY TO BE
+INCREASED _TO A LEVEL WITH OURS...._ I HAVE SAID SO IN THE HOUSE OF
+COMMONS, AND I REPEAT IT TO _YOU_."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+Mr. FISHER UNWIN is, my Baronite writes, still engaged in the
+important work, some time ago undertaken by his house, of
+publishing _The Story of the Nations_. The last volume issued is the
+thirty-fifth, in which Mr. GREVILLE TREGARTHEN deals with the History
+of the Australian Commonwealth. Australasia is a mere chit among the
+nations of the world, and story, God bless you, it has hardly any to
+tell. It has never been at war except with the aboriginal settlers,
+who were, at the outset, so lost to all proper feeling as to resent
+the incursion of the white man, occasionally carrying their prejudice
+to the absurd extent of eating him. But this is ancient history in a
+record which, beginning a little more than a hundred years ago with a
+convict settlement--it was on January 26, 1788, the British flag was
+for the first time unfurled in Sydney Bay--has already spread out
+lusty limbs over a vast Continent. _The Story of the Nations_ forms a
+library of itself, and this last volume is not the least fascinating
+of the series.
+
+The Baron, while greatly admiring and certainly grateful for the
+Diamond editions of all the best works, and Diamond editions should
+reproduce only those that can be classed among the "brilliants," of
+which two or three specimens at a time can be carried easily in
+the pocket of an ulster, begs to remind Messrs. ROUTLEDGE, the
+republishers of DICKENS'S works in a very pocketable form, that
+much of our journeying is done by such gaslight as railway companies
+supply, and therefore, as this is not always of the most powerful
+kind, a book in small type, however clear the type may be, is
+unreadable. That is what the publishers have to consider. This
+excellent little pocket volume of, for example, _The Cricket on the
+Hearth_, is of no use to the Baron when once out of the pocket. True,
+the publishers may say "it is intended for the pocket only"; but if
+this be the case, then the pockets that would suffer would be those of
+the publishers, not those of the reading public. The Baron's hints are
+well worth consideration. For travelling, the publishers might provide
+and sell a small case containing the Diamond edition and a portable
+candle-lamp by which to read it. Only this would rather add to the
+expense, and with every volume one does not wish to be obliged to
+carry a candle-lamp. Therefore, bigger and clearer type. That's all.
+Try it, and if it does not succeed, blame the hitherto blameless
+
+ BARON DE B.-W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: CRUELLE ENIGME; OR, TWOS INTO ONE WON'T GO.
+
+THE PROBLEM OF THE DAY:--HOW TO GET THIS YEAR'S SLEEVES INTO LAST
+YEAR'S JACKET.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. R. saw a heading in a newspaper. "_Board of Trade Returns._"
+Whereupon she exclaimed, "Where's the Board of Trade been to? I
+suppose for a holiday, and we shall have to pay!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BOGUS MANAGER'S VADE MECUM.
+
+_Question._ Is it an easy thing to become the manager of a theatre?
+
+_Answer._ Why, certainly; you require no cash, and very little credit.
+
+_Q._ Is it necessary that you should have any special training to
+enable you to appropriately fill so responsible a position?
+
+_A._ No. If you are sufficiently impudent, you may in the past have
+been a betting-man, a crossing-sweeper, or an unqualified dentist.
+
+_Q._ Will you have any difficulty in securing a theatre?
+
+_A._ Not at all. You will always find someone willing to accept you as
+a lessee without making any inquiry as to your antecedents.
+
+_Q._ Having obtained a theatre, what is your next step?
+
+_A._ To get together a company. This is easily managed, as the
+dramatic trade-journals give every week a long list of actors and
+actresses who are "resting."
+
+_Q._ What do you understand by such a word?
+
+_A._ That the advertiser is much in need of an engagement, but is too
+proud to acknowledge it.
+
+_Q._ Such a frame of mind is, I suppose, favourable to hurried and
+unconsidered engagements?
+
+_A._ Quite so. It is an easy matter to get an entire company on
+excellent terms. Not that money is of any importance; for you may
+as well promise five pounds a week as five shillings, if you do not
+intend to pay.
+
+_Q._ Having secured your company, what is the next step?
+
+_A._ To make them rehearse three weeks or a month without a salary.
+
+_Q._ I suppose you have no trouble about obtaining a piece on
+advantageous terms?
+
+_A._ None whatever. If you are lucky you will get some conceited
+noodle to pay you for producing his play; and if you are not so
+fortunate, why at least you will get a drama, comedy, or burlesque for
+nothing.
+
+_Q._ Say that you are ready to begin, will you have any difficulty in
+obtaining the preliminary announcements?
+
+_A._ No. For having been trusted by the proprietor of the theatre, the
+advertisement agents will follow suit, and you will obtain sufficient
+publicity to balance your requirements.
+
+_Q._ And what will take place on and after the opening of the
+playhouse under your management?
+
+_A._ You will get more or less ready money taken at the doors during
+five days of the week, with which you can safely decamp without paying
+anybody on or before the sixth.
+
+_Q._ Will not your sudden departure cause some inconvenience to a
+large number of persons connected with the enterprise?
+
+_A._ Assuredly. Many of the company you have engaged will starve, and
+the other parties to the proceedings will use strong language as they
+wipe off your liability as a bad debt.
+
+_Q._ Is it possible that you will be made a bankrupt?
+
+_A._ Not only possible, but probable.
+
+_Q._ And will this end your theatrical career?
+
+_A._ Why, of course not. All you will have to do is to take a little
+holiday.
+
+_Q._ And after the holiday, what next?
+
+_A._ Why, then you can secure another theatre and repeat the
+proceedings with exactly similar results.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: NEWS FROM THE LAW COURTS.
+
+Cold but In-vig-orating.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GINGHAM-GRABBER.
+
+ Someone wrote, "Killing's no Murder."
+ Nothing well could be absurder!
+ But to many in our time
+ Stealing (umbrellas) seems no crime.
+ Therefore, to a frank plain dealer,
+ Killing--an umbrella-stealer--
+ Might be called--by Justice tried--
+ Justifiable Snobicide!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "CRAMMING."
+
+_Affectionate Uncle._ "GLAD TO SEE YOU, RUPERT. NOW TELL ME ALL ABOUT
+IT. WHAT FORM ARE YOU IN, OLD BOY?"
+
+_Nephew (just returned from Harrow)._ "WELL, UNCLE, NOT SO BAD,
+I THINK. I CAN GENERALLY MANAGE A COUPLE OF EGGS, TWO SAUSAGES OR
+KIDNEYS, SOME DUNDEE MARMALADE, AND TWO CUPS OF COFFEE FOR BREAKFAST.
+I ALWAYS HAVE A LITTLE LUNCHEON, ANY AMOUNT OF ROAST BEEF OR MUTTON
+FOR DINNER, AND I GENERALLY LOOK IN AT THE CONFECTIONER'S IN THE
+AFTERNOON, AND INVARIABLY WIND UP WITH A GOOD SUPPER. WHAT DO YOU
+THINK OF THAT?"
+
+ [_Disappointed and misunderstood Uncle subsides, and thinks it
+ best to make no comments._]
+
+]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NINTH OF NOVEMBER.
+
+ The Lord Mayor's Show, I saw it from the Strand,
+ I stood and waited there an hour or so,
+ Till from afar there came with blare of band
+ The Lord Mayor's Show.
+
+ In civic splendour and with footstep slow
+ Passed the procession, glorious and grand!
+ I liked the soldiers well enough, although
+ The men from Deal looked quite at home on land.
+ Yet I confess that when I came to go,
+ I said that once a year's enough to stand
+ The Lord Mayor's Show.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"THE BLACK ART" REVIVED!--"The best specimen of the Black Art," quoth
+the Baron de B. W., "that I have lately seen, is the republication of
+the works of the Wizard of the North, _alias_ Sir WALTER SCOTT, Bart.,
+in a series of substantial library-shelve-ish volumes, printed in good
+clear type."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Q. E. D.
+
+ Don't tell me of "room at the top!" It's a case,
+ I'm sure, of "no thoroughfare." I'm at the base!
+ Does that not suffice you? There only remains
+ Some "room at the top" of your head, man, for brains.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A DICKENSIAN QUESTION.--At the date when _Martin Chuzzlewit_ was
+written, what may fairly be assumed to have been the fashionable hour
+for dining?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.
+
+_House of Commons, Monday, November 6._--PRINCE ARTHUR in fine
+form to-night; made one of those speeches that distinctly enhance
+Parliamentary reputation. Ticklish situation for Leader of Opposition
+in face of Parish Councils Bill. Won't do, with General Election
+within measurable distance, to declare plump against it; still
+less will it suit party to support one of principal measures of a
+Government whose successive steps, however devious, are all bent upon
+goal of Home Rule. For two nights men rising from Opposition benches
+have endeavoured to wriggle through this difficulty; been more or less
+unsuccessful; PRINCE ARTHUR, with sure aim and light touch, does and
+says exactly right thing.
+
+By all means let HODGE have a voice in direction of his own affairs;
+his best friend, the party who spent themselves in his behalf in
+Corn-Law days, who acted in his best interests whenever question
+of political enfranchisement or his relations to parson and squire
+cropped up--the great Tory party would be the very last to slacken
+effort for his prosperity. So anxious are they on the score, they
+would not imperil opportunity by throwing out this Bill on the
+Second Reading. But PRINCE ARTHUR showed, in little asides, that this
+particular measure is badly conceived, not nearly so good as what
+would have befallen HODGE had a Unionist Ministry been in office. For
+an hour the PRINCE spoke, displaying perfect mastery of the subject,
+managing, without assuming a hostile attitude, to bestow upon the
+measure some damaging blows.
+
+[Illustration: LIKA JOKO'S JOTTINGS.--No. 4. SCENES IN THE CITY.]
+
+First time since House met Mr. G. began to show that keen interest in
+proceedings which he seemed to have reserved for Home Rule Bill. Sat
+listening intently with hand to ear as PRINCE ARTHUR gracefully glided
+on from point to point. Pretty little sparring match when PRINCE
+ARTHUR endeavoured to draw him into doing something damaging, either
+in the way of reticence or declaration, touching GEORGE RUSSELL'S
+explosive speech on Friday night. "I would not," observed PRINCE
+ARTHUR, "have said so much, but I presume that in this matter the hon.
+gentleman represented the Government of which he is a member." Mr. G.
+shook his head. "Then he disclaims it?" Mr. G. shook his head
+again. "Oh, then, though he does not dissociate himself from the
+Under-secretary of India, he does not associate the Government with
+his remarks?" Mr. G. again shook his head, finally explaining that his
+young friend and colleague had merely revived former custom--existing
+"in my early days"--whereby Ministers not in the Cabinet and not
+connected with department specially concerned in matter at issue,
+might enter at large into general debate.
+
+"Here, here!" said ELLIS ASHMEAD-BARTLETT (Knight), for once in
+agreement with the views of Arch Enemy.
+
+[Illustration: T. H. Napoleon Boltonparty "objected to ladies being
+Justices of the Peace."
+
+_Justice Herself._ "Aha! Show me the man who said that!"]
+
+_Business done._--More debate on Parish Councils Bill. As usual,
+adjourned at midnight. Motion made that House forthwith adjourn,
+OLIVER ROLLIT asks for more. Too early to go home; might as well sit
+up till one o'clock, and take private Bills. House aghast. SQUIRE OF
+MALWOOD discreetly says he will think the matter over.
+
+_Tuesday._--Another night on Parish Councils. Debate should have
+finished last night; finally arranged to close it before dinner hour
+to-day; but it dribbled on to midnight. As there was an hour to
+spare, TOMMY BOWLES, who since Session resumed has been silent in
+six languages, thought he might as well say a few words. Romped in at
+half-past ten; awkward this; about the hour when JOKIM had intended
+to lift debate out of rut by one of his luminous speeches. THOMAS,
+however, thought House would prefer to hear him. At any rate, he
+provided opportunity. When at length JOKIM spoke upon subject on which
+he is supreme authority, House almost empty, altogether languid.
+
+Brightened up for moment at SQUIRE OF MALWOOD'S happy wit. JOKIM,
+following on line trekked by PRINCE ARTHUR, suggested that half of
+Bill dealing with Poor Law matters should be abandoned. "According
+to judgment of SOLOMON," said the SQUIRE, "it was the true mother who
+would not consent to divide her child in two."
+
+A dreary night made endurable by incursion of
+KNATCHBULL-HUGESSEN--HERBERT THOMAS, of Faversham division of Kent.
+For many years his brother sat in House till he finally wobbled into a
+peerage, and, as ROSEBERY said, wore his coronet as a crown of thorns
+because it had been given him by Mr. G. When he was with us here, and
+one turned to _Dod_ to find him under heading "HUGESSEN," there was
+discovered instruction "See KNATCHBULL-HUGESSEN." This was explained
+at the time on score that no one from day to day exactly knew where
+_Hugessen_ was.
+
+Different with his younger brother. "Sometimes," he said just now,
+looking sorrowfully round the House, a gleam of comfort brightening
+his eyes as they rested on a back view of JIMMY LOWTHER'S head, "I
+believe I'm the only Tory left in the House."
+
+To-night up and smote Parish Councils Bill in uncompromising speech.
+No truckling to Socialism. No bowing the knee to the Baal HODGE. No
+leaning on the arm of Rimmon as he goes to worship in the temple
+of the Compound Householder. The Bill another downward step on the
+pathway dug out for the chariot of Free Trade; the country going to
+dogs at accelerated pace.
+
+Small House, but it listened with delight to the most thoroughly
+honest speech heard from any bench through many Parliaments.
+
+_Business done._--Parish Councils Bill read second time.
+
+_Thursday._--Still smiling at PRINCE ARTHUR'S joke; led up to with
+great skill; last touch of art given in the look of startled surprise
+with which he regarded uproariously laughing audience. Was passing
+eulogy on RHODES and the Chartered Company, forasmuch as, whilst
+certainly mowing down the Matabele with the Maxim gun, they had
+spread the benefits of civilisation, "extending railways, extending
+telegraphs, extending roads."
+
+[Illustration: The Clark of the House causing a Division.]
+
+"Exactly," said the SAGE OF QUEEN ANNE'S GATE. "I spoke for an hour
+and a half, and BALFOUR puts what I had meant to say in a phrase. What
+is all this action in Mashonaland, this spending of money, and making
+of war, but the Extension of RHODES?"
+
+MAGUIRE undertook to defend Chartered Company against attack of SAGE.
+"Terrible work, TOBY," he said, mopping his heated brow. "Much rather
+approach LOBENGULA'S kraal itself than stand up and face the House."
+
+Had to be done, however, and MAGUIRE not the man to run away from
+anything approaching a fight. Still he observed precaution of getting
+as near the door as possible, speaking from remote end of bench,
+almost outside limits of bar. Also he found some subtle comfort,
+strength, and consolation in standing on one leg whilst he addressed
+the Speaker. Sometimes it was the right leg, sometimes the left.
+Whether on one or the other--not for a moment on two--he described
+to the charmed House how the cherished object of Mr. RHODES, the one
+desire upon which all the energies of the Chartered Company were bent,
+was that the men of Matabele should "marry and settle down."
+
+_Business done._--Discussion of affairs in Matabeleland.
+
+_Friday._--Debate on M'LAREN'S Amendment to Employers' Liability Bill
+brought to conclusion at midnight. Thought it would be all over before
+dinner; dragged on hour after hour with ever deepening depression.
+Seems as if already, in this first fortnight of Autumn Session,
+energy's sapped; dulness certainly dominant.
+
+"The fact is," said THE SQUIRE OF MALWOOD, "there is no fight about
+the House now JOSEPH is awa'. Hear he is coming back towards end
+of next week, balmy from the Bahamas, breezy from the Atlantic. I
+shouldn't at all wonder if, upon his arrival, a genial change was
+wrought in things generally."
+
+_Business done._--Government defeat averted by majority of 19.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+QUEER QUERIES.
+
+THE LONDON PROGRAMME.--I entirely approve of the spirited protest
+lately made by the cabmen against that vile instrument of Monopoly,
+the "Station Omnibus." But what I want to ask is whether there is
+no plan of doing away with a still more nefarious specimen of
+capitalistic greed and oppression--I allude to the "Out-Porter." Why
+should this minion, of railway tyrants be permitted to take the beer
+out of the mouths of honest English working-men? I and a number of my
+pals are constantly loafing round the station in our suburb waiting
+for a job of luggage-carrying, or if we aren't exactly _at_ the
+station, we are always to be found at the Public just opposite.
+Will it be believed that passengers actually prefer to engage this
+avaricious blackleg, the Out-Porter, instead of employing _us!_ Their
+paltry excuse is that he charges less than we do and is more civil.
+That _shows_ him to be a contemptible blackleg! Only a serf of our
+present miserable social arrangements is ever civil to anybody. Call
+him an Out-Porter! If me and my pals catch him one of these dark
+nights we'll make an Out-Patient of him! Is the mere convenience of
+the public for ever to override the legitimate claims of the deserving
+unemployed?--CORNER BOY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume
+105, November 18, 1893, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, LONDON CHARIVARI, NOV 18, 1893 ***
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+ .poem1 p.i4 {margin-left: 2em;}
+ .poem1 p.i6 {margin-left: 3em;}
+ .poem1 p.i8 {margin-left: 4em;}
+ .poem1 p.i10 {margin-left: 5em;}
+ .poem1 p.i12 {margin-left: 6em;}
+ .poem1 p.i14 {margin-left: 7em;}
+ .poem1 p.i16 {margin-left: 8em;}
+ .poem1 p.i18 {margin-left: 9em;}
+
+ .poem2 {margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 10%; margin-bottom: 1em; text-align: left;}
+ .poem2 .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+ .poem2 p {margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem2 p.i2 {margin-left: 1em;}
+ .poem2 p.i4 {margin-left: 2em;}
+ .poem2 p.i6 {margin-left: 3em;}
+ .poem2 p.i8 {margin-left: 4em;}
+ .poem2 p.i10 {margin-left: 5em;}
+ .poem2 p.i12 {margin-left: 6em;}
+ .poem2 p.i14 {margin-left: 7em;}
+ .poem2 p.i16 {margin-left: 8em;}
+ .poem2 p.i18 {margin-left: 9em;}
+
+ .figure, .figcenter, .figright, .figleft {padding: 1em; margin: 0; text-align: center; font-size: 0.8em;}
+ .figure img, .figcenter img, .figright img, .figleft img
+ {border: none;}
+ .figure p, .figcenter p, .figright p, .figleft p
+ {margin: 0; text-indent: 1em;}
+ .figcenter {margin: auto;}
+ .figright {float: right;}
+ .figleft {float: left;}
+
+ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 105,
+November 18, 1893, 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 105, November 18, 1893
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Sir Francis Burnand
+
+Release Date: April 11, 2012 [EBook #39424]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, LONDON CHARIVARI, NOV 18, 1893 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer Lesley Halamek, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page229" id="page229"></a>[pg 229]</span>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h1>Punch, or the London Charivari</h1>
+
+<h2>Volume 105, November 18th 1893</h2>
+
+<h4><i>edited by Sir Francis Burnand</i></h4>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2 class="sans">"THE PAPER OF THE DAY AFTER TO-MORROW."</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+[In one of the magazines an entire
+article has been transmitted to the
+office, not by the post, but by mental
+suggestion.&mdash;<i>News paragraph.</i>]
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="sc">SCENE</span>&mdash;<i>Editor's Room of "The
+Mental Mirror of the Universe."</i>
+<span class="sc">TIME</span>&mdash;<i>An hour before
+publication.</i> Editor <i>and</i> Chief-Sub.
+<i>discovered in consultation</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Editor.</i> Dear me, Mr. <span class="sc">Payste</span>,
+this is very annoying! Debate on
+Africa in the House to-night, and
+our leader-writer has sent in no
+copy! Why did you not communicate
+with me?</p>
+
+<p><i>Chief-Sub.</i> Well, Sir, as you
+were dining with the Duke, I did
+not like to disturb you, especially
+as I had arranged matters. I
+have got some one else to knock
+off the article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ed.</i> Very good, and where does
+it come from?</p>
+
+<p><i>Chief-Sub.</i> I turned on the
+mentophone and found Lord <span class="sc">Macaulay</span>
+disengaged.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ed.</i> Of course he writes smartly
+enough, but I should have thought
+he was scarcely sufficiently well-up
+in the subject.</p>
+
+<p><i>Chief-Sub.</i> So he said, Sir: so
+we applied to Sir <span class="sc">Walter Raleigh</span>,
+who has sent in a good
+column.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ed.</i> His English, I am afraid,
+is a trifle old-fashioned.</p>
+
+<p><i>Chief Sub.</i> Well, yes, Sir; a
+little. But I gave it to one of
+our subs. who has made black
+letter a study, and between them
+they have turned out a very decent
+leader. Sorry to say the wire
+has broken down between London
+and the seat of the war, so we
+have no despatches.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ed.</i> Distinctly annoying! However,
+I think I can put myself in
+communication with our special.
+(<i>Takes a pen in his right hand,
+and commences writing.</i>) Well,
+what next?</p>
+
+<p><i>Chief Sub.</i> But shall I not disturb
+you?</p>
+
+<p><i>Ed.</i> Not at all; my right hand
+is in sympathy with <span class="sc">Longbow</span>,
+so I need not pay any attention
+to what he is sending us until he
+gets to the end of his copy.
+Everything else right?</p>
+
+<p><i>Chief Sub.</i> I think I may venture
+to say "Yes," Sir. Mrs.
+<span class="sc">Covers</span>, who does our reviews,
+has neglected to send in her stuff,
+but I have used the mentophone
+again in that case. Put on
+<span class="sc">Charles Lamb</span>. And I think
+that's all, save, as there is a
+letter about the authorship of
+<i>Hamlet</i>, I have got <span class="sc">William
+Shakspeare</span> to answer it himself.
+And now, Sir, I would
+suggest that, as we are rather
+full up this evening, you might
+conclude that dispatch as quickly
+as possible.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ed.</i> My hand has just done
+writing. (<i>Gives copy to</i> Chief
+Sub.) Anything worth a line for
+the bill?</p>
+
+<p><i>Chief Sub.</i> (<i>after perusal</i>).
+Well, yes, Sir. I find there has
+been a battle, so we may as well
+give that.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ed.</i> Everything right now?</p>
+
+<p><i>Chief Sub.</i> Everything, Sir.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ed.</i> Well, now you can send
+down the paper to press as soon as
+you please. (<i>Exit</i> Chief Sub. <i>to
+carry out directions</i>.) Dear me! It
+really simplifies matters considerably
+when waves of thought will
+do as well as the electric telegraph.</p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>The Curtain falls upon the</i> Editor's
+<i>very natural reflection</i>.</p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;"><a href="images/229-800.png"><img src="images/229-350.png" width="350" height="484" alt="SANCTA SIMPLICITAS." /></a>
+<h2 class="sans">SANCTA SIMPLICITAS.</h2>
+
+<p><i>Housemaid.</i> "<span class="sc">We're getting up a Sweepstakes, Mrs. Thrupp.
+Won't you join</span>?"</p>
+
+<p><i>Housekeeper.</i> "<span class="sc">Gracious me, Child; not I! Why if I <i>won</i> a
+Horse I shouldn't know what to <i>do</i> with him</span>!"</p></div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h3>TO THE SEA.</h3>
+
+<h4><i>An Expostulation.</i></h4>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>Oh, smooth and smiling! I have loved thee well!</p>
+<p>Hymned thee, and heard thee; lived beneath thy spell;</p>
+<p>For years thy life-giving ozone have bless'd,</p>
+<p>That makes loose garments tighter round the chest.</p>
+<p>Paced in the dark thy sounding margent white,</p>
+<p>And voiced my rapture in the boisterous night,</p>
+<p>Striking the lurking coastguard with affright.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Now on my barque&mdash;ah, no! no barque be mine!</p>
+<p>On the new packet of the Angler Line,</p>
+<p>I learn, too late, when fairly out at sea,</p>
+<p>How well they speak who speak not well of thee</p>
+<p>Implacable, inscrutable Emirs</p>
+<p>Mock not the captured foe of bloodstained years</p>
+<p>As thou hast mock'd one who ne'er did thee wrong,</p>
+<p>Save in the venial fault of unexpressive song.</p>
+<p>Or canst thou this unmeasured vengeance take,</p>
+<p>Remembering some childish duck-and-drake,</p>
+<p>Forgotten long, and never done in spite?</p>
+<p>How could it harm thy navy-rending might,</p>
+<p>Thou, whose huge waves in wanton affluence bang</p>
+<p>Their heads against the rocks, in mid-air hang,</p>
+<p>Up the sheer cliffs clamber with foamy claws,</p>
+<p>And backward plunge again, with mad applause</p>
+<p>Of all the turbulent, tumultuous press</p>
+<p>That hurl themselves to spray in wantonness?</p>
+<p>Prone, but unconquered, I have roll'd to leeward,</p>
+<p>Soothed by the merciless mercy of the steward.</p>
+<p>How can I stand when hardest steel and teak</p>
+<p>Play a vertiginous game of hide-and-seek?</p>
+<p>All is a-swing and dipping and a-roll.</p>
+<p>Oh, vain material creed! Th' informing soul!</p>
+<p>Proves well its immateriality,</p>
+<p>Defying thus the tortures of the sea,</p>
+<p>That force all else to helpless surrender;</p>
+<p>For aught but very Spirit would prefer</p>
+<p>To seek at once the illimitable inane,</p>
+<p>Than cognisant of anguish thus remain</p>
+<p>The tenant of a desolated shrine,</p>
+<p>A bare clay cabin, like this frame of mine.</p>
+<p>Oh, rich saloons! Oh, rooms of wretched state!</p>
+<p>The pomp and glory of you all I hate!</p>
+<p>Ye fulsome diving dados, would ye were</p>
+<p>Extinct as your vocabular congener!</p>
+<p>Place me where errant icebergs, anchored deep</p>
+<p>By chains of frost, a darkling vigil keep,</p>
+<p>Fixed in the pole's impenetrable wall,</p>
+<p>Dead to the warmer ocean's roving call!</p>
+<p>Far from this liquid way that heaves and rolls,</p>
+<p>This world-long switchback, bounded by the poles,</p>
+<p>This path of pain, whose undulations cease</p>
+<p>Only in that palæocrystic peace!</p>
+<p>Nay, what is this? How steady! Here we are!</p>
+<p>Field breezes mingle with the oil and tar,</p>
+<p>And with a shudder I behold anear</p>
+<p>The solid weed-hung timbers of the pier.</p>
+<p>Perfidious sea! I'll trust thee never more,</p>
+<p>And mock thy fury safely from the shore.</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h3>TO HEBE.</h3>
+
+<p class="center">(<i>See the Report of the Lady Commissioners on
+Women's Labour.</i>)</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>Waitress! with the dimpled chin,</p>
+<p>Cap as clean as a new pin,</p>
+<p>Here's a feather to put in!</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>For Miss <span class="sc">Orme's</span> report declares</p>
+<p>That no male with you compares</p>
+<p>In the showing off of wares.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Be it counter, be it bar,</p>
+<p>You can "dress" it&mdash;you're its star,</p>
+<p>Bright, and <i>most</i> particular!</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Grievances you have, no doubt;</p>
+<p>Which of us exists without?</p>
+<p>Still, you do not pine or pout.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Standing with reluctant feet</p>
+<p>Always ready, trim, and neat,</p>
+<p>No one tells <i>you</i>&mdash;"Take a seat!"</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Hours are long, and meal-time short,</p>
+<p>Mashing bores, who think it "sport,"</p>
+<p>Say the things they didn't ought!</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Gather, then, the tips that fall;</p>
+<p>Don't let vulgar chaff appal;</p>
+<p>To the Bar you've had your "call"!</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<p class="ind1"><span class="sc">Con. for Competitive Sportsmen.</span>&mdash;<i>Q.</i>
+What is the most unpopular thing in the
+(sporting) world? <i>A.</i> A "record," because
+it is always being "cut," by everybody,
+everywhere, every day.</p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page230" id="page230"></a>[pg 230]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"><a href="images/230-1300.png"><img src="images/230-500.png" width="500" height="577" alt="THE GREAT AFRICAN LION-TAMER." /></a>
+<h3 class="sans">THE GREAT AFRICAN LION-TAMER.</h3></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+["He fully admitted the difficulties of the Government and Sir <span class="sc">Henry
+Loch</span>. Both found themselves to be in a most exceptionally difficult
+position, created by those who had gone before them by granting in the
+wrong way the charter to the Company. He admitted that both Lord <span class="sc">Ripon</span>
+and Sir <span class="sc">Henry Loch</span> did their best in the circumstances for a long time to
+maintain peace; both urged that war should be avoided.... Mr. <span class="sc">Rhodes</span>
+was Prime Minister of Cape Colony, and obviously Sir <span class="sc">Henry Loch</span> had an
+exceedingly difficult position in dealing as Prime Minister and as the head
+of the Company with that gentleman, to whom he could not say that he did
+not quite believe him, and that he was forcing on the war."&mdash;<i>Mr. Labouchere
+on the Chartered Company and Matabeleland.</i>]
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><i>Lion-Tamer</i> (<i>grandly</i>). "Walk up, walk up, ladies and gentlemen!
+See the great African live lion, Matabele&mdash;called Lo Ben
+for short&mdash;larger than (average) life, and thrice as natural as
+normal (menagerie) nature! Walk up! Walk up! Taming
+process just about to begin&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Agent of Menagerie Proprietor</i> (<i>sotto voce</i>). Oh, well you
+know&mdash;subject,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page231" id="page231"></a>[pg 231]</span>
+of course, to&mdash;ahem!&mdash;every provision being made
+for&mdash;a&mdash;<i>humanity</i>&mdash;and&mdash;ahem&mdash;every
+precaution being taken against&mdash;a&mdash;a&mdash;needless
+risks, you know, and&mdash;a&mdash;obvious cruelty, you see&mdash;and&mdash;ahem!&mdash;all
+that sort of thing, don't you know.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lion-Tamer</i> (<i>nettled</i>). No, I <i>don't</i> know, dontcher know. And
+what's more I don't believe <i>you</i> know, dontcher know, nor your
+guv'nors neither, for that matter. What <i>is</i> your little game,
+anyhow?</p>
+
+<p><i>Agent</i> (<i>with some assumption of dignity</i>). We have <i>no</i> "little
+game." Little Game is not the word. Lions, I believe, are generally
+called "Big Game," by <span class="sc">Nimrods</span> and others.</p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>Sniggers as one who has scored.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Lion-Tamer</i> (<i>sardonically</i>). <span class="sc">Nimrod</span>, indeed! Ah! a mighty
+hunter before the Lords <i>you</i> are, ain't you? You and your lot!
+Rural rabbits and parochial foxes are G&mdash;&mdash;'s "Big Game," eh?</p>
+
+<p><i>Agent.</i> This is neither the time nor the place to argue that point.
+Your business is lion-taming; ours is menagerie-managing.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lion-Tamer</i> (<i>scornfully</i>). All right, my noble swell! Manage
+<i>him!</i></p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>Pointing to Lion, who is ramping and roaring.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Agent.</i> Not at all, not at all!</p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>Spectators become impatient.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Lion-Tamer.</i> Well, look here, do you want this lion tamed for
+you, or do you <i>not</i>?</p>
+
+<p><i>Agent.</i> Why, cert'n'ly! Subject of course to the assistance&mdash;ahem!&mdash;I
+<i>should</i> say <i>supervision</i> of <span class="sc">Loch</span> and myself.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lion-Tamer.</i> Ah, "supervise" away as much as you please, only
+don't interfere with me. The old game! Stand by while I do the
+dangerous part of the business, hamper me as much as you can, and
+when, in spite of you all, I am successfully through, take the business&mdash;and
+the credit&mdash;over yourselves!</p>
+
+<p><i>Agent</i> (<i>aside</i>). Wonderful man, very. Wish I quite knew what
+to make of him. Lion-tamers, like fire, are excellent servants, but
+bad masters. All alike, all alike, <span class="sc">Clive</span>, <span class="sc">Warren Hastings</span>,
+Rajah <span class="sc">Brooke</span>, Jamaica <span class="sc">Eyre</span>, <span class="sc">Bartle Frere</span>,
+<span class="sc">Gordon</span>, all wonderful,
+and&mdash;in the end&mdash;very useful, but worrying, worrying!</p>
+
+<p><i>Lion-Tamer</i> (<i>proceeding</i>). Walk up, walk up, ladies and
+gentlemen! All in to begin! See the big black-maned African
+lion, fresh from Mashonaland wilds; bigger than <span class="sc">Churchill</span> ever
+chased or <span class="sc">Selous</span> slew, or <span class="sc">Van Amburgh</span> subdued, tamed in the
+twinkling of an assegai, conquered in the 'tss! of a Hotchkiss, by
+the Great South African Lion-Tamer, <span class="sc">Rhodorowdidow</span> the Rumbistical.</p>
+
+<p><i>Spectators.</i> Hooray! Hooray!! Hoo-<i>ray!!!</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Agent</i> (<i>aside</i>). How wonderfully popular these thrasonical wild-beast
+tamers and prancing proconsul sort of fellows are&mdash;with the gallery!</p>
+
+<p><i>Lion-Tamer</i> (<i>to attendant</i>). I say, just hand me the loaded whip,
+and&mdash;keep the poker hot, in case of emergency&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Agent</i> (<i>hurriedly</i>). Oh, here, I say; that will never do,
+<span class="sc">Rhodorowdidow</span>!</p>
+
+<p><i>Lion-Tamer</i> (<i>impatiently</i>). What do you mean?</p>
+
+<p><i>Agent.</i> Why, you know, loaded bludgeons and red-hot pokers <i>read</i>
+too much like&mdash;<i>Cruelty to Animals!</i> What <i>would</i> <span class="sc">Labby</span> and
+the Humanitarians say? You're none too popular already, you know,
+in certain quarters. Your masterful little ways and monetary
+success have put a good many backs up. We mustn't run any needless
+risks, <span class="sc">Rhodo</span>. <i>Wouldn't</i> this little toy-whip and this big
+bottle of (<i>medicated</i>) rose-water do as well?</p>
+
+<p><i>Lion-Tamer</i> (<i>scornfully</i>). <i>Was it with Rose-water that "John
+Company" tamed your Indian tiger for you?</i></p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/231-1500.png"><img src="images/231-600.png" width="600" height="383" alt="TWO WAYS OF LOOKING AT IT." /></a>
+<h3 class="sans">TWO WAYS OF LOOKING AT IT.</h3>
+
+<p><i>Sporting Farmer</i> (<i>who has been kind enough to give a mount to our
+friend 'Arry</i>). "<span class="sc">Now then! they're away. Don't you see
+they're gone?</span>"</p>
+
+<p><i>'Arry</i> (<i>who has been having a very bad time</i>). "<span class="sc">Eh! gone! and
+not comin' back? Wot a blessin'!</span>"</p></div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h3>YOU NEVER WROTE.</h3>
+
+<h4>(<i>To Another Man's Fiancée.</i>)</h4>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>You never wrote a single word, though I</p>
+<p class="i2">Sent prompt congratulations in a note,</p>
+<p>You gave my well-meant greetings the go-by&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i14"> You never wrote.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Do you remember when we took a boat,</p>
+<p class="i2">And slowly drifted 'neath a summer sky?</p>
+<p>Perhaps you don't. In fact, perhaps, you vote</p>
+<p class="i2">Such memories a bore. You can't deny</p>
+<p>That, politician-like, you turned your coat,</p>
+<p class="i2">In fine, you jilted me. Is not that why</p>
+<p class="i14"> You never wrote?</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sc">Mrs. R.</span> heard in Scotland that <span class="sc">Monson</span> was always a bit of a
+scapegoat.</p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page232" id="page232"></a>[pg 232]</span>
+
+<h2 class="sans">UNDER THE ROSE.</h2>
+
+<h4>(<i>A Story in Scenes.</i>)</h4>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Scene</span> XIV.&mdash;<i>The Study at Hornbeam Lodge.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Time</span>&mdash;<i>Saturday night, about</i> 11.30. Mr. <span class="sc">Toovey</span> <i>is
+alone</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toovey</i> (<i>to himself</i>). Oh the inestimable blessing of having
+nothing on one's mind again! How providential that I found
+<span class="sc">Larkins</span> in! He was a little unsympathetic at first, to be sure; he
+<i>would</i> have it that I must have known all along what the
+Eldorado really was! but as soon as he saw how strongly I felt
+about it, he was <i>most</i> helpful. I could <i>not</i> have gone to that place
+this evening; how could I have met <span class="sc">Cornelia's</span> eye after it? As it
+is, I can face her without&mdash;&mdash; Surely she is later than usual from
+this Zenana meeting! (<i>Wheels are heard outside.</i>) A cab? I do
+hope nothing is the matter! Why, that sounds like&mdash;like a <i>latchkey!</i>
+Can it be&mdash;ah!&mdash;a dispute with the cabman&mdash;it <i>must</i> be
+<span class="sc">Cornelia</span>!</p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>The front door bangs.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>A Voice</i> (<i>in earnest remonstrance through the keyhole</i>). 'Ere, I
+say, you don't sneak off like <i>that</i>, you know! I <i>knowed</i> you was
+no good the minnit I clapped
+eyes on you! Are you going to
+gimme my legal fare or not?
+I ain't goin' till I git it. I
+want another shellin' orf o' you
+I do!</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> (<i>to himself</i>).
+Another shilling? Why, it's
+under a mile! He little knows
+my wife's principles if he
+expects&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>The Voice.</i> You orter be
+<i>ashimed</i> o' yourself! A lydy
+like you to tyke a man orf his
+rank at this toime o' noight,
+all the w'y from&mdash;&mdash;(<i>The
+front door is hastily unlocked
+again.</i>) Thankee, mum, thankee;
+lor, I only want what's my doo,
+and the distance 'ere from&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>The door shuts with a bang.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> She's given him
+the extra shilling&mdash;she <i>can't</i> be
+well! I'm afraid she's really
+poorly. She's gone into the
+drawing-room, but there are no
+lights there. She'll be here
+directly.</p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>He sits up expectantly.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>to herself, in the
+hall</i>). Just as I expected.
+<span class="sc">Theophilus</span> not home yet! I
+shall sit up for him in the
+study. (<i>She opens the study
+door, and starts</i>.) So <i>there</i> you
+are, Pa! And pray when did
+<i>you</i> come in?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> (<i>mildly</i>). Yes, my
+love, here I am; I've been in a
+long while, quite a long while.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>to herself</i>). And
+he imagines I believe <i>that!</i>
+(<i>Aloud.</i>) I understood you intended
+to spend the evening
+with <span class="sc">Charles</span>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> So I did, my dear, so I did. I went to his rooms.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> And you went out somewhere together, Pa? Come,
+you won't deny <i>that!</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> (<i>to himself</i>). What a mercy I didn't go to that
+Eldorado! I should have <i>had</i> to tell her! (<i>Aloud.</i>) Why you see
+we&mdash;we didn't go anywhere. I found <span class="sc">Charles</span> was engaged to dine
+with a friend, so I went away again.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>to herself</i>). A very likely story! Where has
+<span class="sc">Theophilus</span>
+learnt such brazen duplicity? (<i>Aloud.</i>) Oh! and then of
+course you came straight home?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> Why, no, my love; not immediately. I&mdash;I suddenly
+recollected that I had to see a friend on&mdash;on a little matter of business
+which was&mdash;hem&mdash;somewhat pressing, so I went there first of all.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>to herself, contemptuously</i>). Exactly the excuse in all
+those horrid songs! (<i>Aloud.</i>) And the business kept you rather
+late, eh, Pa? Some business <i>is</i> apt to do so, I know!</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> (<i>to himself</i>). She makes me almost feel as if I'd gone
+after all! (<i>Aloud.</i>) I <i>was</i> a little late, my dear, not so very. I
+suppose I must have been home between eight and nine, and <span class="sc">Ph&oelig;be</span>
+brought me up some nice cold mutton and the apple-tart, so I did
+very well, very well indeed.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>to herself</i>). If he is deceiving me, I can soon find
+out
+from the look of the joint and tart!</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> By the way, my love, surely <i>you</i> are rather late this
+evening, are you not? it's nearly twelve!</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>to herself, with a start</i>). Oh, but I will <i>not</i>
+fib unless
+he forces me to. (<i>Aloud.</i>) I&mdash;I was detained later than I expected.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> And you didn't expect to be back so very early either,
+for you took the latchkey, didn't you?</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Mrs. Toov.</span> I happened to find it, Pa, and I thought I might as
+well use it&mdash;and why not?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> It was most thoughtful of you, my love, to think of
+saving <span class="sc">Ph&oelig;be</span>. By the way, do you notice&mdash;&mdash;? (<i>He looks round
+him suspiciously.</i>) Ah, well, it may be my fancy. And you had a
+successful meeting? were there many interesting speeches?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov</i> (<i>choking</i>). As&mdash;as interesting as usual,
+<span class="sc">Theophilus</span>!
+(<i>To herself.</i>) I 'm sure <i>that's</i> true enough!</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> And supper provided afterwards, I suppose? Which
+accounts for your being late. Dear&mdash;dear me!</p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>His face grows troubled again.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> Is there any reason why there <i>shouldn't</i> be supper
+afterwards, Pa?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> Not in <i>that</i> house.
+Our dear friends the <span class="sc">Cumberbatches</span>
+do everything on such
+a truly hospitable scale. Now,
+most people in their position
+would have considered tea and
+coffee and sandwiches <i>quite</i> sufficient.
+Was it a <i>hot</i> supper, my
+love?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>desperately</i>). Yes&mdash;no&mdash;<i>rather</i>
+hot&mdash;I didn't
+notice. You ask such preposterous
+questions, <span class="sc">Theophilus</span>!</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> I didn't mean to.
+I was just a little surprised,
+do you know, at your taking a
+cab for such a short distance. I
+thought you might have felt
+unwell; but perhaps dear Mrs.
+<span class="sc">Cumberbatch</span> insisted&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> Why, of course,
+Pa; you know how kind and
+considerate she is; otherwise
+I should never have dreamed
+of&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> Just what I
+thought, my love. But wasn't
+the cabman rather uncivil? I
+wonder you gave way to him&mdash;unless,
+of course, he was drunk.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> He <i>was</i>&mdash;disgracefully
+drunk, Pa; if you
+heard so much, you must have
+noticed that; and how you
+could sit quietly here and never
+think of coming to my assistance!
+Ah, it is hardly for <i>you</i>
+to reproach me for submitting
+to his extortion!</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> Indeed, my love,
+I'd no idea&mdash;you are generally
+so very firm with cabmen that&mdash;&mdash;
+(<i>Changing the subject.</i>)
+By-the-bye, I don't know if you
+noticed a note for you lying on the hall table? It must have come
+after you left. It looked to me wonderfully like dear Mrs.
+<span class="sc">Cumberbatch's</span>
+writing, but what could she have to write about when
+she would be seeing you directly? Did she allude to it at all?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> From <span class="sc">Eliza Cumberbatch</span>? No; at least, she&mdash;I'll
+go and get it. (<i>She goes into the hall and finds the note.</i>) Good
+gracious, it <i>is</i> <span class="sc">Eliza's</span> hand! (<i>She reads it hurriedly under
+the hall-lamp.</i>)
+"Just a line. Zenana meeting postponed at last moment.
+Will let you know when another day fixed. Well, it will save me
+the trouble of writing to her; but, oh dear, the stories I've been
+telling Pa! But he's as bad&mdash;I <i>know</i> he's as bad!</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> (<i>as</i> Mrs. T. <i>returns</i>). So you found the note,
+<span class="sc">Cornelia</span>,
+and what does Mrs. <span class="sc">Cumberbatch</span> say?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>putting the note in the fire</i>). It&mdash;it was only
+from&mdash;from
+my dressmaker. (<i>To herself.</i>) He <i>drives</i> me to this!</p>
+<div class="figright" style="width: 300px;"><a href="images/232-800.png"><img src="images/232-300.png" width="300" height="389" alt="'Mrs. Toovey suddenly sits down, scarlet.'" /></a>
+<p class="center">"Mrs. Toovey suddenly sits down, scarlet."</p></div>
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> (<i>again uneasy</i>). Do you know, <span class="sc">Cornelia</span>, I&mdash;I may
+be
+wrong, but I've a very strong suspicion that&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>in terror</i>). Pa, speak out! In&mdash;in the name of
+Heaven, <i>what</i> is it you suspect?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> It's getting stronger every moment. I'm sure of it.
+My love, there's a strange man downstairs in the kitchen!</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page233" id="page233"></a>[pg 233]</span>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>with a gasp of relief</i>). A man! Oh, this must be
+seen into at once! (<i>She rings the bell furiously; presently</i>
+<span class="sc">Ph&oelig;be</span>
+<i>appears, evidently only half-awake</i>.) <span class="sc">Ph&oelig;be</span>, what does this
+mean? I insist on the truth!</p>
+
+<p><i>Ph&oelig;be</i>. I'm very sorry m'm, but I'd no idea you was home, and
+I was sitting up for you downstairs, and I expect I must have
+dropped asleep, and never heard you come in.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> Don't attempt to deceive <i>me!</i> You are entertaining
+a man downstairs, contrary to all my orders. Yes, it's useless to
+deny it, your master has distinctly heard sounds.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> No, my love, I can't exactly say as much as that&mdash;but&mdash;yes,
+every time the door opens it's more perceptible! (<i>He sniffs.</i>)
+Don't you observe yourself, my dear, a remarkably strong odour of
+tobacco-smoke? Now, as I never have been a smoker myself, it
+stands to reason that&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>Mrs. T. suddenly sits down, scarlet.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Ph&oelig;be</i> (<i>roused</i>). I'm sure if you and master suspect me of
+concealing followers downstairs, you're welcome to search as much as
+you please! Cook's gone up to bed hours ago, and for a poor girl
+to be kep' up to this time o' night, and then have her character
+took away&mdash;why, I'm not accustomed to such treatment, and, what's
+more, put up with it I <i>won't</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>to herself, guiltily</i>). It's that filthy smoke at the
+Eldorado! (<i>Aloud.</i>) <span class="sc">Theophilus</span>, how can you have such
+ridiculous fancies? Tobacco, indeed! I&mdash;<i>I</i> don't notice anything.
+<span class="sc">Ph&oelig;be</span>, it was a mistake of your master's; I don't blame you in the
+least. There, you've sat up long enough, go to bed, go, girl!</p>
+
+<p><i>Ph&oelig;be.</i> Beggin' your pardon, m'm, but insinuations have been
+descended to which I can't pass over in a hurry, and before I go I
+should wish&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>feverishly</i>). I tell you it was all a mistake. Your
+master will apologise for it. Pa, say you're sorry!</p>
+
+<p><i>Ph&oelig;be.</i> I don't require no apologies from <i>master</i>, m'm. I can
+make allowances for <i>him</i>&mdash;more partickler as there's no mistake
+about there being a smell of tobaccer-smoke. I don't wonder at
+<i>anyone</i> noticing it. It's your sending for me like this, and trying
+to shift the blame on the innercent, when all the time&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>to herself</i>). This is too intolerable! (<i>Aloud.</i>)
+Haven't I <i>said</i> I didn't blame you, you unreasonable girl! Let us
+have no more of this impertinence! Leave us!</p>
+
+<p><i>Ph&oelig;be.</i> I will, m'm, as soon as ever you can get suited, for, to
+tell you the truth, I don't like such goings on as these; and I'll
+take care I get a good character, too, or I'll know the reason why!
+(<i>As she closes the door.</i>) And I 'ope master will satisfy himself
+where the smell of tobacco reelly <i>does</i> come from, I'm sure; it isn't
+from <i>downstairs!</i></p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>She vanishes, leaving Mrs. T. petrified.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> You see, my love, it couldn't have been all my fancy,
+because <span class="sc">Ph&oelig;be</span> noticed it too. Dear me, it's late; I'd better go
+and see that everything is locked up. (<i>As he passes</i> Mrs. T.) It's
+very extraordinary. Surely they don't allow any of the missionaries
+to smoke at these Zenana meetings, my love&mdash;do they?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> Of course they don't. I&mdash;I am at a loss to understand
+you. <span class="sc">Theophilus</span>, and&mdash;and I am going to bed.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> No, but really&mdash;&mdash; Why, I <i>see</i> how it was! Depend
+upon it, my dear, that cabman must have been sitting inside the
+vehicle smoking, with the windows up, before you got in. Yes, yes;
+that accounts for everything.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>faintly</i>). Do you think so, <span class="sc">Theophilus</span>? I&mdash;I
+remember noticing a smell of cigars.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Toov.</i> (<i>as he goes out</i>). My poor dear love, <i>what</i> a trial
+for
+you; and you never complained! Now, when I see dear Mrs. <span class="sc">Cumberbatch</span>
+at church to-morrow, I must really caution her not to
+employ that cabman again&mdash;she may have taken his number, and he
+really ought to lose his licence&mdash;drunk, and smoking inside his cab!
+Oh, I shall tell her!</p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>He goes out.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Mrs. Toov.</i> (<i>alone</i>). Pa shall <i>not</i> go to church to-morrow.
+<i>I</i> will
+take care of that, and by the time he sees <span class="sc">Eliza</span> again he will have
+forgotten all about it. Is he doing all this to cover his own misdoings?
+I can't rest till I know! I will make <span class="sc">Charles</span> tell me on
+Monday. But what if Pa is blameless? No, he must have been
+doing <i>something</i> he oughtn't to. It would be too horrible if it turned
+out that I&mdash;<i>I</i> am the only person who has been (<i>she catches her
+breath with a shudder</i>) "hi-tiddley-ing," as those vulgar wretches
+would call it! There 's only one comfort that I can see; nobody
+here is ever likely to know, unless I choose to betray myself. Oh
+dear! oh dear! I wish I could forget this awful evening!</p>
+
+<p class="ind2">[<i>She ascends the stairs with a heavy and dispirited tread</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sc">End of Scene XIV.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<p class="ind1"><span class="sc">An Inquiry.</span>&mdash;Miss <span class="sc">Quota</span> writes to ask us "where the following
+well-known lines are to be found:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>"'Eight hours to sleep, eight hours to food are given,</p>
+<p>Eight hours to play, and all the rest to Heav'n.'"</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+[<i>We are not sure, but imagine that they are to be found In the works of
+"Anon." Anyhow, better send to Editor of "Notes and Queries," who
+knows everything.</i>&mdash;<span class="sc">Ed.</span>]
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"><a href="images/233-800.png"><img src="images/233-300.png" width="300" height="420" alt="HUMAN NATURE REBELS!" /></a>
+<h3 class="sans">HUMAN NATURE REBELS!</h3>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Poor Mr. Wiggles has just been described by a facetious
+Witness of the Lower Orders as "that there h'old Bloke
+wiv a Choker, an' a Cauliflower on 'is 'ed"</span>!!!</p></div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h2>TWO VIEWS OF VICTORY.</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">The Past.</span></h4>
+
+<p>THE Commander who had fought so bravely was tired out. He
+could go no farther. He had beaten back the stubborn foe, and
+there was nothing more for him to do. He waited with as much
+patience as he could muster the return of his messengers. In a
+short time he would learn whether the honour of his country had
+been preserved; whether his battle was a defeat or a victory.</p>
+
+<p>"Will they never come?" he murmured. "Surely by this time
+they should have learned the truth?"</p>
+
+<p>He had scarcely uttered these words when the scouts returned.</p>
+
+<p>"General," cried the leader, "your campaign has been crowned
+with success! England is herself again! Your reward is assured!"</p>
+
+<p>And it was. A week later he was made a K.C.B.!</p>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">The Future.</span></h4>
+
+<p>The Commander who had contended with the stubborn foe with a
+spirit of stern determination was at length exhausted. He had put
+to flight the enemies who at every step had attempted to bar his
+progress. But now the affair was over, and there was little for him
+to do; so he was waiting as patiently as he could the return of those
+he had sent forward to represent him in the proper quarter. Before
+long he would receive the intelligence for which he hungered. He
+would be told whether all was right or all was wrong; whether his
+battle was a defeat or a victory.</p>
+
+<p>"Will they never come?" he murmured. "Surely by this time
+they should have revealed the truth, and made the most of the
+opportunity."</p>
+
+<p>He had scarcely uttered these words when the scouts came back.</p>
+
+<p>"General," cried the leader, "your campaign has been crowned
+with success! Capel Court is itself again! The Stocks have gone
+up 15, and your success is assured!"</p>
+
+<p>And it was. A week later and he found himself a millionaire!</p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sc">Mem. from Matabeleland.</span>&mdash;Most of the news from the Cape, if
+not true, is certainly <i>Lo Ben trovato</i>.</p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page234" id="page234"></a>[pg 234]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/234-1500.png"><img src="images/234-600.png" width="600" height="383" alt="EFFECTS OF SHYNESS." /></a>
+<h3 class="sans">EFFECTS OF SHYNESS.</h3>
+
+<p><i>Shy Lady</i> (<i>trying to break the ice</i>). "<span class="sc">What a sad thing it all
+is about this wretched Coal-Strike, <i>isn't</i> it?</span>"</p>
+
+<p><i>Silent Gentleman</i> (<i>also shy</i>). "<span class="sc">Er&mdash;yes&mdash;er&mdash;I almost think
+that everything that can be said on that subject&mdash;er&mdash;er&mdash;<i>has</i>
+been said!</span>"</p>
+
+<p class="indr">[<i>Conversation languishes after this.</i></p></div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h2>"RULE, BRITANNIA!" (?)</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+["Her Majesty's Government are perfectly satisfied
+as to the adequacy and capacity of the British
+Navy to perform all the purposes for which it
+exists."&mdash;<i>Mr. Gladstone, in House of Commons,
+November 7, 1893.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Everybody knows, Liberals as well as Tories,
+that it is indispensable that we should have not
+only a powerful Navy, but I may say an all-powerful
+Navy."&mdash;<i>Mr. Morley at Manchester,
+November 8, 1893.</i>]
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>Since "Britain First!" is Fate's command,</p>
+<p class="i2">And History bids us sway the main,</p>
+<p>We feel this charter of our land</p>
+<p class="i2">All guardian statesmen must maintain.</p>
+<p class="i4">Rule, <span class="sc">Britannia</span>! <span class="sc">Britannia</span> rule the waves!</p>
+<p class="i4">Out on the Chief who only shirks and saves!</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>The nations must not rival thee,</p>
+<p class="i2">Their fleets below our own must fall.</p>
+<p><i>Thou</i> must, if thou'dst be great and free,</p>
+<p class="i2">Still rise superior to them all!</p>
+<p class="i4">Rule, <span class="sc">Britannia</span>! <span class="sc">Britannia</span> rule the waves!</p>
+<p>Such primacy e'en peaceful <span class="sc">Cobden</span> craves.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Russia and France are now allies!&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">Though funny, 'tis not all a joke.</p>
+<p>As their rejoicings shake the skies,</p>
+<p class="i2">Think how the great Free Trader spoke!</p>
+<p class="i4">Rule, <span class="sc">Britannia</span>! <span class="sc">Britannia</span> rule the waves!</p>
+<p class="i4">Better that Hundred Millions than be slaves.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>True, all thy statesmen <i>say</i> the same,</p>
+<p class="i2"><span class="sc">Morley</span> hands <span class="sc">Cobden's</span> dictum down.</p>
+<p>Yet Ins and Outs do play a game</p>
+<p class="i2">That hardly adds to thy renown.</p>
+<p class="i4">Rule, <span class="sc">Britannia</span>! <span class="sc">Britannia</span> rule the waves!</p>
+<p class="i4"><i>But</i> Parties squabble and the Exchequer&mdash;saves!</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>If thou'dst maintain thine ocean reign,</p>
+<p class="i2">And first in Commerce still would'st shine,</p>
+<p>The easy optimistic strain</p>
+<p class="i2">And Pangloss pose must not be thine.</p>
+<p class="i4">Rule, <span class="sc">Britannia</span>! <span class="sc">Britannia</span> rule the waves!</p>
+<p class="i4">But constant warding constant watching craves.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Devotion to the needs of home,</p>
+<p class="i2">And claims parochial, is not all.</p>
+<p>Beware, lest shades more darkling come,</p>
+<p class="i2">With gloomier writings on the wall.</p>
+<p class="i4">Rule, <span class="sc">Britannia</span>! <span class="sc">Britannia</span> rule the waves!</p>
+<p class="i4">Britons to careless trust should ne'er be slaves.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Say, Statesman, are those figures found</p>
+<p class="i2">Full warrant for your picture bold?</p>
+<p>Our watch the wave-washed world around</p>
+<p class="i2">Needs iron hearts, <i>and</i> ungrudged gold.</p>
+<p class="i4">Rule, <span class="sc">Britannia</span>! <span class="sc">Britannia</span> rule the waves!</p>
+<p class="i4">Britons&mdash;free-handed&mdash;never need be slaves!</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<p class="ind1">Mrs. R thinks the reason so many of the
+young men of the present day are bald is,
+because they don't use antimacassar oil as
+they did in her time.</p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h3>MARCH IN NOVEMBER.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">"Blow, blow, thou winter wind,"</p>
+<p class="i2">In verse some call thee wind.</p>
+<p>Though Thursday's crowd was thinned</p>
+<p class="i2">By blasts so unrefined,</p>
+<p>And men in armour, tinnèd</p>
+<p class="i2">Like lobsters, mutely pined&mdash;</p>
+<p>They, later, "wined" and "ginned,"</p>
+<p class="i2">Whilst guests superbly dined</p>
+<p>On turtle, fish (that's finned),</p>
+<p class="i2">Joints, game of matchless kind,</p>
+<p>And wines, rare, old, long-binned.</p>
+<p class="i2">Blow clear, before, behind,</p>
+<p>The streets where lately dinned</p>
+<p class="i2">The band&mdash;each man, defined,</p>
+<p>Of <i>Vaterland</i> the <i>kind</i>&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">And sightless singers whined</p>
+<p>Not much like <i>Jenny Lind</i>;</p>
+<p class="i2">Would they were dumb, not blind!</p>
+<p>Whilst grinders grimly grinned,</p>
+<p class="i2">And ground their graceless grind.</p>
+<p>I swore; perhaps I sinned.</p>
+<p class="i2">But now they seem to find</p>
+<p>Their rags, just tied and pinned,</p>
+<p class="i2">Let in thy blast unkind,</p>
+<p>By which they're almost skinned.</p>
+<p class="i2">Then blow, I do not mind,</p>
+<p>Thou rough November wind&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">Pronounced by many, wind.</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h3>Seasonable.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>When garden lawns are a green bog,</p>
+<p>And shrubbery vistas veiled in fog,</p>
+<p>Reload revolvers, let dogs run!</p>
+<p>The Burglar Season has begun!</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page235" id="page235"></a>[pg 235]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"><a href="images/235-1200.png"><img src="images/235-500.png" width="500" height="610" alt="'RULE, BRITANNIA!' (?)" /></a>
+"RULE, BRITANNIA!" (?)
+
+<p><span class="sc">Shade of Cobden</span> (<i>quoting from his own speech at Rochdale, June 26,
+1861</i>). "I AM NOT ONE TO ADVOCATE THE
+REDUCING OF OUR NAVY IN ANY DEGREE BELOW THAT PROPORTION TO THE FRENCH NAVY
+WHICH THE EXIGENCIES OF OUR SERVICE REQUIRE. WE HAVE A LEGITIMATE PRETENSION TO HAVE A
+LARGER NAVY THAN FRANCE.... IF THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT SHOWED A SINISTER DESIGN TO
+INCREASE THEIR NAVY TO AN EQUALITY WITH OURS, I <i>SHOULD VOTE A HUNDRED MILLIONS
+STERLING</i> RATHER THAN ALLOW THAT NAVY TO BE INCREASED <i>TO A LEVEL WITH OURS....</i> I
+HAVE SAID SO IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS, AND I REPEAT IT TO <i>YOU</i>."</p></div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page236" id="page236"></a>[pg 236]</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page237" id="page237"></a>[pg 237]</span>
+
+<h2 class="sans">OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.</h2>
+
+<p>Mr. <span class="sc">Fisher Unwin</span> is, my
+Baronite writes, still engaged in
+the important work, some time
+ago undertaken by his house, of
+publishing <i>The Story of the
+Nations</i>. The last volume issued
+is the thirty-fifth, in which Mr.
+<span class="sc">Greville Tregarthen</span> deals
+with the History of the Australian
+Commonwealth. Australasia
+is a mere chit among
+the nations of the world, and
+story, God bless you, it has
+hardly any to tell. It has
+never been at war except with
+the aboriginal settlers, who
+were, at the outset, so lost to all
+proper feeling as to resent the
+incursion of the white man,
+occasionally carrying their prejudice
+to the absurd extent of
+eating him. But this is ancient
+history in a record which, beginning
+a little more than a
+hundred years ago with a convict
+settlement&mdash;it was on
+January 26, 1788, the British
+flag was for the first time unfurled
+in Sydney Bay&mdash;has
+already spread out lusty limbs
+over a vast Continent. <i>The
+Story of the Nations</i> forms a
+library of itself, and this last
+volume is not the least fascinating
+of the series.</p>
+
+<p>The Baron, while greatly admiring
+and certainly grateful
+for the Diamond editions of all
+the best works, and Diamond
+editions should reproduce only
+those that can be classed among
+the "brilliants," of which two
+or three specimens at a time can
+be carried easily in the pocket
+of an ulster, begs to remind
+Messrs. <span class="sc">Routledge</span>, the republishers
+of <span class="sc">Dickens's</span> works in
+a very pocketable form, that
+much of our journeying is
+done by such gaslight as railway
+companies supply, and
+therefore, as this is not always
+of the most powerful kind,
+a book in small type, however
+clear the type may be, is
+unreadable. That is what the
+publishers have to consider.
+This excellent little pocket
+volume of, for example, <i>The
+Cricket on the Hearth</i>, is of no
+use to the Baron when once out
+of the pocket. True, the publishers
+may say "it is intended
+for the pocket only"; but if
+this be the case, then the pockets
+that would suffer would be
+those of the publishers, not those
+of the reading public. The
+Baron's hints are well worth
+consideration. For travelling,
+the publishers might provide
+and sell a small case containing
+the Diamond edition and a portable
+candle-lamp by which to
+read it. Only this would rather
+add to the expense, and with
+every volume one does not wish
+to be obliged to carry a candle-lamp.
+Therefore, bigger and
+clearer type. That's all. Try
+it, and if it does not succeed,
+blame the hitherto blameless</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p><span class="sc">Baron de B.-W.</span></p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"><a href="images/237a-800.png"><img src="images/237a-380.png" width="380" height="485" alt="CRUELLE ENIGME; OR, TWOS INTO ONE WON'T GO." /></a>
+<h3>CRUELLE ENIGME; OR, TWOS INTO ONE WON'T GO.</h3>
+
+<p><span class="sc">The Problem of the Day:&mdash;How to get this year's sleeves into
+last year's jacket.</span></p></div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<p class="ind1">Mrs. R. saw a heading in
+a newspaper. "<i>Board of Trade
+Returns.</i>" Whereupon she exclaimed,
+"Where's the Board
+of Trade been to? I suppose
+for a holiday, and we shall have
+to pay!"</p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h2>THE BOGUS MANAGER'S VADE MECUM.</h2>
+<ul class="none">
+<li><i>Question.</i> Is it an easy thing to become the manager of a theatre?</li>
+
+<li><i>Answer.</i> Why, certainly; you require no cash, and very little
+credit.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> Is it necessary that you should have any special training to
+enable you to appropriately fill so responsible a position?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> No. If you are sufficiently impudent, you may in the past have
+been a betting-man, a crossing-sweeper, or an unqualified
+dentist.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> Will you have any difficulty in securing a theatre?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> Not at all. You will always find someone willing to accept
+you as a lessee without making any inquiry as to your antecedents.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> Having obtained a theatre, what is your next step?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> To get together a company. This is easily managed, as the
+dramatic trade-journals give every week a long list of actors and
+actresses who are "resting."</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> What do you understand by such a word?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> That the advertiser is much in need of an engagement, but is
+too proud to acknowledge it.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> Such a frame of mind is, I suppose,
+favourable to hurried and unconsidered
+engagements?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> Quite so. It is an easy matter to
+get an entire company on excellent terms.
+Not that money is of any importance; for
+you may as well promise five pounds a week
+as five shillings, if you do not intend to pay.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> Having secured your company, what
+is the next step?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> To make them rehearse three weeks
+or a month without a salary.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> I suppose you have no trouble about
+obtaining a piece on advantageous terms?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> None whatever. If you are lucky
+you will get some conceited noodle to pay
+you for producing his play; and if you are not so fortunate, why at
+least you will get a drama, comedy, or burlesque for nothing.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> Say that you are ready to begin, will you have any difficulty
+in obtaining the preliminary announcements?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> No. For having been trusted by the proprietor of the theatre,
+the advertisement agents will follow suit, and you will obtain
+sufficient publicity to balance your requirements.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> And what will take place on and after the opening of the
+playhouse under your management?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> You will get more or less ready money taken at the doors
+during five days of the week, with which you can safely decamp
+without paying anybody on or before the sixth.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> Will not your sudden departure cause some inconvenience to
+a large number of persons connected with the enterprise?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> Assuredly. Many of the company you have engaged will starve,
+and the other parties to the proceedings will use strong language as
+they wipe off your liability as a bad debt.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> Is it possible that you will be made a bankrupt?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> Not only possible, but probable.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> And will this end your theatrical career?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> Why, of course not. All you will
+have to do is to take a little holiday.</li>
+
+<li><i>Q.</i> And after the holiday, what next?</li>
+
+<li><i>A.</i> Why, then you can secure another
+theatre and repeat the proceedings with
+exactly similar results.</li>
+</ul>
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<h3>NEWS FROM THE LAW COURTS.</h3>
+<a href="images/237b-700.png"><img src="images/237b-400.png" width="400" height="226" alt="NEWS FROM THE LAW COURTS." /></a>
+<p class="center">Cold but In-vig-orating.</p></div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h3>THE GINGHAM-GRABBER.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>Someone wrote, "Killing's no Murder."</p>
+<p>Nothing well could be absurder!</p>
+<p>But to many in our time</p>
+<p>Stealing (umbrellas) seems no crime.</p>
+<p>Therefore, to a frank plain dealer,</p>
+<p>Killing&mdash;an umbrella-stealer&mdash;</p>
+<p>Might be called&mdash;by Justice tried&mdash;</p>
+<p>Justifiable Snobicide!</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page238" id="page238"></a>[pg 238]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/238-1500.png"><img src="images/238-600.png" width="600" height="433" alt="'CRAMMING.'" /></a>
+<h3>"CRAMMING."</h3>
+
+<p><i>Affectionate Uncle.</i> "<span class="sc">Glad to see you, Rupert. Now tell me all about
+it. What Form are you in, Old Boy?</span>"</p>
+
+<p><i>Nephew (just returned from Harrow).</i> "<span class="sc">Well, Uncle, not so bad, I
+think. I can generally manage a couple of Eggs,
+two Sausages or Kidneys, some Dundee Marmalade, and two Cups of Coffee for
+Breakfast. I always have a little
+Luncheon, any amount of Roast Beef or Mutton for Dinner, and I generally look in
+at the Confectioner's in the
+afternoon, and invariably wind up with a good Supper. What do you think of
+that?</span>"</p>
+
+<p class="indr">[<i>Disappointed and misunderstood Uncle subsides, and thinks it best to make no comments.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h3>THE NINTH OF NOVEMBER.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>The Lord Mayor's Show, I saw it from the Strand,</p>
+<p class="i2">I stood and waited there an hour or so,</p>
+<p>Till from afar there came with blare of band</p>
+<p class="i18"> The Lord Mayor's Show.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>In civic splendour and with footstep slow</p>
+<p class="i2">Passed the procession, glorious and grand!</p>
+<p>I liked the soldiers well enough, although</p>
+<p class="i2">The men from Deal looked quite at home on land.</p>
+<p>Yet I confess that when I came to go,</p>
+<p class="i2">I said that once a year's enough to stand</p>
+<p class="i18"> The Lord Mayor's Show.</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<p class="ind">"<span class="sc">The Black Art" Revived!</span>&mdash;"The best specimen of the Black
+Art," quoth the Baron de B. W., "that I have lately seen, is the republication
+of the works of the Wizard of the North, <i>alias</i> Sir
+<span class="sc">Walter Scott</span>, Bart., in a series of substantial library-shelve-ish
+volumes, printed in good clear type."</p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h3>Q. E. D.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>Don't tell me of "room at the top!" It's a case,</p>
+<p>I'm sure, of "no thoroughfare." I'm at the base!</p>
+<p>Does that not suffice you? There only remains</p>
+<p>Some "room at the top" of your head, man, for brains.</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<p class="ind"><span class="sc">A Dickensian Question.</span>&mdash;At the date when <i>Martin Chuzzlewit</i>
+was written, what may fairly be assumed to have been the
+fashionable hour for dining?</p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h2 class="sans">ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.</h2>
+
+<h4>EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.</h4>
+
+<p><i>House of Commons, Monday, November 6.</i>&mdash;<span class="sc">Prince Arthur</span> in fine
+form to-night; made one of those speeches that distinctly enhance
+Parliamentary reputation. Ticklish situation for Leader of Opposition
+in face of Parish Councils Bill. Won't do, with General
+Election within measurable distance, to declare plump against it;
+still less will it suit party to support one of principal measures of
+a Government whose successive steps, however devious, are all
+bent upon goal of Home Rule. For two nights men rising from
+Opposition benches have endeavoured to wriggle through this
+difficulty; been more or less unsuccessful; <span class="sc">Prince Arthur</span>, with
+sure aim and light touch, does and says exactly right thing.</p>
+
+<p>By all means let <span class="sc">Hodge</span> have a voice in direction of his own
+affairs; his best friend, the party who spent themselves in his behalf
+in Corn-Law days, who acted in his best interests whenever question
+of political enfranchisement or his relations to parson and
+squire cropped up&mdash;the great Tory party would be the very last
+to slacken effort for his prosperity. So anxious are they on the
+score, they would not imperil opportunity by throwing out this
+Bill on the Second Reading. But <span class="sc">Prince Arthur</span> showed, in
+little asides, that this particular measure is badly conceived, not
+nearly so good as what would have befallen <span class="sc">Hodge</span> had a Unionist
+Ministry been in office. For an hour the <span class="sc">Prince</span> spoke, displaying
+perfect mastery of the subject, managing, without assuming a
+hostile attitude, to bestow upon the measure some damaging blows.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page239" id="page239"></a>[pg 239]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/239-1500.png"><img src="images/239-600.png" width="600" height="436" alt="LIKA JOKO'S JOTTINGS.&mdash;No. 4. SCENES IN THE CITY." /></a>
+<h3 class="sans">LIKA JOKO'S JOTTINGS.&mdash;No. 4. SCENES IN THE CITY.</h3></div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page240" id="page240"></a>[pg 240]</span>
+
+<p>First time since House met Mr. G. began to show that keen
+interest in proceedings which he seemed to have reserved for Home
+Rule Bill. Sat listening intently with hand to ear as <span class="sc">Prince Arthur</span>
+gracefully glided on from point to point. Pretty little sparring
+match when <span class="sc">Prince Arthur</span> endeavoured to draw him into doing
+something damaging, either in the way of reticence or declaration,
+touching <span class="sc">George Russell's</span> explosive speech on Friday night. "I
+would not," observed <span class="sc">Prince Arthur</span>, "have said so much, but
+I presume that in this matter the hon. gentleman represented
+the Government of which he is a member."
+Mr. G. shook his head. "Then he disclaims it?"
+Mr. G. shook his head again. "Oh, then, though he does
+not dissociate himself from the Under-secretary of India,
+he does not associate the Government with his remarks?" Mr.
+G. again shook his head, finally explaining that his
+young friend and colleague had merely revived former custom&mdash;existing
+"in my early days"&mdash;whereby Ministers not in the Cabinet
+and not connected with department specially concerned
+in matter at issue, might enter at large into general debate.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, here!" said <span class="sc">Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett</span>
+(Knight), for once in agreement with the views of Arch Enemy.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 250px;"><a href="images/240a-600.png"><img src="images/240a-200.png" width="200" height="396" alt="T. H. Napoleon Boltonparty 'objected to ladies being Justices of the Peace.'" /></a>
+<p>T. H. Napoleon Boltonparty "objected to ladies
+being Justices of the Peace."</p>
+
+<p><i>Justice Herself.</i> "Aha! Show me the man who
+said that!"</p></div>
+
+<p><i>Business done.</i>&mdash;More debate on Parish Councils Bill.
+As usual, adjourned at midnight. Motion made that House
+forthwith adjourn, <span class="sc">Oliver Rollit</span> asks for more. Too early
+to go home; might as well sit up till
+one o'clock, and take private Bills. House aghast. <span class="sc">Squire of
+Malwood</span> discreetly says he will think the matter over.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tuesday.</i>&mdash;Another night on Parish Councils. Debate should have
+finished last night; finally arranged to close it before dinner hour
+to-day; but it dribbled on to midnight. As there was an hour to
+spare, <span class="sc">Tommy Bowles</span>, who since Session resumed has been silent in
+six languages, thought he might as well say a few words. Romped
+in at half-past ten; awkward this; about the hour when <span class="sc">Jokim</span> had
+intended to lift debate out of rut by one of his luminous speeches.
+<span class="sc">Thomas</span>, however, thought House would prefer to hear him. At
+any rate, he provided opportunity. When at length <span class="sc">Jokim</span> spoke upon
+subject on which he is supreme authority, House almost empty,
+altogether languid.</p>
+
+<p>Brightened up for moment at <span class="sc">Squire of Malwood's</span> happy wit.
+<span class="sc">Jokim</span>, following on line trekked by <span class="sc">Prince Arthur</span>, suggested
+that half of Bill dealing with Poor Law matters should be abandoned.
+"According to judgment of <span class="sc">Solomon</span>," said the <span class="sc">Squire</span>, "it was
+the true mother who would not consent to divide her child in two."</p>
+
+<p>A dreary night made endurable by incursion of
+<span class="sc">Knatchbull-Hugessen</span>&mdash;<span class="sc">Herbert
+Thomas</span>, of Faversham division of Kent. For
+many years his brother sat in House till he finally wobbled into a
+peerage, and, as <span class="sc">Rosebery</span> said, wore his coronet as a crown of
+thorns because it had been given him by Mr. G. When he was
+with us here, and one turned to <i>Dod</i> to find him under heading
+"<span class="sc">Hugessen</span>," there was discovered instruction "See
+<span class="sc">Knatchbull-Hugessen</span>."
+This was explained at the time on score that no one
+from day to day exactly knew where <i>Hugessen</i> was.</p>
+
+<p>Different with his younger brother. "Sometimes," he said just
+now, looking sorrowfully round the House, a gleam of comfort
+brightening his eyes as they rested on a back view of <span class="sc">Jimmy
+Lowther's</span> head, "I believe I'm the only Tory left in the House."</p>
+
+<p>To-night up and smote Parish Councils Bill in uncompromising
+speech. No truckling to Socialism. No bowing the knee to the Baal
+<span class="sc">Hodge</span>. No leaning on the arm of Rimmon as he goes to worship in
+the temple of the Compound Householder. The Bill another downward
+step on the pathway dug out for the chariot of Free Trade;
+the country going to dogs at accelerated pace.</p>
+
+<p>Small House, but it listened with delight to the most thoroughly
+honest speech heard from any bench through many Parliaments.</p>
+
+<p><i>Business done.</i>&mdash;Parish Councils Bill read second time.</p>
+
+<p><i>Thursday.</i>&mdash;Still smiling at <span class="sc">Prince Arthur's</span> joke; led up to
+with great skill; last touch of art given in the look of startled surprise
+with which he regarded uproariously laughing audience. Was
+passing eulogy on <span class="sc">Rhodes</span> and the Chartered Company, forasmuch
+as, whilst certainly mowing down the Matabele with the Maxim
+gun, they had spread the benefits of civilisation, "extending railways,
+extending telegraphs, extending roads."</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 250px;"><a href="images/240b-600.png"><img src="images/240b-200.png" width="200" height="299" alt="The Clark of the House causing a Division." /></a>
+<p>The Clark of the House causing a Division.</p></div>
+
+<p>"Exactly," said the <span class="sc">Sage of Queen Anne's Gate</span>. "I spoke for an
+hour and a half, and <span class="sc">Balfour</span> puts what I had meant to say in a phrase.
+What is all this action in Mashonaland, this spending of money, and making
+of war, but the Extension of <span class="sc">Rhodes</span>?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Maguire</span> undertook to defend Chartered Company
+against attack of <span class="sc">Sage</span>. "Terrible work, <span class="sc">Toby</span>," he
+said, mopping his heated brow. "Much rather approach
+<span class="sc">Lobengula's</span> kraal itself than stand up and face the House."</p>
+
+<p>Had to be done, however, and <span class="sc">Maguire</span> not the man
+to run away from anything approaching a fight. Still
+he observed precaution of getting as near the door as
+possible, speaking from remote end of bench, almost
+outside limits of bar. Also he found some subtle comfort, strength,
+and consolation in standing on one leg whilst he addressed the
+Speaker. Sometimes it was the right leg, sometimes the left.
+Whether on one or the other&mdash;not for a moment on two&mdash;he described
+to the charmed House how the cherished object of Mr. <span class="sc">Rhodes</span>, the
+one desire upon which all the energies of the Chartered Company were
+bent, was that the men of Matabele should "marry and settle down."</p>
+
+<p><i>Business done.</i>&mdash;Discussion of affairs in Matabeleland.</p>
+
+<p><i>Friday.</i>&mdash;Debate on <span class="sc">M'Laren's</span> Amendment to Employers' Liability
+Bill brought to conclusion at midnight. Thought it would be all
+over before dinner; dragged on hour after hour with ever deepening
+depression. Seems as if already, in this first fortnight of Autumn
+Session, energy's sapped; dulness certainly dominant.</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is," said <span class="sc">The Squire of Malwood</span>, "there is no
+fight about the House now <span class="sc">Joseph</span> is awa'. Hear he is coming back
+towards end of next week, balmy from the Bahamas, breezy from
+the Atlantic. I shouldn't at all wonder if, upon his arrival, a genial
+change was wrought in things generally."</p>
+
+<p><i>Business done.</i>&mdash;Government defeat averted by majority of 19.</p>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<h2>QUEER QUERIES.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="sc">The London Programme.</span>&mdash;I entirely approve of the spirited
+protest lately made by the cabmen against that vile instrument of
+Monopoly, the "Station Omnibus." But what I want to ask is whether
+there is no plan of doing away with a still more nefarious specimen
+of capitalistic greed and oppression&mdash;I allude to the "Out-Porter."
+Why should this minion, of railway tyrants be permitted to take the
+beer out of the mouths of honest English working-men? I and a
+number of my pals are constantly loafing round the station in our
+suburb waiting for a job of luggage-carrying, or if we aren't exactly
+<i>at</i> the station, we are always to be found at the Public just opposite.
+Will it be believed that passengers actually prefer to engage this
+avaricious blackleg, the Out-Porter, instead of employing <i>us!</i> Their
+paltry excuse is that he charges less than we do and is more civil.
+That <i>shows</i> him to be a contemptible blackleg! Only a serf of our
+present miserable social arrangements is ever civil to anybody.
+Call him an Out-Porter! If me and my pals catch him one of
+these dark nights we'll make an Out-Patient of him! Is the mere
+convenience of the public for ever to override the legitimate claims
+of the deserving unemployed?&mdash;<span class="sc">Corner Boy.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume
+105, November 18, 1893, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, LONDON CHARIVARI, NOV 18, 1893 ***
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 105,
+November 18, 1893, 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 105, November 18, 1893
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Sir Francis Burnand
+
+Release Date: April 11, 2012 [EBook #39424]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, LONDON CHARIVARI, NOV 18, 1893 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer Lesley Halamek, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Punch, or the London Charivari
+
+Volume 105, November 18th 1893
+
+_edited by Sir Francis Burnand_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+"THE PAPER OF THE DAY AFTER TO-MORROW."
+
+ [In one of the magazines an entire article has been
+ transmitted to the office, not by the post, but by mental
+ suggestion.--_News paragraph._]
+
+SCENE--_Editor's Room of "The Mental Mirror of the Universe."_
+TIME--_An hour before publication._ Editor _and_ Chief-Sub.
+_discovered in consultation_.
+
+_Editor._ Dear me, Mr. PAYSTE, this is very annoying! Debate on Africa
+in the House to-night, and our leader-writer has sent in no copy! Why
+did you not communicate with me?
+
+_Chief-Sub._ Well, Sir, as you were dining with the Duke, I did not
+like to disturb you, especially as I had arranged matters. I have got
+some one else to knock off the article.
+
+_Ed._ Very good, and where does it come from?
+
+_Chief-Sub._ I turned on the mentophone and found Lord MACAULAY
+disengaged.
+
+_Ed._ Of course he writes smartly enough, but I should have thought he
+was scarcely sufficiently well-up in the subject.
+
+_Chief-Sub._ So he said, Sir: so we applied to Sir WALTER RALEIGH, who
+has sent in a good column.
+
+_Ed._ His English, I am afraid, is a trifle old-fashioned.
+
+_Chief Sub._ Well, yes, Sir; a little. But I gave it to one of our
+subs. who has made black letter a study, and between them they have
+turned out a very decent leader. Sorry to say the wire has broken down
+between London and the seat of the war, so we have no despatches.
+
+_Ed._ Distinctly annoying! However, I think I can put myself in
+communication with our special. (_Takes a pen in his right hand, and
+commences writing._) Well, what next?
+
+_Chief Sub._ But shall I not disturb you?
+
+_Ed._ Not at all; my right hand is in sympathy with LONGBOW, so I need
+not pay any attention to what he is sending us until he gets to the
+end of his copy. Everything else right?
+
+_Chief Sub._ I think I may venture to say "Yes," Sir. Mrs. COVERS, who
+does our reviews, has neglected to send in her stuff, but I have used
+the mentophone again in that case. Put on CHARLES LAMB. And I think
+that's all, save, as there is a letter about the authorship of
+_Hamlet_, I have got WILLIAM SHAKSPEARE to answer it himself. And now,
+Sir, I would suggest that, as we are rather full up this evening, you
+might conclude that dispatch as quickly as possible.
+
+_Ed._ My hand has just done writing. (_Gives copy to_ Chief Sub.)
+Anything worth a line for the bill?
+
+_Chief Sub._ (_after perusal_). Well, yes, Sir. I find there has been
+a battle, so we may as well give that.
+
+_Ed._ Everything right now?
+
+_Chief Sub._ Everything, Sir.
+
+_Ed._ Well, now you can send down the paper to press as soon as you
+please. (_Exit_ Chief Sub. _to carry out directions_.) Dear me! It
+really simplifies matters considerably when waves of thought will do
+as well as the electric telegraph.
+
+ [_The Curtain falls upon the_ Editor's _very natural
+ reflection_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: SANCTA SIMPLICITAS.
+
+_Housemaid._ "WE'RE GETTING UP A SWEEPSTAKES, MRS. THRUPP. WON'T YOU
+JOIN?"
+
+_Housekeeper._ "GRACIOUS ME, CHILD; NOT I! WHY IF I _WON_ A HORSE I
+SHOULDN'T KNOW WHAT TO _DO_ WITH HIM!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO THE SEA.
+
+_An Expostulation._
+
+ Oh, smooth and smiling! I have loved thee well!
+ Hymned thee, and heard thee; lived beneath thy spell;
+ For years thy life-giving ozone have bless'd,
+ That makes loose garments tighter round the chest.
+ Paced in the dark thy sounding margent white,
+ And voiced my rapture in the boisterous night,
+ Striking the lurking coastguard with affright.
+
+ Now on my barque--ah, no! no barque be mine!
+ On the new packet of the Angler Line,
+ I learn, too late, when fairly out at sea,
+ How well they speak who speak not well of thee
+ Implacable, inscrutable Emirs
+ Mock not the captured foe of bloodstained years
+ As thou hast mock'd one who ne'er did thee wrong,
+ Save in the venial fault of unexpressive song.
+ Or canst thou this unmeasured vengeance take,
+ Remembering some childish duck-and-drake,
+ Forgotten long, and never done in spite?
+ How could it harm thy navy-rending might,
+ Thou, whose huge waves in wanton affluence bang
+ Their heads against the rocks, in mid-air hang,
+ Up the sheer cliffs clamber with foamy claws,
+ And backward plunge again, with mad applause
+ Of all the turbulent, tumultuous press
+ That hurl themselves to spray in wantonness?
+ Prone, but unconquered, I have roll'd to leeward,
+ Soothed by the merciless mercy of the steward.
+ How can I stand when hardest steel and teak
+ Play a vertiginous game of hide-and-seek?
+ All is a-swing and dipping and a-roll.
+ Oh, vain material creed! Th' informing soul!
+ Proves well its immateriality,
+ Defying thus the tortures of the sea,
+ That force all else to helpless surrender;
+ For aught but very Spirit would prefer
+ To seek at once the illimitable inane,
+ Than cognisant of anguish thus remain
+ The tenant of a desolated shrine,
+ A bare clay cabin, like this frame of mine.
+ Oh, rich saloons! Oh, rooms of wretched state!
+ The pomp and glory of you all I hate!
+ Ye fulsome diving dados, would ye were
+ Extinct as your vocabular congener!
+ Place me where errant icebergs, anchored deep
+ By chains of frost, a darkling vigil keep,
+ Fixed in the pole's impenetrable wall,
+ Dead to the warmer ocean's roving call!
+ Far from this liquid way that heaves and rolls,
+ This world-long switchback, bounded by the poles,
+ This path of pain, whose undulations cease
+ Only in that palaeocrystic peace!
+ Nay, what is this? How steady! Here we are!
+ Field breezes mingle with the oil and tar,
+ And with a shudder I behold anear
+ The solid weed-hung timbers of the pier.
+ Perfidious sea! I'll trust thee never more,
+ And mock thy fury safely from the shore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO HEBE.
+
+(_See the Report of the Lady Commissioners on Women's Labour._)
+
+ Waitress! with the dimpled chin,
+ Cap as clean as a new pin,
+ Here's a feather to put in!
+
+ For Miss ORME'S report declares
+ That no male with you compares
+ In the showing off of wares.
+
+ Be it counter, be it bar,
+ You can "dress" it--you're its star,
+ Bright, and _most_ particular!
+
+ Grievances you have, no doubt;
+ Which of us exists without?
+ Still, you do not pine or pout.
+
+ Standing with reluctant feet
+ Always ready, trim, and neat,
+ No one tells _you_--"Take a seat!"
+
+ Hours are long, and meal-time short,
+ Mashing bores, who think it "sport,"
+ Say the things they didn't ought!
+
+ Gather, then, the tips that fall;
+ Don't let vulgar chaff appal;
+ To the Bar you've had your "call"!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CON. FOR COMPETITIVE SPORTSMEN.--_Q._ What is the most unpopular thing
+in the (sporting) world? _A._ A "record," because it is always being
+"cut," by everybody, everywhere, every day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE GREAT AFRICAN LION-TAMER.]
+
+ ["He fully admitted the difficulties of the Government and
+ Sir HENRY LOCH. Both found themselves to be in a most
+ exceptionally difficult position, created by those who had
+ gone before them by granting in the wrong way the charter to
+ the Company. He admitted that both Lord RIPON and Sir HENRY
+ LOCH did their best in the circumstances for a long time to
+ maintain peace; both urged that war should be avoided.... Mr.
+ RHODES was Prime Minister of Cape Colony, and obviously Sir
+ HENRY LOCH had an exceedingly difficult position in dealing
+ as Prime Minister and as the head of the Company with that
+ gentleman, to whom he could not say that he did not quite
+ believe him, and that he was forcing on the war."--_Mr.
+ Labouchere on the Chartered Company and Matabeleland._]
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_grandly_). "Walk up, walk up, ladies and gentlemen! See
+the great African live lion, Matabele--called Lo Ben for short--larger
+than (average) life, and thrice as natural as normal (menagerie)
+nature! Walk up! Walk up! Taming process just about to begin----
+
+_Agent of Menagerie Proprietor_ (_sotto voce_). Oh, well you
+know--subject, of course, to--ahem!--every provision being made
+for--a--_humanity_--and--ahem--every precaution being taken
+against--a--a--needless risks, you know, and--a--obvious cruelty, you
+see--and--ahem!--all that sort of thing, don't you know.
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_nettled_). No, I _don't_ know, dontcher know. And
+what's more I don't believe _you_ know, dontcher know, nor your
+guv'nors neither, for that matter. What _is_ your little game, anyhow?
+
+_Agent_ (_with some assumption of dignity_). We have _no_ "little
+game." Little Game is not the word. Lions, I believe, are generally
+called "Big Game," by NIMRODS and others.
+
+ [_Sniggers as one who has scored._
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_sardonically_). NIMROD, indeed! Ah! a mighty hunter
+before the Lords _you_ are, ain't you? You and your lot! Rural rabbits
+and parochial foxes are G----'s "Big Game," eh?
+
+_Agent._ This is neither the time nor the place to argue that point.
+Your business is lion-taming; ours is menagerie-managing.
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_scornfully_). All right, my noble swell! Manage _him_!
+
+ [_Pointing to Lion, who is ramping and roaring._
+
+_Agent._ Not at all, not at all!
+
+ [_Spectators become impatient._
+
+_Lion-Tamer._ Well, look here, do you want this lion tamed for you, or
+do you _not_?
+
+_Agent._ Why, cert'n'ly! Subject of course to the assistance--ahem!--I
+_should_ say _supervision_ of LOCH and myself.
+
+_Lion-Tamer._ Ah, "supervise" away as much as you please, only don't
+interfere with me. The old game! Stand by while I do the dangerous
+part of the business, hamper me as much as you can, and when, in spite
+of you all, I am successfully through, take the business--and the
+credit--over yourselves!
+
+_Agent_ (_aside_). Wonderful man, very. Wish I quite knew what to
+make of him. Lion-tamers, like fire, are excellent servants, but bad
+masters. All alike, all alike, CLIVE, WARREN HASTINGS, Rajah BROOKE,
+Jamaica EYRE, BARTLE FRERE, GORDON, all wonderful, and--in the
+end--very useful, but worrying, worrying!
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_proceeding_). Walk up, walk up, ladies and gentlemen!
+All in to begin! See the big black-maned African lion, fresh from
+Mashonaland wilds; bigger than CHURCHILL ever chased or SELOUS
+slew, or VAN AMBURGH subdued, tamed in the twinkling of an assegai,
+conquered in the 'tss! of a Hotchkiss, by the Great South African
+Lion-Tamer, RHODOROWDIDOW the Rumbistical.
+
+_Spectators._ Hooray! Hooray!! Hoo-_ray!!!_
+
+_Agent_ (_aside_). How wonderfully popular these thrasonical
+wild-beast tamers and prancing proconsul sort of fellows are--with the
+gallery!
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_to attendant_). I say, just hand me the loaded whip,
+and--keep the poker hot, in case of emergency----
+
+_Agent_ (_hurriedly_). Oh, here, I say; that will never do,
+RHODOROWDIDOW!
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_impatiently_). What do you mean?
+
+_Agent._ Why, you know, loaded bludgeons and red-hot pokers _read_
+too much like--_Cruelty to Animals_! What _would_ LABBY and the
+Humanitarians say? You're none too popular already, you know, in
+certain quarters. Your masterful little ways and monetary success have
+put a good many backs up. We mustn't run any needless risks, RHODO.
+_Wouldn't_ this little toy-whip and this big bottle of (_medicated_)
+rose-water do as well?
+
+_Lion-Tamer_ (_scornfully_). _Was it with Rose-water that "John
+Company" tamed your Indian tiger for you?_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: TWO WAYS OF LOOKING AT IT.
+
+_Sporting Farmer_ (_who has been kind enough to give a mount to our
+friend 'Arry_). "NOW THEN! THEY'RE AWAY. DON'T YOU SEE THEY'RE GONE?"
+
+_'Arry_ (_who has been having a very bad time_). "EH! GONE! AND NOT
+COMIN' BACK? WOT A BLESSIN'!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+YOU NEVER WROTE.
+
+(_To Another Man's Fiancee._)
+
+ You never wrote a single word, though I
+ Sent prompt congratulations in a note,
+ You gave my well-meant greetings the go-by--
+ You never wrote.
+
+ Do you remember when we took a boat,
+ And slowly drifted 'neath a summer sky?
+ Perhaps you don't. In fact, perhaps, you vote
+ Such memories a bore. You can't deny
+ That, politician-like, you turned your coat,
+ In fine, you jilted me. Is not that why
+ You never wrote?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. R. heard in Scotland that MONSON was always a bit of a scapegoat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+UNDER THE ROSE.
+
+(_A Story in Scenes._)
+
+SCENE XIV.--_The Study at Hornbeam Lodge._
+
+TIME--_Saturday night, about_ 11.30. Mr. TOOVEY _is alone_.
+
+_Mr. Toovey_ (_to himself_). Oh the inestimable blessing of having
+nothing on one's mind again! How providential that I found LARKINS in!
+He was a little unsympathetic at first, to be sure; he _would_ have it
+that I must have known all along what the Eldorado really was! but as
+soon as he saw how strongly I felt about it, he was _most_ helpful. I
+could _not_ have gone to that place this evening; how could I have met
+CORNELIA'S eye after it? As it is, I can face her without---- Surely
+she is later than usual from this Zenana meeting! (_Wheels are heard
+outside._) A cab? I do hope nothing is the matter! Why, that sounds
+like--like a _latchkey_! Can it be--ah!--a dispute with the cabman--it
+_must_ be CORNELIA!
+
+ [_The front door bangs._
+
+_A Voice_ (_in earnest remonstrance through the keyhole_). 'Ere, I
+say, you don't sneak off like _that_, you know! I _knowed_ you was no
+good the minnit I clapped eyes on you! Are you going to gimme my legal
+fare or not? I ain't goin' till I git it. I want another shellin' orf
+o' you I do!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_to himself_). Another shilling? Why, it's under a mile!
+He little knows my wife's principles if he expects----
+
+_The Voice._ You orter be _ashimed_ o' yourself! A lydy like you
+to tyke a man orf his rank at this toime o' noight, all the w'y
+from----(_The front door is hastily unlocked again._) Thankee,
+mum, thankee; lor, I only want what's my doo, and the distance 'ere
+from----
+
+ [_The door shuts with a bang._
+
+_Mr. Toov._ She's given him the extra shilling--she _can't_ be well!
+I'm afraid she's really poorly. She's gone into the drawing-room, but
+there are no lights there. She'll be here directly.
+
+ [_He sits up expectantly._
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself, in the hall_). Just as I expected.
+THEOPHILUS not home yet! I shall sit up for him in the study. (_She
+opens the study door, and starts_.) So _there_ you are, Pa! And pray
+when did _you_ come in?
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_mildly_). Yes, my love, here I am; I've been in a long
+while, quite a long while.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself_). And he imagines I believe _that!_
+(_Aloud._) I understood you intended to spend the evening with
+CHARLES.
+
+_Mr. Toov._ So I did, my dear, so I did. I went to his rooms.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ And you went out somewhere together, Pa? Come, you won't
+deny _that_!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_to himself_). What a mercy I didn't go to that Eldorado!
+I should have _had_ to tell her! (_Aloud._) Why you see we--we didn't
+go anywhere. I found CHARLES was engaged to dine with a friend, so I
+went away again.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself_). A very likely story! Where has THEOPHILUS
+learnt such brazen duplicity? (_Aloud._) Oh! and then of course you
+came straight home?
+
+_Mr. Toov._ Why, no, my love; not immediately. I--I suddenly
+recollected that I had to see a friend on--on a little matter of
+business which was--hem--somewhat pressing, so I went there first of
+all.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself, contemptuously_). Exactly the excuse in all
+those horrid songs! (_Aloud._) And the business kept you rather late,
+eh, Pa? Some business _is_ apt to do so, I know!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_to himself_). She makes me almost feel as if I'd gone
+after all! (_Aloud._) I _was_ a little late, my dear, not so very.
+I suppose I must have been home between eight and nine, and PH[OE]BE
+brought me up some nice cold mutton and the apple-tart, so I did very
+well, very well indeed.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself_). If he is deceiving me, I can soon find
+out from the look of the joint and tart!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ By the way, my love, surely _you_ are rather late this
+evening, are you not? it's nearly twelve!
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself, with a start_). Oh, but I will _not_ fib
+unless he forces me to. (_Aloud._) I--I was detained later than I
+expected.
+
+_Mr. Toov._ And you didn't expect to be back so very early either, for
+you took the latchkey, didn't you?
+
+MRS. TOOV. I happened to find it, Pa, and I thought I might as well
+use it--and why not?
+
+_Mr. Toov._ It was most thoughtful of you, my love, to think of
+saving PH[OE]BE. By the way, do you notice----? (_He looks round him
+suspiciously._) Ah, well, it may be my fancy. And you had a successful
+meeting? were there many interesting speeches?
+
+_Mrs. Toov_ (_choking_). As--as interesting as usual, THEOPHILUS! (_To
+herself._) I 'm sure _that's_ true enough!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ And supper provided afterwards, I suppose? Which accounts
+for your being late. Dear--dear me!
+
+ [_His face grows troubled again._
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ Is there any reason why there _shouldn't_ be supper
+afterwards, Pa?
+
+_Mr. Toov._ Not in _that_ house. Our dear friends the CUMBERBATCHES do
+everything on such a truly hospitable scale. Now, most people in their
+position would have considered tea and coffee and sandwiches _quite_
+sufficient. Was it a _hot_ supper, my love?
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_desperately_). Yes--no--_rather_ hot--I didn't notice.
+You ask such preposterous questions, THEOPHILUS!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ I didn't mean to. I was just a little surprised, do you
+know, at your taking a cab for such a short distance. I thought you
+might have felt unwell; but perhaps dear Mrs. CUMBERBATCH insisted----
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ Why, of course, Pa; you know how kind and considerate she
+is; otherwise I should never have dreamed of----
+
+_Mr. Toov._ Just what I thought, my love. But wasn't the cabman rather
+uncivil? I wonder you gave way to him--unless, of course, he was
+drunk.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ He _was_--disgracefully drunk, Pa; if you heard so much,
+you must have noticed that; and how you could sit quietly here and
+never think of coming to my assistance! Ah, it is hardly for _you_ to
+reproach me for submitting to his extortion!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ Indeed, my love, I'd no idea--you are generally so very
+firm with cabmen that---- (_Changing the subject._) By-the-bye, I
+don't know if you noticed a note for you lying on the hall table? It
+must have come after you left. It looked to me wonderfully like dear
+Mrs. CUMBERBATCH'S writing, but what could she have to write about
+when she would be seeing you directly? Did she allude to it at all?
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ From ELIZA CUMBERBATCH? No; at least, she--I'll go and
+get it. (_She goes into the hall and finds the note._) Good gracious,
+it _is_ ELIZA'S hand! (_She reads it hurriedly under the hall-lamp._)
+"Just a line. Zenana meeting postponed at last moment. Will let you
+know when another day fixed. Well, it will save me the trouble of
+writing to her; but, oh dear, the stories I've been telling Pa! But
+he's as bad--I _know_ he's as bad!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_as_ Mrs. T. _returns_). So you found the note, CORNELIA,
+and what does Mrs. CUMBERBATCH say?
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_putting the note in the fire_). It--it was only
+from--from my dressmaker. (_To herself._) He _drives_ me to this!
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_again uneasy_). Do you know, CORNELIA, I--I may be
+wrong, but I've a very strong suspicion that----
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_in terror_). Pa, speak out! In--in the name of Heaven,
+_what_ is it you suspect?
+
+_Mr. Toov._ It's getting stronger every moment. I'm sure of it. My
+love, there's a strange man downstairs in the kitchen!
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_with a gasp of relief_). A man! Oh, this must be seen
+into at once! (_She rings the bell furiously; presently_ PH[OE]BE
+_appears, evidently only half-awake_.) PH[OE]BE, what does this mean?
+I insist on the truth!
+
+_Ph[oe]be_. I'm very sorry m'm, but I'd no idea you was home, and I
+was sitting up for you downstairs, and I expect I must have dropped
+asleep, and never heard you come in.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ Don't attempt to deceive _me_! You are entertaining a man
+downstairs, contrary to all my orders. Yes, it's useless to deny it,
+your master has distinctly heard sounds.
+
+_Mr. Toov._ No, my love, I can't exactly say as much as
+that--but--yes, every time the door opens it's more perceptible! (_He
+sniffs._) Don't you observe yourself, my dear, a remarkably strong
+odour of tobacco-smoke? Now, as I never have been a smoker myself, it
+stands to reason that----
+
+ [_Mrs. T. suddenly sits down, scarlet._
+
+[Illustration: "Mrs. Toovey suddenly sits down, scarlet."]
+
+_Ph[oe]be_ (_roused_). I'm sure if you and master suspect me of
+concealing followers downstairs, you're welcome to search as much as
+you please! Cook's gone up to bed hours ago, and for a poor girl to
+be kep' up to this time o' night, and then have her character took
+away--why, I'm not accustomed to such treatment, and, what's more, put
+up with it I _won't_.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself, guiltily_). It's that filthy smoke at the
+Eldorado! (_Aloud._) THEOPHILUS, how can you have such ridiculous
+fancies? Tobacco, indeed! I--_I_ don't notice anything. PH[OE]BE, it
+was a mistake of your master's; I don't blame you in the least. There,
+you've sat up long enough, go to bed, go, girl!
+
+_Ph[oe]be._ Beggin' your pardon, m'm, but insinuations have been
+descended to which I can't pass over in a hurry, and before I go I
+should wish----
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_feverishly_). I tell you it was all a mistake. Your
+master will apologise for it. Pa, say you're sorry!
+
+_Ph[oe]be._ I don't require no apologies from _master_, m'm. I can
+make allowances for _him_--more partickler as there's no mistake about
+there being a smell of tobaccer-smoke. I don't wonder at _anyone_
+noticing it. It's your sending for me like this, and trying to shift
+the blame on the innercent, when all the time----
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_to herself_). This is too intolerable! (_Aloud._)
+Haven't I _said_ I didn't blame you, you unreasonable girl! Let us
+have no more of this impertinence! Leave us!
+
+_Ph[oe]be._ I will, m'm, as soon as ever you can get suited, for, to
+tell you the truth, I don't like such goings on as these; and I'll
+take care I get a good character, too, or I'll know the reason why!
+(_As she closes the door._) And I 'ope master will satisfy himself
+where the smell of tobacco reelly _does_ come from, I'm sure; it isn't
+from _downstairs_!
+
+ [_She vanishes, leaving Mrs. T. petrified._
+
+_Mr. Toov._ You see, my love, it couldn't have been all my fancy,
+because PH[OE]BE noticed it too. Dear me, it's late; I'd better go and
+see that everything is locked up. (_As he passes_ Mrs. T.) It's very
+extraordinary. Surely they don't allow any of the missionaries to
+smoke at these Zenana meetings, my love--do they?
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ Of course they don't. I--I am at a loss to understand
+you. THEOPHILUS, and--and I am going to bed.
+
+_Mr. Toov._ No, but really---- Why, I _see_ how it was! Depend upon
+it, my dear, that cabman must have been sitting inside the vehicle
+smoking, with the windows up, before you got in. Yes, yes; that
+accounts for everything.
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_faintly_). Do you think so, THEOPHILUS? I--I remember
+noticing a smell of cigars.
+
+_Mr. Toov._ (_as he goes out_). My poor dear love, _what_ a trial for
+you; and you never complained! Now, when I see dear Mrs CUMBERBATCH at
+church to-morrow, I must really caution her not to employ that cabman
+again--she may have taken his number, and he really ought to lose his
+licence--drunk, and smoking inside his cab! Oh, I shall tell her!
+
+ [_He goes out._
+
+_Mrs. Toov._ (_alone_). Pa shall _not_ go to church to-morrow. _I_
+will take care of that, and by the time he sees ELIZA again he will
+have forgotten all about it. Is he doing all this to cover his own
+misdoings? I can't rest till I know! I will make CHARLES tell me
+on Monday. But what if Pa is blameless? No, he must have been doing
+_something_ he oughtn't to. It would be too horrible if it turned out
+that I--_I_ am the only person who has been (_she catches her breath
+with a shudder_) "hi-tiddley-ing," as those vulgar wretches would
+call it! There 's only one comfort that I can see; nobody here is ever
+likely to know, unless I choose to betray myself. Oh dear! oh dear! I
+wish I could forget this awful evening!
+
+ [_She ascends the stairs with a heavy and dispirited tread_.
+
+END OF SCENE XIV.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN INQUIRY.--Miss QUOTA writes to ask us "where the following
+well-known lines are to be found:--
+
+ "'Eight hours to sleep, eight hours to food are given,
+ Eight hours to play, and all the rest to Heav'n.'"
+
+ [_We are not sure, but imagine that they are to be found In
+ the works of "Anon." Anyhow, better send to Editor of "Notes
+ and Queries," who knows everything._--ED.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: HUMAN NATURE REBELS!
+
+POOR MR. WIGGLES HAS JUST BEEN DESCRIBED BY A FACETIOUS WITNESS OF
+THE LOWER ORDERS AS "THAT THERE H'OLD BLOKE WIV A CHOKER, AN' A
+CAULIFLOWER ON 'IS 'ED"!!!]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO VIEWS OF VICTORY.
+
+THE PAST.
+
+THE Commander who had fought so bravely was tired out. He could go no
+farther. He had beaten back the stubborn foe, and there was nothing
+more for him to do. He waited with as much patience as he could muster
+the return of his messengers. In a short time he would learn whether
+the honour of his country had been preserved; whether his battle was a
+defeat or a victory.
+
+"Will they never come?" he murmured. "Surely by this time they should
+have learned the truth?"
+
+He had scarcely uttered these words when the scouts returned.
+
+"General," cried the leader, "your campaign has been crowned with
+success! England is herself again! Your reward is assured!"
+
+And it was. A week later he was made a K.C.B.!
+
+
+THE FUTURE.
+
+The Commander who had contended with the stubborn foe with a spirit of
+stern determination was at length exhausted. He had put to flight the
+enemies who at every step had attempted to bar his progress. But now
+the affair was over, and there was little for him to do; so he was
+waiting as patiently as he could the return of those he had sent
+forward to represent him in the proper quarter. Before long he would
+receive the intelligence for which he hungered. He would be told
+whether all was right or all was wrong; whether his battle was a
+defeat or a victory.
+
+"Will they never come?" he murmured. "Surely by this time they should
+have revealed the truth, and made the most of the opportunity."
+
+He had scarcely uttered these words when the scouts came back.
+
+"General," cried the leader, "your campaign has been crowned with
+success! Capel Court is itself again! The Stocks have gone up 15, and
+your success is assured!"
+
+And it was. A week later and he found himself a millionaire!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MEM. FROM MATABELELAND.--Most of the news from the Cape, if not true,
+is certainly _Lo Ben trovato_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: EFFECTS OF SHYNESS.
+
+_Shy Lady_ (_trying to break the ice_). "WHAT A SAD THING IT ALL IS
+ABOUT THIS WRETCHED COAL-STRIKE, _ISN'T_ IT?"
+
+_Silent Gentleman_ (_also shy_). "ER<--YES--ER--I ALMOST THINK THAT
+EVERYTHING THAT CAN BE SAID ON THAT SUBJECT--ER--ER--_HAS_ BEEN SAID!"
+
+ [_Conversation languishes after this._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"RULE, BRITANNIA!" (?)
+
+ ["Her Majesty's Government are perfectly satisfied as to the
+ adequacy and capacity of the British Navy to perform all the
+ purposes for which it exists."--_Mr. Gladstone, in House of
+ Commons, November 7, 1893._
+
+ "Everybody knows, Liberals as well as Tories, that it is
+ indispensable that we should have not only a powerful
+ Navy, but I may say an all-powerful Navy."--_Mr. Morley at
+ Manchester, November 8, 1893._]
+
+ Since "Britain First!" is Fate's command,
+ And History bids us sway the main,
+ We feel this charter of our land
+ All guardian statesmen must maintain.
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ Out on the Chief who only shirks and saves!
+
+ The nations must not rival thee,
+ Their fleets below our own must fall.
+ _Thou_ must, if thou'dst be great and free,
+ Still rise superior to them all!
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ Such primacy e'en peaceful COBDEN craves.
+
+ Russia and France are now allies!--
+ Though funny, 'tis not all a joke.
+ As their rejoicings shake the skies,
+ Think how the great Free Trader spoke!
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ Better that Hundred Millions than be slaves.
+
+ True, all thy statesmen _say_ the same,
+ MORLEY hands COBDEN'S dictum down.
+ Yet Ins and Outs do play a game
+ That hardly adds to thy renown.
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ _But_ Parties squabble and the Exchequer--saves!
+
+ If thou'dst maintain thine ocean reign,
+ And first in Commerce still would'st shine,
+ The easy optimistic strain
+ And Pangloss pose must not be thine.
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ But constant warding constant watching craves.
+
+ Devotion to the needs of home,
+ And claims parochial, is not all.
+ Beware, lest shades more darkling come,
+ With gloomier writings on the wall.
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ Britons to careless trust should ne'er be slaves.
+
+ Say, Statesman, are those figures found
+ Full warrant for your picture bold?
+ Our watch the wave-washed world around
+ Needs iron hearts, _and_ ungrudged gold.
+ Rule, BRITANNIA! BRITANNIA rule the waves!
+ Britons--free-handed--never need be slaves!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. R thinks the reason so many of the young men of the present day
+are bald is, because they don't use antimacassar oil as they did in
+her time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MARCH IN NOVEMBER.
+
+ "Blow, blow, thou winter wind,"
+ In verse some call thee wind.
+ Though Thursday's crowd was thinned
+ By blasts so unrefined,
+ And men in armour, tinned
+ Like lobsters, mutely pined--
+ They, later, "wined" and "ginned,"
+ Whilst guests superbly dined
+ On turtle, fish (that's finned),
+ Joints, game of matchless kind,
+ And wines, rare, old, long-binned.
+ Blow clear, before, behind,
+ The streets where lately dinned
+ The band--each man, defined,
+ Of _Vaterland_ the _kind_--
+ And sightless singers whined
+ Not much like _Jenny Lind_;
+ Would they were dumb, not blind!
+ Whilst grinders grimly grinned,
+ And ground their graceless grind.
+ I swore; perhaps I sinned.
+ But now they seem to find
+ Their rags, just tied and pinned,
+ Let in thy blast unkind,
+ By which they're almost skinned.
+ Then blow, I do not mind,
+ Thou rough November wind--
+ Pronounced by many, wind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Seasonable.
+
+ When garden lawns are a green bog,
+ And shrubbery vistas veiled in fog,
+ Reload revolvers, let dogs run!
+ The Burglar Season has begun!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "RULE, BRITANNIA!" (?)
+
+SHADE OF COBDEN (_quoting from his own speech at Rochdale, June 26,
+1861_). "I AM NOT ONE TO ADVOCATE THE REDUCING OF OUR NAVY IN ANY
+DEGREE BELOW THAT PROPORTION TO THE FRENCH NAVY WHICH THE EXIGENCIES
+OF OUR SERVICE REQUIRE. WE HAVE A LEGITIMATE PRETENSION TO HAVE A
+LARGER NAVY THAN FRANCE.... IF THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT SHOWED A SINISTER
+DESIGN TO INCREASE THEIR NAVY TO AN EQUALITY WITH OURS, I _SHOULD
+VOTE A HUNDRED MILLIONS STERLING_ RATHER THAN ALLOW THAT NAVY TO BE
+INCREASED _TO A LEVEL WITH OURS...._ I HAVE SAID SO IN THE HOUSE OF
+COMMONS, AND I REPEAT IT TO _YOU_."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+Mr. FISHER UNWIN is, my Baronite writes, still engaged in the
+important work, some time ago undertaken by his house, of
+publishing _The Story of the Nations_. The last volume issued is the
+thirty-fifth, in which Mr. GREVILLE TREGARTHEN deals with the History
+of the Australian Commonwealth. Australasia is a mere chit among the
+nations of the world, and story, God bless you, it has hardly any to
+tell. It has never been at war except with the aboriginal settlers,
+who were, at the outset, so lost to all proper feeling as to resent
+the incursion of the white man, occasionally carrying their prejudice
+to the absurd extent of eating him. But this is ancient history in a
+record which, beginning a little more than a hundred years ago with a
+convict settlement--it was on January 26, 1788, the British flag was
+for the first time unfurled in Sydney Bay--has already spread out
+lusty limbs over a vast Continent. _The Story of the Nations_ forms a
+library of itself, and this last volume is not the least fascinating
+of the series.
+
+The Baron, while greatly admiring and certainly grateful for the
+Diamond editions of all the best works, and Diamond editions should
+reproduce only those that can be classed among the "brilliants," of
+which two or three specimens at a time can be carried easily in
+the pocket of an ulster, begs to remind Messrs. ROUTLEDGE, the
+republishers of DICKENS'S works in a very pocketable form, that
+much of our journeying is done by such gaslight as railway companies
+supply, and therefore, as this is not always of the most powerful
+kind, a book in small type, however clear the type may be, is
+unreadable. That is what the publishers have to consider. This
+excellent little pocket volume of, for example, _The Cricket on the
+Hearth_, is of no use to the Baron when once out of the pocket. True,
+the publishers may say "it is intended for the pocket only"; but if
+this be the case, then the pockets that would suffer would be those of
+the publishers, not those of the reading public. The Baron's hints are
+well worth consideration. For travelling, the publishers might provide
+and sell a small case containing the Diamond edition and a portable
+candle-lamp by which to read it. Only this would rather add to the
+expense, and with every volume one does not wish to be obliged to
+carry a candle-lamp. Therefore, bigger and clearer type. That's all.
+Try it, and if it does not succeed, blame the hitherto blameless
+
+ BARON DE B.-W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: CRUELLE ENIGME; OR, TWOS INTO ONE WON'T GO.
+
+THE PROBLEM OF THE DAY:--HOW TO GET THIS YEAR'S SLEEVES INTO LAST
+YEAR'S JACKET.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. R. saw a heading in a newspaper. "_Board of Trade Returns._"
+Whereupon she exclaimed, "Where's the Board of Trade been to? I
+suppose for a holiday, and we shall have to pay!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BOGUS MANAGER'S VADE MECUM.
+
+_Question._ Is it an easy thing to become the manager of a theatre?
+
+_Answer._ Why, certainly; you require no cash, and very little credit.
+
+_Q._ Is it necessary that you should have any special training to
+enable you to appropriately fill so responsible a position?
+
+_A._ No. If you are sufficiently impudent, you may in the past have
+been a betting-man, a crossing-sweeper, or an unqualified dentist.
+
+_Q._ Will you have any difficulty in securing a theatre?
+
+_A._ Not at all. You will always find someone willing to accept you as
+a lessee without making any inquiry as to your antecedents.
+
+_Q._ Having obtained a theatre, what is your next step?
+
+_A._ To get together a company. This is easily managed, as the
+dramatic trade-journals give every week a long list of actors and
+actresses who are "resting."
+
+_Q._ What do you understand by such a word?
+
+_A._ That the advertiser is much in need of an engagement, but is too
+proud to acknowledge it.
+
+_Q._ Such a frame of mind is, I suppose, favourable to hurried and
+unconsidered engagements?
+
+_A._ Quite so. It is an easy matter to get an entire company on
+excellent terms. Not that money is of any importance; for you may
+as well promise five pounds a week as five shillings, if you do not
+intend to pay.
+
+_Q._ Having secured your company, what is the next step?
+
+_A._ To make them rehearse three weeks or a month without a salary.
+
+_Q._ I suppose you have no trouble about obtaining a piece on
+advantageous terms?
+
+_A._ None whatever. If you are lucky you will get some conceited
+noodle to pay you for producing his play; and if you are not so
+fortunate, why at least you will get a drama, comedy, or burlesque for
+nothing.
+
+_Q._ Say that you are ready to begin, will you have any difficulty in
+obtaining the preliminary announcements?
+
+_A._ No. For having been trusted by the proprietor of the theatre, the
+advertisement agents will follow suit, and you will obtain sufficient
+publicity to balance your requirements.
+
+_Q._ And what will take place on and after the opening of the
+playhouse under your management?
+
+_A._ You will get more or less ready money taken at the doors during
+five days of the week, with which you can safely decamp without paying
+anybody on or before the sixth.
+
+_Q._ Will not your sudden departure cause some inconvenience to a
+large number of persons connected with the enterprise?
+
+_A._ Assuredly. Many of the company you have engaged will starve, and
+the other parties to the proceedings will use strong language as they
+wipe off your liability as a bad debt.
+
+_Q._ Is it possible that you will be made a bankrupt?
+
+_A._ Not only possible, but probable.
+
+_Q._ And will this end your theatrical career?
+
+_A._ Why, of course not. All you will have to do is to take a little
+holiday.
+
+_Q._ And after the holiday, what next?
+
+_A._ Why, then you can secure another theatre and repeat the
+proceedings with exactly similar results.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: NEWS FROM THE LAW COURTS.
+
+Cold but In-vig-orating.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GINGHAM-GRABBER.
+
+ Someone wrote, "Killing's no Murder."
+ Nothing well could be absurder!
+ But to many in our time
+ Stealing (umbrellas) seems no crime.
+ Therefore, to a frank plain dealer,
+ Killing--an umbrella-stealer--
+ Might be called--by Justice tried--
+ Justifiable Snobicide!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "CRAMMING."
+
+_Affectionate Uncle._ "GLAD TO SEE YOU, RUPERT. NOW TELL ME ALL ABOUT
+IT. WHAT FORM ARE YOU IN, OLD BOY?"
+
+_Nephew (just returned from Harrow)._ "WELL, UNCLE, NOT SO BAD,
+I THINK. I CAN GENERALLY MANAGE A COUPLE OF EGGS, TWO SAUSAGES OR
+KIDNEYS, SOME DUNDEE MARMALADE, AND TWO CUPS OF COFFEE FOR BREAKFAST.
+I ALWAYS HAVE A LITTLE LUNCHEON, ANY AMOUNT OF ROAST BEEF OR MUTTON
+FOR DINNER, AND I GENERALLY LOOK IN AT THE CONFECTIONER'S IN THE
+AFTERNOON, AND INVARIABLY WIND UP WITH A GOOD SUPPER. WHAT DO YOU
+THINK OF THAT?"
+
+ [_Disappointed and misunderstood Uncle subsides, and thinks it
+ best to make no comments._]
+
+]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NINTH OF NOVEMBER.
+
+ The Lord Mayor's Show, I saw it from the Strand,
+ I stood and waited there an hour or so,
+ Till from afar there came with blare of band
+ The Lord Mayor's Show.
+
+ In civic splendour and with footstep slow
+ Passed the procession, glorious and grand!
+ I liked the soldiers well enough, although
+ The men from Deal looked quite at home on land.
+ Yet I confess that when I came to go,
+ I said that once a year's enough to stand
+ The Lord Mayor's Show.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"THE BLACK ART" REVIVED!--"The best specimen of the Black Art," quoth
+the Baron de B. W., "that I have lately seen, is the republication of
+the works of the Wizard of the North, _alias_ Sir WALTER SCOTT, Bart.,
+in a series of substantial library-shelve-ish volumes, printed in good
+clear type."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Q. E. D.
+
+ Don't tell me of "room at the top!" It's a case,
+ I'm sure, of "no thoroughfare." I'm at the base!
+ Does that not suffice you? There only remains
+ Some "room at the top" of your head, man, for brains.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A DICKENSIAN QUESTION.--At the date when _Martin Chuzzlewit_ was
+written, what may fairly be assumed to have been the fashionable hour
+for dining?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.
+
+_House of Commons, Monday, November 6._--PRINCE ARTHUR in fine
+form to-night; made one of those speeches that distinctly enhance
+Parliamentary reputation. Ticklish situation for Leader of Opposition
+in face of Parish Councils Bill. Won't do, with General Election
+within measurable distance, to declare plump against it; still
+less will it suit party to support one of principal measures of a
+Government whose successive steps, however devious, are all bent upon
+goal of Home Rule. For two nights men rising from Opposition benches
+have endeavoured to wriggle through this difficulty; been more or less
+unsuccessful; PRINCE ARTHUR, with sure aim and light touch, does and
+says exactly right thing.
+
+By all means let HODGE have a voice in direction of his own affairs;
+his best friend, the party who spent themselves in his behalf in
+Corn-Law days, who acted in his best interests whenever question
+of political enfranchisement or his relations to parson and squire
+cropped up--the great Tory party would be the very last to slacken
+effort for his prosperity. So anxious are they on the score, they
+would not imperil opportunity by throwing out this Bill on the
+Second Reading. But PRINCE ARTHUR showed, in little asides, that this
+particular measure is badly conceived, not nearly so good as what
+would have befallen HODGE had a Unionist Ministry been in office. For
+an hour the PRINCE spoke, displaying perfect mastery of the subject,
+managing, without assuming a hostile attitude, to bestow upon the
+measure some damaging blows.
+
+[Illustration: LIKA JOKO'S JOTTINGS.--No. 4. SCENES IN THE CITY.]
+
+First time since House met Mr. G. began to show that keen interest in
+proceedings which he seemed to have reserved for Home Rule Bill. Sat
+listening intently with hand to ear as PRINCE ARTHUR gracefully glided
+on from point to point. Pretty little sparring match when PRINCE
+ARTHUR endeavoured to draw him into doing something damaging, either
+in the way of reticence or declaration, touching GEORGE RUSSELL'S
+explosive speech on Friday night. "I would not," observed PRINCE
+ARTHUR, "have said so much, but I presume that in this matter the hon.
+gentleman represented the Government of which he is a member." Mr. G.
+shook his head. "Then he disclaims it?" Mr. G. shook his head
+again. "Oh, then, though he does not dissociate himself from the
+Under-secretary of India, he does not associate the Government with
+his remarks?" Mr. G. again shook his head, finally explaining that his
+young friend and colleague had merely revived former custom--existing
+"in my early days"--whereby Ministers not in the Cabinet and not
+connected with department specially concerned in matter at issue,
+might enter at large into general debate.
+
+"Here, here!" said ELLIS ASHMEAD-BARTLETT (Knight), for once in
+agreement with the views of Arch Enemy.
+
+[Illustration: T. H. Napoleon Boltonparty "objected to ladies being
+Justices of the Peace."
+
+_Justice Herself._ "Aha! Show me the man who said that!"]
+
+_Business done._--More debate on Parish Councils Bill. As usual,
+adjourned at midnight. Motion made that House forthwith adjourn,
+OLIVER ROLLIT asks for more. Too early to go home; might as well sit
+up till one o'clock, and take private Bills. House aghast. SQUIRE OF
+MALWOOD discreetly says he will think the matter over.
+
+_Tuesday._--Another night on Parish Councils. Debate should have
+finished last night; finally arranged to close it before dinner hour
+to-day; but it dribbled on to midnight. As there was an hour to
+spare, TOMMY BOWLES, who since Session resumed has been silent in
+six languages, thought he might as well say a few words. Romped in at
+half-past ten; awkward this; about the hour when JOKIM had intended
+to lift debate out of rut by one of his luminous speeches. THOMAS,
+however, thought House would prefer to hear him. At any rate, he
+provided opportunity. When at length JOKIM spoke upon subject on which
+he is supreme authority, House almost empty, altogether languid.
+
+Brightened up for moment at SQUIRE OF MALWOOD'S happy wit. JOKIM,
+following on line trekked by PRINCE ARTHUR, suggested that half of
+Bill dealing with Poor Law matters should be abandoned. "According
+to judgment of SOLOMON," said the SQUIRE, "it was the true mother who
+would not consent to divide her child in two."
+
+A dreary night made endurable by incursion of
+KNATCHBULL-HUGESSEN--HERBERT THOMAS, of Faversham division of Kent.
+For many years his brother sat in House till he finally wobbled into a
+peerage, and, as ROSEBERY said, wore his coronet as a crown of thorns
+because it had been given him by Mr. G. When he was with us here, and
+one turned to _Dod_ to find him under heading "HUGESSEN," there was
+discovered instruction "See KNATCHBULL-HUGESSEN." This was explained
+at the time on score that no one from day to day exactly knew where
+_Hugessen_ was.
+
+Different with his younger brother. "Sometimes," he said just now,
+looking sorrowfully round the House, a gleam of comfort brightening
+his eyes as they rested on a back view of JIMMY LOWTHER'S head, "I
+believe I'm the only Tory left in the House."
+
+To-night up and smote Parish Councils Bill in uncompromising speech.
+No truckling to Socialism. No bowing the knee to the Baal HODGE. No
+leaning on the arm of Rimmon as he goes to worship in the temple
+of the Compound Householder. The Bill another downward step on the
+pathway dug out for the chariot of Free Trade; the country going to
+dogs at accelerated pace.
+
+Small House, but it listened with delight to the most thoroughly
+honest speech heard from any bench through many Parliaments.
+
+_Business done._--Parish Councils Bill read second time.
+
+_Thursday._--Still smiling at PRINCE ARTHUR'S joke; led up to with
+great skill; last touch of art given in the look of startled surprise
+with which he regarded uproariously laughing audience. Was passing
+eulogy on RHODES and the Chartered Company, forasmuch as, whilst
+certainly mowing down the Matabele with the Maxim gun, they had
+spread the benefits of civilisation, "extending railways, extending
+telegraphs, extending roads."
+
+[Illustration: The Clark of the House causing a Division.]
+
+"Exactly," said the SAGE OF QUEEN ANNE'S GATE. "I spoke for an hour
+and a half, and BALFOUR puts what I had meant to say in a phrase. What
+is all this action in Mashonaland, this spending of money, and making
+of war, but the Extension of RHODES?"
+
+MAGUIRE undertook to defend Chartered Company against attack of SAGE.
+"Terrible work, TOBY," he said, mopping his heated brow. "Much rather
+approach LOBENGULA'S kraal itself than stand up and face the House."
+
+Had to be done, however, and MAGUIRE not the man to run away from
+anything approaching a fight. Still he observed precaution of getting
+as near the door as possible, speaking from remote end of bench,
+almost outside limits of bar. Also he found some subtle comfort,
+strength, and consolation in standing on one leg whilst he addressed
+the Speaker. Sometimes it was the right leg, sometimes the left.
+Whether on one or the other--not for a moment on two--he described
+to the charmed House how the cherished object of Mr. RHODES, the one
+desire upon which all the energies of the Chartered Company were bent,
+was that the men of Matabele should "marry and settle down."
+
+_Business done._--Discussion of affairs in Matabeleland.
+
+_Friday._--Debate on M'LAREN'S Amendment to Employers' Liability Bill
+brought to conclusion at midnight. Thought it would be all over before
+dinner; dragged on hour after hour with ever deepening depression.
+Seems as if already, in this first fortnight of Autumn Session,
+energy's sapped; dulness certainly dominant.
+
+"The fact is," said THE SQUIRE OF MALWOOD, "there is no fight about
+the House now JOSEPH is awa'. Hear he is coming back towards end
+of next week, balmy from the Bahamas, breezy from the Atlantic. I
+shouldn't at all wonder if, upon his arrival, a genial change was
+wrought in things generally."
+
+_Business done._--Government defeat averted by majority of 19.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+QUEER QUERIES.
+
+THE LONDON PROGRAMME.--I entirely approve of the spirited protest
+lately made by the cabmen against that vile instrument of Monopoly,
+the "Station Omnibus." But what I want to ask is whether there is
+no plan of doing away with a still more nefarious specimen of
+capitalistic greed and oppression--I allude to the "Out-Porter." Why
+should this minion, of railway tyrants be permitted to take the beer
+out of the mouths of honest English working-men? I and a number of my
+pals are constantly loafing round the station in our suburb waiting
+for a job of luggage-carrying, or if we aren't exactly _at_ the
+station, we are always to be found at the Public just opposite.
+Will it be believed that passengers actually prefer to engage this
+avaricious blackleg, the Out-Porter, instead of employing _us!_ Their
+paltry excuse is that he charges less than we do and is more civil.
+That _shows_ him to be a contemptible blackleg! Only a serf of our
+present miserable social arrangements is ever civil to anybody. Call
+him an Out-Porter! If me and my pals catch him one of these dark
+nights we'll make an Out-Patient of him! Is the mere convenience of
+the public for ever to override the legitimate claims of the deserving
+unemployed?--CORNER BOY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume
+105, November 18, 1893, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, LONDON CHARIVARI, NOV 18, 1893 ***
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