THE CHAMBERMAID.

Throughout my life the girls I've pleased,So merry, so blithe and gay;I've coax'd, I've flatter'd, I've sigh'd, and teased,And stole their young hearts away.With their lips so red, and their eyes so bright,Their nut-brown locks and their teeth so white,The lasses were always my delight,And I am the boy for them.With my capering, tapering, twirling toe,My billet-doux note or letter a;My sighing—pining—whining—oh!My person—eye—etcetera!My taste is wondrous civil, too;For mark, ye ladies, this—There's nought you say, there's nought you do,To me can come amiss.If serious be your turn of mind,To grunt and groan I'm then inclined;But if you'll laugh, why, still you'll findThat I'm the boy for you.With my capering, etc.Then as to person, what of that?Of all the girls I've seen,If they've been plump, I've loved them fat;If thin, admired them lean;And as to height, make no ado;It matters not, I tell you true,Whether two feet six, or six feet two,Still I am the boy for you.With my capering, etc.

Throughout my life the girls I've pleased,So merry, so blithe and gay;I've coax'd, I've flatter'd, I've sigh'd, and teased,And stole their young hearts away.With their lips so red, and their eyes so bright,Their nut-brown locks and their teeth so white,The lasses were always my delight,And I am the boy for them.With my capering, tapering, twirling toe,My billet-doux note or letter a;My sighing—pining—whining—oh!My person—eye—etcetera!My taste is wondrous civil, too;For mark, ye ladies, this—There's nought you say, there's nought you do,To me can come amiss.If serious be your turn of mind,To grunt and groan I'm then inclined;But if you'll laugh, why, still you'll findThat I'm the boy for you.With my capering, etc.Then as to person, what of that?Of all the girls I've seen,If they've been plump, I've loved them fat;If thin, admired them lean;And as to height, make no ado;It matters not, I tell you true,Whether two feet six, or six feet two,Still I am the boy for you.With my capering, etc.

Throughout my life the girls I've pleased,So merry, so blithe and gay;I've coax'd, I've flatter'd, I've sigh'd, and teased,And stole their young hearts away.With their lips so red, and their eyes so bright,Their nut-brown locks and their teeth so white,The lasses were always my delight,And I am the boy for them.With my capering, tapering, twirling toe,My billet-doux note or letter a;My sighing—pining—whining—oh!My person—eye—etcetera!

Throughout my life the girls I've pleased,

So merry, so blithe and gay;

I've coax'd, I've flatter'd, I've sigh'd, and teased,

And stole their young hearts away.

With their lips so red, and their eyes so bright,

Their nut-brown locks and their teeth so white,

The lasses were always my delight,

And I am the boy for them.

With my capering, tapering, twirling toe,

My billet-doux note or letter a;

My sighing—pining—whining—oh!

My person—eye—etcetera!

My taste is wondrous civil, too;For mark, ye ladies, this—There's nought you say, there's nought you do,To me can come amiss.If serious be your turn of mind,To grunt and groan I'm then inclined;But if you'll laugh, why, still you'll findThat I'm the boy for you.With my capering, etc.

My taste is wondrous civil, too;

For mark, ye ladies, this—

There's nought you say, there's nought you do,

To me can come amiss.

If serious be your turn of mind,

To grunt and groan I'm then inclined;

But if you'll laugh, why, still you'll find

That I'm the boy for you.

With my capering, etc.

Then as to person, what of that?Of all the girls I've seen,If they've been plump, I've loved them fat;If thin, admired them lean;And as to height, make no ado;It matters not, I tell you true,Whether two feet six, or six feet two,Still I am the boy for you.With my capering, etc.

Then as to person, what of that?

Of all the girls I've seen,

If they've been plump, I've loved them fat;

If thin, admired them lean;

And as to height, make no ado;

It matters not, I tell you true,

Whether two feet six, or six feet two,

Still I am the boy for you.

With my capering, etc.

When clouds obscure the evening sky,And rains in torrents pour,The inn with joy the travellers spy,And seek its welcome door.'Tis there I stand to please them all,And follow still my trade;I smile and run whene'er they call,A merry little chambermaid.But when appears the dawn of day,Farewell to every guest,They take their leaves and onward stray,Some east and others west.And when that horrid bore, the bill,Is call'd for, read, and paid,I cry, "I hope, give what you will,You'll not forget the chambermaid."Thus happy might I pass my life,But love rules in my breast,And till I'm made a happy wife,I ne'er shall be at rest.Then Fortune's gifts in vain she sheds,For love I leave my trade;And give my all to him who wedsThe merry little chambermaid.

When clouds obscure the evening sky,And rains in torrents pour,The inn with joy the travellers spy,And seek its welcome door.'Tis there I stand to please them all,And follow still my trade;I smile and run whene'er they call,A merry little chambermaid.But when appears the dawn of day,Farewell to every guest,They take their leaves and onward stray,Some east and others west.And when that horrid bore, the bill,Is call'd for, read, and paid,I cry, "I hope, give what you will,You'll not forget the chambermaid."Thus happy might I pass my life,But love rules in my breast,And till I'm made a happy wife,I ne'er shall be at rest.Then Fortune's gifts in vain she sheds,For love I leave my trade;And give my all to him who wedsThe merry little chambermaid.

When clouds obscure the evening sky,And rains in torrents pour,The inn with joy the travellers spy,And seek its welcome door.'Tis there I stand to please them all,And follow still my trade;I smile and run whene'er they call,A merry little chambermaid.

When clouds obscure the evening sky,

And rains in torrents pour,

The inn with joy the travellers spy,

And seek its welcome door.

'Tis there I stand to please them all,

And follow still my trade;

I smile and run whene'er they call,

A merry little chambermaid.

But when appears the dawn of day,Farewell to every guest,They take their leaves and onward stray,Some east and others west.And when that horrid bore, the bill,Is call'd for, read, and paid,I cry, "I hope, give what you will,You'll not forget the chambermaid."

But when appears the dawn of day,

Farewell to every guest,

They take their leaves and onward stray,

Some east and others west.

And when that horrid bore, the bill,

Is call'd for, read, and paid,

I cry, "I hope, give what you will,

You'll not forget the chambermaid."

Thus happy might I pass my life,But love rules in my breast,And till I'm made a happy wife,I ne'er shall be at rest.Then Fortune's gifts in vain she sheds,For love I leave my trade;And give my all to him who wedsThe merry little chambermaid.

Thus happy might I pass my life,

But love rules in my breast,

And till I'm made a happy wife,

I ne'er shall be at rest.

Then Fortune's gifts in vain she sheds,

For love I leave my trade;

And give my all to him who weds

The merry little chambermaid.

When I was a very little fellow,To Italy I wentUpon music intent,With a voice very pliable and mellow.Il sondo to my earoSi suito e so clearo.I like it;—I love it;—I adore, ohAnd den it was I resolved to have some more,Che il gela del timoreSua Pace in tanta penaTanta Smorza l'ardore,Gia sento in ogni vena.To Turkey then I bent my way;Tink, tink, a ting a ring, oh!When cymbals jingle, music play,Ting, ting a ting a ring, oh!Yet then I change;To Germany I range;And Holland, too, mynher vat is der name,Bazzoon, O Gloch da cram boVat can a, do, do!Then turn againTo flippant Spain,Fast as ever I can go,Where pretty setsWith castanetsTack a rack to the merry Fandango.In France I thereLearn'd many an air,And music made my gainWithComment ça,Monsieur?Ha! Ha!Miron ton ton ton tain!But near home I got land,And lilted I into Scotland,Where Donald loo'd fair Maggie bonnie;She loo'd Jock and hated Johnny;Wi bit love between 'em ganging,Sawney gied the lad a banging.And now to Hibernia, the true land of harmony,Tippling your whiskey to Shelim a gig,Music, love, wine, and true friendship so charming ye,Blood and ouns, boderoo, fizle my gig.In England, no music is fit to be read,Save one glorious tune that's in every one's head.'Tis a tune we delight in,So glorious to sing;God save great George our King,Long live our noble King!God save the King.

When I was a very little fellow,To Italy I wentUpon music intent,With a voice very pliable and mellow.Il sondo to my earoSi suito e so clearo.I like it;—I love it;—I adore, ohAnd den it was I resolved to have some more,Che il gela del timoreSua Pace in tanta penaTanta Smorza l'ardore,Gia sento in ogni vena.To Turkey then I bent my way;Tink, tink, a ting a ring, oh!When cymbals jingle, music play,Ting, ting a ting a ring, oh!Yet then I change;To Germany I range;And Holland, too, mynher vat is der name,Bazzoon, O Gloch da cram boVat can a, do, do!Then turn againTo flippant Spain,Fast as ever I can go,Where pretty setsWith castanetsTack a rack to the merry Fandango.In France I thereLearn'd many an air,And music made my gainWithComment ça,Monsieur?Ha! Ha!Miron ton ton ton tain!But near home I got land,And lilted I into Scotland,Where Donald loo'd fair Maggie bonnie;She loo'd Jock and hated Johnny;Wi bit love between 'em ganging,Sawney gied the lad a banging.And now to Hibernia, the true land of harmony,Tippling your whiskey to Shelim a gig,Music, love, wine, and true friendship so charming ye,Blood and ouns, boderoo, fizle my gig.In England, no music is fit to be read,Save one glorious tune that's in every one's head.'Tis a tune we delight in,So glorious to sing;God save great George our King,Long live our noble King!God save the King.

When I was a very little fellow,To Italy I wentUpon music intent,With a voice very pliable and mellow.Il sondo to my earoSi suito e so clearo.I like it;—I love it;—I adore, ohAnd den it was I resolved to have some more,Che il gela del timoreSua Pace in tanta penaTanta Smorza l'ardore,Gia sento in ogni vena.

When I was a very little fellow,

To Italy I went

Upon music intent,

With a voice very pliable and mellow.

Il sondo to my earo

Si suito e so clearo.

I like it;—I love it;—I adore, oh

And den it was I resolved to have some more,

Che il gela del timore

Sua Pace in tanta pena

Tanta Smorza l'ardore,

Gia sento in ogni vena.

To Turkey then I bent my way;Tink, tink, a ting a ring, oh!When cymbals jingle, music play,Ting, ting a ting a ring, oh!Yet then I change;To Germany I range;And Holland, too, mynher vat is der name,Bazzoon, O Gloch da cram boVat can a, do, do!Then turn againTo flippant Spain,Fast as ever I can go,Where pretty setsWith castanetsTack a rack to the merry Fandango.

To Turkey then I bent my way;

Tink, tink, a ting a ring, oh!

When cymbals jingle, music play,

Ting, ting a ting a ring, oh!

Yet then I change;

To Germany I range;

And Holland, too, mynher vat is der name,

Bazzoon, O Gloch da cram bo

Vat can a, do, do!

Then turn again

To flippant Spain,

Fast as ever I can go,

Where pretty sets

With castanets

Tack a rack to the merry Fandango.

In France I thereLearn'd many an air,And music made my gainWithComment ça,Monsieur?Ha! Ha!Miron ton ton ton tain!But near home I got land,And lilted I into Scotland,Where Donald loo'd fair Maggie bonnie;She loo'd Jock and hated Johnny;Wi bit love between 'em ganging,Sawney gied the lad a banging.

In France I there

Learn'd many an air,

And music made my gain

WithComment ça,

Monsieur?Ha! Ha!

Miron ton ton ton tain!

But near home I got land,

And lilted I into Scotland,

Where Donald loo'd fair Maggie bonnie;

She loo'd Jock and hated Johnny;

Wi bit love between 'em ganging,

Sawney gied the lad a banging.

And now to Hibernia, the true land of harmony,Tippling your whiskey to Shelim a gig,Music, love, wine, and true friendship so charming ye,Blood and ouns, boderoo, fizle my gig.In England, no music is fit to be read,Save one glorious tune that's in every one's head.'Tis a tune we delight in,So glorious to sing;God save great George our King,Long live our noble King!God save the King.

And now to Hibernia, the true land of harmony,

Tippling your whiskey to Shelim a gig,

Music, love, wine, and true friendship so charming ye,

Blood and ouns, boderoo, fizle my gig.

In England, no music is fit to be read,

Save one glorious tune that's in every one's head.

'Tis a tune we delight in,

So glorious to sing;

God save great George our King,

Long live our noble King!

God save the King.

The plump Lady Tott to her husband one daySaid, "Let us go driving this evening, I pray."(Lady Tott was an alderman's daughter.)"Well, where shall we go?" said Sir Tilbury Tott;"Why, my love," said my lady, "the weather is hot,Suppose we drive round by the water,—The water,—Suppose we drive round by the water."The dinner was ended, the claret was "done,"The knight getting up—getting down was the sun,—And my lady agog for heart-slaughter;When Sir Tilbury, lazy, like cows after grains,Said, "The weather is lowering, my love; see, it rains,—Only look at the drops in the water,—The water,—Only look at the drops in the water."Lady Tott, who, when earnestly fix'd on a drive,Overcame all excuses Sir Til might contrive,Had her bonnet and parasol brought her:Says she, "Dear Sir Til, don't let me ask in vain;The dots in the pond which you take to be rain,Are nothing but flies in the water,—The water,—Are nothing but flies in the water."Sir Tilbury saw that he could not escape;So he put on his coat, with a three-doubled cape,And then by the hand gently caught her;And lifting her up to his high one-horse "shay,"She settled her "things," and the pair drove away,And skirted the edge of the water,—The water,—And skirted the edge of the water.Sir Til was quite right; on the top of his crown,Like small shot in volleys, the rain pepper'd down,—Only small shot would do much more slaughter,—Till the gay Lady Tott, who was getting quite wet,Said, "My dear Sir T. T.," in a kind of half pet,"Turn back, for I'm drench'd with rain-water,—Rain-water,—Turn back, for I'm drench'd with rain-water.""Oh, dear Lady T," said Til, winking his eye,"You everything know so much better than I;"(For, when angry, with kindness he fought her.)"You may fancy this rain, as I did before,But you show'd me my folly;—'tis really no moreThan the skimming of flies in the water,—The water,—Than the skimming of flies in the water."He drove her about for an hour or two,Till her ladyship's clothes were completely soak'd through,Then home to Tott Cottage he brought her,And said, "Now, Lady T., by the joke of to-night,I'llreignover you; for you'll own that I'm right,And know rain, ma'am, from flies in the water,—The water,—Know rain, ma'am, from flies in the water."

The plump Lady Tott to her husband one daySaid, "Let us go driving this evening, I pray."(Lady Tott was an alderman's daughter.)"Well, where shall we go?" said Sir Tilbury Tott;"Why, my love," said my lady, "the weather is hot,Suppose we drive round by the water,—The water,—Suppose we drive round by the water."The dinner was ended, the claret was "done,"The knight getting up—getting down was the sun,—And my lady agog for heart-slaughter;When Sir Tilbury, lazy, like cows after grains,Said, "The weather is lowering, my love; see, it rains,—Only look at the drops in the water,—The water,—Only look at the drops in the water."Lady Tott, who, when earnestly fix'd on a drive,Overcame all excuses Sir Til might contrive,Had her bonnet and parasol brought her:Says she, "Dear Sir Til, don't let me ask in vain;The dots in the pond which you take to be rain,Are nothing but flies in the water,—The water,—Are nothing but flies in the water."Sir Tilbury saw that he could not escape;So he put on his coat, with a three-doubled cape,And then by the hand gently caught her;And lifting her up to his high one-horse "shay,"She settled her "things," and the pair drove away,And skirted the edge of the water,—The water,—And skirted the edge of the water.Sir Til was quite right; on the top of his crown,Like small shot in volleys, the rain pepper'd down,—Only small shot would do much more slaughter,—Till the gay Lady Tott, who was getting quite wet,Said, "My dear Sir T. T.," in a kind of half pet,"Turn back, for I'm drench'd with rain-water,—Rain-water,—Turn back, for I'm drench'd with rain-water.""Oh, dear Lady T," said Til, winking his eye,"You everything know so much better than I;"(For, when angry, with kindness he fought her.)"You may fancy this rain, as I did before,But you show'd me my folly;—'tis really no moreThan the skimming of flies in the water,—The water,—Than the skimming of flies in the water."He drove her about for an hour or two,Till her ladyship's clothes were completely soak'd through,Then home to Tott Cottage he brought her,And said, "Now, Lady T., by the joke of to-night,I'llreignover you; for you'll own that I'm right,And know rain, ma'am, from flies in the water,—The water,—Know rain, ma'am, from flies in the water."

The plump Lady Tott to her husband one daySaid, "Let us go driving this evening, I pray."(Lady Tott was an alderman's daughter.)"Well, where shall we go?" said Sir Tilbury Tott;"Why, my love," said my lady, "the weather is hot,Suppose we drive round by the water,—The water,—Suppose we drive round by the water."

The plump Lady Tott to her husband one day

Said, "Let us go driving this evening, I pray."

(Lady Tott was an alderman's daughter.)

"Well, where shall we go?" said Sir Tilbury Tott;

"Why, my love," said my lady, "the weather is hot,

Suppose we drive round by the water,—

The water,—

Suppose we drive round by the water."

The dinner was ended, the claret was "done,"The knight getting up—getting down was the sun,—And my lady agog for heart-slaughter;When Sir Tilbury, lazy, like cows after grains,Said, "The weather is lowering, my love; see, it rains,—Only look at the drops in the water,—The water,—Only look at the drops in the water."

The dinner was ended, the claret was "done,"

The knight getting up—getting down was the sun,—

And my lady agog for heart-slaughter;

When Sir Tilbury, lazy, like cows after grains,

Said, "The weather is lowering, my love; see, it rains,—

Only look at the drops in the water,—

The water,—

Only look at the drops in the water."

Lady Tott, who, when earnestly fix'd on a drive,Overcame all excuses Sir Til might contrive,Had her bonnet and parasol brought her:Says she, "Dear Sir Til, don't let me ask in vain;The dots in the pond which you take to be rain,Are nothing but flies in the water,—The water,—Are nothing but flies in the water."

Lady Tott, who, when earnestly fix'd on a drive,

Overcame all excuses Sir Til might contrive,

Had her bonnet and parasol brought her:

Says she, "Dear Sir Til, don't let me ask in vain;

The dots in the pond which you take to be rain,

Are nothing but flies in the water,—

The water,—

Are nothing but flies in the water."

Sir Tilbury saw that he could not escape;So he put on his coat, with a three-doubled cape,And then by the hand gently caught her;And lifting her up to his high one-horse "shay,"She settled her "things," and the pair drove away,And skirted the edge of the water,—The water,—And skirted the edge of the water.

Sir Tilbury saw that he could not escape;

So he put on his coat, with a three-doubled cape,

And then by the hand gently caught her;

And lifting her up to his high one-horse "shay,"

She settled her "things," and the pair drove away,

And skirted the edge of the water,—

The water,—

And skirted the edge of the water.

Sir Til was quite right; on the top of his crown,Like small shot in volleys, the rain pepper'd down,—Only small shot would do much more slaughter,—Till the gay Lady Tott, who was getting quite wet,Said, "My dear Sir T. T.," in a kind of half pet,"Turn back, for I'm drench'd with rain-water,—Rain-water,—Turn back, for I'm drench'd with rain-water."

Sir Til was quite right; on the top of his crown,

Like small shot in volleys, the rain pepper'd down,—

Only small shot would do much more slaughter,—

Till the gay Lady Tott, who was getting quite wet,

Said, "My dear Sir T. T.," in a kind of half pet,

"Turn back, for I'm drench'd with rain-water,—

Rain-water,—

Turn back, for I'm drench'd with rain-water."

"Oh, dear Lady T," said Til, winking his eye,"You everything know so much better than I;"(For, when angry, with kindness he fought her.)"You may fancy this rain, as I did before,But you show'd me my folly;—'tis really no moreThan the skimming of flies in the water,—The water,—Than the skimming of flies in the water."

"Oh, dear Lady T," said Til, winking his eye,

"You everything know so much better than I;"

(For, when angry, with kindness he fought her.)

"You may fancy this rain, as I did before,

But you show'd me my folly;—'tis really no more

Than the skimming of flies in the water,—

The water,—

Than the skimming of flies in the water."

He drove her about for an hour or two,Till her ladyship's clothes were completely soak'd through,Then home to Tott Cottage he brought her,And said, "Now, Lady T., by the joke of to-night,I'llreignover you; for you'll own that I'm right,And know rain, ma'am, from flies in the water,—The water,—Know rain, ma'am, from flies in the water."

He drove her about for an hour or two,

Till her ladyship's clothes were completely soak'd through,

Then home to Tott Cottage he brought her,

And said, "Now, Lady T., by the joke of to-night,

I'llreignover you; for you'll own that I'm right,

And know rain, ma'am, from flies in the water,—

The water,—

Know rain, ma'am, from flies in the water."

Tune—"The Sprig of Shillelagh."

Och, tell me truth now, and did you ne'er hearOf a pair of big traitors, call'd Jaffier and Pierre,Who thought that their country was shockingly served?Who met in the dark, and the night, and the fogs,—Who "howl'd at the moon" and call'd themselves "dogs,"Till Jaffier to Pierre pledged his honour and life,And into the bargain his iligant wife,—By which very means was ould Venice preserved.The ringleaders held a snug club in the town,The object of which was to knock the Doge down,Because from his duty they thought he had swerved.They met every evening, and more was their fault,At the house of a gentleman, Mr. Renault,Who—och, the spalpeen!—when they all went away,Stay'd at home, and made love to the sweet Mrs. J.,—By which, in the end, was ould Venice preserved.When Jaffier came back, his most delicate belle—Belvidera they call'd her—determined to tellHow she by old Renault that night had been served.This blew up a breeze, and made Jaffier repentOf the plots he had laid: to the Senate he went.He got safe home by twelve: his wife bade him not fail;And by half-after-one he was snug in the gaol,—By which, as we'll see, was ould Venice preserved.The Doge and the Court, when J.'s story they'd heard,Thought it good for the country to forfeit their word,And break the conditions they should have observed.So they sent the police out to clear every street,And seize whomsoever by chance they might meet;And before the bright sun was aloft in the sky,Twenty-two of the party were sentenced to die,—And that was the way was ould Venice preserved.Mr. Jaffier, who 'peach'd, was let off at the time;But that wouldn't do, he committed a crime,Which punishment more than his others deserved;So when Pierre was condemn'd, to the scaffold he went,Pierre whisper'd and nodded, and J. said "Content."They mounted together, till kind Mr. J.,Having stabb'd Mr. P., served himself the same way,—And so was their honour in Venice preserved.But och! what a scene, when the beautiful Bell,At her father's, found out how her dear husband fell!The sight would the stoutest of hearts have unnerved.She did nothing but tumble, and squabble, and rave,And try to scratch J., with her nails from the grave.This lasted three months, when, cured of her pain,She chuck'd off her weeds, and got married again,—By which very means was thisVenuspreserved.

Och, tell me truth now, and did you ne'er hearOf a pair of big traitors, call'd Jaffier and Pierre,Who thought that their country was shockingly served?Who met in the dark, and the night, and the fogs,—Who "howl'd at the moon" and call'd themselves "dogs,"Till Jaffier to Pierre pledged his honour and life,And into the bargain his iligant wife,—By which very means was ould Venice preserved.The ringleaders held a snug club in the town,The object of which was to knock the Doge down,Because from his duty they thought he had swerved.They met every evening, and more was their fault,At the house of a gentleman, Mr. Renault,Who—och, the spalpeen!—when they all went away,Stay'd at home, and made love to the sweet Mrs. J.,—By which, in the end, was ould Venice preserved.When Jaffier came back, his most delicate belle—Belvidera they call'd her—determined to tellHow she by old Renault that night had been served.This blew up a breeze, and made Jaffier repentOf the plots he had laid: to the Senate he went.He got safe home by twelve: his wife bade him not fail;And by half-after-one he was snug in the gaol,—By which, as we'll see, was ould Venice preserved.The Doge and the Court, when J.'s story they'd heard,Thought it good for the country to forfeit their word,And break the conditions they should have observed.So they sent the police out to clear every street,And seize whomsoever by chance they might meet;And before the bright sun was aloft in the sky,Twenty-two of the party were sentenced to die,—And that was the way was ould Venice preserved.Mr. Jaffier, who 'peach'd, was let off at the time;But that wouldn't do, he committed a crime,Which punishment more than his others deserved;So when Pierre was condemn'd, to the scaffold he went,Pierre whisper'd and nodded, and J. said "Content."They mounted together, till kind Mr. J.,Having stabb'd Mr. P., served himself the same way,—And so was their honour in Venice preserved.But och! what a scene, when the beautiful Bell,At her father's, found out how her dear husband fell!The sight would the stoutest of hearts have unnerved.She did nothing but tumble, and squabble, and rave,And try to scratch J., with her nails from the grave.This lasted three months, when, cured of her pain,She chuck'd off her weeds, and got married again,—By which very means was thisVenuspreserved.

Och, tell me truth now, and did you ne'er hearOf a pair of big traitors, call'd Jaffier and Pierre,Who thought that their country was shockingly served?Who met in the dark, and the night, and the fogs,—Who "howl'd at the moon" and call'd themselves "dogs,"Till Jaffier to Pierre pledged his honour and life,And into the bargain his iligant wife,—By which very means was ould Venice preserved.

Och, tell me truth now, and did you ne'er hear

Of a pair of big traitors, call'd Jaffier and Pierre,

Who thought that their country was shockingly served?

Who met in the dark, and the night, and the fogs,—

Who "howl'd at the moon" and call'd themselves "dogs,"

Till Jaffier to Pierre pledged his honour and life,

And into the bargain his iligant wife,—

By which very means was ould Venice preserved.

The ringleaders held a snug club in the town,The object of which was to knock the Doge down,Because from his duty they thought he had swerved.They met every evening, and more was their fault,At the house of a gentleman, Mr. Renault,Who—och, the spalpeen!—when they all went away,Stay'd at home, and made love to the sweet Mrs. J.,—By which, in the end, was ould Venice preserved.

The ringleaders held a snug club in the town,

The object of which was to knock the Doge down,

Because from his duty they thought he had swerved.

They met every evening, and more was their fault,

At the house of a gentleman, Mr. Renault,

Who—och, the spalpeen!—when they all went away,

Stay'd at home, and made love to the sweet Mrs. J.,—

By which, in the end, was ould Venice preserved.

When Jaffier came back, his most delicate belle—Belvidera they call'd her—determined to tellHow she by old Renault that night had been served.This blew up a breeze, and made Jaffier repentOf the plots he had laid: to the Senate he went.He got safe home by twelve: his wife bade him not fail;And by half-after-one he was snug in the gaol,—By which, as we'll see, was ould Venice preserved.

When Jaffier came back, his most delicate belle—

Belvidera they call'd her—determined to tell

How she by old Renault that night had been served.

This blew up a breeze, and made Jaffier repent

Of the plots he had laid: to the Senate he went.

He got safe home by twelve: his wife bade him not fail;

And by half-after-one he was snug in the gaol,—

By which, as we'll see, was ould Venice preserved.

The Doge and the Court, when J.'s story they'd heard,Thought it good for the country to forfeit their word,And break the conditions they should have observed.So they sent the police out to clear every street,And seize whomsoever by chance they might meet;And before the bright sun was aloft in the sky,Twenty-two of the party were sentenced to die,—And that was the way was ould Venice preserved.

The Doge and the Court, when J.'s story they'd heard,

Thought it good for the country to forfeit their word,

And break the conditions they should have observed.

So they sent the police out to clear every street,

And seize whomsoever by chance they might meet;

And before the bright sun was aloft in the sky,

Twenty-two of the party were sentenced to die,—

And that was the way was ould Venice preserved.

Mr. Jaffier, who 'peach'd, was let off at the time;But that wouldn't do, he committed a crime,Which punishment more than his others deserved;So when Pierre was condemn'd, to the scaffold he went,Pierre whisper'd and nodded, and J. said "Content."They mounted together, till kind Mr. J.,Having stabb'd Mr. P., served himself the same way,—And so was their honour in Venice preserved.

Mr. Jaffier, who 'peach'd, was let off at the time;

But that wouldn't do, he committed a crime,

Which punishment more than his others deserved;

So when Pierre was condemn'd, to the scaffold he went,

Pierre whisper'd and nodded, and J. said "Content."

They mounted together, till kind Mr. J.,

Having stabb'd Mr. P., served himself the same way,—

And so was their honour in Venice preserved.

But och! what a scene, when the beautiful Bell,At her father's, found out how her dear husband fell!The sight would the stoutest of hearts have unnerved.She did nothing but tumble, and squabble, and rave,And try to scratch J., with her nails from the grave.This lasted three months, when, cured of her pain,She chuck'd off her weeds, and got married again,—By which very means was thisVenuspreserved.

But och! what a scene, when the beautiful Bell,

At her father's, found out how her dear husband fell!

The sight would the stoutest of hearts have unnerved.

She did nothing but tumble, and squabble, and rave,

And try to scratch J., with her nails from the grave.

This lasted three months, when, cured of her pain,

She chuck'd off her weeds, and got married again,—

By which very means was thisVenuspreserved.

When Summer's smiles rejoice the plains,And deck the vale with flowers;And blushing nymphs, and gentle swains,With love beguile the hours;Oh! then conceive the ills that mockThe well-dress'd London sinner,Invited just at seven o'clockTo join a "daylight dinner."The sun, no trees the eye to shade,Glares full into the windows,And scorches widow, wife, and maidJust as it does the Hindoos;One's shoes look brown, one's black looks grey,One's legs if thin, look thinner;There's nothing equals, in its way,A London daylight dinner.The cloth seems blue, the plate's like lead,The faded carpet dirty,Grey hairs peep out from each dark head,And twenty looks like thirty.You sit beside an heiress gay,And do your best to win her,But oh!—what can one do or say,If 'tis a daylight dinner?A lovely dame just forty-one,At night a charming creature,My praise unqualified had won,In figure, form, and feature,Thatshewas born, without a doubt,Before the days of Jenner,By sitting next her, I found out,Once at a daylight dinner.Freckles, and moles, and holes, and spots,The envious sun discloses,And little bumps, and little dots,On chins, and cheeks, and noses.Last Monday, Kate, when next me placed(A most determined grinner),Betray'd four teeth of mineral paste,Eating a daylight dinner.

When Summer's smiles rejoice the plains,And deck the vale with flowers;And blushing nymphs, and gentle swains,With love beguile the hours;Oh! then conceive the ills that mockThe well-dress'd London sinner,Invited just at seven o'clockTo join a "daylight dinner."The sun, no trees the eye to shade,Glares full into the windows,And scorches widow, wife, and maidJust as it does the Hindoos;One's shoes look brown, one's black looks grey,One's legs if thin, look thinner;There's nothing equals, in its way,A London daylight dinner.The cloth seems blue, the plate's like lead,The faded carpet dirty,Grey hairs peep out from each dark head,And twenty looks like thirty.You sit beside an heiress gay,And do your best to win her,But oh!—what can one do or say,If 'tis a daylight dinner?A lovely dame just forty-one,At night a charming creature,My praise unqualified had won,In figure, form, and feature,Thatshewas born, without a doubt,Before the days of Jenner,By sitting next her, I found out,Once at a daylight dinner.Freckles, and moles, and holes, and spots,The envious sun discloses,And little bumps, and little dots,On chins, and cheeks, and noses.Last Monday, Kate, when next me placed(A most determined grinner),Betray'd four teeth of mineral paste,Eating a daylight dinner.

When Summer's smiles rejoice the plains,And deck the vale with flowers;And blushing nymphs, and gentle swains,With love beguile the hours;Oh! then conceive the ills that mockThe well-dress'd London sinner,Invited just at seven o'clockTo join a "daylight dinner."

When Summer's smiles rejoice the plains,

And deck the vale with flowers;

And blushing nymphs, and gentle swains,

With love beguile the hours;

Oh! then conceive the ills that mock

The well-dress'd London sinner,

Invited just at seven o'clock

To join a "daylight dinner."

The sun, no trees the eye to shade,Glares full into the windows,And scorches widow, wife, and maidJust as it does the Hindoos;One's shoes look brown, one's black looks grey,One's legs if thin, look thinner;There's nothing equals, in its way,A London daylight dinner.

The sun, no trees the eye to shade,

Glares full into the windows,

And scorches widow, wife, and maid

Just as it does the Hindoos;

One's shoes look brown, one's black looks grey,

One's legs if thin, look thinner;

There's nothing equals, in its way,

A London daylight dinner.

The cloth seems blue, the plate's like lead,The faded carpet dirty,Grey hairs peep out from each dark head,And twenty looks like thirty.You sit beside an heiress gay,And do your best to win her,But oh!—what can one do or say,If 'tis a daylight dinner?

The cloth seems blue, the plate's like lead,

The faded carpet dirty,

Grey hairs peep out from each dark head,

And twenty looks like thirty.

You sit beside an heiress gay,

And do your best to win her,

But oh!—what can one do or say,

If 'tis a daylight dinner?

A lovely dame just forty-one,At night a charming creature,My praise unqualified had won,In figure, form, and feature,Thatshewas born, without a doubt,Before the days of Jenner,By sitting next her, I found out,Once at a daylight dinner.

A lovely dame just forty-one,

At night a charming creature,

My praise unqualified had won,

In figure, form, and feature,

Thatshewas born, without a doubt,

Before the days of Jenner,

By sitting next her, I found out,

Once at a daylight dinner.

Freckles, and moles, and holes, and spots,The envious sun discloses,And little bumps, and little dots,On chins, and cheeks, and noses.Last Monday, Kate, when next me placed(A most determined grinner),Betray'd four teeth of mineral paste,Eating a daylight dinner.

Freckles, and moles, and holes, and spots,

The envious sun discloses,

And little bumps, and little dots,

On chins, and cheeks, and noses.

Last Monday, Kate, when next me placed

(A most determined grinner),

Betray'd four teeth of mineral paste,

Eating a daylight dinner.

Tune—"Bow, wow, wow."

If any man loves comfort and has little cash to buy it, heShould get into acrowdedclub—a mostselectsociety;While solitude and mutton-cutlets serveinfelix uxor, heMay have his club (like Hercules) and revel there in luxury.Bow, wow, wow, etc.Yes,Clubsknock taverns on the head!e'enHatchettscan't demolish them;Joy grievesto see their magnitude, andLonglongs to abolish them.TheInnsareout! hotels for single men scarce keep alive on it,While none but houses that are in theFamily waythrive on it!Bow, wow, wow, etc.There's first the Athenæum club, so wise, there's not a man of itThat has not sense enough for six, (in fact, that is the plan of it:)The very waiters answer you with eloquence Socratical,And always place the knives and forks in order mathematical.Bow, wow, wow, etc.Then opposite thementalclub you'll find theregimental one,A meeting made of men of war, and yet a very gentle one;Ifuniformgood living please your palate, here's excess of it,Especially at private dinners, when theymake a mess of it!Bow, wow, wow, etc.E'en Isis has a house in Town! and Cam abandonshercity!TheMasternow hangs out at the United University;In Common Room she gave a route! (a novel freak to hit upon)Where Masters gave the Mistresses of Arts no chairs to sit upon!Bow, wow, wow, etc.The Union Club is quite superb—it's best apartment daily isThe lounge of lawyers, doctors, merchants, beauxcum multis aliis:At half-past six, thejoint concern, for eighteenpence, is given you—Half-pints of port are sent inketchup bottlesto enliven you!Bow, wow, wow, etc.The travellers are in Pall Mall, and smoke cigars so cosily,And dream they climb the highest Alps, or rove the plains of Moselai;The world for them has nothing new, they have explor'd all parts of it,And now they are club-footed! and they sit and look at charts of it.Bow, wow, wow, etc.The Orientals homeward bound, now seek their clubs much sallower,And while they eat green fat, they find their own fat growing yellower:Their soup is mademore savoury, till bile to shadows dwindles 'em,And Messrs.SavoryandMoorewith seidlitz draughts rekindles 'em.Bow, wow, wow, etc.Then there are clubs where persons Parliamentary preponderate,And clubs for menupon the turf—(I wonder they aren'tunder it)—Clubs where thewinningways ofsharperfolks pervert theuseof clubs,Whereknaveswill make subscribers cry, "Egad, this is thedeuceof clubs."Bow, wow, wow, etc.For country Squires the only club in London now is Boodles, sirs,The Crockford club for playful men, the Alfred club for noodles, sirs,These are the stages which all men propose to play their parts upon,Forclubsare what the Londoners have clearly set theirheartsupon.Bow, wow, wow, etc.

If any man loves comfort and has little cash to buy it, heShould get into acrowdedclub—a mostselectsociety;While solitude and mutton-cutlets serveinfelix uxor, heMay have his club (like Hercules) and revel there in luxury.Bow, wow, wow, etc.Yes,Clubsknock taverns on the head!e'enHatchettscan't demolish them;Joy grievesto see their magnitude, andLonglongs to abolish them.TheInnsareout! hotels for single men scarce keep alive on it,While none but houses that are in theFamily waythrive on it!Bow, wow, wow, etc.There's first the Athenæum club, so wise, there's not a man of itThat has not sense enough for six, (in fact, that is the plan of it:)The very waiters answer you with eloquence Socratical,And always place the knives and forks in order mathematical.Bow, wow, wow, etc.Then opposite thementalclub you'll find theregimental one,A meeting made of men of war, and yet a very gentle one;Ifuniformgood living please your palate, here's excess of it,Especially at private dinners, when theymake a mess of it!Bow, wow, wow, etc.E'en Isis has a house in Town! and Cam abandonshercity!TheMasternow hangs out at the United University;In Common Room she gave a route! (a novel freak to hit upon)Where Masters gave the Mistresses of Arts no chairs to sit upon!Bow, wow, wow, etc.The Union Club is quite superb—it's best apartment daily isThe lounge of lawyers, doctors, merchants, beauxcum multis aliis:At half-past six, thejoint concern, for eighteenpence, is given you—Half-pints of port are sent inketchup bottlesto enliven you!Bow, wow, wow, etc.The travellers are in Pall Mall, and smoke cigars so cosily,And dream they climb the highest Alps, or rove the plains of Moselai;The world for them has nothing new, they have explor'd all parts of it,And now they are club-footed! and they sit and look at charts of it.Bow, wow, wow, etc.The Orientals homeward bound, now seek their clubs much sallower,And while they eat green fat, they find their own fat growing yellower:Their soup is mademore savoury, till bile to shadows dwindles 'em,And Messrs.SavoryandMoorewith seidlitz draughts rekindles 'em.Bow, wow, wow, etc.Then there are clubs where persons Parliamentary preponderate,And clubs for menupon the turf—(I wonder they aren'tunder it)—Clubs where thewinningways ofsharperfolks pervert theuseof clubs,Whereknaveswill make subscribers cry, "Egad, this is thedeuceof clubs."Bow, wow, wow, etc.For country Squires the only club in London now is Boodles, sirs,The Crockford club for playful men, the Alfred club for noodles, sirs,These are the stages which all men propose to play their parts upon,Forclubsare what the Londoners have clearly set theirheartsupon.Bow, wow, wow, etc.

If any man loves comfort and has little cash to buy it, heShould get into acrowdedclub—a mostselectsociety;While solitude and mutton-cutlets serveinfelix uxor, heMay have his club (like Hercules) and revel there in luxury.Bow, wow, wow, etc.

If any man loves comfort and has little cash to buy it, he

Should get into acrowdedclub—a mostselectsociety;

While solitude and mutton-cutlets serveinfelix uxor, he

May have his club (like Hercules) and revel there in luxury.

Bow, wow, wow, etc.

Yes,Clubsknock taverns on the head!e'enHatchettscan't demolish them;Joy grievesto see their magnitude, andLonglongs to abolish them.TheInnsareout! hotels for single men scarce keep alive on it,While none but houses that are in theFamily waythrive on it!Bow, wow, wow, etc.

Yes,Clubsknock taverns on the head!e'enHatchettscan't demolish them;

Joy grievesto see their magnitude, andLonglongs to abolish them.

TheInnsareout! hotels for single men scarce keep alive on it,

While none but houses that are in theFamily waythrive on it!

Bow, wow, wow, etc.

There's first the Athenæum club, so wise, there's not a man of itThat has not sense enough for six, (in fact, that is the plan of it:)The very waiters answer you with eloquence Socratical,And always place the knives and forks in order mathematical.Bow, wow, wow, etc.

There's first the Athenæum club, so wise, there's not a man of it

That has not sense enough for six, (in fact, that is the plan of it:)

The very waiters answer you with eloquence Socratical,

And always place the knives and forks in order mathematical.

Bow, wow, wow, etc.

Then opposite thementalclub you'll find theregimental one,A meeting made of men of war, and yet a very gentle one;Ifuniformgood living please your palate, here's excess of it,Especially at private dinners, when theymake a mess of it!Bow, wow, wow, etc.

Then opposite thementalclub you'll find theregimental one,

A meeting made of men of war, and yet a very gentle one;

Ifuniformgood living please your palate, here's excess of it,

Especially at private dinners, when theymake a mess of it!

Bow, wow, wow, etc.

E'en Isis has a house in Town! and Cam abandonshercity!TheMasternow hangs out at the United University;In Common Room she gave a route! (a novel freak to hit upon)Where Masters gave the Mistresses of Arts no chairs to sit upon!Bow, wow, wow, etc.

E'en Isis has a house in Town! and Cam abandonshercity!

TheMasternow hangs out at the United University;

In Common Room she gave a route! (a novel freak to hit upon)

Where Masters gave the Mistresses of Arts no chairs to sit upon!

Bow, wow, wow, etc.

The Union Club is quite superb—it's best apartment daily isThe lounge of lawyers, doctors, merchants, beauxcum multis aliis:At half-past six, thejoint concern, for eighteenpence, is given you—Half-pints of port are sent inketchup bottlesto enliven you!Bow, wow, wow, etc.

The Union Club is quite superb—it's best apartment daily is

The lounge of lawyers, doctors, merchants, beauxcum multis aliis:

At half-past six, thejoint concern, for eighteenpence, is given you—

Half-pints of port are sent inketchup bottlesto enliven you!

Bow, wow, wow, etc.

The travellers are in Pall Mall, and smoke cigars so cosily,And dream they climb the highest Alps, or rove the plains of Moselai;The world for them has nothing new, they have explor'd all parts of it,And now they are club-footed! and they sit and look at charts of it.Bow, wow, wow, etc.

The travellers are in Pall Mall, and smoke cigars so cosily,

And dream they climb the highest Alps, or rove the plains of Moselai;

The world for them has nothing new, they have explor'd all parts of it,

And now they are club-footed! and they sit and look at charts of it.

Bow, wow, wow, etc.

The Orientals homeward bound, now seek their clubs much sallower,And while they eat green fat, they find their own fat growing yellower:Their soup is mademore savoury, till bile to shadows dwindles 'em,And Messrs.SavoryandMoorewith seidlitz draughts rekindles 'em.Bow, wow, wow, etc.

The Orientals homeward bound, now seek their clubs much sallower,

And while they eat green fat, they find their own fat growing yellower:

Their soup is mademore savoury, till bile to shadows dwindles 'em,

And Messrs.SavoryandMoorewith seidlitz draughts rekindles 'em.

Bow, wow, wow, etc.

Then there are clubs where persons Parliamentary preponderate,And clubs for menupon the turf—(I wonder they aren'tunder it)—Clubs where thewinningways ofsharperfolks pervert theuseof clubs,Whereknaveswill make subscribers cry, "Egad, this is thedeuceof clubs."Bow, wow, wow, etc.

Then there are clubs where persons Parliamentary preponderate,

And clubs for menupon the turf—(I wonder they aren'tunder it)—

Clubs where thewinningways ofsharperfolks pervert theuseof clubs,

Whereknaveswill make subscribers cry, "Egad, this is thedeuceof clubs."

Bow, wow, wow, etc.

For country Squires the only club in London now is Boodles, sirs,The Crockford club for playful men, the Alfred club for noodles, sirs,These are the stages which all men propose to play their parts upon,Forclubsare what the Londoners have clearly set theirheartsupon.Bow, wow, wow, etc.

For country Squires the only club in London now is Boodles, sirs,

The Crockford club for playful men, the Alfred club for noodles, sirs,

These are the stages which all men propose to play their parts upon,

Forclubsare what the Londoners have clearly set theirheartsupon.

Bow, wow, wow, etc.

N.B.—A lady having presented the Author, on a visit, with herthumbto shakehandswith, the Muse opened her mouth and spake as follows:—

Some women at parting scarce give youSo much as a simple good-bye,And from others as long as you live, youWill never be bless'd with a sigh;Some will press you so warmly, you'd lingerBeside them for ever, and someWill give you an icy forefinger,But Fanny presents you a thumb.Some will give you a look of indifference,Others will give you a smile;While some of the colder and stiffer ones,Bow in their own chilly style.There are some who look merry at parting,And some who look wofully glum;Some give you a blessing at starting,But Fanny just gives you a thumb.There are some who will go to the door with you,Some ring for the man or the maid;Some who do less, and some more, with you,And a few would be glad if you stay'd.A good many wish you'd be slack again,Their way on a visit to come;Two or three give you leave to go back again,But Fanny gives only her thumb.With a number, ten minutes are longerThan you find yourself welcome to stay;While some, whose affections are stronger,Would like to detain you all day.Some offer you sherry and biscuit,Others give not a drop nor a crumb;Some a sandwich, from sirloin or brisket,But Fanny gives simply her thumb.Some look with a sort of a squint to you,Some whisper they've visits to make;Some glance at their watches—a hint to you,Which, if you are wise, you will take.Some faintly invite you to dinner,(So faint, you may see it's all hum,Unless you're a silly beginner,)But Fanny presents you a thumb.Some chatter—thirteen to the dozen—Some don't speak a word all the time;Some open the albums they've chosen,And beg you to scribble in rhyme;Some bellow so loud, they admonishYour ear to take care of its drum;Some give you an ogle quitetonish,But Fanny gives nought, save her thumb.Some wonder how long you've been absent,Despair of your coming again;While some have a coach or a cab sent,To take you away if it rain.Some shut up their windows in summer,Some won't stir the fire, though you're numb;Some give you hot punch in a rummer,But Fanny gives only her thumb.Some talk about scandal, or lovers,Some talk about Byron or Scott;Some offer you eggs laid by plovers,Some offer the luck of the pot;A great many offer you nothing,They sit, like automata, dumb,The silly ones give you a loathing,But Fanny gives merely her thumb.Some bore you with six-year-old gabies,In the shape of a master or miss;Others hold up their slobbering babies,Which you must be a brute not to kiss:Some tell you their household disasters,While others their instruments strum;Some give you receipts for corn plasters,But Fanny presents you her thumb.Some talk of the play they've been last at,And some of the steam-driven coach;While those who are prudes look aghast atEach piece of new scandal you broach:Some talk of converting the Hindoos,To relish, like Christians, their rum;Some give you a view from their windows,But Fanny gives only her thumb.Some ask what you think of the tussel, man,Between the all-lies and the Porte;And Cod-rington's thrashing the muscle-man(Puns being such people's forte).The men speak of change in the Cabinet;The women—how can they sit mum?Give their thoughts upon laces and tabinet,But Fanny gives merely her thumb.Some speak of the Marquis of Lansdowne,Who, to prove the old proverb, has setAbout thief-catching—laying wise plans downIn theHue and Cryweekly gazette.Some think that the Whigs are but noodles(But such are, of course, the mere scum);Some give you long tales of their poodles,But Fanny presents you her thumb.Good luck to them all!—where I visit,I meet with warm hearts and warm hands;But that's not a common thing, is it?For I neither have houses nor lands:Not a look but the soul has a part in it,(How different the looks are of some!)Oh! give me a hand with a heart in it,And the devil take finger and thumb.

Some women at parting scarce give youSo much as a simple good-bye,And from others as long as you live, youWill never be bless'd with a sigh;Some will press you so warmly, you'd lingerBeside them for ever, and someWill give you an icy forefinger,But Fanny presents you a thumb.Some will give you a look of indifference,Others will give you a smile;While some of the colder and stiffer ones,Bow in their own chilly style.There are some who look merry at parting,And some who look wofully glum;Some give you a blessing at starting,But Fanny just gives you a thumb.There are some who will go to the door with you,Some ring for the man or the maid;Some who do less, and some more, with you,And a few would be glad if you stay'd.A good many wish you'd be slack again,Their way on a visit to come;Two or three give you leave to go back again,But Fanny gives only her thumb.With a number, ten minutes are longerThan you find yourself welcome to stay;While some, whose affections are stronger,Would like to detain you all day.Some offer you sherry and biscuit,Others give not a drop nor a crumb;Some a sandwich, from sirloin or brisket,But Fanny gives simply her thumb.Some look with a sort of a squint to you,Some whisper they've visits to make;Some glance at their watches—a hint to you,Which, if you are wise, you will take.Some faintly invite you to dinner,(So faint, you may see it's all hum,Unless you're a silly beginner,)But Fanny presents you a thumb.Some chatter—thirteen to the dozen—Some don't speak a word all the time;Some open the albums they've chosen,And beg you to scribble in rhyme;Some bellow so loud, they admonishYour ear to take care of its drum;Some give you an ogle quitetonish,But Fanny gives nought, save her thumb.Some wonder how long you've been absent,Despair of your coming again;While some have a coach or a cab sent,To take you away if it rain.Some shut up their windows in summer,Some won't stir the fire, though you're numb;Some give you hot punch in a rummer,But Fanny gives only her thumb.Some talk about scandal, or lovers,Some talk about Byron or Scott;Some offer you eggs laid by plovers,Some offer the luck of the pot;A great many offer you nothing,They sit, like automata, dumb,The silly ones give you a loathing,But Fanny gives merely her thumb.Some bore you with six-year-old gabies,In the shape of a master or miss;Others hold up their slobbering babies,Which you must be a brute not to kiss:Some tell you their household disasters,While others their instruments strum;Some give you receipts for corn plasters,But Fanny presents you her thumb.Some talk of the play they've been last at,And some of the steam-driven coach;While those who are prudes look aghast atEach piece of new scandal you broach:Some talk of converting the Hindoos,To relish, like Christians, their rum;Some give you a view from their windows,But Fanny gives only her thumb.Some ask what you think of the tussel, man,Between the all-lies and the Porte;And Cod-rington's thrashing the muscle-man(Puns being such people's forte).The men speak of change in the Cabinet;The women—how can they sit mum?Give their thoughts upon laces and tabinet,But Fanny gives merely her thumb.Some speak of the Marquis of Lansdowne,Who, to prove the old proverb, has setAbout thief-catching—laying wise plans downIn theHue and Cryweekly gazette.Some think that the Whigs are but noodles(But such are, of course, the mere scum);Some give you long tales of their poodles,But Fanny presents you her thumb.Good luck to them all!—where I visit,I meet with warm hearts and warm hands;But that's not a common thing, is it?For I neither have houses nor lands:Not a look but the soul has a part in it,(How different the looks are of some!)Oh! give me a hand with a heart in it,And the devil take finger and thumb.

Some women at parting scarce give youSo much as a simple good-bye,And from others as long as you live, youWill never be bless'd with a sigh;Some will press you so warmly, you'd lingerBeside them for ever, and someWill give you an icy forefinger,But Fanny presents you a thumb.

Some women at parting scarce give you

So much as a simple good-bye,

And from others as long as you live, you

Will never be bless'd with a sigh;

Some will press you so warmly, you'd linger

Beside them for ever, and some

Will give you an icy forefinger,

But Fanny presents you a thumb.

Some will give you a look of indifference,Others will give you a smile;While some of the colder and stiffer ones,Bow in their own chilly style.There are some who look merry at parting,And some who look wofully glum;Some give you a blessing at starting,But Fanny just gives you a thumb.

Some will give you a look of indifference,

Others will give you a smile;

While some of the colder and stiffer ones,

Bow in their own chilly style.

There are some who look merry at parting,

And some who look wofully glum;

Some give you a blessing at starting,

But Fanny just gives you a thumb.

There are some who will go to the door with you,Some ring for the man or the maid;Some who do less, and some more, with you,And a few would be glad if you stay'd.A good many wish you'd be slack again,Their way on a visit to come;Two or three give you leave to go back again,But Fanny gives only her thumb.

There are some who will go to the door with you,

Some ring for the man or the maid;

Some who do less, and some more, with you,

And a few would be glad if you stay'd.

A good many wish you'd be slack again,

Their way on a visit to come;

Two or three give you leave to go back again,

But Fanny gives only her thumb.

With a number, ten minutes are longerThan you find yourself welcome to stay;While some, whose affections are stronger,Would like to detain you all day.Some offer you sherry and biscuit,Others give not a drop nor a crumb;Some a sandwich, from sirloin or brisket,But Fanny gives simply her thumb.

With a number, ten minutes are longer

Than you find yourself welcome to stay;

While some, whose affections are stronger,

Would like to detain you all day.

Some offer you sherry and biscuit,

Others give not a drop nor a crumb;

Some a sandwich, from sirloin or brisket,

But Fanny gives simply her thumb.

Some look with a sort of a squint to you,Some whisper they've visits to make;Some glance at their watches—a hint to you,Which, if you are wise, you will take.Some faintly invite you to dinner,(So faint, you may see it's all hum,Unless you're a silly beginner,)But Fanny presents you a thumb.

Some look with a sort of a squint to you,

Some whisper they've visits to make;

Some glance at their watches—a hint to you,

Which, if you are wise, you will take.

Some faintly invite you to dinner,

(So faint, you may see it's all hum,

Unless you're a silly beginner,)

But Fanny presents you a thumb.

Some chatter—thirteen to the dozen—Some don't speak a word all the time;Some open the albums they've chosen,And beg you to scribble in rhyme;Some bellow so loud, they admonishYour ear to take care of its drum;Some give you an ogle quitetonish,But Fanny gives nought, save her thumb.

Some chatter—thirteen to the dozen—

Some don't speak a word all the time;

Some open the albums they've chosen,

And beg you to scribble in rhyme;

Some bellow so loud, they admonish

Your ear to take care of its drum;

Some give you an ogle quitetonish,

But Fanny gives nought, save her thumb.

Some wonder how long you've been absent,Despair of your coming again;While some have a coach or a cab sent,To take you away if it rain.Some shut up their windows in summer,Some won't stir the fire, though you're numb;Some give you hot punch in a rummer,But Fanny gives only her thumb.

Some wonder how long you've been absent,

Despair of your coming again;

While some have a coach or a cab sent,

To take you away if it rain.

Some shut up their windows in summer,

Some won't stir the fire, though you're numb;

Some give you hot punch in a rummer,

But Fanny gives only her thumb.

Some talk about scandal, or lovers,Some talk about Byron or Scott;Some offer you eggs laid by plovers,Some offer the luck of the pot;A great many offer you nothing,They sit, like automata, dumb,The silly ones give you a loathing,But Fanny gives merely her thumb.

Some talk about scandal, or lovers,

Some talk about Byron or Scott;

Some offer you eggs laid by plovers,

Some offer the luck of the pot;

A great many offer you nothing,

They sit, like automata, dumb,

The silly ones give you a loathing,

But Fanny gives merely her thumb.

Some bore you with six-year-old gabies,In the shape of a master or miss;Others hold up their slobbering babies,Which you must be a brute not to kiss:Some tell you their household disasters,While others their instruments strum;Some give you receipts for corn plasters,But Fanny presents you her thumb.

Some bore you with six-year-old gabies,

In the shape of a master or miss;

Others hold up their slobbering babies,

Which you must be a brute not to kiss:

Some tell you their household disasters,

While others their instruments strum;

Some give you receipts for corn plasters,

But Fanny presents you her thumb.

Some talk of the play they've been last at,And some of the steam-driven coach;While those who are prudes look aghast atEach piece of new scandal you broach:Some talk of converting the Hindoos,To relish, like Christians, their rum;Some give you a view from their windows,But Fanny gives only her thumb.

Some talk of the play they've been last at,

And some of the steam-driven coach;

While those who are prudes look aghast at

Each piece of new scandal you broach:

Some talk of converting the Hindoos,

To relish, like Christians, their rum;

Some give you a view from their windows,

But Fanny gives only her thumb.

Some ask what you think of the tussel, man,Between the all-lies and the Porte;And Cod-rington's thrashing the muscle-man(Puns being such people's forte).The men speak of change in the Cabinet;The women—how can they sit mum?Give their thoughts upon laces and tabinet,But Fanny gives merely her thumb.

Some ask what you think of the tussel, man,

Between the all-lies and the Porte;

And Cod-rington's thrashing the muscle-man

(Puns being such people's forte).

The men speak of change in the Cabinet;

The women—how can they sit mum?

Give their thoughts upon laces and tabinet,

But Fanny gives merely her thumb.

Some speak of the Marquis of Lansdowne,Who, to prove the old proverb, has setAbout thief-catching—laying wise plans downIn theHue and Cryweekly gazette.Some think that the Whigs are but noodles(But such are, of course, the mere scum);Some give you long tales of their poodles,But Fanny presents you her thumb.

Some speak of the Marquis of Lansdowne,

Who, to prove the old proverb, has set

About thief-catching—laying wise plans down

In theHue and Cryweekly gazette.

Some think that the Whigs are but noodles

(But such are, of course, the mere scum);

Some give you long tales of their poodles,

But Fanny presents you her thumb.

Good luck to them all!—where I visit,I meet with warm hearts and warm hands;But that's not a common thing, is it?For I neither have houses nor lands:Not a look but the soul has a part in it,(How different the looks are of some!)Oh! give me a hand with a heart in it,And the devil take finger and thumb.

Good luck to them all!—where I visit,

I meet with warm hearts and warm hands;

But that's not a common thing, is it?

For I neither have houses nor lands:

Not a look but the soul has a part in it,

(How different the looks are of some!)

Oh! give me a hand with a heart in it,

And the devil take finger and thumb.

TO MR. ——, WHO PUTS OVER HIS DOOR

You put above your door, and in your bills,You're manufacturer ofpensandquills;And for the first you well may feel a pride,Yourpensare better far than most I've tried;But for thequillsyour words are somewhat loose—Whomanufactures quillsmust be a Goose.

You put above your door, and in your bills,You're manufacturer ofpensandquills;And for the first you well may feel a pride,Yourpensare better far than most I've tried;But for thequillsyour words are somewhat loose—Whomanufactures quillsmust be a Goose.

You put above your door, and in your bills,You're manufacturer ofpensandquills;And for the first you well may feel a pride,Yourpensare better far than most I've tried;But for thequillsyour words are somewhat loose—Whomanufactures quillsmust be a Goose.

You put above your door, and in your bills,

You're manufacturer ofpensandquills;

And for the first you well may feel a pride,

Yourpensare better far than most I've tried;

But for thequillsyour words are somewhat loose—

Whomanufactures quillsmust be a Goose.

It seems as if nature had curiously plann'd,That men's names with their trades should agree;There's Twining the Tea-man, who lives in the Strand,Would bewhiningif robb'd of his T.

It seems as if nature had curiously plann'd,That men's names with their trades should agree;There's Twining the Tea-man, who lives in the Strand,Would bewhiningif robb'd of his T.

It seems as if nature had curiously plann'd,That men's names with their trades should agree;There's Twining the Tea-man, who lives in the Strand,Would bewhiningif robb'd of his T.

It seems as if nature had curiously plann'd,

That men's names with their trades should agree;

There's Twining the Tea-man, who lives in the Strand,

Would bewhiningif robb'd of his T.

When Dido's spouse to Dido would not come,She mourn'd in silence, and wasDi, Do, Dumb!

When Dido's spouse to Dido would not come,She mourn'd in silence, and wasDi, Do, Dumb!

When Dido's spouse to Dido would not come,She mourn'd in silence, and wasDi, Do, Dumb!

When Dido's spouse to Dido would not come,

She mourn'd in silence, and wasDi, Do, Dumb!

Or, Fortunes and Misfortunes of a Lord Mayor.

Literature, even in this literary age, is not the ordinary pursuit of the citizens of London, although every merchant is necessarily a man of letters, and underwriters are as common as cucumbers. Notwithstanding, however, my being a citizen, I am tempted to disclose the miseries and misfortunes of my life in these pages, because, having heard the "Anniversary" called a splendid annual, I hope for sympathy from its readers, seeing that I have been a "splendid annual" myself.

My name is Scropps—Iaman Alderman—IwasSheriff—Ihave beenLord Mayor—and the three great eras of my existence were the year of my shrievalty, the year of my mayoralty, and the year after it. Until I had passed through this ordeal I had no conception of the extremes of happiness and wretchedness to which a human being may be carried, nor ever believed that society presented to its members an eminence so exalted as that which I once touched, or imagined a fall so great as that which I experienced.

I came originally from that place to which persons of bad character are sent—I mean Coventry, where my father for many years contributed his share to the success of parliamentary candidates, the happiness of new married couples, and even the gratification of ambitious courtiers, by taking part in the manufacture of ribands for election cockades, wedding favours, and cordons of chivalry; but trade failed, and, like his betters, he became bankrupt, but, unlike hisbetters, without any consequent advantage to himself; and I, at the age of fifteen, was thrown upon the world with nothing but a strong constitution, a moderate education, and fifteen shillings and elevenpence three farthings in my pocket.

With these qualifications I started from my native town on a pedestrian excursion to London; and, although I fell into none of those romantic adventures of which I had read at school, I met with more kindness than the world generally gets credit for, and on the fourth day after my departure, having slept soundly, if not magnificently, every night, and eaten with an appetite which my mode of travelling was admirably calculated to stimulate, reached the great metropolis, having preserved of my patrimony no less a sum than nine shillings and sevenpence.

The bells of one of the churches in the city were ringing merrily as I descended the heights of Islington; and were it not that my patronymic Scropps never could, under the most improved system of campanology, be jingled into anything harmonious, I have no doubt I, like my great predecessor Whittington, might have heard in that peal a prediction of my future exaltation; certain it is I did not; and, wearied with my journey, I took up my lodging for the night at a very humble house near Smithfield, to which I had been kindly recommended by the driver of a return post-chaise, of whose liberal offer of the moiety of his bar to town, I had availed myself at Barnet.

As it is not my intention to deduce a moral from my progress in the world at this period of my life, I need not here dilate upon the good policy of honesty, or the advantages of temperance and perseverance, by which I worked my way upwards, until, after meriting the confidence of an excellent master, I found myself enjoying it fully. To his business I succeeded at his death, having several years before, with his sanction, married a young and deserving woman, about my own age, of whose prudence and skill in household matters I had long had a daily experience. In the subordinate characterof his sole domestic servant, in which she figured when I first knew her, she had but few opportunities of displaying her intellectual qualities, but when she rose in the world, and felt the cheering influence of prosperity, her mind, like a balloon soaring into regions where the bright sun beams on it, expanded, and she became, as she remains, the kind unsophisticated partner of my sorrows and my pleasures, the friend of my heart, and the guiding-star of my destinies.

To be brief, Providence blessed my efforts and increased my means; I became a wholesale dealer in everything, from barrels of gunpowder down to pickled herrings; in the civic acceptation of the word I was a merchant, amongst the vulgar I am called a drysalter. I accumulated wealth; with my fortune my family also grew, and one male Scropps, and four female ditto, grace my board at least once in every week; for I hold it an article of faith to have a sirloin of roasted beef upon my table on Sundays, and all my children round me to partake of it: this may be prejudice—no matter—so long as he could afford it, my poor father did so before me; I plead that precedent, and am not ashamed of the custom.

Passing over the minor gradations of my life, the removal from one residence to another, the enlargement of this warehouse, the rebuilding of that, the anxiety of a canvass for common councilman, activity in the company of which I am liveryman, inquests, and vestries, and ward meetings, and all the other pleasing toils to which an active citizen is subject, let us come at once to the first marked epoch of my life—the year of my Shrievalty. The announcement of my nomination and election filled Mrs. S. with delight; and when I took my children to Great Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields, to look at the gay chariot brushing up for me, I confess I felt proud and happy to be able to show my progeny the arms of London, those of the Spectacle-makers' Company, and those of the Scroppses (recently found at a trivial expense) all figuring upon the same panels. They looked magnificent upon the pea-green ground, and the wheels, "white picked-outcrimson," looked so chaste, and the hammercloth, and the fringe, and the festoons, and the Scropps' crests all looked so rich, and the silk linings and white tassels, and the squabs and the yellow cushions and the crimson carpet looked so comfortable, that, as I stood contemplating the equipage, I said to myself, "What have I done to deservethis? O that my poor father were alive to see his boy Jack going to Westminster, to chop sticks and count hobnails, in a carriage like this!" My children were like mad things; and in the afternoon, when I put on my first new brown court suit (lined, like my chariot, with white silk), and fitted up with cut steel buttons, just to try the effect, it all appeared like a dream; the sword, which I tried on, every night for half an hour after I went up to bed, to practise walking with it, was very inconvenient at first; but use is second nature; and so by rehearsing and rehearsing I made myself perfect before that auspicious day, when Sheriffs flourish and geese prevail—namely, the twenty-ninth of September.

The twelve months which followed were very delightful, for, independently of thepositivehonour andéclatthey produced, I had the Mayoralty inprospectu(having attained my aldermanic gown by an immense majority the preceding year), and as I used during the sessions to sit in my box at the Old Bailey, with my bag at my back and my bouquet on my book, my thoughts were wholly devoted to one object of contemplation; culprits stood trembling to hear the verdict of a jury, and I regarded them not; convicts knelt to receive the fatal fiat of the Recorder, and I heeded not their sufferings, as I watched the Lord Mayor seated in the centre of the bench, with the sword of justice stuck up in a goblet over his head—there, thought I, if I live two years, shallIsit—however, even as it was, it was very agreeable. When executions, the chief drawbacks to my delight, happened, I found, after a little seasoning, I took the thing coolly, and enjoyed my toast and tea after the patients were turned off, just as if nothing had happened; for, inmytime, we hanged at eight andbreakfasted at a quarter after, so that without much hurry we were able to finish our muffins just in time for the cutting down at nine. I had to go to the House of Commons with a petition, and to Court with an address—trying situation for one of the Scroppses—however, the want of state in Parliament, and the very little attention paid to us by the members, put me quite at my ease at Westminster; while the gracious urbanity of our accomplished monarch[75]on his throne made me equally comfortable at St. James's. Still I was but a secondary person, or rather only one of two secondary persons—the chief of bailiffs and principal Jack Ketch; therewasa step to gain—and, as I often mentioned to Mrs. Scropps, I was sure my heart would never be still until I had reached the pinnacle.

Behold at length the time arrived! Guildhall crowded to excess—the hustings thronged—the aldermen retire—they return—their choice is announced to the people—it has fallen upon John Ebenezer Scropps, Esq. Alderman and spectacle-maker—a sudden shout is heard—"Scropps for ever!" resounds—the whole assembly seems to vanish from my sight—I come forward—am invested with the chain—I bow—make a speech—tumble over the train of the Recorder, and tread upon the tenderest toe of Mr. Deputy Pod—leave the hall in ecstasy, and drive home to Mrs. Scropps in a state of mind bordering upon insanity.

The days wore on, each one seemed as long as a week, until at length the 8th of November arrived, and then did it seem certain that I should be Lord Mayor—I was sworn in—the civic insignia were delivered to me—I returned them to the proper officers—my chaplain was near me—the esquires of my household were behind me—the thing was done—never shall I forget the tingling sensation I felt in my ear when I was first called "My Lord"—I even doubted if it were addressed to me, and hesitated to answer—but itwasso—the reign of splendour had begun, and after goingthrough the accustomed ceremonies, I got home and retired to bed early, in order to be fresh for the fatigues of the ensuing day.

Sleep I did not—how was it to be expected?—some part of the night I was in consultation with Mrs. Scropps upon the different arrangements; settling about the girls, their places at the banquet, and their partners at the ball; the wind down the chimney sounded like the shouts of the people; the cocks crowing in the mews at the back of the house I took for trumpets sounding my approach; and the ordinary incidental noises in the family I fancied the popguns at Stangate, announcing my disembarkation at Westminster—thus I tossed and tumbled until the long wished-for day dawned, and I jumped up anxiously to realize the visions of the night. I was not long at my toilet—I was soon shaved and dressed—but just as I was settling myself comfortably into my beautiful brown broadcloth inexpressibles, crack went something, and I discovered that a seam had ripped half a foot long. Had it been consistent with the dignity of a Lord Mayor to swear, I should, I believe, at that moment, have anathematized the offending tailor;—as it was, what was to be done?—I heard trumpets in earnest, carriages drawing up and setting down; sheriffs and chaplains, mace bearers, train bearers, sword bearers, water bailiffs, remembrancers, Mr. Common Hunt, the town clerk, and the deputy town clerk, all bustling about—the bells ringing—andIlate, with a hole in my inexpressibles! There was but one remedy—my wife's maid, kind, intelligent creature, civil and obliging, and ready to turn her hand to anything, came to my aid, and in less than fifteen minutes her activity, exerted in the midst of the confusion, repaired the injury, and turned me out fit to be seen by the whole corporation of London.

When I was dressed, I tapped at Mrs. Scropps's door, went in, and asked her if she thought I should do; the dear soul, after settling my point-lace frill (which she had been good enough to pick off her own petticoat on purpose)and putting my bag straight, gave me the sweetest salute imaginable.

"I wish your Lordship health and happiness," said she.

"Sally," said I, "your Ladyship is an angel;" and so, having kissed each of my daughters, who were in progress of dressing, I descended the stairs, to begin the auspicious day in which I reached the apex of my greatness. Never shall I forget the bows—the civilities—the congratulations—Sheriffs bending before me—the Recorder smiling—the Common Serjeant at my feet—the pageant was intoxicating; and when, after having breakfasted, I stepped into that glazed and gilded house upon wheels, called the stage coach, and saw my sword-bearer pop himself into one of the boots, with the sword of state in his hands, I was lost in ecstasy. I threw myself back upon the seat of the vehicle, with all possible dignity, but not without damage; for, in my efforts at ease and elegance, I snapped off the cut steel hilt of my own rapier, by accidentally bumping the whole weight of my body right, or rather wrong, directly upon the top of it.

But what was a sword hilt and a bruise tome—pride knows no pain—I felt none—I wastheLord Mayor, the greatest man in the greatest city of the greatest nation in the world. The people realised my expectation; and "Bravo! Scropps," and "Scropps for ever!" resounded again and again, as we proceeded slowly and majestically towards the river, through a fog which prevented our being advantageously seen, and which got down the throat of the sword-bearer, who was a little troubled with asthma, and who coughed incessantly during our progress, much to my annoyance, not to speak of the ungraceful movements which his convulsive barkings gave to the red velvet scabbard of the honourable glaive, as it stuck out of the coach window.

We embarked inmybarge. A new scene of splendour here awaited me: guns, flags, banners, in short, every thing that taste and fancy could suggest, or a water-bailiff provide, were awaiting me. In the gilded bark was a cold collation.I ate, or tried to eat, but I tasted nothing. Fowls, pâtees, game, beef, ham—all had the same flavour; champagne, hock, and Madeira, were all alike to me. "Lord Mayor" was all I saw, all I heard, all I swallowed; every thing was pervaded and absorbed by the one captivating word; and the repeated appeals to "My Lordship" were sweeter than nectar.

Well, sir, at Westminster I was presented and received; and what do you think I then did—I, John Ebenezer Scropps, of Coventry?—I desired the Recorder to invite the Judges to dine with me at the Guildhall!—I, who remember when two of the oldest and most innocent of the twelve came the circuit, trembling at the very sight of them, and believing them some extraordinary creatures, upon whom all the hair and fur, that I saw, grew naturally; I not only asked these formidable beings to dine with me, but, as if I thought it beneath my dignity to do so in my own proper person, actually deputed a judge of my own to do it for me. I never shall forget their lordships' bows in return; mandarins on a mantelpiece are fools to them.

Then came the return. We re-embarked; and then, in reality, did I hear the guns at Stangate saluting me. I stood it like a man, although I have always a fear of accidents from the wadding. The tide was with us; we soon reached Blackfriars' Bridge; we landed once more in the sphere of my greatness. At the corner of Fleet Street was the Lady Mayoress, waiting for the procession; there she was, Sally Scropps—my own Sally—(her maiden name was Snob,)—with a plume of feathers that half filled the coach, and young Sally, and Jenny, and Maria, all crammed in the front seat, with their backs tomyhorses, which were pawing the mud, and snorting, and smoking like steam-engines, with nostrils like safety-valves; not to speak of four of my footmen hanging behind the carriage, like bees in a swarm. There had not been so much riband in my family since my poorfather's failure at Coventry; and yet, how often, over and over again, although the poor old man had been dead more than twenty years, did I during that morning, in the midst of my splendour, think ofhim, and wish to my heart that he could see me in my greatness. Even in the midst of my triumph, I seemed to defer to my good kind parent—in heaven, as I hope and trust—as if I were anxious forhisjudgment, andhisopinion, as to how I should perform the manifold arduous duties of the day.

Up Ludgate Hill we went—the fog grew thicker and thicker—but then the beautiful women at the windows—those high up could only just see my knees, and the paste buckles in my shoes. This I regretted; but every now and then I bowed condescendingly to the people, in order to show my courtesy, and my chain and collar, which I had discovered during the morning shone the brighter for being shaken. But else I maintained a proper dignity throughout my progress; and, although I said an occasional word or two to my chaplain, and smiled occasionally at Mr. Water-bailiff, I took no more notice of Mr. Sword and Mr. Mace, than I should have taken of Gog and Magog.

At length we reached Guildhall. As I crossed that beautiful building, lighted brilliantly, and filled with splendidly dressed company, and heard the deafening shouts which pealed through its roof as I entered it, I felt a good deal flurried. I retired to a private room, adjusted my dress, shook out my frill, rubbed up my chain and collar, and prepared to receive my guests. They came, and shall I ever forget it? Dinner was announced; the bands played "Oh! the roast beef of Old England." Onwards we went. A prince of the blood—of the blood royal of my own country—led out Sally—my own Sally—the Lady Mayoress; the Lord Chancellor handed out young Sally—I saw it done—I thought I should have fainted; the Prime Minister took Maria; the Lord Privy Seal gave his arm to Jenny; and Mrs. Snob, my wife's mother—a wonderful woman at herage, bating her corpulency—was escorted to table by the Right Honourable the Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench, in his full robes and collar of SS. Oh, if my poor father could have but seenthat!

At the ball, my eldest girl danced with the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, and found him very chatty, though a bit of a "swell;" Maria danced with the Lord Privy Seal; and my youngest with a very handsome man, who wore a riband and star, but who he was, we none of us could ever find out; no matter—never did I see such a day, although it was but the first of three hundred and sixty-five splendid visions.

It would be tedious to expatiate in detail upon all the pleasures of this happy year, thus auspiciously begun. Each month brought its fresh pleasures; each week its new amusements; each day its festival. Public meetings, under the sanction of the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor; concerts and balls, under the patronage of the Lady Mayoress. Then came Easter, and its dinner—Blue-coat boys and buns; then to St. Paul's one Sunday, and to some other church another Sunday. And then came summer; and then there was swan-hoppingupthe river, and white-baitingdownthe river; Crown and Sceptre below, navigation barge above; music, flags, streamers, guns, and company. Turtle every day in the week; peas a pound per pint, and grapes a guinea a pound; not to speak of dabbling in rose-water, served in gold, nor the loving cup, nor the esquires of my household, all in full dress at my elbow.

The days, which before had seemed weeks, were now turned to minutes; scarcely had I swallowed my breakfast, when I was in the justice room; and before I had mittimused half a dozen paupers for begging about the streets, luncheon was ready; this hardly over, in comes a despatch or a deputation; and so on till dinner, which was barely ended before supper was announced. We all became delighted with the Mansion House. My girls grew graceful by thenew confidence their high station gave them; Maria refused a good offer because her lover had an ugly name; and my dearest Sarah was absolutely persecuted by Sir Patrick O'Donahoo, who had what is called the run of the house, and who scarcely ever dined out of it during my mayoralty, whether I was at home or not. What did it matter? There was plenty to eat and drink; the money must be spent, and the victuals cooked; and so as we made ourselves happy, it was of no great consequence having one or two more or less at table. We got used to the place—the establishment had got used to us; we became, in fact, easy in our dignity, and happy in our state, when, lo and behold, the ninth of another November came—the anniversary of my exaltation—the conclusion of my reign.

Again did we go to Guildhall; again were we toasted and addressed; again we were handed in and led out; the girls again flirted with Cabinet ministers, and danced with ambassadors; and at two o'clock in the morning drove home from the scene of gaiety to our old residence in Budge Row, Walbrook. Never in this world did pickled herrings and turpentine smell so powerfully as when we entered the house upon that occasion; and although my wife and the young ones stuck to the drinkables at Guildhall as long as was decent, in order to keep up their spirits, their natural feelings would have way, and a sort of shuddering disgust seemed to fill all their minds on their return home. The passage looked so narrow, the drawing-room looked so small, the staircase was so dark, and the ceilings were so low. However, being tired, we all slept well—at least, I did; for I was in no humour to talk; and the only topic I could think upon, before I dropped off, was a calculation of the amount of expenses which I had incurred during the just expired year of my magnificence.

In the morning we assembled at breakfast; a note which had arrived by the twopenny post lay on the table; it was addressed "Mrs. Scropps, Budge Row." The girls, one afteranother, took it up, read the undignified superscription, and laid it down again. My old and excellent friend Bucklesbury called to inquire after us. What were his first words?—theywerethe first I had heard from a stranger since my change;—"Well, Scropps, how are you, old boy? Done up, eh?"

"Scropps—old boy"—no deference, no respect, no "My lord, I hope your lordship passed a comfortable night; and how is her ladyship, and your lordship's amiable daughters?" not a bit of it—"How's Mrs. S. and thegals?" There was nothing in this; it was quite natural—all as ithadbeen—all as it must be—all as it should be; but how very unlike what itwasonly one day before! The very servants themselves, who, when amidst the strapping, state-fed, lace-loaded lackeys of the Mansion House (transferred, with the chairs and tables, from one lord mayor to another), dared not speak, nor look, nor say their lives were their own, strutted about, and banged the doors, and talked of their "missis," as if she had been an apple-woman.

So much for domestic matters. I went out—I was shoved about in Cheapside, in the most remorseless manner, by the money-hunting crowd. My right eye had the narrowest possible escape of being poked out by the tray of a brawny butcher-boy, who, when I civilly remonstrated, turned round and said, "Vy, I say, who are you, I vonder, as is so partiklar about yourhye-sight?" I felt an involuntary shudder. "Who am I?—to-day," thought I, "IamJohn Ebenezer Scropps; two days ago IwasLord Mayor of London;" and so the rencontre ended, evidently to the advantage of the bristly brute. It was, however, too much for me. I admit the weakness; but the effect of contrast was too powerful—the change was too sudden—and I determined to go to Brighton for a few weeks to refresh myself and be weaned from my dignity.

We went—we drove to the Royal Hotel; in the hall stood one of his Majesty's ministers, one of my formerguests, speaking to his lady and daughter: my girls passed close to him,—he had handed one of them to dinner the year before, but he appeared entirely to have forgotten her. By-and-by, when we were going out in a fly to take the air, one of the waiters desired the fly-man to pull off, because Sir Something Somebody's carriage could not come up,—it was clear that the name of Scropps had lost its influence.

We secluded ourselves in a private house, where we did nothing but sigh and look at the sea. We had been totally spoiled for our proper sphere, and could not get into a better; the indifference of our inferiors mortified us, and the familiarity of our equals disgusted us,—our potentiality was gone, and we were so much degraded that a puppy of a fellow had the impertinence to ask Jenny if she was going to one of the Old Ship balls. "Of course," said the coxcomb, "I don't mean the 'Almacks,' for they are uncommonly select."

In short, do what we would, go where we might, we were outraged and annoyed, or, at least, thought ourselves so; and beyond all bitterness was the reflection that the days of our dignity and delight never might return. There were at Brighton no less than three men who called me Jack, andthat, out of flies or in libraries, and one of these chose occasionally, by way of making himself particularly agreeable, to address me by the familiar appellation of Jacky. At length, and that only three weeks after my fall, an over-grown tallow-chandler met us on the Steyne, and stopped our party to observe, "as how he thought he owed me for two barrels of coal-tar, for doing over his pig-styes." This settled it,—we departed from Brighton, and made a tour of the coast; but we never rallied, and business, which must be minded, drove us before Christmas to Budge Row, where we are again settled down.

Maria has grown thin—Sarah has turned Methodist—and Jenny, who danced with his Excellency the Portuguese Ambassador, who was called angelic by the Right Honourablethe Lord Privy Seal; and who, moreover, refused a man of fortune because he had an ugly name, is going to be married to Lieutenant Stodge, on the half-pay of the Royal Marines—and what then? I am sure if it were not for the females of my family I should be perfectly at my ease in my proper sphere, out of which the course of our civic constitution raised me. It was very pleasant at first—but I have toiled long and laboured hard; I have done my duty, and Providence has blessed my works. If we were discomposed at the sudden change in our station, I it is who was to blame, for having aspired to honours which I knew were not to last. However, the ambition was not dishonourable, nor did I disgrace the station while I held it. Indeed, I ought to apologize for making public the weakness by which we were all affected; especially as I have myself already learned to laugh at what we all severely felt at first—the miseries of aSplendid Annual.


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