AUNT FANNY.

AUNT FANNY.

A LEGEND OF A SHIRT.

Virginibus, Puerisque canto.—Hor.

Old Maids, and Bachelors I chaunt to!—T. I.

I sing of a Shirt thatnever wasnew!In the course of the year Eighteen hundred and two,Aunt Fanny began,  Upon Grandmama's plan,To make one for me, then her "dear little man."——At the epoch I speak about, I was betweenA man and a boy,  A hobble-de-hoy,A fat, little, punchy concern of sixteen,—Just beginning to flirt,  And ogle,—so pert,I'd been whipt every day had I had my desert,—And Aunt Fan volunteer'd to make me a shirt!I've said shebeganit,—  Some unlucky planetNo doubt interfered,—for, before she, and JanetCompleted the "cutting-out," "hemming," and "stitching,"A tall Irish footman appear'd in the kitchen;——This took off the maid,—  And, I'm sadly afraid,My respected Aunt Fanny's attention, too, stray'd;For, about the same period, a gay son of Mars,Cornet Jones of the Tenth (then the Prince's) Hussars,With his fine dark eyelashes,  And finer moustaches,And the ostrich plume work'd on the corps' sabre-taches,(I say nought of the gold-and-red cord of the sashes,Or the boots far above the Guards' vile spatterdashes,)—So eyed, and so sigh'd, and so lovingly triedTo engage her whole ear as he lounged by her side,Looking down on the rest with such dignified pride,That she made up her mind  She should certainly findCornet Jones at her feet, whisp'ring, "Fan, be my bride!"——She had even resolved to say "Yes" should he ask it,—And I—and my Shirt—were both left in the basket.To her grief and dismay  She discover'd one dayCornet Jones of the Tenth was a little too gay;For, besides that she saw him—he could not say nay—Wink at one of the actresses capering awayIn a Spanishbolero, one night at the play,She found he'd already a wife at Cambray;—One at Paris,—a nymph of thecorps de ballet;—And a third down in Kent, at a place call'd Foot's Cray.—He was "viler than dirt!"—  Fanny vow'd to exertAll her powers to forget him,—and finish my Shirt.But, oh! lack-a-day!  How time slips away!—Who'd have thought that while Cupid was playing these tricks,Ten years had elapsed, and—I'd turn'd twenty-six?—"I care not a whit,  —He's not grown a bit,"Says my Aunt, "it will still be a very good fit."So Janet, and She,  Now about thirty-three,(The maid had been jilted by Mr. Magee,)Each taking one end of "the Shirt" on her knee,Again began working with hearty good will,"Felling the Seams," and "whipping the Frill,"—For, twenty years since, though the Ruffle had vanish'd,A Frill like a fan had by no means been banish'd;People wore them at playhouses, parties, and churches,Like overgrown fins of overgrown perches.—Now, then, by these two thus laying their capsTogether, my "Shirt" had been finish'd, perhaps,But for one of those queer little three-corner'd straps,Which the ladies call "Side-bits," that sever the "Flaps;"—Here unlucky Janet  Took her needle, and ran itRight into her thumb, and cried loudly, "Ads cuss it!I've spoiled myself now by that 'ere nasty Gusset!"For a month to come  Poor dear Janet's thumbWas in that sort of state vulgar people call "Rum."At the end of that time,  A youth, still in his prime,The Doctor's fat Errand-boy,—just such a dolt as isKept to mix draughts, and spread plaisters and poultices,—Who a bread-cataplasm each morning had carried her,Sigh'd,—ogled,—proposed,—was accepted,—and married her!Much did Aunt Fan  Disapprove of the plan;—She turn'd up her dear little snub at "the Man."She "could not believe it"—  "Could scarcely conceive itWas possible—What!sucha place!—and then leave it!—And all for a 'Shrimp' not as high as my hat—A little contemptible 'Shaver' like that!!With a broad pancake face, and eyes buried in fat!"—For her part, "She was sure  She could never endureA lad with a lisp, and a leg like a skewer.—Such a name too!—('twas Potts!)—and so nasty a trade—No, no,—she would much rather die an old maid!—He a husband, indeed!—Well—mine, come what may come,Shan't look like a blister, or smell of Guaiacum!"—But there!  She'd "declare,  It was Janet's affair——Chacun à son goût—  As she baked she might brew—She could not prevent her—'twas no use in trying it—Oh, no—she had made her own bed, and might lie in it.—They 'repent at leisure who marry at random.'No matter—De gustibus non disputandum!"Consoling herself with this choice bit of Latin,Aunt Fanny resignedly bought some white satin,And, as the Soubrette  Was a very great petAfter all,—she resolved to forgive and forget,And sat down to make her a bridal rosette,With magnificent bits of some white-looking metalStuck in, here and there, each forming a petal.——On such an occasion one couldn't feel hurt,Of course, that she ceased to remember—my Shirt!Ten years,—or nigh,—  Had again gone by,When Fan, accidentally casting her eyeOn a dirty old work-basket, hung up on highIn the store-closet where herbs were put by to dry,Took it down to explore it—she didn't know why.—Within, a pea-soup colour'd fragment she spied,Of the hue of a November fog in Cheapside,Or a bad piece of gingerbread spoilt in the baking.——I still hear her cry,—  "I wish I may dieIf here isn't Tom's Shirt, that's been so long a-making!My gracious me!  Well,—only to see!I declare it's as yellow as yellow can be!Why, it looks just as though't had been soak'd in green tea.Dear me!Didyouever?—  But come—'twill be cleverTo bring matters round; so I'll do my endeavour—'Better Late,' says an excellent proverb, 'than Never!'—Itisstain'd, to be sure; but 'grass-bleaching' will bring itTo rights 'in a jiffy,'—We'll wash it, and wring it;Or, stay,—'Hudson's Liquor'  Will do it still quicker,And—" Here the new maid chimed in, "Ma'am, Salt of LemonWill make it, in no time, quite fit for the Gemman!"—So they "set in the gathers,"—the large round the collar,While those at the wrist-bands of course were much smaller,—The button-holes now were at length "overcast;"Then a button itself was sewn on—'twas the last!All's done!  All's won!  Never under the sunWas Shirt so late finish'd—so early begun!——The work would defy  The most critical eye.It was "bleach'd,"—it was wash'd,—it was hung out to dry,—It was mark'd on the tail with a T, and an I!On the back of a chair it  Was placed, just to air it,In front of the fire.—"Tom to-morrow shall wear it!"——O cæca mens hominum!—Fanny, good soul,Left her charge for one moment—but one—a vile coalBounced out from the grate, and set fire to the whole!Had it been Doctor Arnott's new stove—not a grate;—Had the coal been a "Lord Mayor's coal,"—viz.: a slate;—What a diff'rent tale had I had to relate!And Aunt Fan—and my Shirt—been superior to Fate!—One moment—no more!  —Fan open'd the door!The draught made the blaze ten times worse than before;And Aunt Fanny sank down—in despair—on the floor!You may fancy perhaps Agrippina's amazement,When, looking one fine moonlight night from her casement,She saw, while thus gazing,  All Rome a-blazing,And, losing at once all restraint on her temper, orFeelings, exclaimed, "Hang that Scamp of an Emperor,Although he's my son!—  —He thinks it prime fun,No doubt!—While the flames are demolishing Rome,There's my Nero a-fiddling, and singing 'Sweet Home!'"—Stay—I'm really not sure 'twas that lady who saidThe words I've put down, as she stepp'd into bed,—On reflection, I rather believeshewas dead;But e'en when at College, I  Fairly acknowledge, INever was very precise in Chronology;So, if there's an error, pray set down as mine aMistake of no very great moment—in fine, aMere slip—'twas some Pleb's wife, if not Agrippina.You may fancy that warrior, so stern and so stony,Whom thirty years since we all used to callBoney,When, engaged in what he styled "fulfilling his destinies,"He led his rapscallions across the Borysthenes,And had made up his mind  Snug quarters to findIn Moscow, against the catarrhs and the coughsWhich are apt to prevail 'mongst the "Owskis" and "Offs,"At a time of the year  When your nose and your earAre by no means so safe there as people's are here,Inasmuch as "Jack Frost," that most fearful of Bogles,Makes folks leave their cartilage oft in their "fogles."You may fancy, I say,  That sameBoney'sdismay,When Count Rostopchin  At once made him drop chin,And turn up his eyes, as his rapee he took,With a sort of amort-de-ma-viekind of look,On perceiving that "Swing,"  And "all that sort of thing,"Was at work,—that he'd just lost the game without knowing it—That the Kremlin was blazing—the Russians "a going it,"—Every plug in the place frozen hard as the ground,And never a Turn-cock at all to be found!You may fancy King Charles at some Court Fancy-Ball,(The date we may fix  In Sixteen sixty-six,)In the room built by Inigo Jones at Whitehall,Whence his father, the Martyr,—(as such mourn'd by allWho, inhis, wept the Law's and the Monarchy's fall,)—Stept out to exchange regal robes for a pall—You may fancy King Charles, I say, stopping the brawl,[38]As bursts on his sight the old church of St. Paul,By the light of its flames, now beginning to crawlFrom basement to buttress, and topping its wall——You may fancy old Clarendon making a call,And stating in cold, slow, monotonous drawl,"Sire, from Pudding Lane's End, close by Fishmongers' Hall,To Pye Corner, in Smithfield, there is not a stallThere, in market, or street,—not a house, great or small,In which Knight wields his faulchion, or Cobbler his awl,But's on fire!!"—You may fancy the general squall,And bawl as they all call for wimple and shawl!——You may fancy all this—but I boldly assertYoucan'tfancy Aunt Fan—as she looked onMY SHIRT!!!Was't Apelles? or Zeuxis?—I think 'twas Apelles,That artist of old—I declare I can't tell hisExact patronymic—I write and pronounce illThese Classical names—Whom some Grecian Town-CouncilEmploy'd—I believe, by command of the Oracle,—To produce them a splendid piece, purely historical,For adorning the wall  Of some fane, or Guildhall,And who for his subject determined to try aLarge painting in oils of Miss IphigeniaAt the moment her Sire,  By especial desireOf "that Spalpeen, O'Dysseus" (see Barney Maguire),Has resolved to devote  Her beautiful throatTo old Chalcas's knife, and her limbs to the fire;—An act which we moderns by no means admire,—An off'ring, 'tis true, to Jove, Mars, or Apollo costNo trifling sum in those days, if a holocaust,—Still, although for economy we should condemn none,In an αναξ ανδρων, like the great Agamemnon,To give up to slaughter  An elegant daughter,After all the French, Music, and Dancing they'd taught her,And Singing,—at Heaven knows how much a quarter,—In lieu of a Calf!—  It was too bad by half!At a "nigger"[39]so pitiful who would not laugh,And turn up their noses at one who could findNo decenter method of "Raising the Wind"?No doubt but he might,  Without any greatFlight,Have obtain'd it by what we call "flying a kite."Or on mortgage—or sure, if he couldn't so do it, heMust have succeeded "by way of annuity."But there—it appears,  His crocodile tears,His "Oh!s" and his "Ah!s" his "Oh Law!s" and "Oh dear!s"Were all thought sincere,—so in painting his VictimThe Artist was splendid—but could not depictHim.His features, and phiz awry  Shewed so much misery,And so like a dragon he  Look'd in his agony,That the foil'd Painter buried—despairing to gain aGood likeness—his face in a printed Bandana.—Such a veil is best thrown o'er one's face when one's hurtBy some grief which no power can repair or avert!——Such a veil I shall throw o'er Aunt Fan—and My Shirt!MORAL.And now for some practical hints from the storyOf Aunt Fan's mishap, which I've thus laid before ye;For, if rather too gay,  I can venture to sayA fine vein of morality is, in each layOf my primitive Muse, the distinguishingtrait!—First of all—Don't put off till to-morrow what may,Without inconvenience, be managed to-day!That golden occasion we call "Opportunity"Rarely's neglected by man with impunity!And the "Future," how brightly soe'er by Hope's dupe colour'd,Ne'er may afford  You a lost chance restored,Till both you, andyour Shirt, are grown old, and pea-soup-colour'd!I would also desire  You to guard your attire,Young Ladies,—and never go too near the fire!——Depend on't there's many a dear little SoulHas found that a Spark is as bad as a coal,—And "in her best petticoat burnt a great hole!"Last of all, gentle Reader, don't be too secure!—Let seeming success never make you "cock-sure!"But beware!—and take care,  When all things look fair,How you hang your Shirt over the back of your chair!——"There's many a slip  'Twixt the cup and the lip!"Be this excellent proverb, then, well understood,AndDon't halloo before you're quite out of the wood!!!

I sing of a Shirt thatnever wasnew!In the course of the year Eighteen hundred and two,Aunt Fanny began,  Upon Grandmama's plan,To make one for me, then her "dear little man."——At the epoch I speak about, I was betweenA man and a boy,  A hobble-de-hoy,A fat, little, punchy concern of sixteen,—Just beginning to flirt,  And ogle,—so pert,I'd been whipt every day had I had my desert,—And Aunt Fan volunteer'd to make me a shirt!I've said shebeganit,—  Some unlucky planetNo doubt interfered,—for, before she, and JanetCompleted the "cutting-out," "hemming," and "stitching,"A tall Irish footman appear'd in the kitchen;——This took off the maid,—  And, I'm sadly afraid,My respected Aunt Fanny's attention, too, stray'd;For, about the same period, a gay son of Mars,Cornet Jones of the Tenth (then the Prince's) Hussars,With his fine dark eyelashes,  And finer moustaches,And the ostrich plume work'd on the corps' sabre-taches,(I say nought of the gold-and-red cord of the sashes,Or the boots far above the Guards' vile spatterdashes,)—So eyed, and so sigh'd, and so lovingly triedTo engage her whole ear as he lounged by her side,Looking down on the rest with such dignified pride,That she made up her mind  She should certainly findCornet Jones at her feet, whisp'ring, "Fan, be my bride!"——She had even resolved to say "Yes" should he ask it,—And I—and my Shirt—were both left in the basket.To her grief and dismay  She discover'd one dayCornet Jones of the Tenth was a little too gay;For, besides that she saw him—he could not say nay—Wink at one of the actresses capering awayIn a Spanishbolero, one night at the play,She found he'd already a wife at Cambray;—One at Paris,—a nymph of thecorps de ballet;—And a third down in Kent, at a place call'd Foot's Cray.—He was "viler than dirt!"—  Fanny vow'd to exertAll her powers to forget him,—and finish my Shirt.But, oh! lack-a-day!  How time slips away!—Who'd have thought that while Cupid was playing these tricks,Ten years had elapsed, and—I'd turn'd twenty-six?—"I care not a whit,  —He's not grown a bit,"Says my Aunt, "it will still be a very good fit."So Janet, and She,  Now about thirty-three,(The maid had been jilted by Mr. Magee,)Each taking one end of "the Shirt" on her knee,Again began working with hearty good will,"Felling the Seams," and "whipping the Frill,"—For, twenty years since, though the Ruffle had vanish'd,A Frill like a fan had by no means been banish'd;People wore them at playhouses, parties, and churches,Like overgrown fins of overgrown perches.—Now, then, by these two thus laying their capsTogether, my "Shirt" had been finish'd, perhaps,But for one of those queer little three-corner'd straps,Which the ladies call "Side-bits," that sever the "Flaps;"—Here unlucky Janet  Took her needle, and ran itRight into her thumb, and cried loudly, "Ads cuss it!I've spoiled myself now by that 'ere nasty Gusset!"For a month to come  Poor dear Janet's thumbWas in that sort of state vulgar people call "Rum."At the end of that time,  A youth, still in his prime,The Doctor's fat Errand-boy,—just such a dolt as isKept to mix draughts, and spread plaisters and poultices,—Who a bread-cataplasm each morning had carried her,Sigh'd,—ogled,—proposed,—was accepted,—and married her!Much did Aunt Fan  Disapprove of the plan;—She turn'd up her dear little snub at "the Man."She "could not believe it"—  "Could scarcely conceive itWas possible—What!sucha place!—and then leave it!—And all for a 'Shrimp' not as high as my hat—A little contemptible 'Shaver' like that!!With a broad pancake face, and eyes buried in fat!"—For her part, "She was sure  She could never endureA lad with a lisp, and a leg like a skewer.—Such a name too!—('twas Potts!)—and so nasty a trade—No, no,—she would much rather die an old maid!—He a husband, indeed!—Well—mine, come what may come,Shan't look like a blister, or smell of Guaiacum!"—But there!  She'd "declare,  It was Janet's affair——Chacun à son goût—  As she baked she might brew—She could not prevent her—'twas no use in trying it—Oh, no—she had made her own bed, and might lie in it.—They 'repent at leisure who marry at random.'No matter—De gustibus non disputandum!"Consoling herself with this choice bit of Latin,Aunt Fanny resignedly bought some white satin,And, as the Soubrette  Was a very great petAfter all,—she resolved to forgive and forget,And sat down to make her a bridal rosette,With magnificent bits of some white-looking metalStuck in, here and there, each forming a petal.——On such an occasion one couldn't feel hurt,Of course, that she ceased to remember—my Shirt!Ten years,—or nigh,—  Had again gone by,When Fan, accidentally casting her eyeOn a dirty old work-basket, hung up on highIn the store-closet where herbs were put by to dry,Took it down to explore it—she didn't know why.—Within, a pea-soup colour'd fragment she spied,Of the hue of a November fog in Cheapside,Or a bad piece of gingerbread spoilt in the baking.——I still hear her cry,—  "I wish I may dieIf here isn't Tom's Shirt, that's been so long a-making!My gracious me!  Well,—only to see!I declare it's as yellow as yellow can be!Why, it looks just as though't had been soak'd in green tea.Dear me!Didyouever?—  But come—'twill be cleverTo bring matters round; so I'll do my endeavour—'Better Late,' says an excellent proverb, 'than Never!'—Itisstain'd, to be sure; but 'grass-bleaching' will bring itTo rights 'in a jiffy,'—We'll wash it, and wring it;Or, stay,—'Hudson's Liquor'  Will do it still quicker,And—" Here the new maid chimed in, "Ma'am, Salt of LemonWill make it, in no time, quite fit for the Gemman!"—So they "set in the gathers,"—the large round the collar,While those at the wrist-bands of course were much smaller,—The button-holes now were at length "overcast;"Then a button itself was sewn on—'twas the last!All's done!  All's won!  Never under the sunWas Shirt so late finish'd—so early begun!——The work would defy  The most critical eye.It was "bleach'd,"—it was wash'd,—it was hung out to dry,—It was mark'd on the tail with a T, and an I!On the back of a chair it  Was placed, just to air it,In front of the fire.—"Tom to-morrow shall wear it!"——O cæca mens hominum!—Fanny, good soul,Left her charge for one moment—but one—a vile coalBounced out from the grate, and set fire to the whole!Had it been Doctor Arnott's new stove—not a grate;—Had the coal been a "Lord Mayor's coal,"—viz.: a slate;—What a diff'rent tale had I had to relate!And Aunt Fan—and my Shirt—been superior to Fate!—One moment—no more!  —Fan open'd the door!The draught made the blaze ten times worse than before;And Aunt Fanny sank down—in despair—on the floor!You may fancy perhaps Agrippina's amazement,When, looking one fine moonlight night from her casement,She saw, while thus gazing,  All Rome a-blazing,And, losing at once all restraint on her temper, orFeelings, exclaimed, "Hang that Scamp of an Emperor,Although he's my son!—  —He thinks it prime fun,No doubt!—While the flames are demolishing Rome,There's my Nero a-fiddling, and singing 'Sweet Home!'"—Stay—I'm really not sure 'twas that lady who saidThe words I've put down, as she stepp'd into bed,—On reflection, I rather believeshewas dead;But e'en when at College, I  Fairly acknowledge, INever was very precise in Chronology;So, if there's an error, pray set down as mine aMistake of no very great moment—in fine, aMere slip—'twas some Pleb's wife, if not Agrippina.You may fancy that warrior, so stern and so stony,Whom thirty years since we all used to callBoney,When, engaged in what he styled "fulfilling his destinies,"He led his rapscallions across the Borysthenes,And had made up his mind  Snug quarters to findIn Moscow, against the catarrhs and the coughsWhich are apt to prevail 'mongst the "Owskis" and "Offs,"At a time of the year  When your nose and your earAre by no means so safe there as people's are here,Inasmuch as "Jack Frost," that most fearful of Bogles,Makes folks leave their cartilage oft in their "fogles."You may fancy, I say,  That sameBoney'sdismay,When Count Rostopchin  At once made him drop chin,And turn up his eyes, as his rapee he took,With a sort of amort-de-ma-viekind of look,On perceiving that "Swing,"  And "all that sort of thing,"Was at work,—that he'd just lost the game without knowing it—That the Kremlin was blazing—the Russians "a going it,"—Every plug in the place frozen hard as the ground,And never a Turn-cock at all to be found!You may fancy King Charles at some Court Fancy-Ball,(The date we may fix  In Sixteen sixty-six,)In the room built by Inigo Jones at Whitehall,Whence his father, the Martyr,—(as such mourn'd by allWho, inhis, wept the Law's and the Monarchy's fall,)—Stept out to exchange regal robes for a pall—You may fancy King Charles, I say, stopping the brawl,[38]As bursts on his sight the old church of St. Paul,By the light of its flames, now beginning to crawlFrom basement to buttress, and topping its wall——You may fancy old Clarendon making a call,And stating in cold, slow, monotonous drawl,"Sire, from Pudding Lane's End, close by Fishmongers' Hall,To Pye Corner, in Smithfield, there is not a stallThere, in market, or street,—not a house, great or small,In which Knight wields his faulchion, or Cobbler his awl,But's on fire!!"—You may fancy the general squall,And bawl as they all call for wimple and shawl!——You may fancy all this—but I boldly assertYoucan'tfancy Aunt Fan—as she looked onMY SHIRT!!!Was't Apelles? or Zeuxis?—I think 'twas Apelles,That artist of old—I declare I can't tell hisExact patronymic—I write and pronounce illThese Classical names—Whom some Grecian Town-CouncilEmploy'd—I believe, by command of the Oracle,—To produce them a splendid piece, purely historical,For adorning the wall  Of some fane, or Guildhall,And who for his subject determined to try aLarge painting in oils of Miss IphigeniaAt the moment her Sire,  By especial desireOf "that Spalpeen, O'Dysseus" (see Barney Maguire),Has resolved to devote  Her beautiful throatTo old Chalcas's knife, and her limbs to the fire;—An act which we moderns by no means admire,—An off'ring, 'tis true, to Jove, Mars, or Apollo costNo trifling sum in those days, if a holocaust,—Still, although for economy we should condemn none,In an αναξ ανδρων, like the great Agamemnon,To give up to slaughter  An elegant daughter,After all the French, Music, and Dancing they'd taught her,And Singing,—at Heaven knows how much a quarter,—In lieu of a Calf!—  It was too bad by half!At a "nigger"[39]so pitiful who would not laugh,And turn up their noses at one who could findNo decenter method of "Raising the Wind"?No doubt but he might,  Without any greatFlight,Have obtain'd it by what we call "flying a kite."Or on mortgage—or sure, if he couldn't so do it, heMust have succeeded "by way of annuity."But there—it appears,  His crocodile tears,His "Oh!s" and his "Ah!s" his "Oh Law!s" and "Oh dear!s"Were all thought sincere,—so in painting his VictimThe Artist was splendid—but could not depictHim.His features, and phiz awry  Shewed so much misery,And so like a dragon he  Look'd in his agony,That the foil'd Painter buried—despairing to gain aGood likeness—his face in a printed Bandana.—Such a veil is best thrown o'er one's face when one's hurtBy some grief which no power can repair or avert!——Such a veil I shall throw o'er Aunt Fan—and My Shirt!MORAL.And now for some practical hints from the storyOf Aunt Fan's mishap, which I've thus laid before ye;For, if rather too gay,  I can venture to sayA fine vein of morality is, in each layOf my primitive Muse, the distinguishingtrait!—First of all—Don't put off till to-morrow what may,Without inconvenience, be managed to-day!That golden occasion we call "Opportunity"Rarely's neglected by man with impunity!And the "Future," how brightly soe'er by Hope's dupe colour'd,Ne'er may afford  You a lost chance restored,Till both you, andyour Shirt, are grown old, and pea-soup-colour'd!I would also desire  You to guard your attire,Young Ladies,—and never go too near the fire!——Depend on't there's many a dear little SoulHas found that a Spark is as bad as a coal,—And "in her best petticoat burnt a great hole!"Last of all, gentle Reader, don't be too secure!—Let seeming success never make you "cock-sure!"But beware!—and take care,  When all things look fair,How you hang your Shirt over the back of your chair!——"There's many a slip  'Twixt the cup and the lip!"Be this excellent proverb, then, well understood,AndDon't halloo before you're quite out of the wood!!!

I sing of a Shirt thatnever wasnew!In the course of the year Eighteen hundred and two,Aunt Fanny began,  Upon Grandmama's plan,To make one for me, then her "dear little man."——At the epoch I speak about, I was betweenA man and a boy,  A hobble-de-hoy,A fat, little, punchy concern of sixteen,—Just beginning to flirt,  And ogle,—so pert,I'd been whipt every day had I had my desert,—And Aunt Fan volunteer'd to make me a shirt!

I've said shebeganit,—  Some unlucky planetNo doubt interfered,—for, before she, and JanetCompleted the "cutting-out," "hemming," and "stitching,"A tall Irish footman appear'd in the kitchen;——This took off the maid,—  And, I'm sadly afraid,My respected Aunt Fanny's attention, too, stray'd;For, about the same period, a gay son of Mars,Cornet Jones of the Tenth (then the Prince's) Hussars,With his fine dark eyelashes,  And finer moustaches,And the ostrich plume work'd on the corps' sabre-taches,(I say nought of the gold-and-red cord of the sashes,Or the boots far above the Guards' vile spatterdashes,)—So eyed, and so sigh'd, and so lovingly triedTo engage her whole ear as he lounged by her side,Looking down on the rest with such dignified pride,That she made up her mind  She should certainly findCornet Jones at her feet, whisp'ring, "Fan, be my bride!"——She had even resolved to say "Yes" should he ask it,—And I—and my Shirt—were both left in the basket.

To her grief and dismay  She discover'd one dayCornet Jones of the Tenth was a little too gay;For, besides that she saw him—he could not say nay—Wink at one of the actresses capering awayIn a Spanishbolero, one night at the play,She found he'd already a wife at Cambray;—One at Paris,—a nymph of thecorps de ballet;—And a third down in Kent, at a place call'd Foot's Cray.—He was "viler than dirt!"—  Fanny vow'd to exertAll her powers to forget him,—and finish my Shirt.But, oh! lack-a-day!  How time slips away!—Who'd have thought that while Cupid was playing these tricks,Ten years had elapsed, and—I'd turn'd twenty-six?—

"I care not a whit,  —He's not grown a bit,"Says my Aunt, "it will still be a very good fit."So Janet, and She,  Now about thirty-three,(The maid had been jilted by Mr. Magee,)Each taking one end of "the Shirt" on her knee,Again began working with hearty good will,"Felling the Seams," and "whipping the Frill,"—For, twenty years since, though the Ruffle had vanish'd,A Frill like a fan had by no means been banish'd;People wore them at playhouses, parties, and churches,Like overgrown fins of overgrown perches.—

Now, then, by these two thus laying their capsTogether, my "Shirt" had been finish'd, perhaps,But for one of those queer little three-corner'd straps,Which the ladies call "Side-bits," that sever the "Flaps;"—Here unlucky Janet  Took her needle, and ran itRight into her thumb, and cried loudly, "Ads cuss it!I've spoiled myself now by that 'ere nasty Gusset!"

For a month to come  Poor dear Janet's thumbWas in that sort of state vulgar people call "Rum."At the end of that time,  A youth, still in his prime,The Doctor's fat Errand-boy,—just such a dolt as isKept to mix draughts, and spread plaisters and poultices,—Who a bread-cataplasm each morning had carried her,Sigh'd,—ogled,—proposed,—was accepted,—and married her!

Much did Aunt Fan  Disapprove of the plan;—She turn'd up her dear little snub at "the Man."She "could not believe it"—  "Could scarcely conceive itWas possible—What!sucha place!—and then leave it!—And all for a 'Shrimp' not as high as my hat—A little contemptible 'Shaver' like that!!With a broad pancake face, and eyes buried in fat!"—For her part, "She was sure  She could never endureA lad with a lisp, and a leg like a skewer.—Such a name too!—('twas Potts!)—and so nasty a trade—No, no,—she would much rather die an old maid!—He a husband, indeed!—Well—mine, come what may come,Shan't look like a blister, or smell of Guaiacum!"—But there!  She'd "declare,  It was Janet's affair——Chacun à son goût—  As she baked she might brew—She could not prevent her—'twas no use in trying it—Oh, no—she had made her own bed, and might lie in it.—They 'repent at leisure who marry at random.'No matter—De gustibus non disputandum!"

Consoling herself with this choice bit of Latin,Aunt Fanny resignedly bought some white satin,And, as the Soubrette  Was a very great petAfter all,—she resolved to forgive and forget,And sat down to make her a bridal rosette,With magnificent bits of some white-looking metalStuck in, here and there, each forming a petal.——On such an occasion one couldn't feel hurt,Of course, that she ceased to remember—my Shirt!

Ten years,—or nigh,—  Had again gone by,When Fan, accidentally casting her eyeOn a dirty old work-basket, hung up on highIn the store-closet where herbs were put by to dry,Took it down to explore it—she didn't know why.—

Within, a pea-soup colour'd fragment she spied,Of the hue of a November fog in Cheapside,Or a bad piece of gingerbread spoilt in the baking.——I still hear her cry,—  "I wish I may dieIf here isn't Tom's Shirt, that's been so long a-making!My gracious me!  Well,—only to see!I declare it's as yellow as yellow can be!Why, it looks just as though't had been soak'd in green tea.Dear me!Didyouever?—  But come—'twill be cleverTo bring matters round; so I'll do my endeavour—'Better Late,' says an excellent proverb, 'than Never!'—Itisstain'd, to be sure; but 'grass-bleaching' will bring itTo rights 'in a jiffy,'—We'll wash it, and wring it;Or, stay,—'Hudson's Liquor'  Will do it still quicker,And—" Here the new maid chimed in, "Ma'am, Salt of LemonWill make it, in no time, quite fit for the Gemman!"—So they "set in the gathers,"—the large round the collar,While those at the wrist-bands of course were much smaller,—The button-holes now were at length "overcast;"Then a button itself was sewn on—'twas the last!

All's done!  All's won!  Never under the sunWas Shirt so late finish'd—so early begun!——The work would defy  The most critical eye.It was "bleach'd,"—it was wash'd,—it was hung out to dry,—It was mark'd on the tail with a T, and an I!On the back of a chair it  Was placed, just to air it,In front of the fire.—"Tom to-morrow shall wear it!"—

—O cæca mens hominum!—Fanny, good soul,Left her charge for one moment—but one—a vile coalBounced out from the grate, and set fire to the whole!

Had it been Doctor Arnott's new stove—not a grate;—Had the coal been a "Lord Mayor's coal,"—viz.: a slate;—What a diff'rent tale had I had to relate!And Aunt Fan—and my Shirt—been superior to Fate!—One moment—no more!  —Fan open'd the door!The draught made the blaze ten times worse than before;And Aunt Fanny sank down—in despair—on the floor!

You may fancy perhaps Agrippina's amazement,When, looking one fine moonlight night from her casement,She saw, while thus gazing,  All Rome a-blazing,And, losing at once all restraint on her temper, orFeelings, exclaimed, "Hang that Scamp of an Emperor,Although he's my son!—  —He thinks it prime fun,No doubt!—While the flames are demolishing Rome,There's my Nero a-fiddling, and singing 'Sweet Home!'"—Stay—I'm really not sure 'twas that lady who saidThe words I've put down, as she stepp'd into bed,—On reflection, I rather believeshewas dead;But e'en when at College, I  Fairly acknowledge, INever was very precise in Chronology;So, if there's an error, pray set down as mine aMistake of no very great moment—in fine, aMere slip—'twas some Pleb's wife, if not Agrippina.

You may fancy that warrior, so stern and so stony,Whom thirty years since we all used to callBoney,When, engaged in what he styled "fulfilling his destinies,"He led his rapscallions across the Borysthenes,And had made up his mind  Snug quarters to findIn Moscow, against the catarrhs and the coughsWhich are apt to prevail 'mongst the "Owskis" and "Offs,"At a time of the year  When your nose and your earAre by no means so safe there as people's are here,Inasmuch as "Jack Frost," that most fearful of Bogles,Makes folks leave their cartilage oft in their "fogles."You may fancy, I say,  That sameBoney'sdismay,When Count Rostopchin  At once made him drop chin,And turn up his eyes, as his rapee he took,With a sort of amort-de-ma-viekind of look,On perceiving that "Swing,"  And "all that sort of thing,"Was at work,—that he'd just lost the game without knowing it—That the Kremlin was blazing—the Russians "a going it,"—Every plug in the place frozen hard as the ground,And never a Turn-cock at all to be found!

You may fancy King Charles at some Court Fancy-Ball,(The date we may fix  In Sixteen sixty-six,)In the room built by Inigo Jones at Whitehall,Whence his father, the Martyr,—(as such mourn'd by allWho, inhis, wept the Law's and the Monarchy's fall,)—Stept out to exchange regal robes for a pall—You may fancy King Charles, I say, stopping the brawl,[38]As bursts on his sight the old church of St. Paul,By the light of its flames, now beginning to crawlFrom basement to buttress, and topping its wall——You may fancy old Clarendon making a call,And stating in cold, slow, monotonous drawl,"Sire, from Pudding Lane's End, close by Fishmongers' Hall,To Pye Corner, in Smithfield, there is not a stallThere, in market, or street,—not a house, great or small,In which Knight wields his faulchion, or Cobbler his awl,But's on fire!!"—You may fancy the general squall,And bawl as they all call for wimple and shawl!——You may fancy all this—but I boldly assertYoucan'tfancy Aunt Fan—as she looked onMY SHIRT!!!

Was't Apelles? or Zeuxis?—I think 'twas Apelles,That artist of old—I declare I can't tell hisExact patronymic—I write and pronounce illThese Classical names—Whom some Grecian Town-CouncilEmploy'd—I believe, by command of the Oracle,—To produce them a splendid piece, purely historical,For adorning the wall  Of some fane, or Guildhall,And who for his subject determined to try aLarge painting in oils of Miss IphigeniaAt the moment her Sire,  By especial desireOf "that Spalpeen, O'Dysseus" (see Barney Maguire),Has resolved to devote  Her beautiful throatTo old Chalcas's knife, and her limbs to the fire;—An act which we moderns by no means admire,—An off'ring, 'tis true, to Jove, Mars, or Apollo costNo trifling sum in those days, if a holocaust,—Still, although for economy we should condemn none,In an αναξ ανδρων, like the great Agamemnon,To give up to slaughter  An elegant daughter,After all the French, Music, and Dancing they'd taught her,And Singing,—at Heaven knows how much a quarter,—In lieu of a Calf!—  It was too bad by half!At a "nigger"[39]so pitiful who would not laugh,And turn up their noses at one who could findNo decenter method of "Raising the Wind"?No doubt but he might,  Without any greatFlight,Have obtain'd it by what we call "flying a kite."Or on mortgage—or sure, if he couldn't so do it, heMust have succeeded "by way of annuity."But there—it appears,  His crocodile tears,His "Oh!s" and his "Ah!s" his "Oh Law!s" and "Oh dear!s"Were all thought sincere,—so in painting his VictimThe Artist was splendid—but could not depictHim.His features, and phiz awry  Shewed so much misery,And so like a dragon he  Look'd in his agony,That the foil'd Painter buried—despairing to gain aGood likeness—his face in a printed Bandana.—Such a veil is best thrown o'er one's face when one's hurtBy some grief which no power can repair or avert!——Such a veil I shall throw o'er Aunt Fan—and My Shirt!

MORAL.

And now for some practical hints from the storyOf Aunt Fan's mishap, which I've thus laid before ye;For, if rather too gay,  I can venture to sayA fine vein of morality is, in each layOf my primitive Muse, the distinguishingtrait!—

First of all—Don't put off till to-morrow what may,Without inconvenience, be managed to-day!That golden occasion we call "Opportunity"Rarely's neglected by man with impunity!And the "Future," how brightly soe'er by Hope's dupe colour'd,Ne'er may afford  You a lost chance restored,Till both you, andyour Shirt, are grown old, and pea-soup-colour'd!

I would also desire  You to guard your attire,Young Ladies,—and never go too near the fire!——Depend on't there's many a dear little SoulHas found that a Spark is as bad as a coal,—And "in her best petticoat burnt a great hole!"

Last of all, gentle Reader, don't be too secure!—Let seeming success never make you "cock-sure!"But beware!—and take care,  When all things look fair,How you hang your Shirt over the back of your chair!——"There's many a slip  'Twixt the cup and the lip!"Be this excellent proverb, then, well understood,AndDon't halloo before you're quite out of the wood!!!

tb

FOOTNOTES:[38]Not a "row," but a dance—"The brave Lord Keeper led thebrawls,The seals and maces danced before him."—Gray.And truly Sir Christopher danced to some tune.[39]Hibernicè "nigger,"quasi"niggard."VideB. Maguirepassim.

[38]Not a "row," but a dance—"The brave Lord Keeper led thebrawls,The seals and maces danced before him."—Gray.And truly Sir Christopher danced to some tune.

[38]Not a "row," but a dance—"The brave Lord Keeper led thebrawls,The seals and maces danced before him."—Gray.

And truly Sir Christopher danced to some tune.

[39]Hibernicè "nigger,"quasi"niggard."VideB. Maguirepassim.

[39]Hibernicè "nigger,"quasi"niggard."VideB. Maguirepassim.

It is to my excellent and erudite friend, Simpkinson, that I am indebted for his graphic description of the well-known chalk-pit, between Acol and Minster, in the Isle of Thanet, known by the name of the "Smuggler's Leap." The substance of the true history attached to it he picked up while visiting that admirable institution, the "Sea-Bathing Infirmary," of which he is a "Life Governor," and enjoying hisotium cum dignitatelast summer at the least aristocratic of all possible watering-places.

Before I proceed to detail it, however, I cannot, in conscience, fail to bespeak for him the reader's sympathy in one of his own


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