SIR RUPERT THE FEARLESS.

SIR RUPERT THE FEARLESS.

A LEGEND OF GERMANY.

Sir Rupert the Fearless, a gallant young knight,Was equally ready to tipple or fight,Crack a crown, or a bottle,  Cut sirloin, or throttle;In brief, or as Hume says, "to sum up the tottle,"Unstain'd by dishonour, unsullied by fear,All his neighbours pronounced him apreux chevalier.Despite these perfections, corporeal and mental,He had one slight defect, viz. a rather lean rental;Besides, as 'tis own'd there are spots in the sun,So it must be confessed that Sir Rupert had one;Being rather unthinking,  He'd scarce sleep a wink inA night, but addict himself sadly to drinking,And, what moralists say  Is as naughty—to play,ToRouge et Noir, Hazard, Short Whist,Ecarté;Till these, and a few less defensible fanciesBrought the Knight to the end of his slender finances.When at length through his boozing, And tenants refusingTheir rents, swearing "times were so bad they were losing,"His steward said, "O, sir,  It's some time ago, sir,Since ought through my hands reach'd the baker or grocer,And the tradesmen in general are grown great complainers."Sir Rupert the brave thus addressed his retainers:"My friends, since the stock  Of my father's old hockIs out, with the Kürchwasser, Barsac, Moselle,And we're fairly reduced to the pump and the well,I presume to suggest,  We shall all find it bestFor each to shake hands with his friends ere he goes,Mount his horse, if he has one, and—follow his nose;As to me, I opine,  Leftsansmoney or wine,My best way is to throw myself into the Rhine,Where pitying trav'lers may sigh, as they cross over,'Though he lived aroué, yet he died a philosopher.'"The Knight, having bow'd out his friends thus politely,Got into his skiff, the full moon shining brightly,By the light of whose beam,  He soon spied on the streamA dame, whose complexion was fair as new cream;Pretty pink silken hose  Cover'd ankles and toes,In other respects she was scanty of clothes;For, so says tradition, both written and oral,Heronegarment was loop'd up with bunches of coral.Full sweetly she sang to a sparkling guitar,With silver cords stretch'd over Derbyshire spar,And she smiled on the Knight,  Who, amazed at the sight,Soon found his astonishment merged in delight;But the stream by degrees  Now rose up to her knees,Till at length it invaded her very chemise,While the heavenly strain, as the wave seemed to swallow her,And slowly she sank, sounded fainter and hollower;—Jumping up in his boat,  And discarding his coat,"Here goes," cried Sir Rupert, "by jingo I'll follow her!"Then into the water he plunged with a souseThat was heard quite distinctly by those in the house.Down, down, forty fathom and more from the brink,Sir Rupert the Fearless continues to sink,And, as downward he goes,  Still the cold water flowsThrough his ears, and his eyes, and his mouth, and his nose,Till the rum and the brandy he'd swallow'd since lunchWanted nothing but lemon to fill him with punch;Some minutes elapsed since he enter'd the flood,Ere his heels touch'd the bottom, and stuck in the mud.But oh! what a sight Met the eyes of the Knight,When he stood in the depth of the stream bolt upright!—A grand stalactite hall,  Like the cave of Fingal,Rose above and about him;—great fishes and smallCame thronging around him, regardless of danger,And seemed all agog for a peep at the stranger.Their figures and forms to describe, language fails—They'd such very odd heads, and such very odd tails;Of their genus or species a sample to gain,You would ransack all Hungerford market in vain;E'en the famed Mr. Myers  Would scarcely find buyers,Though hundreds of passengers doubtless would stopTo stare, were such monsters expos'd in his shop.But little reck'd Rupert these queer-looking brutes,Or the efts and the newts  That crawled up his boots,For a sight, beyond any of which I've made mention,In a moment completely absorb'd his attention.A huge crystal bath, which, with water far clearerThan George Robins' filters, or Thorpe's (which are dearer),Have ever distill'd,  To the summit was fill'd,Lay stretch'd out before him,—and every nerve thrill'dAs scores of young women  Were diving and swimming,Till the vision a perfect quandary put him in;—All slightly accoutred in gauzes and lawns,They came floating about him like so many prawns.Sir Rupert, who (barring the few peccadilloesAlluded to,) ere he lept into the billowsPossess'd irreproachable morals, beganTo feel rather queer, as a modest young man;When forth stepp'd a dame, whom he recognised soonAs the one he had seen by the light of the moon,And lisp'd, while a soft smile attended each sentence,"Sir Rupert, I'm happy to make your acquaintance;My name is Lurline,  And the ladies you've seen,All do me the honour to call me their Queen;I'm delighted to see you, sir, down in the Rhine here,And hope you can make it convenient to dine here."The Knight blush'd, and bowed,  As he ogled the crowdOf subaqueous beauties, then answer'd aloud:"Ma'am, you do me much honour,—I cannot expressThe delight I shall feel—if you'll pardon my dress—May I venture to say, when a gentleman jumpsIn the river at midnight for want of 'the dumps,'He rarely puts on his knee-breeches and pumps;If I could but have guess'd—what I sensibly feel—Your politeness—I'd not have comeen dishabille,But have put on mysilktights in lieu of mysteel."Quoth the lady, "Dear sir, no apologies, pray,You will take our 'pot-luck' in the family way;We can give you a dish  Of some decentish fish,And our water's thought fairish; but here in the Rhine,I can't say we pique ourselves much on our wine."The Knight made a bow more profound than before,When a Dory-faced page oped the dining-room door,And said, bending his knee,  "Madame, on a servi!"Rupert tender'd his arm, led Lurline to her place,And a fat little Mer-man stood up and said grace.What boots it to tell of the viands, or how sheApologiz'd much for their plain water-souchy,Want of Harvey's, and Cross's,  And Burgess's sauces?Or how Rupert, on his side, protested, by Jove, hePreferred his fish plain, without soy or anchovy.Suffice it the meal  Boasted trout, perch, and eel,Besides some remarkably fine salmon peel.The Knight, sooth to say, thought much less of the fishesThan of what they were served on, the massive gold dishes;While his eye, as it glanced now and then on the girls,Was caught by their persons much less than their pearls,And a thought came across him and caused him to muse,"If I could but get hold  Of some of that gold,I might manage to pay off my rascally Jews!"When dinner was done, at a sign to the lasses,The table was clear'd, and they put on fresh glasses;Then the lady addrest  Her redoubtable guestMuch as Dido, of old, did the pious Eneas,"Dear sir, what induced you to come down and see us?"—Rupert gave her a glance most bewitchingly tender,Loll'd back in his chair, put his toes on the fender,And told her outright  How that he, a young Knight,Had never been last at a feast or a fight;But that keeping good cheer  Every day in the year,And drinking neat wines all the same as small-beer,Had exhausted his rent,  And, his money all spent,How he borrow'd large sums at two hundred per cent.;How they follow'd—and then,  The once civillest of men,Messrs. Howard and Gibbs, made him bitterly rue it he'd ever raised money by way of annuity;And, his mortgages being about to foreclose,How he jump'd in the river to finish his woes!Lurline was affected, and own'd, with a tear,That a story so mournful had ne'er met her ear;Rupert, hearing her sigh,  Look'd uncommonly sly,And said, with some emphasis, "Ah! miss, had IA few pounds of those metals  You waste here on kettles,Then, Lord once again  Of my spacious domain,A free Count of the Empire once more I might reign,With Lurline at my side,  My adorable bride,(For the parson should come, and the knot should be tied;)No couple so happy on earth should be seenAs Sir Rupert the brave and his charming Lurline;Not that money's my object—No, hang it! I scorn it—And as for my rank—but thatyou'dso adorn it—I'd abandon it all  To remain your true thrall,And, instead of 'theGreat,' be call'd 'Rupert theSmall;'—To gain but your smiles, were I Sardanapalus,I'd descend from my throne, and be boots at an alehouse."[23]Lurline hung her head,  Turned pale, and then red,Growing faint at this sudden proposal to wed,As though his abruptness, in "popping the question"So soon after dinner, disturb'd her digestion.Then, averting her eye, With a lover-like sigh,"You are welcome," she murmur'd, in tones most bewitching,"To every utensil I have in my kitchen!"Upstarted the Knight,  Half mad with delight,Round her finely-form'd waist  He immediately placedOne arm, which the lady most closely embraced,Of her lily-white fingers the other made capture,And he press'd his adored to his bosom with rapture."And, oh!" he exclaim'd, "let them go catch my skiff, I'll be home in a twinkling, and back in a jiffy,Nor one moment procrastinate longer my journeyThan to put up the banns and kick out the attorney."One kiss to her lip, and one squeeze to her hand,And Sir Rupert already was half-way to land,For a sour-visaged Triton,  With features would frightenOld Nick, caught him up in one hand, though no light one,Sprang up through the waves, popp'd him into his funny,Which some others already had half-fill'd with money;In fact, 'twas so heavily laden with oreAnd pearls, 'twas a mercy he got it to shore;But Sir Rupert was strong,  And, while pulling along,Still he heard, faintly sounding, the water-nymphs' song.LAY OF THE NAIADS."Away! away! to the mountain's brow,Where the castle is darkly frowning;And the vassals, all in goodly row,Weep for their lord a-drowning!Away! away! to the steward's room,Where law with its wig and robe is;Throw us out John Doe and Richard Roe,And sweetly we'll tickle their tobies!"The unearthly voices scarce had ceased their yelling,When Rupert reach'd his old baronial dwelling.What rejoicing was there!  How the vassals did stare!The old housekeeper put a clean shirt down to air,For she saw by her lamp  That her master's was damp,And she fear'd he'd catch cold, and lumbago and cramp;But, scorning what she did,  The Knight never heededWet jacket or trowsers, nor thought of repining,Since their pockets had got such a delicate lining.But oh! what dismay  Fill'd the tribe ofCa Sa,When they found he'd the cash, and intended to pay!Away went "cognovits," "bills," "bonds," and escheats,"—Rupert clear'd off all scores, and took proper receipts.Now no more he sends out  For pots of brown stoutOrschnaps, but resolves to do henceforth without,Abjure from this hour all excess and ebriety,Enrol himself one of a Temp'rance Society,All riot eschew,  Begin life anew,And new-cushion and hassock the family pew!Nay, to strengthen him more in his new mode of life,He boldly determines to take him a wife.Now, many would think that the Knight, from a nice senseOf honour, should put Lurline's name in the licence,And that, for a man of his breeding and quality,To break faith and troth,  Confirm'd by an oath,Is not quite consistent with rigid morality;But whether the nymph was forgot, or he thought herFrom her essence scarce wife, but at best wife-and-water,And declined as unsuited  A bride so diluted—Be this as it may,  He, I'm sorry to say,(For, all things consider'd, I own 'twas a rum thing,)Made proposals in form to MissUna Von—something,(Her name has escaped me,) sole heiress, and nieceTo a highly respectable Justice of Peace."Thrice happy's the wooing  That's not long a-doing!"So much time is saved in the billing and cooing—The ring is now bought, the white favours, and gloves,And all theet ceterawhich crown people's loves;A magnificent bride-cake comes home from the baker,And lastly appears, from the German Long Acre,That shaft which the sharpest in all Cupid's quiver is,A plum-colour'd coach, and rich Pompadour liveries.'Twas a comely sight  To behold the Knight,With his beautiful bride, dress'd all in white,And the bridemaids fair with their long lace veils,As they all walk'd up to the altar rails,While nice little boys, the incense dispensers,March'd in front with white surplices, bands, and gilt censers.With a gracious air, and a smiling look,Mess John had open'd his awful book,And had read so far as to ask if to wed he meant?And if "he knew any just cause or impediment?"When from base to turret the castle shook!!!Then came a sound of a mighty rainDashing against each storied pane,The wind blew loud,  And a coal-black cloudO'ershadow'd the church, and the party, and crowd;How it could happen they could not divine,The morning had been so remarkably fine!Still the darkness increased, till it reach'd such a passThat the sextoness hasten'd to turn on the gas;But harder it pour'd,  And the thunder roar'd,As if heaven and earth were coming together;None ever had witness'd such terrible weather.Now louder it crash'd,  And the lightning flash'd,Exciting the fears  Of the sweet little dearsIn the veils, as it danced on the brass chandeliers;The parson ran off, though a stout-hearted Saxon,When he found that a flash had set fire to his caxon.Though all the rest trembled, as might be expected,Sir Rupert was perfectly cool and collected,And endeavoured to cheer  His bride, in her earWhisp'ring tenderly, "Pray don't be frighten'd, my dear;Should it even set fire to the castle, and burn it, you'reAmply insured, both for buildings and furniture."But now, from without  A trustworthy scoutRush'd hurriedly in,  Wet through to the skin,Informing his master "the river was rising,And flooding the grounds in a way quite surprising."He'd no time to say more,  For already the roarOf the waters was heard as they reach'd the church-door,While, high on the first wave that roll'd in, was seen,Riding proudly, the form of the angry Lurline;And all might observe, by her glance fierce and stormy,She was stung by thespretæ injuriâ formæ.What she said to the Knight, what she said to the bride,What she said to the ladies who stood by her side,What she said to the nice little boys in white clothes,Oh, nobody mentions,—for nobody knows;For the roof tumbled in, and the walls tumbled out,And the folks tumbled down, all confusion and rout,The rain kept on pouring,  The flood kept on roaring,The billows and water-nymphs roll'd more and more in;Ere the close of the day  All was clean washed away—One only survived who could hand down the news,A little old woman that open'd the pews;She was borne off, but stuck,  By the greatest good luck.In an oak-tree, and there she hung, crying and screaming,And saw all the rest swallow'd up the wild stream in;In vain, all the week,  Did the fishermen seekFor the bodies, and poke in each cranny and creek;In vain was their search  After ought in the church,They caught nothing but weeds, and perhaps a few perch;The Humane Society  Tried a varietyOf methods, and brought down, to drag for the wreck, tackles,But they only fish'd up the clerk's tortoise-shell spectacles.Moral.This tale has a moral. Ye youths, oh, bewareOf liquor, and how you run after the fair!Shun playing atshorts—avoid quarrels and jars—And don't take to smoking those nasty cigars!—Let no run of bad luck, or despair for some Jewess-eyedDamsel, induce you to contemplate suicide!Don't sit up much later than ten or eleven!—Be up in the morning by half after seven!Keep from flirting—nor risk, warned by Rupert's miscarriage,An action for breach of a promise of marriage;—Don't fancy old fishes!  Don't prig silver dishes!And to sum up the whole, in the shortest phrase I know,Beware of the Rhine, and take care of the Rhino!

Sir Rupert the Fearless, a gallant young knight,Was equally ready to tipple or fight,Crack a crown, or a bottle,  Cut sirloin, or throttle;In brief, or as Hume says, "to sum up the tottle,"Unstain'd by dishonour, unsullied by fear,All his neighbours pronounced him apreux chevalier.Despite these perfections, corporeal and mental,He had one slight defect, viz. a rather lean rental;Besides, as 'tis own'd there are spots in the sun,So it must be confessed that Sir Rupert had one;Being rather unthinking,  He'd scarce sleep a wink inA night, but addict himself sadly to drinking,And, what moralists say  Is as naughty—to play,ToRouge et Noir, Hazard, Short Whist,Ecarté;Till these, and a few less defensible fanciesBrought the Knight to the end of his slender finances.When at length through his boozing, And tenants refusingTheir rents, swearing "times were so bad they were losing,"His steward said, "O, sir,  It's some time ago, sir,Since ought through my hands reach'd the baker or grocer,And the tradesmen in general are grown great complainers."Sir Rupert the brave thus addressed his retainers:"My friends, since the stock  Of my father's old hockIs out, with the Kürchwasser, Barsac, Moselle,And we're fairly reduced to the pump and the well,I presume to suggest,  We shall all find it bestFor each to shake hands with his friends ere he goes,Mount his horse, if he has one, and—follow his nose;As to me, I opine,  Leftsansmoney or wine,My best way is to throw myself into the Rhine,Where pitying trav'lers may sigh, as they cross over,'Though he lived aroué, yet he died a philosopher.'"The Knight, having bow'd out his friends thus politely,Got into his skiff, the full moon shining brightly,By the light of whose beam,  He soon spied on the streamA dame, whose complexion was fair as new cream;Pretty pink silken hose  Cover'd ankles and toes,In other respects she was scanty of clothes;For, so says tradition, both written and oral,Heronegarment was loop'd up with bunches of coral.Full sweetly she sang to a sparkling guitar,With silver cords stretch'd over Derbyshire spar,And she smiled on the Knight,  Who, amazed at the sight,Soon found his astonishment merged in delight;But the stream by degrees  Now rose up to her knees,Till at length it invaded her very chemise,While the heavenly strain, as the wave seemed to swallow her,And slowly she sank, sounded fainter and hollower;—Jumping up in his boat,  And discarding his coat,"Here goes," cried Sir Rupert, "by jingo I'll follow her!"Then into the water he plunged with a souseThat was heard quite distinctly by those in the house.Down, down, forty fathom and more from the brink,Sir Rupert the Fearless continues to sink,And, as downward he goes,  Still the cold water flowsThrough his ears, and his eyes, and his mouth, and his nose,Till the rum and the brandy he'd swallow'd since lunchWanted nothing but lemon to fill him with punch;Some minutes elapsed since he enter'd the flood,Ere his heels touch'd the bottom, and stuck in the mud.But oh! what a sight Met the eyes of the Knight,When he stood in the depth of the stream bolt upright!—A grand stalactite hall,  Like the cave of Fingal,Rose above and about him;—great fishes and smallCame thronging around him, regardless of danger,And seemed all agog for a peep at the stranger.Their figures and forms to describe, language fails—They'd such very odd heads, and such very odd tails;Of their genus or species a sample to gain,You would ransack all Hungerford market in vain;E'en the famed Mr. Myers  Would scarcely find buyers,Though hundreds of passengers doubtless would stopTo stare, were such monsters expos'd in his shop.But little reck'd Rupert these queer-looking brutes,Or the efts and the newts  That crawled up his boots,For a sight, beyond any of which I've made mention,In a moment completely absorb'd his attention.A huge crystal bath, which, with water far clearerThan George Robins' filters, or Thorpe's (which are dearer),Have ever distill'd,  To the summit was fill'd,Lay stretch'd out before him,—and every nerve thrill'dAs scores of young women  Were diving and swimming,Till the vision a perfect quandary put him in;—All slightly accoutred in gauzes and lawns,They came floating about him like so many prawns.Sir Rupert, who (barring the few peccadilloesAlluded to,) ere he lept into the billowsPossess'd irreproachable morals, beganTo feel rather queer, as a modest young man;When forth stepp'd a dame, whom he recognised soonAs the one he had seen by the light of the moon,And lisp'd, while a soft smile attended each sentence,"Sir Rupert, I'm happy to make your acquaintance;My name is Lurline,  And the ladies you've seen,All do me the honour to call me their Queen;I'm delighted to see you, sir, down in the Rhine here,And hope you can make it convenient to dine here."The Knight blush'd, and bowed,  As he ogled the crowdOf subaqueous beauties, then answer'd aloud:"Ma'am, you do me much honour,—I cannot expressThe delight I shall feel—if you'll pardon my dress—May I venture to say, when a gentleman jumpsIn the river at midnight for want of 'the dumps,'He rarely puts on his knee-breeches and pumps;If I could but have guess'd—what I sensibly feel—Your politeness—I'd not have comeen dishabille,But have put on mysilktights in lieu of mysteel."Quoth the lady, "Dear sir, no apologies, pray,You will take our 'pot-luck' in the family way;We can give you a dish  Of some decentish fish,And our water's thought fairish; but here in the Rhine,I can't say we pique ourselves much on our wine."The Knight made a bow more profound than before,When a Dory-faced page oped the dining-room door,And said, bending his knee,  "Madame, on a servi!"Rupert tender'd his arm, led Lurline to her place,And a fat little Mer-man stood up and said grace.What boots it to tell of the viands, or how sheApologiz'd much for their plain water-souchy,Want of Harvey's, and Cross's,  And Burgess's sauces?Or how Rupert, on his side, protested, by Jove, hePreferred his fish plain, without soy or anchovy.Suffice it the meal  Boasted trout, perch, and eel,Besides some remarkably fine salmon peel.The Knight, sooth to say, thought much less of the fishesThan of what they were served on, the massive gold dishes;While his eye, as it glanced now and then on the girls,Was caught by their persons much less than their pearls,And a thought came across him and caused him to muse,"If I could but get hold  Of some of that gold,I might manage to pay off my rascally Jews!"When dinner was done, at a sign to the lasses,The table was clear'd, and they put on fresh glasses;Then the lady addrest  Her redoubtable guestMuch as Dido, of old, did the pious Eneas,"Dear sir, what induced you to come down and see us?"—Rupert gave her a glance most bewitchingly tender,Loll'd back in his chair, put his toes on the fender,And told her outright  How that he, a young Knight,Had never been last at a feast or a fight;But that keeping good cheer  Every day in the year,And drinking neat wines all the same as small-beer,Had exhausted his rent,  And, his money all spent,How he borrow'd large sums at two hundred per cent.;How they follow'd—and then,  The once civillest of men,Messrs. Howard and Gibbs, made him bitterly rue it he'd ever raised money by way of annuity;And, his mortgages being about to foreclose,How he jump'd in the river to finish his woes!Lurline was affected, and own'd, with a tear,That a story so mournful had ne'er met her ear;Rupert, hearing her sigh,  Look'd uncommonly sly,And said, with some emphasis, "Ah! miss, had IA few pounds of those metals  You waste here on kettles,Then, Lord once again  Of my spacious domain,A free Count of the Empire once more I might reign,With Lurline at my side,  My adorable bride,(For the parson should come, and the knot should be tied;)No couple so happy on earth should be seenAs Sir Rupert the brave and his charming Lurline;Not that money's my object—No, hang it! I scorn it—And as for my rank—but thatyou'dso adorn it—I'd abandon it all  To remain your true thrall,And, instead of 'theGreat,' be call'd 'Rupert theSmall;'—To gain but your smiles, were I Sardanapalus,I'd descend from my throne, and be boots at an alehouse."[23]Lurline hung her head,  Turned pale, and then red,Growing faint at this sudden proposal to wed,As though his abruptness, in "popping the question"So soon after dinner, disturb'd her digestion.Then, averting her eye, With a lover-like sigh,"You are welcome," she murmur'd, in tones most bewitching,"To every utensil I have in my kitchen!"Upstarted the Knight,  Half mad with delight,Round her finely-form'd waist  He immediately placedOne arm, which the lady most closely embraced,Of her lily-white fingers the other made capture,And he press'd his adored to his bosom with rapture."And, oh!" he exclaim'd, "let them go catch my skiff, I'll be home in a twinkling, and back in a jiffy,Nor one moment procrastinate longer my journeyThan to put up the banns and kick out the attorney."One kiss to her lip, and one squeeze to her hand,And Sir Rupert already was half-way to land,For a sour-visaged Triton,  With features would frightenOld Nick, caught him up in one hand, though no light one,Sprang up through the waves, popp'd him into his funny,Which some others already had half-fill'd with money;In fact, 'twas so heavily laden with oreAnd pearls, 'twas a mercy he got it to shore;But Sir Rupert was strong,  And, while pulling along,Still he heard, faintly sounding, the water-nymphs' song.LAY OF THE NAIADS."Away! away! to the mountain's brow,Where the castle is darkly frowning;And the vassals, all in goodly row,Weep for their lord a-drowning!Away! away! to the steward's room,Where law with its wig and robe is;Throw us out John Doe and Richard Roe,And sweetly we'll tickle their tobies!"The unearthly voices scarce had ceased their yelling,When Rupert reach'd his old baronial dwelling.What rejoicing was there!  How the vassals did stare!The old housekeeper put a clean shirt down to air,For she saw by her lamp  That her master's was damp,And she fear'd he'd catch cold, and lumbago and cramp;But, scorning what she did,  The Knight never heededWet jacket or trowsers, nor thought of repining,Since their pockets had got such a delicate lining.But oh! what dismay  Fill'd the tribe ofCa Sa,When they found he'd the cash, and intended to pay!Away went "cognovits," "bills," "bonds," and escheats,"—Rupert clear'd off all scores, and took proper receipts.Now no more he sends out  For pots of brown stoutOrschnaps, but resolves to do henceforth without,Abjure from this hour all excess and ebriety,Enrol himself one of a Temp'rance Society,All riot eschew,  Begin life anew,And new-cushion and hassock the family pew!Nay, to strengthen him more in his new mode of life,He boldly determines to take him a wife.Now, many would think that the Knight, from a nice senseOf honour, should put Lurline's name in the licence,And that, for a man of his breeding and quality,To break faith and troth,  Confirm'd by an oath,Is not quite consistent with rigid morality;But whether the nymph was forgot, or he thought herFrom her essence scarce wife, but at best wife-and-water,And declined as unsuited  A bride so diluted—Be this as it may,  He, I'm sorry to say,(For, all things consider'd, I own 'twas a rum thing,)Made proposals in form to MissUna Von—something,(Her name has escaped me,) sole heiress, and nieceTo a highly respectable Justice of Peace."Thrice happy's the wooing  That's not long a-doing!"So much time is saved in the billing and cooing—The ring is now bought, the white favours, and gloves,And all theet ceterawhich crown people's loves;A magnificent bride-cake comes home from the baker,And lastly appears, from the German Long Acre,That shaft which the sharpest in all Cupid's quiver is,A plum-colour'd coach, and rich Pompadour liveries.'Twas a comely sight  To behold the Knight,With his beautiful bride, dress'd all in white,And the bridemaids fair with their long lace veils,As they all walk'd up to the altar rails,While nice little boys, the incense dispensers,March'd in front with white surplices, bands, and gilt censers.With a gracious air, and a smiling look,Mess John had open'd his awful book,And had read so far as to ask if to wed he meant?And if "he knew any just cause or impediment?"When from base to turret the castle shook!!!Then came a sound of a mighty rainDashing against each storied pane,The wind blew loud,  And a coal-black cloudO'ershadow'd the church, and the party, and crowd;How it could happen they could not divine,The morning had been so remarkably fine!Still the darkness increased, till it reach'd such a passThat the sextoness hasten'd to turn on the gas;But harder it pour'd,  And the thunder roar'd,As if heaven and earth were coming together;None ever had witness'd such terrible weather.Now louder it crash'd,  And the lightning flash'd,Exciting the fears  Of the sweet little dearsIn the veils, as it danced on the brass chandeliers;The parson ran off, though a stout-hearted Saxon,When he found that a flash had set fire to his caxon.Though all the rest trembled, as might be expected,Sir Rupert was perfectly cool and collected,And endeavoured to cheer  His bride, in her earWhisp'ring tenderly, "Pray don't be frighten'd, my dear;Should it even set fire to the castle, and burn it, you'reAmply insured, both for buildings and furniture."But now, from without  A trustworthy scoutRush'd hurriedly in,  Wet through to the skin,Informing his master "the river was rising,And flooding the grounds in a way quite surprising."He'd no time to say more,  For already the roarOf the waters was heard as they reach'd the church-door,While, high on the first wave that roll'd in, was seen,Riding proudly, the form of the angry Lurline;And all might observe, by her glance fierce and stormy,She was stung by thespretæ injuriâ formæ.What she said to the Knight, what she said to the bride,What she said to the ladies who stood by her side,What she said to the nice little boys in white clothes,Oh, nobody mentions,—for nobody knows;For the roof tumbled in, and the walls tumbled out,And the folks tumbled down, all confusion and rout,The rain kept on pouring,  The flood kept on roaring,The billows and water-nymphs roll'd more and more in;Ere the close of the day  All was clean washed away—One only survived who could hand down the news,A little old woman that open'd the pews;She was borne off, but stuck,  By the greatest good luck.In an oak-tree, and there she hung, crying and screaming,And saw all the rest swallow'd up the wild stream in;In vain, all the week,  Did the fishermen seekFor the bodies, and poke in each cranny and creek;In vain was their search  After ought in the church,They caught nothing but weeds, and perhaps a few perch;The Humane Society  Tried a varietyOf methods, and brought down, to drag for the wreck, tackles,But they only fish'd up the clerk's tortoise-shell spectacles.Moral.This tale has a moral. Ye youths, oh, bewareOf liquor, and how you run after the fair!Shun playing atshorts—avoid quarrels and jars—And don't take to smoking those nasty cigars!—Let no run of bad luck, or despair for some Jewess-eyedDamsel, induce you to contemplate suicide!Don't sit up much later than ten or eleven!—Be up in the morning by half after seven!Keep from flirting—nor risk, warned by Rupert's miscarriage,An action for breach of a promise of marriage;—Don't fancy old fishes!  Don't prig silver dishes!And to sum up the whole, in the shortest phrase I know,Beware of the Rhine, and take care of the Rhino!

Sir Rupert the Fearless, a gallant young knight,Was equally ready to tipple or fight,Crack a crown, or a bottle,  Cut sirloin, or throttle;In brief, or as Hume says, "to sum up the tottle,"Unstain'd by dishonour, unsullied by fear,All his neighbours pronounced him apreux chevalier.

Despite these perfections, corporeal and mental,He had one slight defect, viz. a rather lean rental;Besides, as 'tis own'd there are spots in the sun,So it must be confessed that Sir Rupert had one;Being rather unthinking,  He'd scarce sleep a wink inA night, but addict himself sadly to drinking,And, what moralists say  Is as naughty—to play,ToRouge et Noir, Hazard, Short Whist,Ecarté;Till these, and a few less defensible fanciesBrought the Knight to the end of his slender finances.

When at length through his boozing, And tenants refusingTheir rents, swearing "times were so bad they were losing,"His steward said, "O, sir,  It's some time ago, sir,Since ought through my hands reach'd the baker or grocer,And the tradesmen in general are grown great complainers."Sir Rupert the brave thus addressed his retainers:

"My friends, since the stock  Of my father's old hockIs out, with the Kürchwasser, Barsac, Moselle,And we're fairly reduced to the pump and the well,I presume to suggest,  We shall all find it bestFor each to shake hands with his friends ere he goes,Mount his horse, if he has one, and—follow his nose;As to me, I opine,  Leftsansmoney or wine,My best way is to throw myself into the Rhine,Where pitying trav'lers may sigh, as they cross over,'Though he lived aroué, yet he died a philosopher.'"

The Knight, having bow'd out his friends thus politely,Got into his skiff, the full moon shining brightly,By the light of whose beam,  He soon spied on the streamA dame, whose complexion was fair as new cream;Pretty pink silken hose  Cover'd ankles and toes,In other respects she was scanty of clothes;For, so says tradition, both written and oral,Heronegarment was loop'd up with bunches of coral.

Full sweetly she sang to a sparkling guitar,With silver cords stretch'd over Derbyshire spar,And she smiled on the Knight,  Who, amazed at the sight,Soon found his astonishment merged in delight;But the stream by degrees  Now rose up to her knees,Till at length it invaded her very chemise,While the heavenly strain, as the wave seemed to swallow her,And slowly she sank, sounded fainter and hollower;—Jumping up in his boat,  And discarding his coat,"Here goes," cried Sir Rupert, "by jingo I'll follow her!"Then into the water he plunged with a souseThat was heard quite distinctly by those in the house.

Down, down, forty fathom and more from the brink,Sir Rupert the Fearless continues to sink,And, as downward he goes,  Still the cold water flowsThrough his ears, and his eyes, and his mouth, and his nose,Till the rum and the brandy he'd swallow'd since lunchWanted nothing but lemon to fill him with punch;Some minutes elapsed since he enter'd the flood,Ere his heels touch'd the bottom, and stuck in the mud.

But oh! what a sight Met the eyes of the Knight,When he stood in the depth of the stream bolt upright!—A grand stalactite hall,  Like the cave of Fingal,Rose above and about him;—great fishes and smallCame thronging around him, regardless of danger,And seemed all agog for a peep at the stranger.

Their figures and forms to describe, language fails—They'd such very odd heads, and such very odd tails;Of their genus or species a sample to gain,You would ransack all Hungerford market in vain;E'en the famed Mr. Myers  Would scarcely find buyers,Though hundreds of passengers doubtless would stopTo stare, were such monsters expos'd in his shop.

But little reck'd Rupert these queer-looking brutes,Or the efts and the newts  That crawled up his boots,For a sight, beyond any of which I've made mention,In a moment completely absorb'd his attention.A huge crystal bath, which, with water far clearerThan George Robins' filters, or Thorpe's (which are dearer),Have ever distill'd,  To the summit was fill'd,Lay stretch'd out before him,—and every nerve thrill'dAs scores of young women  Were diving and swimming,Till the vision a perfect quandary put him in;—All slightly accoutred in gauzes and lawns,They came floating about him like so many prawns.

Sir Rupert, who (barring the few peccadilloesAlluded to,) ere he lept into the billowsPossess'd irreproachable morals, beganTo feel rather queer, as a modest young man;When forth stepp'd a dame, whom he recognised soonAs the one he had seen by the light of the moon,And lisp'd, while a soft smile attended each sentence,"Sir Rupert, I'm happy to make your acquaintance;My name is Lurline,  And the ladies you've seen,All do me the honour to call me their Queen;I'm delighted to see you, sir, down in the Rhine here,And hope you can make it convenient to dine here."

The Knight blush'd, and bowed,  As he ogled the crowdOf subaqueous beauties, then answer'd aloud:"Ma'am, you do me much honour,—I cannot expressThe delight I shall feel—if you'll pardon my dress—May I venture to say, when a gentleman jumpsIn the river at midnight for want of 'the dumps,'He rarely puts on his knee-breeches and pumps;If I could but have guess'd—what I sensibly feel—Your politeness—I'd not have comeen dishabille,But have put on mysilktights in lieu of mysteel."Quoth the lady, "Dear sir, no apologies, pray,You will take our 'pot-luck' in the family way;We can give you a dish  Of some decentish fish,And our water's thought fairish; but here in the Rhine,I can't say we pique ourselves much on our wine."

The Knight made a bow more profound than before,When a Dory-faced page oped the dining-room door,And said, bending his knee,  "Madame, on a servi!"Rupert tender'd his arm, led Lurline to her place,And a fat little Mer-man stood up and said grace.

What boots it to tell of the viands, or how sheApologiz'd much for their plain water-souchy,Want of Harvey's, and Cross's,  And Burgess's sauces?Or how Rupert, on his side, protested, by Jove, hePreferred his fish plain, without soy or anchovy.Suffice it the meal  Boasted trout, perch, and eel,Besides some remarkably fine salmon peel.The Knight, sooth to say, thought much less of the fishesThan of what they were served on, the massive gold dishes;While his eye, as it glanced now and then on the girls,Was caught by their persons much less than their pearls,And a thought came across him and caused him to muse,"If I could but get hold  Of some of that gold,I might manage to pay off my rascally Jews!"

When dinner was done, at a sign to the lasses,The table was clear'd, and they put on fresh glasses;Then the lady addrest  Her redoubtable guestMuch as Dido, of old, did the pious Eneas,"Dear sir, what induced you to come down and see us?"—

Rupert gave her a glance most bewitchingly tender,Loll'd back in his chair, put his toes on the fender,And told her outright  How that he, a young Knight,Had never been last at a feast or a fight;But that keeping good cheer  Every day in the year,And drinking neat wines all the same as small-beer,Had exhausted his rent,  And, his money all spent,How he borrow'd large sums at two hundred per cent.;How they follow'd—and then,  The once civillest of men,Messrs. Howard and Gibbs, made him bitterly rue it he'd ever raised money by way of annuity;And, his mortgages being about to foreclose,How he jump'd in the river to finish his woes!

Lurline was affected, and own'd, with a tear,That a story so mournful had ne'er met her ear;Rupert, hearing her sigh,  Look'd uncommonly sly,And said, with some emphasis, "Ah! miss, had IA few pounds of those metals  You waste here on kettles,Then, Lord once again  Of my spacious domain,A free Count of the Empire once more I might reign,With Lurline at my side,  My adorable bride,(For the parson should come, and the knot should be tied;)No couple so happy on earth should be seenAs Sir Rupert the brave and his charming Lurline;Not that money's my object—No, hang it! I scorn it—And as for my rank—but thatyou'dso adorn it—I'd abandon it all  To remain your true thrall,And, instead of 'theGreat,' be call'd 'Rupert theSmall;'—To gain but your smiles, were I Sardanapalus,I'd descend from my throne, and be boots at an alehouse."[23]

Lurline hung her head,  Turned pale, and then red,Growing faint at this sudden proposal to wed,As though his abruptness, in "popping the question"So soon after dinner, disturb'd her digestion.Then, averting her eye, With a lover-like sigh,"You are welcome," she murmur'd, in tones most bewitching,"To every utensil I have in my kitchen!"Upstarted the Knight,  Half mad with delight,Round her finely-form'd waist  He immediately placedOne arm, which the lady most closely embraced,Of her lily-white fingers the other made capture,And he press'd his adored to his bosom with rapture."And, oh!" he exclaim'd, "let them go catch my skiff, I'll be home in a twinkling, and back in a jiffy,Nor one moment procrastinate longer my journeyThan to put up the banns and kick out the attorney."

One kiss to her lip, and one squeeze to her hand,And Sir Rupert already was half-way to land,For a sour-visaged Triton,  With features would frightenOld Nick, caught him up in one hand, though no light one,Sprang up through the waves, popp'd him into his funny,Which some others already had half-fill'd with money;In fact, 'twas so heavily laden with oreAnd pearls, 'twas a mercy he got it to shore;But Sir Rupert was strong,  And, while pulling along,Still he heard, faintly sounding, the water-nymphs' song.

LAY OF THE NAIADS.

"Away! away! to the mountain's brow,Where the castle is darkly frowning;And the vassals, all in goodly row,Weep for their lord a-drowning!Away! away! to the steward's room,Where law with its wig and robe is;Throw us out John Doe and Richard Roe,And sweetly we'll tickle their tobies!"

The unearthly voices scarce had ceased their yelling,When Rupert reach'd his old baronial dwelling.

What rejoicing was there!  How the vassals did stare!The old housekeeper put a clean shirt down to air,For she saw by her lamp  That her master's was damp,And she fear'd he'd catch cold, and lumbago and cramp;But, scorning what she did,  The Knight never heededWet jacket or trowsers, nor thought of repining,Since their pockets had got such a delicate lining.But oh! what dismay  Fill'd the tribe ofCa Sa,When they found he'd the cash, and intended to pay!Away went "cognovits," "bills," "bonds," and escheats,"—Rupert clear'd off all scores, and took proper receipts.

Now no more he sends out  For pots of brown stoutOrschnaps, but resolves to do henceforth without,Abjure from this hour all excess and ebriety,Enrol himself one of a Temp'rance Society,All riot eschew,  Begin life anew,And new-cushion and hassock the family pew!Nay, to strengthen him more in his new mode of life,He boldly determines to take him a wife.

Now, many would think that the Knight, from a nice senseOf honour, should put Lurline's name in the licence,And that, for a man of his breeding and quality,To break faith and troth,  Confirm'd by an oath,Is not quite consistent with rigid morality;But whether the nymph was forgot, or he thought herFrom her essence scarce wife, but at best wife-and-water,And declined as unsuited  A bride so diluted—Be this as it may,  He, I'm sorry to say,(For, all things consider'd, I own 'twas a rum thing,)Made proposals in form to MissUna Von—something,(Her name has escaped me,) sole heiress, and nieceTo a highly respectable Justice of Peace.

"Thrice happy's the wooing  That's not long a-doing!"So much time is saved in the billing and cooing—The ring is now bought, the white favours, and gloves,And all theet ceterawhich crown people's loves;A magnificent bride-cake comes home from the baker,And lastly appears, from the German Long Acre,That shaft which the sharpest in all Cupid's quiver is,A plum-colour'd coach, and rich Pompadour liveries.

'Twas a comely sight  To behold the Knight,With his beautiful bride, dress'd all in white,And the bridemaids fair with their long lace veils,As they all walk'd up to the altar rails,While nice little boys, the incense dispensers,March'd in front with white surplices, bands, and gilt censers.

With a gracious air, and a smiling look,Mess John had open'd his awful book,And had read so far as to ask if to wed he meant?And if "he knew any just cause or impediment?"When from base to turret the castle shook!!!Then came a sound of a mighty rainDashing against each storied pane,The wind blew loud,  And a coal-black cloudO'ershadow'd the church, and the party, and crowd;How it could happen they could not divine,The morning had been so remarkably fine!

Still the darkness increased, till it reach'd such a passThat the sextoness hasten'd to turn on the gas;But harder it pour'd,  And the thunder roar'd,As if heaven and earth were coming together;None ever had witness'd such terrible weather.Now louder it crash'd,  And the lightning flash'd,Exciting the fears  Of the sweet little dearsIn the veils, as it danced on the brass chandeliers;The parson ran off, though a stout-hearted Saxon,When he found that a flash had set fire to his caxon.

Though all the rest trembled, as might be expected,Sir Rupert was perfectly cool and collected,And endeavoured to cheer  His bride, in her earWhisp'ring tenderly, "Pray don't be frighten'd, my dear;Should it even set fire to the castle, and burn it, you'reAmply insured, both for buildings and furniture."But now, from without  A trustworthy scoutRush'd hurriedly in,  Wet through to the skin,Informing his master "the river was rising,And flooding the grounds in a way quite surprising."

He'd no time to say more,  For already the roarOf the waters was heard as they reach'd the church-door,While, high on the first wave that roll'd in, was seen,Riding proudly, the form of the angry Lurline;And all might observe, by her glance fierce and stormy,She was stung by thespretæ injuriâ formæ.

What she said to the Knight, what she said to the bride,What she said to the ladies who stood by her side,What she said to the nice little boys in white clothes,Oh, nobody mentions,—for nobody knows;For the roof tumbled in, and the walls tumbled out,And the folks tumbled down, all confusion and rout,The rain kept on pouring,  The flood kept on roaring,The billows and water-nymphs roll'd more and more in;Ere the close of the day  All was clean washed away—One only survived who could hand down the news,A little old woman that open'd the pews;She was borne off, but stuck,  By the greatest good luck.In an oak-tree, and there she hung, crying and screaming,And saw all the rest swallow'd up the wild stream in;In vain, all the week,  Did the fishermen seekFor the bodies, and poke in each cranny and creek;In vain was their search  After ought in the church,They caught nothing but weeds, and perhaps a few perch;The Humane Society  Tried a varietyOf methods, and brought down, to drag for the wreck, tackles,But they only fish'd up the clerk's tortoise-shell spectacles.

Moral.

This tale has a moral. Ye youths, oh, bewareOf liquor, and how you run after the fair!Shun playing atshorts—avoid quarrels and jars—And don't take to smoking those nasty cigars!—Let no run of bad luck, or despair for some Jewess-eyedDamsel, induce you to contemplate suicide!Don't sit up much later than ten or eleven!—Be up in the morning by half after seven!Keep from flirting—nor risk, warned by Rupert's miscarriage,An action for breach of a promise of marriage;—Don't fancy old fishes!  Don't prig silver dishes!And to sum up the whole, in the shortest phrase I know,Beware of the Rhine, and take care of the Rhino!

tb

And now for "Sunny Italy,"—the "Land of the unforgotten brave,"—the land of blue skies and black-eyed Signoras.—I cannot discover from any recorded memoranda that "Uncle Perry" was ever in Venice, even in Carnival time—that he ever saw Garrick in Shylock I do not believe, and am satisfied that he knew nothing of Shakspeare, a circumstance that would by no means disqualify him from publishing an edition of that Poet's works. I can only conclude that, in the course of his Continental wanderings, Sir Peregrine had either read, or heard of the following history, especially as he furnishes us with some particulars of the eventual destination of hisdramatis personæwhich the Bard of Avon has omitted. If this solution be not accepted, I can only say, with Mr. Puff, that probably "two men hit upon the same idea, and Shakspeare made use of it first."

FOOTNOTES:[23]"Sardanapalus" and "Boots," theZenithandNadirof human society.

[23]"Sardanapalus" and "Boots," theZenithandNadirof human society.

[23]"Sardanapalus" and "Boots," theZenithandNadirof human society.


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