WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The Comic Almanack, Volume 1 / An Ephemeris in Jest and Earnest, Containing Merry Tales, Humerous Poetry, Quips, and Oddities cover

The Comic Almanack, Volume 1 / An Ephemeris in Jest and Earnest, Containing Merry Tales, Humerous Poetry, Quips, and Oddities

Chapter 33: A DRAMATIC FACT.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The volume collects annual almanac-style material—satirical sketches, comic essays, mock-astrological pieces, humorous verse, and brief narrative vignettes—assembled as a running sequence of yearly numbers. Multiple contributors supply witty sayings, droll observations, and recurring columns, all accompanied by hundreds of woodcuts and engraved plates by prominent illustrators. The pieces alternate light parody and sharper social satire, using playful formats, topical jokes, and caricatured scenes to amuse readers across varied short items.

MARCH.—"Day and Night nearly equal."

"THE LAY OF THE LAST" ALDERMAN.

I.
The feast was over on Lord Mayor's Day;
The waiters had clear'd the viands away;
The Common Councilmen all were gone,
And every Alderman,—saving one;
Who to gorge and guzzle no longer able,
Had sunk to repose beneath the table,
And, sooth'd by his own melodious snore,
Lay calmly stretch'd on the Guildhall floor.
But he lay not long in the arms of sleep,
Ere a sound, that caus'd his flesh to creep,
Startled him up from his downy bed,
And caus'd him to raise his aching head;
When oh, what a sight then met his eyes,
And chill'd his soul with sad surprise!
* * * * *
He bawl'd aloud when the scene was o'er,
Which awoke the porter, who open'd the door.
When a bottle of sherry had loosen'd his tongue,
'Twas thus the latest Alderman sung:—
II.
I was rous'd from my sleep by a frightful crash,
As if all the crockery'd gone to smash;
And I straight beheld a terrible form,—
At the end of the hall it took its stand,
With a swingeing besom in its hand,
And shouted out "REFORM!"
III.
Then stalking to me, it thus did say,
"Gone is the glory of Lord Mayor's Day!
Gone—gone, for ever!
To come back never.
The Corporation Reform Bill's past,
And ev'ry ward is Cheap;
The City of London they'll squeeze at last,
And scatter her golden heap.
IV.
"Portsoken no more Port shall soke,
For guzzling they'll aBridge it."
(I thought this quite beyond a joke,
And it put me in a fidget.)
"No 'fair round bellies with capon lin'd
Your Aldermen shall sport;
They may double the Cape, if they feel inclin'd,
But they never must touch at Port.
V.
"The Worshipful Court—so fate ordains—
Shall look like skeletons hanging in chains;
They'll need no gowns, for they'll get so thin,
They may wrap themselves round in their own loose skin;
And then in vain
Shall they complain,
Who cannot bear the shock;
Champagne shall turn to real pain,
And Turtle change to mock.
No calipash or calipee
Their longing eyes again shall see;
No more green fat!
To them shall ven'son still be deer;
Their stout shall turn to thin small beer,
Sour and flat.
VI.
"No lamps shall blaze in this spacious hall,
But farthing rushlights, lank and small,
Some cook-shop's dining-room shall grace,
Where Mister Mayor, with sword and mace,
And all the Corporation sinners,
By city contract clothed and fed,
Shall dine at eighteen pence a-head,
And feel quite grateful for their dinners.
While the armour-man, like a turtle starv'd.
Shall rattle his bones in his iron shell,
And no more shall feast on baron of beef,
But stand content with the cook-shop smell!"
VII.
Thus having said his terrible say,
The horrible spectre stalk'd away,
And left me in the blues;
And as across the Hall he pass'd,
E'en Gog and Magog stood aghast,
And trembled in their shoes.
VIII.
Oh, dreadful night!
Oh, fearful sight!
To see that sight, and hear that say,
An Alderman's soul it may well dismay.
I felt as opprest
With a pain in my chest,
And as brimful of terror and ills,
As if I had eaten some venison old,
Or swallow'd a gallon of turtle cold,
Or been poison'd by Morison's Pills.
IX.
I tried to rise, and I scream'd a scream,
The man at the gate came staggering in—
"To be sure I did, for I heard a din;
And your worship gave such a terrible snore,
While you laid on your back on the Guildhall floor,
That it woke you up from your dream!"

Wine in a Ferment and Spirits in Hot Water.

APRIL.—Greenwich Park.

1836] APRIL.
  Well, neighbour, what do the papers say
      About "The Wisdom collective?"
  Oh! their Honours are busied by night and day
      With a list of The Lords elective:
  For like old London Bridge, they declare, for years
  They've been sadly obstructed by too many peers.
M Season's Odd Matters. WEATHER.
D Signs.    
1 Sloshy    
       
2 squashy "EASTER MONDAY." budding
       
3 are               Can poet's quill, ♄ ♊ ♌ ☿ ⚹
                  Or painter's skill,  
4 the                 Depict the joy  
                  Of 'Prentice Boy, ☉ ♊
5 streets,           On that bright fun day,  
                Easter Monday? reputation,
6 sloppy    
    Can rhetorician or logician  
7 droppy Describe with aught that's like precision ☉ ♄ ♊
    The rapture that dilates his soul,  
8 all Now his own master, and beyond control? and
      His fancy soars aloft, like a sky-rocket!  
9 one           Where shall he go? not to put
              He doesn't know,  
10 meets; Although "the world's before him where to choose," the same
    And he's got on a bran new pair of shoes,  
11 Haber-   And two bright shillings in his trousers' pocket.  
       
12 dashers   Perhaps he'll join the merry throng ♄ ♊ ☿ ♂ ⚹
      Who love the dance and song;  
13 mantua-   Or, drawn by Astley's horses, go, into
      And "struggling for the foremost row,"  
14 makers   Enjoy the feats of fam'd Ducrow; jeopardy
      Or at the Circus, as they us'd to call it,  
15 look as     Clamour and bawl it; by
            And, like a little savage,  
16 grave as         Shout "Bravo Davidge!"  
    Who, Richard-like, disdains to yield, ⚹ ♊ ☉ ♄
17 under- And "saddles white Surrey for the field."  
      Or else some fellow-'prentice tells any crude
18 takers,   The joys he'd quaff at Sadler's Wells.  
      or hasty
19 for While these temptations try to start him,  
    A sudden fancy comes athwart him,—  
20 shopping "Well, only think!—why, I declare,  
    I'd quite forgot there's Greenwich Fair! ☉ ♂ ☌ ☍
21 ladies And won't I have a precious lark  
    Down One-Tree Hill in Greenwich Park!" guesses or
22 forced    
      speculations
23 to    
       
24 house    
      ☉ ☿ ♂
25 now    
      thereupon,
26 stay    
      as is the
27 at home    
       
28 to   ☉ ♂ ♃ ♄ ♊
       
29 worry   wont
       
30 spouse.   of those

Advertisements and Paragraphs Extraordinary.

Extraordinary Circumstance.—Yesterday, a shabbily-dressed, half-genteel, poetical-looking sort of man, suddenly fell down in one of the gin-palaces in St. Giles's; after having, as it was supposed, put an end to his existence, by swallowing a quartern of Deady's Best. On taking him, however, to the Station House, and administering large doses of cold water (to which his stomach manifested a particular antipathy by repeatedly serving it with an ejectment), he was sufficiently recovered to give some account of himself; but the following lines, written on the back of a dirty tobacco paper, found in his pocket, will sufficiently explain the cause of the rash act. It will be seen that he was a man of letters, tho' (judging from his reservedness) of very few words.

To Robert Short, Esq. M.P.
Dear Bob,—I know that U'll XQQQ
The wailings of a mournful MUUU.
While U, my friend, are at your EEE,
My creditors I can't apPPP:
I'm CD,—drooping to DK,
With not a sous my debts to pay.
So lean a wight you ne'er did C,—
I look just like an F-I-G.
My purse is MT, it is true;
But don't suppose I NV you:
I O U nothing but good-will,
And that I mean 2 O U still.
But if my motive U'd descry
For writing this, I'll tell U Y:
B 4 'tis long, I hope for peace;
And when U hear of my DCCC,
I beg, to show your love for me,
U'll write your Poet's L-E-G.
I'm sure that U'll indite it well,
For in such matters you XL.
Say, "E was once a R T fellow,
"But all his 'green leaves soon turn'd yellow,'
"He didn't mind his PPP and QQQ,
"But Plutus left, to woo the MUUU:
"And tho' he courted all the IX,
"He found them far too poor to dine;
"Nay, more, the very Graces III
"Could scarce afford a cup of T.
"So here he lies, for want of pelf,
"Who'd but one NME,—himself."

An Extraordinary Turnip, of the Dwarf species, was lately dug out of a field on the estate of Major Longbow, who caused the inside to be scooped out, and gave a grand entertainment therein to a party of 250 persons.—American Paper.

Falls of Niagara.—Congress has passed a resolution that a premium should be offered for a machine by which the Falls of Niagara might be rendered portable, to afford those persons who live at a distance the opportunity of viewing them at their own houses.—American Paper.

MAY.—"Old May Day"

1836.] MAY.
  The depth of "A Winter in London," I sing:—
      For thus do the rulers of fashion declare—
  That Spring Garden shall yield all they know of the spring,
      And the charms of fair May be supplied in May Fair.
M Season's "Old May Day." WEATHER.
D Signs.    
1 Ah! well- BY A NONAGENARIAN.  
       
2 a-day!       When I was young and in my prime, who
            Then ev'rything look'd gay;  
3 alack!       And nothing was so merry as ☌ ♓ ♑ ♌
            The merry First of May:  
4 alas!       Kind Nature, who doth ever smile, in place
            Seem'd then to smile the more;  
5 that       And ev'ry Spring that time did bring of
            Seem'd greener than before.  
6 such a       The birds they sang so jocundly,—  
            They fill'd the air around,  
7 thing       And human hearts as jocundly ☿ ♊ ☽
            Responded to the sound.  
8 should       I recollect the lovely scene consulting
            As though I saw it still:—  
9 come       The mansion of a noble race the stars
            Was seated on a hill;  
10 to pass!       And smilingly it seem'd to look  
            Upon the plain below,  
11 but on       Where groups of happy villagers ♎ ♐ ☍ ♋ ♉
            Were sporting to and fro.  
12 my word,       The May-pole in the centre plac'd, according to
            All deck'd with garlands gay.  
13 I feel       While lads and lasses danc'd around, art,
            And footed it away.  
14 suspi-       The ruddy hostess of the inn,  
            Which stood within the vale,  
15 cious,       Supplied the thirsty revellers ♃ ⊕ ♒ ☉
            With draughts of nut-brown ale;  
16 unless       While pleas'd, the neighb'ring gentry stood,  
            And view'd the cheerful scene, thrust forth
17 the stars       Or laid aside their rank to join  
            The sports upon the green.  
18 prove   ♓ ♑
          Ah! those were times that memory  
19 more         Is happy to retrace, their
          But chang'd, alas! and sad are those  
20 propi-         Which now supply their place. own bald
          An honest healthy peasantry  
21 tious,         Then shar'd the farmer's board, and
          Who'd shrink from parish pauper pay,  
22 that         As from a thing abhorr'd; conceited
          The sons of "Merry England" now  
23 I shall         Are chang'd to Mammon's slaves,  
          And "peep about to find themselves  
24 nothing         Dishonourable graves." ☽ ♂ ♀
          The "labourer," no longer "reckon'd  
25 have         Worthy of his hire,"  
          No more partakes the farmer's board, suppositions
26 to say         Nor warms him at his fire—  
       
27 about *      *      *      *      * ♈ ♀ ⚹ ♏ ☽
       
28 this (Rigdum Funnidos interrupteth:)  
      For these
29 famous Stop, stop, old friend! I prithee, cease this prosing.  
    Egad! you'll set my gentle readers dozing. and other
30 month The Times are bad, I own, and sad's the change;  
    But, surely, that is not so wondrous strange; weighty
31 of May! And if it were, this is no place to joke in.  
       
    Nonagenarian:  
       
    Enough, good Rigdum!—I'll give over croaking.  

A DRAMATIC FACT.

"Macbeth by Mr. Higgs!"—
They sometimes used to let him play it in the country;
And then, odds wigs!
How very great he felt!
One night, while he was at it,
The pot-boy, from the public-house at which he dealt,
Being at the wing, quoth Higgs, aside, "Od 'rat it!
I do lack spirits,—but that sha'n't fret me,
Here, boy, take thou this coin, and go get me"—
"Some bread and cheese, and porter, innions, Sir, or what?"
"Nay, no prog!
Expend the shilling all in glorious grog!"
"With sugar, Sir?" "Ay, and very hot;
Thou knowest, lout!
I only take sixpenn'orths cold without!"
The pot-boy took the grog into the green-room,
And left it there for Higgs:—but, as it came to pass,
Lady Macbeth and Banquo having twigged it,
First she took a very leetle sup,—
He fairly swigged it;
And so between them both, alas!
Lady Macbeth and Banquo mopped it up,
And hid the glass!
Higgs, who all this time
Had been upon the stage,—
In that great scene where Macbeth's urged to crime
By those foul witches,—
Now strutted in,—but, oh! (excuse the rhyme,)
Odds philibegs and breeches!
How he did foam and rage,
And writhe his face,
And call the potboy hog, and dog, and log,
On not perceiving his expected grog
In its accustomed place.
The potboy, being summoned, vowed
That he had duly brought it,
And, if to speak his mind he was allowed,
He thought it
Might have vanish'd,
Being partly spirits,—like the witches,
"'Tis false!" roared Higgs, "Avaunt! Be banish'd!
Visit no more this realm of milk and honey!
Base caitiff! YOU'VE ABSCONDED with the money!"

JUNE.—"Holiday at the Public Offices"

1836.] JUNE.
  The Midsummer nights fly swiftly by,
  While Members are "catching the Speaker's eye;"
  And the Outs are employing their labour and wit
  On those who are In, to serve "notice to quit."
M Season's Odd Matters. WEATHER.
D Signs.    
1 Lawyers "HOLIDAYS AT PUBLIC OFFICES."  
       
2 now may I've often thought how hard the fate and
      Of those, who're destin'd, day by day,  
3 take To rise up early, lie down late, sufficient
      And waste, in toil, their lives away.  
4 their   reasons
    And often have I ask'd myself,  
5 ease,   When musing o'er these scenes of woe, ♈ ☿ ♍ ♀ ♑
    "Couldst thou, for sake of sordid pelf,  
6 and   Oppress thy fellow-creatures so?" ♅ ☊ ♌
       
7 counsel Then fancy would begin to paint  
      The griefs of little cotton-spinners, instead of
8 reckon Compell'd to labour till they faint,  
      That bloated knaves may eat good dinners.  
9 up their    
    I thought of poor young milliners, ♃ ♂ ⊕
10 fees;   Who toil all night, with matted tresses,  
    And faces pale, that Fashion's dames jumping
11 for   May grace the ball in fancy dresses.  
      at once
12 now And then I thought upon the Pole,  
      Condemn'd, among Siberia's snow, into the ice
13 the With shackled limbs and blighted soul,  
      The joys of freedom ne'er to know. and snow
14 welcome    
    With those who work in powder mill.  
15 long   Life's value scarcely weighs a feather,  
    So oft exploding, 'twere no ill,  
16 vacation   Were they exploded altogether. ⚹ ♀ ♈ ♐ ♎
       
17 gives a But what are these? and what are those? ♊ ♀
      Or all that thou, Oh, man! endurest?  
18 rest to Compar'd with those transcendant woes of January
      Experienced by the Sinecurist?  
19 liti-   and
    Compell'd by eight o'clock to rise,  
20 gation;   By nine to get his breakfast o'er, commencing
    And leave some bit that gourmands prize,  
21 while   Because the stage is at the door. ♄ ☌ ☽
       
22 happy And when the coachman sets him down as the
      At Treasury or Navy Pay,  
23 they on His toil begins,—but I'll explain learned
      How hard he works from day to day.  
24 quarter    
    Five weary hours he stands or sits,  
25 day,   Or fidgets till he gets the vapours; ☍ ♈ ♀ ⚹ ♊
    And then to chase the ennui fits,  
26 who're   He picks his teeth, or reads the papers.  
      have it,
27 not Perhaps his name full twenty times  
      He writes, or writes a page of figures;  
28 obliged Until are heard the welcome chimes, ☌ ♈ ♒ ♄ ⚹
      Which end the toil of these white Niggers.  
29 to run   ♋ ☋ ♅
    The fate of him who digs the mine,  
30 away!   Compar'd to this, is children's play; ab initio,
    Then, ah! how cruel 'tis to sneer,  
      And call his life a holiday.  
       
    Ah! radicals: ye little know  
      'Bout what it is ye make a clamour;  
    Go, thank your stars you drag a truck,  
      Or only wield a blacksmith's hammer.