"THE LAY OF THE LAST" ALDERMAN.
| 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.
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.
| 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.
| 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. | |||