 |
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Oh, you who complain that the drawings insane, or too |
| |
much for your noddles have found it, |
| But listen a minute, I'll tell you what's in it — completely |
| |
explain and expound it. |
| With intellect weaselly, artist has easily earned all his |
| |
bacon and greens by it, |
| And now that it's done and all ready for Fun, it's my |
| |
duty to say what he means by it. |
| First Beef-eaters, twain, who are hideously plain, with |
| |
a great deal too much flesh on, |
| Are placed, I dare say, to keep clear all the way, like |
| |
the "pleece" in a civic procession. |
| Two pantomime actors — disgraceful characters, for |
| |
each is a thief and a chartist |
| (The clown little charms, for he's weak in the arms, but |
| |
of course that's the fault of the artist), |
| Stealing and shouting, and bad doggerel spouting, |
| |
completely regardless of rhyme or ear — |
| Melody metrical, authors theatrical little regard at this |
| |
time o' year; |
| Each of the pair you distinguish down there, a |
| |
barbarous Pan or a Sat'r I call |
| (But stop, surely "rhyme or ear" scarce rhymes with |
| |
"time o' year" — "metrical" don't with "theatrical") |
| Two gentlemen, then, stout, hale-looking men, and |
| |
they carry the season's necessities — |
| What's in that bowl? How it flames! on my soul, I've |
| |
not the least notion, unless it is |
| Something to drink — it must be that I think; there is |
| |
pudding and beef and a turkey, |
| Savoury sausages — offspring of coarse ages, round |
| |
the fat gobbler lurk ye! |
| Ha! Ha! Christmas-boxes! — purveyors of oxes, |
| |
greengrocer, and baker, whom HODGE I call. |
| (Fox plural is "foxes," so why not ox "oxes? The |
| |
language is strangely illogical!) |
| A well-bred young man, meeting JULIA and ANNE, |
| |
puts a smile that he fancies will please on, |
| And offers on meeting, the usual greeting — the |
| |
compliments, viz., of the season |
| (Whatever they are, it's a phrase popular in the |
| |
various elegant "sets" I know, |
| I pay them away, and I wish I could say, that with them |
| |
I could pay all my debts, I know!). |
| The waits, wet and chilly, so long have missed WILLIE, |
| |
the tie is quite broken asunder; |
| Now, utterly crazy, they envy the daisy, and long to be |
| |
one, and no wonder! |
"One more unfortunate," mutely importunate, huddled, a
|
| |
mass, in a corner, |
| Miseries harden her — pardon her, pardon her — think |
| |
of the cold when you scorn her! |
| Just to the left of her, utterly deaf to ver-acity, idle men |
| |
two are, |
| Begging a farden, as frozen-out gardeners — just as |
| |
much gard'ners as you are! |
| Letters from editors, dunning from creditors, vile red and |
| |
white intimations, |
| That rates not a few (made October) are due, and that |
| |
these are the LAST APPLICATIONS. |
| The cursed collector he bullies like HECTOR, and duns |
| |
in a manner which funny ain't; |
| How on earth I'm to pay, I'm unable to say, for the rates |
| |
may be made, but the money ain't. |
| The thinking these things on insanity brings on, my brain |
| |
thoughts of suicide enter, |
| I almost think I'll run myself on a file, like the man up |
| |
above in the centre! |
| The poor wretched prisoner (right corner) is in a sad |
| |
state — his thoughts melancholy ones; |
| His wicked mind wends to his open-air friends — they |
| |
are thieves, but uncommonly jolly ones! |
| Time, the physician (sure no one could wish an adviser |
| |
with aspect more knowing), |
| Is earning a fee of old year Sixty-three, who's beginning |
| |
to think about going! |
| The noisy church-bell is a-ringing his knell — it's a |
| |
delicate favour to do one; |
| Its JANUS-like tone kills two birds with one stone, for it |
| |
heralds the birth of the new one! |
| |
| * * * * * * |
| He sleeps the long trance — not a ghost of a chance of |
| |
renewal of lease by his lessor; |
| Il est mort, ce pauvre roi! Shall we sorrow? Pourquoi? |
| |
let us rather cry "Vive his successor!" |
| Anxious, uncommon I, great Anno Domini, am to know |
| |
what you've in store for me, |
| What you will pour for me none can explore for me, which |
| |
you'll admit is a bore for me. |
| The kid (if you pliz, I don't know who he is) takes "steps" |
| |
Sixty-three for to score out, |
| And I hope that all we who've seen old Sixty-three will be |
| |
here to bow young Sixty-four out! |
Page Created
13 August, 2005