Or, the Boy who was Spoiled by his Mamma
I
Limby Lumpy was the only son of his
mamma. His father was called the ‘Pavior’s
Assistant’; for he was so large and heavy, that
when he used to walk through the streets the men who
were ramming the stones down with a large wooden rammer
would say, ’Please to walk over these stones,
sir.’ And then the men would get a rest.
Limby was born on the 1st of April;
I do not know how long ago; but, before he came into
the world, such preparations were made. There
was a beautiful cradle; and a bunch of coral, with
bells on it; and lots of little caps; and a fine satin
hat; and tops and bottoms for pap; and two nurses
to take care of him. He was, too, to have a little
chaise, when he grew big enough; after that, he was
to have a donkey, and then a pony. In short,
he was to have the moon for a plaything, if it could
be got; and, as to the stars, he would have had them,
if they had not been too high to reach.
Limby made a rare to-do when he was
a little baby. But he never was a little
baby he was always a big baby; nay, he was
a big baby till the day of his death.
‘Baby Big,’ his mamma
used to call him; he was ‘a noble baby,’
said his aunt; he was ‘a sweet baby,’
said old Mrs. Tomkins, the nurse; he was ’a
dear baby,’ said his papa, and so
he was, for he cost a good deal. He was
‘a darling baby,’ said his aunt, by the
mother’s side; ’there never was such a
fine child,’ said everybody, before the parents;
when they were at another place they called him ‘a
great, ugly, fat child.’
Limby was almost as broad as he was
long. He had what some people called an open
countenance; that is, one as broad as a full moon.
He had what his mamma called beautiful auburn locks,
but what other people said were carroty; not before
the mother, of course.
Limby had a flattish nose and a widish
mouth, and his eyes were a little out of the right
line. Poor little dear, he could not help that,
and therefore it was not right to laugh at him.
Everybody, however, laughed to see
him eat his pap, for he would not be fed with the
patent silver pap-spoon which his father bought him;
but used to lay himself flat on his back, and seize
the pap-boat with both hands, and never leave go of
it till its contents were fairly in his dear little
stomach.
So Limby grew bigger and bigger every
day, till at last he could scarcely draw his breath,
and was very ill; so his mother sent for three apothecaries
and two physicians, who looked at him, and told his
mamma there were no hopes: the poor child was
dying of over-feeding. The physicians, however,
prescribed for him a dose of castor oil.
His mamma attempted to give him the
castor oil; but Limby, although he liked tops and
bottoms, and cordial, and pap, and sweetbread, and
oysters, and other things nicely dished up, had no
fancy for castor oil, and struggled, and kicked, and
fought every time his nurse or mamma attempted to
give it him.
‘Limby, my darling boy,’
said his mamma, ’my sweet cherub, my only dearest,
do take its oily poily there’s a ducky,
deary and it shall ride in a coachy poachy.’
‘O! the dear baby,’ said
the nurse, ’take it for nursey. It will
take it for nursey that it will.’
The nurse had got the oil in a silver
medicine spoon, so contrived that if you could get
it into the child’s mouth the medicine must go
down. Limby, however, took care that no spoon
should go into his mouth; and when the nurse tried
the experiment for the nineteenth time, gave a plunge
and a kick, and sent the spoon up to the ceiling, knocked
off nurse’s spectacles, upset the table on which
all the bottles and glasses were, and came down whack
on the floor.
His mother picked him up, clasped
him to her breast, and almost smothered him with kisses.
‘O! my dear boy,’ said she, ’it shan’t
take the nasty oil it won’t take
it, the darling; naughty nurse to hurt baby:
it shall not take nasty physic’; and then she
kissed him again.
Poor Limby, although only two years
old, knew what he was at he was trying
to get the master of his mamma; he felt he had gained
his point, and gave another kick and a squall, at
the same time planted a blow on his mother’s
eye.
‘Dear little creature,’
said she, ’he is in a state of high convulsions
and fever he will never recover.’
But Limby did recover, and in a few
days was running about the house, and the master of
it; there was nobody to be considered, nobody to be
consulted, nobody to be attended to, but Limby Lumpy.
II
Limby grew up big and strong; he had
everything his own way. One day, when he was
at dinner with his father and mother, perched upon
a double chair, with his silver knife and fork, and
silver mug to drink from, he amused himself by playing
drums on his plate with the mug.
‘Don’t make that noise,
Limby, my dear,’ said his father. ’Dear
little lamb,’ said his mother, ‘let him
amuse himself. Limby, have some pudding?’
’No; Limby no pudding’ drum!
drum! drum!
A piece of pudding was, however, put
on Limby’s plate, but he kept on drumming as
before. At last he drummed the bottom of the mug
into the soft pudding, to which it stuck, and by which
means it was scattered all over the carpet.
‘Limby, my darling,’ said
his mother; and the servant was called to wipe Limby’s
mug and pick the pudding up from the floor. Limby
would not have his mug wiped, and floundered about,
and upset the cruet-stand and the mustard on the table-cloth.
‘O! Limby Lumpy; naughty boy,’ said
his father.
‘Don’t speak so cross
to the child; he is but a child,’ said his mother;
‘I don’t like to hear you speak so cross
to the child.’
‘I tell you what it is,’
said his father, ’I think the boy does as he
likes; but I don’t want to interfere.’
Limby now sat still, resolving what
to do next. He was not hungry, having been stuffed
with a large piece of pound cake about an hour before
dinner; but he wanted something to do, and could not
sit still.
Presently a saddle of mutton was brought
on the table. When Limby saw this he set up a
crow of delight. ‘Limby ride,’ said
he, ‘Limby ride’; and rose up in his chair,
as if to reach the dish.
‘Yes, my ducky, it shall have
some mutton,’ said his mamma; and immediately
gave him a slice, cut up into small morsels. That
was not it. Limby pushed that on the floor, and
cried out, ’Limby on meat! Limby on meat!’
His mamma could not think what he
meant. At last, however, his father recollected
that he had been in the habit of giving him a ride
occasionally, first on his foot, sometimes on the scroll
end of the sofa, at other times on the top of the
easy chair. Once he put him on a dog, and more
than once on the saddle; in short, he had been in the
habit of perching him on various things; and now Limby,
hearing this was a saddle of mutton, wanted
to take a ride on it.
‘Limby on Limby ride
on bone,’ said the child, in a whimper.
‘Did you ever hear?’ said the father.
‘What an extraordinary child!’
said the mother; ’how clever to know it was
like a saddle the little dear. No,
no, Limby grease frock, Limby.’
But Limby cared nothing about a greasy
frock, not he he was used enough to that;
and therefore roared out more lustily for a ride on
the mutton.
‘Did you ever know such a child?
What a dear, determined spirit!’
‘He is a child of an uncommon
mind,’ said his mother. ’Limby, dear Limby,
dear silence! silence!’
The truth was, Limby made such a roaring,
that neither father nor mother could get their dinners,
and scarcely knew whether they were eating beef or
mutton.
‘It is impossible to let him
ride on the mutton,’ said his father: ‘quite
impossible!’
’Well, but you might just put
him astride the dish, just to satisfy him; you can
take care his legs or clothes do not go into the gravy.’
‘Anything for a quiet life,’
said the father. ’What does Limby want? Limby
ride?’
‘Limby on bone! Limby on meat!’
‘Shall I put him across?’ said Mr. Lumpy.
‘Just for one moment,’ said his mamma:
‘it won’t hurt the mutton.’
The father rose, and took Limby from
his chair, and, with the greatest caution, held his
son’s legs astride, so that they might hang on
each side of the dish without touching it; ‘just
to satisfy him,’ as he said, ‘that they
might dine in quiet,’ and was about to withdraw
him from it immediately.
But Limby was not to be cheated in
that way, he wished to feel the saddle under
him, and accordingly forced himself down upon it; but
feeling it rather warmer than was agreeable, started,
and lost his balance, and fell down among the dishes,
soused in melted butter, cauliflower, and gravy floundering,
and kicking, and screaming, to the detriment of glasses,
jugs, dishes, and everything else on the table.
‘My child! my child!’
said his mamma; ‘O! save my child!’
She snatched him up, and pressed his
begreased garments close to the bosom of her best
silk gown.
Neither father nor mother wanted any
more dinner after this. As to Limby, he was as
frisky afterwards as if nothing had happened; and,
about half an hour from the time of this disaster,
cried for his dinner.