CHAPTER I. Introductory.
“Let the neighbors smell ve
has something respectable for once.”
There is certainly no style of writing
requiring so much modest assurance as autobiography;
a position which, I am confident, neither Lord Cherbury,
nor Vidocq, or any other mortal blessed with an equal
developement of the organ of self-esteem, can or could
deny.
Home, ("sweet home,") in
his Douglas gives, perhaps, one of the most
concise and concentrated specimens extant, of this
species of composition. With what an imposing
air does his youthful hero blow his own trumpet in
those well-known lines, commencing,
“My name is Norval.”
Although a mere cock-boat in comparison
with these first-rates, I think I may safely follow
in their wake. Should the critics, however, condescend
to carp at me for likening myself to a cock-boat, I
have no objection, if by a twist of their ingenuity,
they can prove me to be a little funny!
Economy was one of the most prominent
characteristics of the family from which I sprang.
Now, some authors would weary their indulgent readers
with a flatulent chapter upon the moral beauty of this
virtue; but as my first wish is to win favor by my
candor, I must honestly confess, that necessity was
the parent of this lean attenuated offspring! For,
alas!
My ‘angel mother,’ (as
Anna Maria phrases it,) was a woman of ten thousand,
for she dwelt in one of the most populous districts
of London! My sire, was of the most noble order
of St. Crispin; and though he had many faults, was
continually mending being the most eminent
cobbler in the neighbourhood.
Even in the outset of their connubial
partnership, they started under the most favorable
auspices for, whereas other couples marry
for love or money, they got married for ‘nothing’
taking advantage of the annual gratuitous splicings
performed at Shoreditch Church on one sunshiny Easter
Monday.
In less than three years my amiable
mother presented her lord and master with as many
interesting pledges of their affection I
was the cobbler’s last and
‘Though last, not least, in their dear love.’
CHAPTER II. Our Lodging
Our precarious means were too small
to permit us to rent a house, we therefore rented
one large room, which served us for
“Parlor and kitchen and all!”
in the uppermost story of a house,
containing about a dozen families.
This ‘airy’ apartment
was situated in a narrow alley of great thoroughfare,
in the heart of the great metropolis.
The lower part of this domicile was
occupied by one James, who did ‘porter’s
work,’ while his wife superintended the trade
of a miscellaneous store, called a green-grocer’s;
although the stock comprised, besides a respectable
skew of cabbages, carrots, lettuces, and other things
in season, a barrel of small beer, a side of bacon,
a few red herrings, a black looking can of ‘new
milk,’ and those less perishable articles, Warren’s
blacking, and Flanders’ bricks; while the window
was graced with a few samples of common confectionary,
celebrated under the sweet names of lollypops, Buonaparte’s
ribs, and bulls’-eyes.
In one pane, by permission, was placed
the sign board of my honored parent, informing the
reading public, that
‘Repairs were neatly executed!’
In my mind’s eye how distinctly
do I behold that humble shop in all the greenness
and beauty of its Saturday morning’s display.
Nor can I ever forget the kind dumpy
motherly Mrs. James, who so often patted my curly
head, and presented me with a welcome slice of bread
and butter and a drink of milk, invariably repeating
in her homely phrase, “a child and a chicken
is al’ays a pickin’” and
declaring her belief, that the ‘brat’
got scarcely enough to “keep life and soul together” the
real truth of which my craving stomach inwardly testified.
Talk of the charities of the wealthy,
they are as ‘airy nothings’ in the scale,
compared with the unostentatious sympathy of the poor!
The former only give a portion of their excess, while
the latter willingly divide their humble crust with
a fellow sufferer.
The agreeable routine of breakfast,
dinner, tea, and supper, was unknown in our frugal
establishment; if we obtained one good meal a day,
under any name, we were truly thankful.
To give some idea of our straitened
circumstances, I must relate one solitary instance
of display on the maternal side. It was on a
Saturday night, the air and our appetites were equally
keen, when my sire, having unexpectedly touched a
small sum, brought home a couple of pound of real
Epping. A scream of delight welcomed the savory
morsel.
A fire was kindled, and the meat was
presently hissing in the borrowed frying-pan of our
landlady.
I was already in bed, when the unusual
sound and savor awoke me. I rolled out in a
twinkling, and squatting on the floor, watched the
culinary operations with greedy eyes.
“Tom,” said my mother,
addressing her spouse, “set open the door and
vinder, and let the neighbors smell ve has something
respectable for once.”
Chapter. III. On Temperance.
“I wou’dn’t like
to shoot her exactly; but I’ve a blessed mind
to turn her out!”
Armed with the authority and example of loyalty, for even that renowned
monarch Old King Cole was diurnally want to call for
“His pipe and his glass”
and induced by the poetical strains
of many a bard, from the classic Anacreon to those
of more modern times, who have celebrated the virtue
of
“Wine, mighty wine!”
it is not to be marvelled at, that
men’s minds have fallen victims to the fascinations
of the juice of the purple grape, or yielded to the
alluring temptations of the ‘evil spirit.’
It is a lamentable truth, that notwithstanding
the laudable and wholesome exertions and admonitions
of the Temperance and Tee-total Societies, that the
people of the United Kingdom are grievously addicted
to an excessive imbibation of spirituous liquors,
cordials, and compounds.
Although six-bottle men are now regarded
as monstrosities, and drinking parties are nearly
exploded, tippling and dram-drinking among the lower
orders are perhaps more indulged in than ever.
The gilded and gorgeous temples devoted
to the worship of the reeling-goddess Geneva blaze
forth in every quarter of the vast metropolis.
Is it matter of wonder, then, that
while men of superior intellect and education are
still weak enough to seek excitement in vinous potations,
that the vulgar, poor, and destitute, should endeavour
to drown their sorrows by swallowing the liquid fires
displayed under various names, by the wily priests
of Silenus!
That such a deduction is illogical
we are well aware, but great examples are plausible
excuses to little minds.
Both my parents were naturally inclined
to sobriety; but, unfortunately, and as it too frequently
happens, in low and crowded neighbourhoods, drunkenness
is as contagious as the small-pox, or any other destructive
malady.
Now, it chanced that in the first-floor
of the house in which we dwelt, there also resided
one Stubbs and his wife. They had neither chick
nor child. Stubbs was a tailor by trade, and
being a first-rate workman, earned weekly a considerable
sum; but, like too many of his fraternity, he was
seldom sober from Saturday night until Wednesday morning.
His loving spouse ’rowed in the same boat’ and
the ‘little green-bottle’ was dispatched
several times during the days of their Saturnalia,
to be replenished at the never-failing fountain of
the ‘Shepherd and Flock.’
Unhappily, in one of her maudlin fits,
Mrs. Stubbs took a particular fancy to my mother;
and one day, in the absence of the ‘ninth,’
beckoned my unsuspecting parent into her sittingroom, and
after gratuitously imparting to her the hum-drum history
of her domestic squabbles, invited her to take a ‘drop
o’ summat’ to keep up her I
sperrits.’
Alas! this was the first step and
she went on, and on, and on, until that which at first
she loathed became no longer disagreeable, and by
degrees grew into a craving that was irresistible; and,
at last, she regularly hob-and-nobb’d’
with the disconsolate rib of Stubbs, and shared alike
in all her troubles and her liquor.
Fain would I draw a veil over this
frailty of my unfortunate parent; but, being conscious
that veracity is the very soul and essence of history,
I feel myself imperatively called upon neither to
disguise nor to cancel the truth.
My father remonstrated in vain-the
passion had already taken too deep a hold; and one
day he was suddenly summoned from his work with the
startling information, that ’Mother Mullins’ (so
the kind neighbour phrased it) was sitting on the
step of a public house, in the suburbs, completely
‘tosticated.’
He rushed out, and found the tale
too true. A bricklayer in the neighbourhood
proposed the loan of his barrow, for the poor senseless
creature could not walk a step. Placing her in
the one-wheel-carriage, he made the best of his way
home, amid the jeers of the multitude. Moorfields
was then only partially covered with houses; and as
he passed a deep hollow, on the side of which was
placed a notice, intimating that
“Rubbish may be shot here!”
his eyes caught the words, and in
the bitterness of his heart he exclaimed
“I wou’dn’t like
to shoot her exactly; but I’ve a blessed mind
to turn her out!”
CHAPTER IV. A Situation
“I say, Jim, what birds are
we most like now?” “Why swallows, to be
sure,”
In the vicinity of our alley were
numerous horse-rides, and my chief delight was being
entrusted with a horse, and galloping up and down the
straw-littered avenue. I was about twelve
years of age, and what was termed a sharp lad, and
I soon became a great favourite with the ostlers,
who admired the aptness with which I acquired the language
of the stables.
There were many stock-brokers who
put up at the ride; among others was Mr. Timmis familiarly
called long Jim Timmis. He was a bold, dashing,
good-humoured, vulgar man, who was quite at home with
the ostlers, generally conversing with them in their
favourite lingo.
I had frequent opportunities of shewing
him civilities, handing him his whip, and holding
his stirrup, etc.
One day he came to the ride in a most
amiable and condescending humour, and for the first
time deigned to address me “Whose
kid are you?” demanded he.
“Father’s, sir,” I replied.
“Do you know your father, then?”
“Yes, sir.”
“A wise child this;” and
he winked at the ostler, who, of course, laughed incontinently.
“I want a-lad,” continued
he; “what do you say would you like
to serve me?”
“If I could get any thing by it.”
“D-me, if that a’int blunt.”
“Yes, sir; that’s what I mean.”
“Mean! mean what?”
“If I could get any blunt, sir.”
Hereupon he laughed outright, at what
he considered my readiness, although I merely used
the cant term for “money,” to which I was
most accustomed, from my education among the schoolmasters
of the ride.
“Here, take my card,”
said he; “and tell the old codger, your father,
to bring you to my office to-morrow morning, at eleven.”
“Well, blow me,” exclaimed
my friend the ostler, “if your fortin’
arn’t made; I shall see you a tip-top sawyer may
I never touch another tanner! Vy, I remembers
Jim Timmis hisself vos nothin but a grubby boy Mother
Timmis the washer-woman’s son, here in what-d’ve-call-’em-court ven
he vent to old Jarvis fust. He’s a prime
feller tho’, and no mistake and thof
he’s no gentleman born, he pays like one, and
vot’s the difference?”
The next morning, punctual to the
hour, I waited at his office, which was in a large
building adjoining the Stock Exchange, as full as a
dove-cot, with gentlemen of the same feather.
“O!” said he, eyeing my
parent, “and you’re this chap’s father,
are you? What are you?”
“A boot and shoe-maker, sir;
and my Andrew is an honest lad.”
“For the matter o’ that,
there’s little he can prig here;” replied
my elegant and intended master. “But his
tongs eh old fellow can’t
you rig him out a little?”
My father pleaded poverty; and at
last he bargained to advance a guinea, and deduct
it out of my weekly-wages of two and sixpence, and
no board. My father was glad to make any terms,
and the affair was consequently soon arranged.
I was quickly fitted out, and the next morning attended
his orders.
I had, however, little else to do
than wait in his office, and run to the Stock Exchange,
to summon him when a customer dropped in. I had
much leisure, which I trust was not wholly thrown
away, for I practised writing on the back of the stock-receipts,
of which a quantity hung up in the office, and read
all the books I could lay my hands on; although, I
must confess, the chief portion of my knowledge of
the world has been derived from observation.
“The proper study of mankind is man.”
Although quick in temper, and rude
in speech and manners, Timmis was kind; and, if he
had a failing, it was the ambition of being a patron;
and he was certainly not one of those who do a good
deed, and
“Blush to find it fame.”
He not only employed my father to
make his boots, but recommended him to all his friends
as a “good-fit,” and procured the old man
some excellent customers. Among his acquaintance,
for he had few friends, was Tom Wallis, a fat, facetious
man, about forty, with whom he was always lunching
and cracking his jokes. One day, when the stocks
were “shut” and business was slack, they
started together on a sporting excursion towards the
romantic region of Hornsey-wood, on which occasion
I had the honour of carrying a well-filled basket
of provisions, and the inward satisfaction of making
a good dinner from the remnants.
They killed nothing but time, yet
they were exceedingly merry, especially during the
discussion of the provisions. Their laughter,
indeed, was enough to scare all the birds in the neighbourhood.
“Jim, if you wanted to correct
those sheep yonder,” said Tom, “what sort
of tool would you use?”
“An ewe-twig, of course,” replied my master.
“No; that’s devilish good,” said
Wallis; “but you ain’t hit it yet.”
“For a crown you don’t do a better?”
“Done!”
“Well, what is it?”
“Why, a Ram-rod to be sure as we’re
sportsmen.”
My master agreed that it was more
appropriate, and the good-natured Tom Wallis flung
the crown he had won to me.
“Here’s another,”
continued he, as Mr. Timmis was just raising a bottle
of pale sherry to his lips “I say,
Jim, what birds are we most like now?”
“Why swallows, to be sure,”
quickly replied my patron; who was really, on most
occasions, a match for his croney in the sublime art
of punning, and making conundrums, a favourite pastime
with the wits of the Stock Exchange.
CHAPTER V. The Stalking Horse
“Retributive Justice”
On the same landing where Timmis (as
he termed it) ‘held out,’ were five or
six closets nick-named offices, and three other boys.
One was the nephew of the before-mentioned Wallis,
and a very imp of mischief; another, only a boy, with
nothing remarkable but his stupidity; while the fourth
was a scrubby, stunted, fellow, about sixteen or seventeen
years of age, with a long pale face, deeply pitted
with the small-pox, and an irregular crop of light
hair, most unscientifically cut into tufts.
He, by reason of his seniority and
his gravity, soon became the oracle of the party.
We usually found him seated on the stairs of the first
floor, lost in the perusal of some ragged book of
the marvellous school scraps of which he
used to read aloud to us, with more unction than propriety,
indulging rather too much in the note of admiration
style; for which he soon obtained the name of Old
Emphatic! But I must confess we did obtain
a great deal of information from his select reading,
and were tolerably good listeners too, notwithstanding
his peculiar delivery, for somehow he appeared to
have a permanent cold in his head, which sometimes
threw a tone of irresistible ridicule into his most
pathetic bits.
He bore the scriptural name of Matthew
and was, as he informed us, a ’horphan’ adding,
with a particular pathos, ‘without father or
mother!’ His melancholy was, I think, rather
attributable to bile than destitution, which he superinduced
by feeding almost entirely on ‘second-hand pastry,’
purchased from the little Jew-boys, who hawk about
their ‘tempting’ trash in the vicinity
of the Bank.
Matthew, like other youths of a poetical
temperament, from Petrarch down to Lord Byron, had
a ‘passion.’
I accidentally discovered the object
of his platonic flame in the person of the little
grubby-girl the servant of the house-keeper for,
as the proverb truly says,
“Love and a cough cannot be hid.”
The tender passion first evinced itself
in his delicate attentions; nor was the
quick-eyed maid slow to discover her conquest.
Her penetration, however, was greater than her sympathy.
With a tact that would not have disgraced a politician in
a better cause, she adroitly turned the swelling current
of his love to her own purposes.
As the onward flowing stream is made
to turn the wheel, while the miller sings at the window,
so did she avail herself of his strength to do her
work, while she gaily hummed a time, and sadly ‘hummed’
poor Matthew.
There being nearly thirty offices
in the building, there were of course in winter as
many fires, and as many coal-scuttles required.
When the eyes of the devoted Matthew gazed on the
object of his heart’s desire toiling up the
well-stair, he felt he knew not what; and, with a heart
palpitating with the apprehension that his proffered
service might be rejected (poor deluded mortal!),
he begged he might assist her. With a glance
that he thought sufficient to ignite the insensible
carbon, she accepted his offer. Happy Matthew! he
grasped the handles her warm red-hands had touched! Cold-blooded,
unimaginative beings may deride his enthusiasm; but
after all, the sentiment he experienced was similar
to, and quite as pure, as that of Tom Jones, when
he fondled Sophia Western’s little muff.
But, alas!
“The course of true love never did run smooth.”
Two months after this event, ‘his Mary’
married the baker’s man!
Wallis’s nephew had several
times invited me to pay him a visit at his uncle’s
house, at Crouchend; and so once, during the absence
of that gentleman who was ruralizing at Tonbridge,
I trudged down to his villa.
Nothing would suit Master John, but
that he must ‘have out’ his uncle’s
gun; and we certainly shot at, and frightened, many
sparrows.
He was just pointing at a fresh quarry,
when the loud crow of a cock arrested his arm.
“That’s Doddington’s
game ’un, I know,” said Master John.
“What d’ye think if he did’nt
‘pitch into’ our ‘dunghill’
the other day, and laid him dead at a blow.
I owe him one! Come along.”
I followed in his footsteps, and soon beheld Chanticleer
crowing with all the ostentation of a victor at the
hens he had so ruthlessly widowed. A clothes-horse,
with a ragged blanket, screened us from his view; and
Master’John, putting the muzzle of his gun through
a hole in this novel ambuscade, discharged its contents
point blank into the proclaimer of the morn and
laid him low.
I trembled; for I felt that we had
committed a ‘foul murder.’ Master
Johnny, however, derided my fears called
it retributive justice and ignominiously
consigned the remains of a game-cock to a dunghill!
The affair appeared so like a cowardly
assassination, in which I was (though unwillingly )
’particeps criminis’ that
I walked away without partaking of the gooseberry-pie,
which he had provided for our supper.
CHAPTER VI. A Commission
“Och! thin, Paddy, what’s
the bothuration; if you carry me, don’t I carry
the whiskey, sure, and that’s fair and aqual!”
I was early at my post on the following
morning, being particularly anxious to meet with Mr.
Wallis’s scapegrace nephew, and ascertain whether
anybody had found the dead body of the game-cock, and
whether an inquest had been held; for I knew enough
of the world to draw my own conclusions as to the
result. He, although the principal, being a
relative, would get off with a lecture, while I should
probably be kicked out of my place.
In a fever of expectation, I hung
over the banisters of the geometrical staircase, watching
for his arrival.
While I was thus occupied, my nerves
“screwed up,” almost to cracking,
Mr. Wallis’s office-door was thrown open, and
I beheld that very gentleman’s round, pleasant
physiognomy, embrowned by his travels, staring me
full in the face. I really lost my equilibrium
at the apparition.
“Oh! it’s you, is it,”
cried he. “Where’s my rascal?”
“He’s not come yet, sir,” I replied.
“That fellow’s never at hand when I want him--I’ll cashier him by ____.”
He slammed to his own door, and opened it again immediately.
“Timmis come?” demanded he.
“No, sir; I don’t think he’ll be
here for an hour.”
“True I’m early
in the field; but what brings you here so soon? some
mischief, I suppose.”
“I’m always early, sir, for I live hard
by.”
“Ha! well I wish .”
“Can I do anything for you, sir?” I enquired.
“Why, that’s a good thought,”
said he, and his countenance assumed its usually bland
expression. “Let me see I want
to send my carpet-bag, and a message, to my housekeeper.”
“I can do it, sir, and be back
again in no time,” cried I, elated at having
an opportunity of obliging the man whom I had really
some cause to fear, in the critical situation in which
his nephew’s thoughtlessness had placed me.
In my eagerness, however, and notwithstanding
the political acuteness of my manoeuvre, I got myself
into an awful dilemma. Having received the bag,
and his message, I walked off, but had scarcely descended
a dozen stairs when he recalled me.
“Where the devil are you going?” cried
he.
“To your house, sir,” I innocently replied.
“What, do you know it, then?” demanded
he in surprise.
Here was a position. It was
a miracle that I did not roll over the carpet-bag
and break my neck, in the confusion of ideas engendered
by this simple query.
I could not lie, and evasion was not
my forte. A man or boy in the wrong can never
express himself with propriety; an opinion in which
Quinctilian also appears to coincide, when he asserts
“Orator perfectus nisi vir
bonus esse non potest.”
I therefore summoned up sufficient
breath and courage to answer him in the affirmative.
“And when, pray, were you there?” said
he.
“Yesterday, sir, your nephew asked me to come
and see him.”
“The impudent little blackguard?” cried
he.
“I hope you ain’t angry, sir?”
“Angry with you? no,
my lad; you’re an active little chap, and I wish
that imp of mine would take a pattern by you.
Trot along, and mind you have ‘a lift’
both ways.”
Off I went, as light as a balloon when the ropes are
cut.
I executed my commission with dispatch,
and completely won the favour of Mr. Wallis, by returning
the money which he had given me for coach-hire.
“How’s this? you didn’t
tramp, did you?” said he.
“No, sir, I rode both ways,”
I replied; “but I knew the coachmen, and they
gave me a cast for nothing.”
“Umph! well, that’s
quite proper quite proper,” said he,
considering a moment. “Honesty’s
the best policy.”
“Father always told me so, sir.”
“Your father’s right; there’s
half-a-crown for you.”
I was delighted
“Quantum cedat virtutibus aurum;”
and I felt the truth of this line
of Dr. Johnson’s, although I was then ignorant
of it. I met his nephew on the landing, but my
fears had vanished. We talked, however, of the
departed bird, and he wished me, in the event of discovery,
to declare that I had loaded and carried the gun,
and that he would bear the rest of the blame.
This, however, strongly reminded me
of the two Irish smugglers: one had a wooden
leg, and carried the cask; while his comrade, who had
the use of both his pins, bore him upon his shoulders,
and, complaining of the weight, the other replied: “Och!
thin, Paddy, what’s the bothuration; if you
carry me, don’t I carry the whiskey, sure, and
that’s fair and aqual!” and I at once
declined any such Hibernian partnership in the affair,
quite resolved that he should bear the whole onus upon
his own shoulders.
CHAPTER, VII. The Cricket Match
“Out! so don’t fatigue yourself, I beg,
sir.”
I soon discovered that my conduct
had been reported in the most favourable colours to
Mr. Timmis, and the consequence was that he began
to take more notice of me.
“Andrew, what sort of a fist
can you write?” demanded he. I shewed him
some caligraphic specimens.
“D___ me, if your y’s and your g’s hav’nt tails like skippingropes. We
must have a little topping and tailing here, and I think you’ll do. Here,
make out this account, and enter it in the book.”
He left me to do his bidding; and
when he returned from the Stock-Exchange, inspected
the performance, which I had executed with perspiring
ardour.
I watched his countenance. “That’ll do you’re a brick! I’ll make a man
of you--d___ me.”
From this day forward I had the honour
of keeping his books, and making out the accounts.
I was already a person of importance, and certainly
some steps above the boys on the landing.
I did not, however, obtain any advance
in my weekly wages; but on “good-days”
got a douceur, varying from half a crown to half a
sovereign! and looked upon myself as a made man.
Most of the receipts went to my father; whatever
he returned to me I spent at a neighbouring book-stall,
and in the course of twelve months I possessed a library
of most amusing and instructive literature, Heaven
knows! of a most miscellaneous character, for I had
no one to guide me in the selection.
Among Mr. Timmis’s numerous
clients, was one Mr. Cornelius Crobble, a man of most
extraordinary dimensions; he was also a “chum”
of, and frequently made one of a party with, his friend
Mr. Wallis, and other croneys, to white-bait dinners
at Blackwall, and other intellectual banquets.
In fact, he seldom made his appearance at the office,
but the visit ended in an engagement to dine at some
“crack-house” or other. The cost
of the “feed,” as Mr. Timmis termed it,
was generally decided by a toss of “best two
and three;” and somehow it invariably happened
that Mr. Crobble lost; but he was so good-humoured,
that really it was a pleasure, as Mr. Wallis said,
to “grub” at his expense.
They nick-named him Maximo Rotundo and
he well deserved the title.
“Where’s Timmis?”
said he, one day after he had taken a seat, and puffed
and blowed for the space of five minutes “Cuss
them stairs; they’ll be the death o’ me.”
I ran to summon my master.
“How are you, old fellow?” demanded Mr.
Timmis; “tip us your fin.”
“Queer!” replied Mr. Crobble, tapping
his breast gently with his fat fist, and puffing out
his cheeks to indicate that his lungs were
disordered.
“What, bellows to mend?” cried my accomplished patron--“D___ me, never
say die!”
“Just come from Doctor Sprawles:
says I must take exercise; no malt liquor nothing
at breakfast no lunch no supper.”
“Why, you’ll be a skeleton a
transfer from the consolidated to the reduced in no
time,” exclaimed Mr. Timmis; and his friend joined
in the laugh.
“I was a-thinking, Timmis don’t
you belong to a cricketclub?”
“To be sure.”
“Of joining you.”
“That’s the ticket,”
cried Timmis “consider yourself elected;
I can carry any thing there. I’m quite
the cock of the walk, and no mistake. Next Thursday’s
a field-day I’ll introduce you.
Lord! you’ll soon be right as a trivet.”
Mr Wallis was summoned, and the affair
was soon arranged; and I had the gratification of
being present at Mr. Crobble’s inauguration.
It was a broiling day, and there was
a full field; but he conducted himself manfully, notwithstanding
the jokes of the club. He batted exceedingly
well, “considering,” as Mr. Wallis remarked;
but as for the “runs,” he was completely
at fault.
He only attempted it once; but before
he had advanced a yard or two, the ball was caught;
and the agile player, striking the wicket with ease,
exclaimed, amid the laughter of the spectators “Out!
so don’t fatigue yourself, I beg, sir.”
And so the match was concluded, amid
cheers and shouting, in which the rotund, good-natured
novice joined most heartily.
CHAPTER VIII. The Hunter
“Hunting may be sport, says
I, but I’m blest if its pleasure.”
Two days after the cricket-match,
Mr. Crobble paid a visit to my master.
“Well, old fellow, d___ me me, if you ain’t a trump--how’s your wind?”
kindly enquired Mr. Timmis.
“Vastly better, thank’ye;
how’s Wallis and the other fellows? prime
sport that cricketing.”
“Yes; but, I say, you’ll
never have ‘a run’ of luck, if you stick
to the wicket so.”
“True; but I made a hit or two,
you must allow,” replied Mr. Crobble; “though
I’m afraid I’m a sorry member.”
“A member, indeed! no,
no; you’re the body, and we’re the members,”
replied Mr. Timmis, laughing; “but, halloo! what’s
that patch on your forehead bin a fighting?”
“No; but I’ve been a hunting,”
said Mr. Crobble, “and this here’s the
fruits You know my gray?”
“The nag you swopp’d the
bay roadster for with Tom Brown?”
“Him,” answered Crobble.
“Well, I took him to Hertfordshire Wednesday
last ”
“He took you, you mean.”
“Well, what’s the odds?”
“The odds, why, in your favour,
to be sure, as I dare say the horse can witness.”
“Well, howsomever, there was
a good field and off we went. The
level country was all prime; but he took a hedge,
and nearly julked all the life out o’ me.
I lost my stirrup, and should have lost my seat, had’nt
I clutched his mane ”
“And kept your seat by main force?”
“Very good.”
“Well, away we went, like Johnny
Gilpin. Hunting may be sport, says I, but I’m
blest if its pleasure. This infernal horse was
always fond of shying, and now he’s going to
shy me off; and, ecod! no sooner said than done.
Over his head I go, like a rocket.”
“Like a foot-ball, you mean,” interrupted
Mr. Timmis.
“And, as luck would have it,
tumbles into a ditch, plump with my head agin the
bank.”
“By jingo! such a ‘run’
upon the bank was enough to break it,” cried
my master, whose propensity to crack a joke overcame
all feeling of sympathy for his friend.
“It broke my head though; and
warn’t I in a precious mess that’s
all up to my neck, and no mistake and
black as a chimney-sweep such mud!”
“And only think of a man of
your property investing his substance in mud!
That is a good ’un! Andrew,”
said he, “tell Wally to come here.”
I summoned his crony, and sat myself down to the books,
to enjoy the sportive sallies of the two friends,
who roasted the ‘fat buck,’ their loving
companion, most unmercifully.
“You sly old badger,”
cried Wallis, “why, you must have picked out
the ditch.”
“No, but they picked out me,
and a precious figure I cut I can tell you
I was dripping from top to toe.”
“Very like dripping, indeed!”
exclaimed Mr. Timmis, eyeing his fat friend, and bursting
into an immoderate fit of laughter. The meeting
ended, as usual, with a bet for a dinner at the “Plough”
for themselves and their friends, which Mr. Crobble
lost as usual.
CHAPTER IX. A Row to Blackwall
’To be sold, warranted sound,
a gray-mare, very fast, and carries a lady; likewise
a bay-cob, quiet to ride or drive, and has carried
a lady.’
Steam-boats did not run to Greenwich
and Blackwall at this period; and those who resorted
to the white-bait establishments at those places,
either availed themselves of a coach or a boat.
Being now transformed, by a little personal merit,
and a great favour, from a full-grown errand-boy to
a small clerk, Mr. Timmis, at the suggestion of my
good friend Mr. Wallis, offered me, as a treat, a
row in the boat they had engaged for the occasion;
which, as a matter of course, I did not refuse:
making myself as spruce as my limited wardrobe would
permit, I trotted at their heels to the foot of London-bridge,
the point of embarkation.
The party, including the boatman,
consisted of eight souls; the tide was in our favour,
and away we went, as merry a company as ever floated
on the bosom of Father Thames. Mr. Crobble was
the chief mark for all their sallies, and indeed he
really appeared, from his size, to have been intended
by Nature for a “butt,” as Mr. Wallis wickedly
remarked.
“You told, me, Crobble, of your
hunting exploit in Hertfordshire,” said Mr.
Wallis; “I’ll tell you something as bangs
that hollow; I’m sure I thought I should have
split with laughter when I heard of it. You know
the old frump, my Aunt Betty, Timmis?”
“To be sure she with
the ten thousand in the threes,” replied Mr.
Timmis; “a worthy creature; and I’m sure
you admire her principal.”
“Don’t I,” cried
Wallis; and he winked significantly at his friend.
“Well, what d’ye think;
she, and Miss Scragg, her toady, were in the country
t’other day, and must needs amuse themselves
in an airing upon a couple of prads.
“Well; they were cantering along doing
the handsome and had just come to the border
of a pond, when a donkey pops his innocent nose over
a fence in their rear, and began to heehaw’
in a most melodious strain. The nags pricked
up their ears in a twinkling, and made no more ado
but bolted. Poor aunty tugged! but all in vain;
her bay-cob ran into the water; and she lost both
her presence of mind and her seat, and plumped swash
into the pond her riding habit spreading
out into a beautiful circle while she lay
squalling and bawling out in the centre, like a little
piece of beef in the middle of a large batter-pudding!
Miss Scragg, meanwhile, stuck to her graymare, and
went bumping along to the admiration of all beholders,
and was soon out of sight: luckily a joskin,
who witnessed my dear aunt’s immersion, ran to
her assistance, and, with the help of his pitch-fork,
safely landed her; for unfortunately the pond was
not above three or four feet deep! and so she missed
the chance of being an angel!”
“And you the transfer of her
threes! what a pity!” said the sympathizing
Mr. Timmis.
“When I heard of the accident,
of course, as in duty bound, I wrote an anxious letter
of affectionate enquiry and condolence. At the
same period, seeing an advertisement in the Times ’To
be sold, warranted sound, a gray-mare, very fast,
and carries a lady; likewise a bay-cob, quiet to ride
or drive, and has carried a lady’ I
was so tickled with the co-incidence, that I cut it
out, and sent it to her in an envelope.”
“Prime! by Jove!” shouted
Mr. Crobble “But, I say, Wallis you
should have sent her a ‘duck’ too, as
a symbolical memorial of her accident!”
CHAPTER X. The Pic-Nic
had just spread out their
prog on a clean table-cloth, when they were alarmed
by the approach of a cow.
“People should never undertake
to do a thing they don’t perfectly understand,”
remarked Mr. Crobble, “they’re sure to
make fools o’ themselves in the end. There’s
Tom Davis, (you know Tom Davis?) he’s always
putting his notions into people’s heads, and
turning the laugh against ’em. If there’s
a ditch in the way, he’s sure to dare some of
his companions to leap it, before he overs it himself;
if he finds it safe, away he springs like a greyhound.”
“Exactly him, I know him,”
replied Mr. Timmis; “that’s what he calls
learning to shave upon other people’s chins!”
“Excellent!” exclaimed Mr. Wallis.
“He’s a very devil,”
continued Mr. Crobble; “always proposing some
fun or other: Pic-nics are his delight; but he
always leaves others to bring the grub, and brings
nothing but himself. I hate Pic-nics, squatting
in the grass don’t suit me at all; when once
down, I find it no easy matter to get up again, I
can tell you.”
Hereupon there was a general laugh.
“Talking of Pic-nics,”
said Mr. Timmis, “reminds me of one that was
held the other day in a meadow, on the banks of the
Lea. The party, consisting of ladies only, and
a little boy, had just spread out their prog on a
clean table-cloth, when they were alarmed by the approach
of a cow. They were presently on their pins,
(cow’d, of course,) and sheered off to a respectful
distance, while the cow walked leisurely over the
table-cloth, smelling the materials of the feast, and
popp’d her cloven foot plump into a currant
and raspberry pie! and they had a precious deal of
trouble to draw her off; for, as Tom Davis said, there
were some veal-patties there, which were, no doubt,
made out of one of her calves; and in her maternal
solicitude, she completely demolished the plates and
dishes, leaving the affrighted party nothing more than
the broken victuals.”
“What a lark!” exclaimed
Mr. Crobble; “I would have given a guinea to
have witnessed the fun. That cow was a trojan!”
“A star in the milky way,” cried Mr. Wallis.
We now approached the ‘Plough;’
and Mr. Crobble having ‘satisfied’ the
boatman, Mr. Wallis gave me half-a-crown, and bade
me make the best of my way home. I pocketed
the money, and resolved to ‘go on the highway,’
and trudge on foot.
“Andrew,” said my worthy
patron, “now don’t go and make a beast
of yourself, but walk straight home.”
“Andrew,” said Mr. Wallis,
imitating his friend’s tone of admonition; “if
any body asks you to treat ’em, bolt; if any
body offers to treat you, retreat!”
“Andrew,” said Mr. Crobble,
who was determined to put in his oar, and row in the
same boat as his friends; “Andrew,” “Yes,
Sir;” and I touched my hat with due respect,
while his two friends bent forward to catch his words.
“Andrew,” repeated he, for the third time,
“avoid evil communication, and get thee gone
from Blackwall, as fast as your legs can carry you for,
there’s villainous bad company just landed here wicked
enough to spoil even the immaculate Mr. Cornelius Crobble!”
CHAPTER XI. The Journey Home
“Starboard, Tom, starboard!” “Aye,
aye-starboard it is!”
I found myself quite in a strange
land upon parting with my master and his friends.
It was war-time, and the place was literally swarming
with jack-tars.
Taking to the road, for the footway
was quite crowded, I soon reached Poplar. Here
a large mob impeded my progress. They appeared
all moved with extraordinary merriment. I soon
distinguished the objects of their mirth. Two
sailors, mounted back to back on a cart-horse, were
steering for Blackwall. A large horse-cloth
served them as a substitute for a saddle, and the
merry fellow behind held the reins; he was smoking
a short pipe, while his mate was making an observation
with his spy-glass.
“Starboard, Tom, starboard!” cried the
one in front.
“Aye, aye-starboard it is!” replied his
companion, tugging at the rein.
“Holloo, messmate! where are you bound?”
bawled a sailor in the crowd.
“To the port o’ Blackwall,”
replied the steersman. “But we’re
going quite in the wind’s eye, and I’m
afeared we shan’t make it to-night.”
“A queer craft.”
“Werry,” replied Tom. “Don’t
answer the helm at all.”
“Any grog on board?” demanded the sailor.
“Not enough to wet the boatswain’s
whistle; for, da’e see, mate, there’s
no room for stowage.”
“Shiver my timbers! no
grog!” exclaimed the other; “why you’ll
founder. If you don’t splice the main-brace,
you’ll not make a knot an hour. Heave to and
let’s drink success to the voyage.”
“With all my heart, mate, for
I’m precious krank with tacking. Larboard,
Tom larboard.”
“Aye, aye larboard it is.”
“Now, run her right into that
’ere spirit-shop to leeward, and let’s
have a bowl.”
Tom tugged away, and soon “brought
up” at the door of a wine-vaults.
“Let go the anchor,” exclaimed
his messmate “that’s it coil
up.”
“Here, mate here’s
a picter of his royal majesty” giving
the sailor alongside a new guinea “and
now tell the steward to mix us a jorum as stiff as
a nor’wester, and, let’s all drink the
King’s health God bless him.”
“Hooray!” shouted the delighted mob.
Their quondam friend soon did his
bidding, bringing out a huge china-bowl filled with
grog, which was handed round to every soul within reach,
and presently dispatched; two others followed,
before they “weighed anchor and proceeded on
their voyage,” cheered by the ragged multitude,
among whom they lavishly scattered their change; and
a most riotous and ridiculous scramble it produced.
I was much pleased with the novelty
of the scene, and escaped from the crowd as quickly
as I conveniently could, for I was rather apprehensive
of an attempt upon my pockets.
What strange beings are these sailors!
They have no care for the morrow, but spend lavishly
the hard-earned wages of their adventurous life.
To one like myself, who early knew the value of money,
this thoughtless extravagance certainly appeared unaccountable,
and nearly allied to madness; but, when I reflected
that they are sometimes imprisoned in a ship for years,
without touching land, and frequently in peril of losing
their lives that they have scarcely time
to scatter their wages and prize-money in the short
intervals which chance offers them of mixing with
their fellow-men, my wonder changed to pity.
“A man in a ship,” says
Dr. Johnson, “is worse than a man in a jail;
for the latter has more room, better food, and commonly
better company, and is in safety.”
CHAPTER XII. Monsieur Dubois
“I sha’nt fight with fistesses,
it’s wulgar! but if he’s a mind
to anything like a gemman, here’s my card!”
The love-lorn Matthew had departed,
no doubt unable to bear the sight of that staircase
whose boards no longer resounded with the slip-slap
of the slippers of that hypocritical beauty, “his
Mary.” With him, the romance of the landing-place,
and the squad, had evaporated; and I had no sympathies,
no pursuits, in common with the remaining “boys” my
newly-acquired post, too, nearly occupied the whole
of my time, while my desire of study increased with
the acquisition of books, in which all my pocket-money
was expended.
One day, my good friend, Mr. Wallis,
entered the office, followed by a short, sharp-visaged
man, with a sallow complexion; he was dressed in a
shabby frock, buttoned up to the throat a
rusty black silk neckerchief supplying the place of
shirt and collar.
He stood just within the threshold
of the door, holding his napless hat in his hand.
“Well, Wally, my buck,”
cried my master, extending his hand.
Mr. Wallis advanced close to his elbow,
and spoke in a whisper; but I observed, by the direction
of his eyes, that the subject of his communication
was the stranger.
“Ha!” said Mr. Timmis,
“it’s all very well, Walley but
I hate all forriners; why don’t he
go back to Frogland, and not come here, palming himself
upon us. It’s no go not a scuddick.
They’re all a parcel o’ humbugs and
no mistake!”
As he uttered this gracious opinion
sufficiently loud to strike upon the tympanum of the
poor fellow at the door, I could perceive his dark
eyes glisten, and the blood tinge his woe-begone cheeks;
his lips trembled with emotion: there was an
evident struggle between offended gentility, and urgent
necessity.
Pride, however, gained the mastery;
and advancing the right foot, he raised his hat, and
with peculiar grace bowing to the two friends “Pardon,
Monsieur Vallis,” said he, in tremulous accents,
“I am ‘de trop;’ permit, me to visdraw” and
instantly left the office.
Mr. Timmis, startled by his sudden
exit, looked at Mr. Wallis for an explanation.
“By ___!” exclaimed Mr. Wallis seriously--“you’ve hurt that poor fellow’s
feelings. I would sooner have given a guinea than he should have heard
you. Dubois is a gentleman; and altho’ he’s completely ‘stumped,’ and
has’nt a place to put his head in, he’s tenacious of that respect which
is due to every man, whether he happens to be at a premium, or a
discount.”
“Go it!” cried Mr. Timmis, colouring deeply at this merited reproof “If
this ain’t a reg’lar sermon! I didn’t mean to hurt his feelings, d___
me; I’m a reg’lar John Bull, and he should know better than to be popped
at my bluntness. D___ me, I wouldn’t hurt a worm--you know I wouldn’t,
Wallis.”
There was a tone of contrition in
this rambling apology that satisfied Mr. Wallis of
its truth; and he immediately entered into an explanation
on the Frenchman’s situation. He had known
him, he said, for several years as a tutor in the
family of one of his clients, by whom he was much
respected: a heavy loss had compelled them suddenly
to reduce their establishment; Dubois had entreated
to remain with his pupil refused to receive
any salary and had even served his old patron
in the capacity of a menial, adhering to him in all
his misfortunes, and only parted with him, reluctantly,
at the door of the debtor’s prison!
“Did he do that?” said my master; and I saw his eyes moisten at the
relation. “A French mounseer do that! Game--d___ me!”--and lifting the
lid of his desk, he drew out a five pound note! “Here, Wallis, tip him
this flimsey! Tell him you know what to say I’m no speechifier but
you know what I mean.” I almost jumped up and hugged my master, I was so
excited.
The next day Monsieur Dubois again
made his appearance; and Mr. Wallis had the pleasure
of beholding Mr. Timmis and his gallic friend on the
best terms imaginable.
As for me, I had good cause to rejoice;
for it was agreed that I should take lessons in the
“foreign lingo,” by way of giving him “a
lift,” as Mr. Timmis expressed it. I remember
him with feelings of gratitude; for I owe much more
than the knowledge of the language to his kindness
and instruction.
As for Mr. Timmis, he could never
sufficiently appreciate his worth, although he uniformly
treated him with kindness.
“Talk of refinement,”
said he, one day, when discussing Dubois’ merits
with Mr. Wallis; “I saw a bit to-day as bangs
everything. A cadger sweeping a crossing fell
out with a dustman. Wasn’t there some spicy
jaw betwixt ’em. Well, nothing would suit,
but the dustman must have a go, and pitch into the
cadger.
“D___ me, what does the cove do, but he outs with a bit of dirty
pasteboard, and he says, says he, ’I sha’nt fight with fistesses, it’s
wulgar! but if he’s a mind to anything like a gemman, here’s my card!’
Wasn’t there a roar! I lugg’d out a bob, and flung it at the vagabond
for his wit.”
CHAPTER XIII. My Talent Called into Active Service
“Ar’n’t you glad you ain’t
a black-a-moor?”
“I should think so,” replied
his sooty brother, “they’re sich ugly
warmints.”
Having to deliver a letter, containing
an account and a stock receipt, to one of Mr. Timmis’s
clients, residing at the west end of the town; in
crossing through one of the fashionable squares, I
observed a flat-faced negro servant in livery, standing
at the door of one of the houses.
Two chimney sweepers who happened
to be passing, showed their white teeth in a contemptuous
grin at the African.
“Bob,” I overheard one
remark, “ar’n’t you glad you ain’t
a black-a-moor?”
“I should think so,” replied
his sooty brother, “they’re sich ugly
warmints. Master’s daughter, wots come
from boarding school! says the sight of ‘ems’
enough to frighten one into conwulsions!”
Alas! for the prejudice of the world!
How much this ignorant remark reminded me of my patron’s
unfounded hatred of all “forriners.”
It was precisely the same sentiment, differently
expressed, that actuated the thoughts and opinions
of both.
I must, however, do Mr. Timmis the
justice to say, that he made ample amends to Monsieur
Dubois for the affront he had so thoughtlessly put
upon the worthy Frenchman; and did all in his power
to obtain him pupils.
The consequent change in his dress
and manner, his amiable conduct, and gentlemanly deportment,
at last completely won upon the esteem of the boisterous
broker, who swore, (for that was generally his elegant
manner of expressing his sincerity) that Dubois was
a ‘downright good’un;’ and were
it not for his foreign accent, he should have taken
him for an Englishman born really believing,
that there was no virtue in the world but of English
growth.
I had now been above twelve-months
in his office, and although I had received but a moderate
compensation for my services, yet the vast improvement
I had made (thanks to the instruction of Monsieur Dubois,)
was more valuable than gold. My father also,
though but scantily furnished with book-knowledge,
had, nevertheless, the good sense to appreciate and
encourage my progress; he was well aware, from observation,
that ‘knowledge is power,’ and would frequently
quote the old saw,
“When house, and land, and money’s spent;
Then larning is most excellent”
and spared all the money he could
scrape together to purchase books for me.
One day Mr. Crobble came into the
office with an open letter in his hand. “Here,” cried
he, “I’ve received a remittance at last
from that, German fellow two good bills
on the first house in the city but I can’t
make top nor tail of his rigmarole. Do you know
any chap among your acquaintance who can read German?”
“Not I,” replied Mr. Timmis.
“Will you allow me, Mr. Crobble?”
said I, stepping forward. “This letter
is written in French, not German, Sir,” I observed.
“What’s the difference
to me, Master Andrew; it might as well be in wild
Irish, for the matter o’ that.”
“Andrew can read the lingo,” said my master.
“The devil he can!” exclaimed
Mr. Crobble; “I dare say I shall be able to
make it out,” said I; “and if not, Monsieur
Dubois will be here; to-morrow morning, and you can
have it by twelve o’clock, sir.”
“Ain’t that the ticket?”
exclaimed Mr. Timmis, delighted at the surprise of
his friend; “you don’t know how vastly
clever we are, old fellow.”
Mr. Crobble, much gratified at this
information, placed the letter in my hands; and, leaving
me to take a lunch at Garraway’s with Mr. Timmis,
I eagerly sat about my task and luckily
it was not only plainly written, but the subject-matter
by no means difficult, being rather complimentary
than technical. By the time they returned, I
had not only translated, but made a fair copy of it,
in my best hand.
“Come, that is clever,”
said Mr. Crobble; “let me see, now, what shall
I give you?”
“Nothing, Sir,” I promptly
replied; “I am Mr. Timmis’s clerk and
all that I know I owe to his kindness.”
I saw, with pleasure, that this compliment
was not lost upon my master.
Mr. Crobble was really a gentleman
in feeling, and therefore did not persist in offering
me any remuneration; but as he left the office, he
said, “I thank you, Mr. Andrew I
shall not forget your services;” and departed
evidently much pleased with my performance.
CHAPTER XIV. A Dilemma
“Ee cawnt gow back, ’cause they locks
the gates,”
“Well, can we go forward, then?” “Noa,
ee cawnt, ’cause the roads are under water;”
“Ee cawnt gow back, ’cause
they locks the gates,” said a bumpkin on the
road-side to a Cockney-party in a one-horse chaise.
“Well, can we go forward, then?”
demanded the anxious and wearied traveller.
“Noa, ee cawnt, ’cause
the roads are under water;” replied the joskin,
with a grin.
This was certainly a situation more
ridiculous than interesting; and I smiled when I heard
the story told, little suspecting that Fortune would
one day throw me into a similar dilemina so
blindly do we mortals hug ourselves in the supposed
security of our tact and foresight.
“How d’ye do, Mr. Andrew,”
said Mr. Crobble, when he had seated himself, and
sufficiently inflated his lungs, after the fatiguing
operation of mounting the stairs.
“Where’s Timmis? tell him I
want a word with him.”
I quickly summoned my patron, and followed him into
the office.
“Well, old puff and blow!”
exclaimed Mr. Timmis, with his usual familiarity.
“What’s in the wind?
Want to sell out? The fives are fallen three
per cent. since Friday. All the ’Change
is as busy as the devil in a high wind.”
“No no more dabbling,
Timmis,” replied Mr. Crobble; “I lost a
cool hundred last account; I want a word in private
with you” and he glanced towards
me; upon which I seized my hat, and took up my position
at my old post on the landing. How were my feelings
altered since I first loitered there, listening to
the marvels of poor Matthew!
I was lost in a pleasant reverie,
when the sharp voice of Mr. Timmis recalled me.
“Andrew,” said he, “my
friend Crobble wants a clerk, and has cast his eye
upon you. What do you say?”
I scarcely knew what to say.
On one side stood my master, to whom I really owed
so much on the other his friend, who offered
me a promotion, which I felt, on many accounts, was
most attractive. “I should have no objection,”
I replied, “but great pleasure in serving Mr.
Crobble, sir but I have received
so many favours from you, that I’m afraid I
might seem ungrateful.”
The good-natured Mr. Wallis happily
stepped in at this moment to my relief.
“Nonsense,” replied Mr.
Timmis; “the stock is delivered to the highest
bidder; here Crobble backs eighteen shillings a week
against my half-a-crown-take him.”
I still felt some hesitation, although
it was evident, from his expression, that Mr. Timmis
valued the servant much less than the servant valued
the master.
“Only look here, Wally,”
cried he; “here stands Andrew, like an ass between
two bundles of hay.”
“Rather like a bundle of hay
between two asses, I think,” replied Mr. Wallis;
and good-naturedly tapping me on the shoulder, he continued
“accept Mr. Crobble’s offer, Master Andrew:
you’re much too good for Timmis he
can soon get a grubby half-crown boy but
you may wait a long time for such an eligible offer.”
“Eighteen shillings a week,”
said Mr. Crobble; who, I must confess, without any
particular stretch of self-esteem, appeared anxious
to engage me , “but I shall want
security.”
That word “security” fell
like an avalanche on my mounting spirit, and cast
me headlong down the imaginary ascent my busy thoughts
had climbed to!
“Five hundred pounds,”
continued Mr. Crobble; “d’ye think have
you any friends?”
“None, sir; my father is a poor
man, and quite unable.” I could scarcely
speak like the driver of the one-horse chaise,
I could neither advance nor recede.
“The father,” said Mr.
Timmis, “is only a poor shoe-maker a
good fellow tho’ an excellent fit!”
“You mean to say,” cried
Mr. Wallis, “it were bootless to seek security
of the shoe-maker.”
A laugh ensued; and, notwithstanding
my agitated feelings, I could not forbear being tickled
by Mr. Wallis’s humour, and joining in the merriment.
This sally gave a most favourable
turn to the discussion. “Come,” said
Mr. Wallis, “I’ll stand two hundred and
fifty and you, Timmis, must go the other.”
“No; d___ me, he may bolt with the cash-box, and let me in, perhaps,”
exclaimed Mr. Timmis. I burst into tears; I felt, that from my long and
faithful services, I deserved a better opinion although I had no right
to expect so great a favour.
Rude as he was, he felt some compunction
at having wounded my feelings; and swore a round oath
that he was only joking, and I was a fool. “Did
I think, for a moment, that Wally should get the start
of him; no I was an honest chap, and he’d
put his fist to double the amount to serve me;”
and then bade me “sit to the books,” and
make all square before I cut my stick: and thus
happily concluded this most momentous change in my
circumstances.
CHAPTER XV. An Old Acquaintance
“Only three holidays left, and
still this plaguey glass says ’very wet;’ I
can’t bear it I can’t and
I won’t.”
How impatiently did I count the minutes
’till the office was closed, for I longed to
communicate the glad tidings of my good fortune to
my worthy father. The old man wept with joy
at the prospect, and assisted me in rearing those
beautiful fabrics termed castles in the air.
His own trade, by the recommendation
of the rough, ill-mannered, but good-natured Mr. Timmis,
had wonderfully increased; and, by making some temporary
sacrifices, he was enabled to give me an appearance
more suitable to the new position in which I was so
unexpectedly placed. In a narrow alley, on the
south side of the Royal Exchange, on the ground-floor,
I found the counting-house of Mr. Crobble. Under
his directions, I quickly made myself master of the
details of the business. Alas! it was but the
slender fragment of a once flourishing mercantile
house, of which time had gradually lopped off the correspondents,
whilst his own inertness had not supplied the deficiency
by a new connexion; for his father had left him such
an ample fortune, that he was almost careless of the
pursuit, although he could not make up his mind, as
he said, to abandon the “old shop,” where
his present independence had been accumulated.
I consequently found plenty of leisure, uninterrupted
by the continual hurry and bustle of a broker’s
office, to pursue my favourite studies, and went on,
not only to the entire satisfaction of Mr. Crobble,
but to my own, and really began to find myself a man
of some importance.
In the course of business, I one day
fell in with an old acquaintance.
“A parcel for Cornelius Crobble,
Esq.,” said a little porter, of that peculiar
stamp which is seen hanging about coach-offices “Two
and-sixpence.”
I looked at the direction, and drew
out the “petty cash” to defray the demand;
when, then, first looking at the man, I thought I recognised
his features.
“What!” cried I, “Isn’t your
name ”
“Matthew,” answered he quickly.
“Matthew! why, don’t you know
me?”
“No, sir,” replied he, staring vacantly
at me.
“Indeed! Have I so
outgrown all knowledge? Don’t you recollect
Andrew Mullins?”
“Good heavins!” exclaimed
he, with his well-remembered nasal twang; “are
you ”
“Yes.”
“Well, I declare now you’ve
growed into a gentleman. I should’nt I
really should’nt ” He did not
say what he really “should not” but
extended his hand. “Hope you ain’t
too proud to shake hands with an old friend? ”
I shook him heartily by the hand,
and made some enquiries touching his history.
Poor Matthew seated himself with all
the ease imaginable, and laid his knot beside him,
and began, after the manner of his favourite heroes,
to “unbosom himself.”
“You’ve a father,”
said he; “but I’m a horphan, without father
nor mother a houtcast!” and
he sunk his head upon his bosom; and I observed that
his scrubby crop was already becoming thin and bald.
“Since I left the place in the
‘lane,’ I’ve bin a-going down down” and
he nearly touched the floor with his hand. “That
gal, Mary, was the ruin of me I shall never
forget her. My hopes is sunk, like the sun
in the ocean, never to rise agin!” I was rather
amused by this romantic, though incorrect, figure;
but I let him proceed: “I’ve got several
places, but lost ’em all. I think there’s
a spell upon me; and who can struggle against his
fate?”
I tried to console him, and found,
upon a further confession, that he had flown to spirits
“now and then,” to blunt the sharp tooth
of mental misery.
Here, then, was the chief cause of
his want of success, which he blindly attributed to
fate the common failing of all weak minds.
For my part, notwithstanding the imperial authority
of the great Napoleon himself, I have no faith in
Fate, believing that the effect, whether good or bad,
may invariably be traced to some cause in the conduct
of the individual, as certainly as the loss of a man,
in a game of draughts, is the consequence of a “wrong
move” by the player! And poor Matthew’s
accusation of Fate put me in mind of the school-boy,
who, during a wet vacation, rushed vindictively at
the barometer, and struck it in the face, exclaiming “Only
three holidays left, and still this plaguey glass
says ’very wet;’ I can’t
bear it I can’t and I won’t.”
I did all in my power to comfort the
little porter, exhorting him to diligence and sobriety.
“You were always a kind friend,”
said he, pathetically; “and perhaps perhaps
you will give me something to drink your health, for
old-acquaintance sake.” This unexpected
turn compelled me to laughter. I gave him sixpence.
Alas! Matthew, I found, was but
a piece of coarse gingerbread, tricked out with the
Dutch metal of false sentiment.
CHAPTER XVI. The Loss of a Friend
“I say, ma’am, do you
happen to have the hair of ’All round my hat
I vears a green villow?’”
I was startled by the batho-romantic
sentiment of Matthew, somewhat in the same manner
as the young lady at the bookseller’s, when she
was accosted by a musical dustman, with “I
say, ma’am, do you happen to have the hair of
‘All round my hat I vears a green villow?’”
But, however ridiculous they may appear,
such incongruous characters are by no means caricatures nay,
are “as plentiful as blackberries,” especially
in the lower grades of society.
I was indulging in a reverie of this
sort, when Monsieur Dubois, my kind and gentlemanly
tutor, abruptly entered the office. I felt proud
in having obtained his friendship for he
was to me a mine of wealth, and appeared master of
every subject upon which my curiosity prompted me to
inquire, whilst the worthy Frenchman was so flattered
by my sincere respect, that he took a delight in imparting
his knowledge to so willing and diligent a scholar.
Mr. Crobble had promised that I should
continue my studies, being much pleased with the proof
I had been fortunate enough to give him of my progress,
generously offering to defray the charges of tuition;
and I found in my new place, even more time than when
in the employ of Mr. Timmis: for, indeed, half-a-clerk
would have been sufficient to have conducted the whole
business.
I was no less surprised at the unusual
abruptness of approach, than at the extraordinary
excitement apparent in the manner of Monsieur Dubois;
for he always boasted of his coolness and philosophy
under all circumstances.
“Peace, peace! ’mon
cher ami’ peace is proclaim” cried
he, raising his hat and his eyes to the dingy ceiling
of our office “Grace a Dieu! lé
tyran Napoleon lé charlatan
est renverse de son piédestal oui,
mon élève I vill see, again once
more my dear France!”
He grasped my hand in his ecstasy,
and tears filled his eyes to overflowing. I
had heard rumours of the restoration of the Bourbons,
but I had not anticipated the loss of my inestimable
tutor.
I was almost ashamed of my selfishness;
but vanquished my feelings so far as to congratulate
him on his prospects, with as much cordiality and
appearance of truth as I could assume.
“I trust, however,” said
I, “that restored to your country, and your
friends, you will find that happiness you so much deserve.
Go where you will, you will be followed by the regrets
of your English friends.”
“Ah! les Anglais! ’combien’ how
motch ‘reconnaissance?’” said he,
“I vill have for them! I sall them forget
nevare!”
Mr. Crobble interrupted our colloquy.
“All right t’other side the channel,
Mounseer,” cried be, elated; “we’ve
licked Boney: he’s done up; stocks are
up; and Timmis, (your old master, Andrew) is as busy
as a bee only he’s making money
instead of honey!”
He shook hands with Monsieur Dubois;
and congratulated him upon the restoration of Louis
the Eighteenth.
I mentioned to him Monsieur Dubois’
intention of proceeding immediately to France.
“He’s right,” cried he; “let
every man stick to his King and his country; and I
say” he suddenly checked himself,
and beckoning me aside, continued in an under tone “Andrew,
you understand this Mounseer better than I do; he
appears a good fellow in the main: if he should
want a lift, to fit him out for the voyage, or any
thing of that sort, tell him Corny Crobble will lend
him a hand, for old acquaintance sake; I shan’t
stick at a matter of forty or fifty pound you
understand put it to him, as a matter of
business; for that’ll suit his proud stomach
best, perhaps” then, turning to Monsieur,
he said, “Excuse whispering before company,
Mounseer Dubois. Good morning.”
“Bon jour, Monsieur,”
replied Dubois, making my obese governor one of his
most graceful bows.
I was highly gratified at being selected
as the medium of this generous offer; which Monsieur
Dubois received without hesitation, as one who intended
to repay it; but, at the same time, with the most grateful
acknowledgments of Mr. Crobble’s considerate
kindness.
CHAPTER XVII. Promotion
“I, think there must be something
wrong about your rowing,”
“My rowing!” cried I;
“nonsense! it’s because you
don’t steer right.”
“I remember, when I was a young
man, I once took a fancy to rowing,” said Mr.
Crobble one day to me. “I wasn’t
then quite so round as I am at present. Cousin
Tom and I hired a wherry, but somehow we found we didn’t
make much way. Tom was steering, and I took the
sculls, sitting my back to him like a gaby!”
“I, think there must be something
wrong about your rowing,” said Tom.
“My rowing!” cried I;
“nonsense! it’s because you
don’t steer right. Well, at last a waterman
came alongside, and grinning (the fellow couldn’t
help it) good-naturedly, pointed out the cause of our
dilemma; at which we both laughed heartily.
Ever since that time I’ve been of opinion, that
unless people, ‘who row in the same boat,’
understand each other, they’ll never get along ”
I smiled at this lengthy prologue,
not conceiving to what it could possibly lead.
“Now, Mr. Andrew,” resumed
he, “I mean to be very industrious, and devote
a whole day to giving you an insight into the business;
after which I expect you’ll pull away, while
I only steer, which will suit me to a T ,
you understand.”
“Exactly, sir,” I replied;
and, in consequence, he really set about the task;
and I soon acquired sufficient knowledge in the business,
as not only to row in the same boat with him, but,
what was still more agreeable to my patron’s
indolence, to manage the “craft” without
his assistance.
Six months after the departure of
Monsieur Dubois, he sent a remittance, with interest
on the amount, advanced by Mr. Crobble, with a long
epistle to me, stating, that he had entered into partnership
with his elder brother, and commenced the business
of a banker, under the firm of “Dubois Frères,”
at the same time informing me that they were already
doing a large stroke of business, and wanted an agent
in London, requesting me to inform him if it would
be agreeable to Mr. Crobble for them to draw upon
his respectable house.
I saw at once the advantages of this
correspondence, and so warmly solicited Mr. Crobble
to accede, that he at last consented, provided I undertook
the whole management of the affair.
The English were now daily flocking
to Paris, and the money required for their lavish
expenditure in the gay capital of France compelled
their application to the bankers.
Messrs. Dubois Frères had their
share of this lucrative business, and, as their agents
in London, we necessarily became participators in their
large transactions.
In three months these operations had
increased so enormously, and the profits were so considerable,
that Mr. Crobble not only advanced my salary, but
consented to engage the assistance of two junior clerks.
I was now a man of some consideration. I was
the senior clerk of the establishment, although the
youngest of the three.
In two years I found myself at the
head of six clerks, and had as much business as I
could possibly manage.
My star was in the ascendant.
I had not only more money than I required for my
expenses, but was enabled to maintain my poor old father,
who daily became more and more infirm.
I rented a small cottage at the rural
village of Hackney, but my labour occupied me early
and late, and it was only on a Sunday I could really
enjoy my home.
Three years after quitting the office
of Mr. Timmis, I had the inexpressible pleasure of
employing him to purchase stock for his errand boy!
I was proud as a king.
“I said that boy would turn
out well,” said the good-natured Mr. Wallis;
“he always had a good principle.”
“And now bids fair,” said
Mr. Timmis, “to have both principal and interest.”
Mr. Crobble having lately had a large
property left him in Hertfordshire, rarely came to
the office above once a-quarter, to settle accounts.
“A good dividend a
very good dividend!” said he, upon receipt of
the last quarter’s profits. “But,
Mr. Mullins, I cannot forget that this business is
your child.”
“And I’m happy to say a thriving one,”
I replied.
“Are you satisfied perfectly satisfied?”
demanded he.
“Beyond my wishes, sir.”
“I am not,” said he shortly.
“No, sir?” exclaimed I, with surprise.
“No, Sir!” repeated he.
“Those who sow should reap. I’ve
no children I’m an idle fellow-a
drone, sir and won’t consent to consume
all the honey. Don’t speak, sir read
that!” and he pulled a parchment from his pocket.
It was a deed of partnership between Cornelius Crobble,
of Lodge,
Hertfordshire, Esquire, and the poor cobbler’s
son,
Andrew Mullins.
A RIGMAROLE. PART I
“De omnibus rebus.”
The evening is calm the
sun has just sunk below the tiles of the house, which
serenely bounds the view from the quiet attic where
I wield the anserine plume for the delectation of
the pensive public all nature, etc. the
sky is deep blue, tinged with mellowest red, like a
learned lady delicately rouged, and ready for a literary
soiree the sweet-voiced pot-boy has commenced
his rounds with “early beer,” and with
leathern lungs, and a sovereign contempt for the enactments
of the new police-act greasy varlets
proclaim to the hungry neighbourhood “Baked
sheeps’ heads, hot!” O! savoury
morsel! May no legislative measure ever
silence this peripatetic purveyor to the poor! or
prevent his calling may the tag-rag and
bob-tail never reject a sheep’s head!
“I never sees a sheep’s
head, but I thinks on you,” said Mrs. Spriggins,
whose physiognomy was as yellow and as wrinkled as
a duck’s foot. Spriggins whipped his horse,
for they were driving in a one-horse chaise, with
two boys, and an infant in arms Spriggins
whipped his horse spitefully, for Mrs. S.’s
sarcasm inspired him with a splenetic feeling; and
as he durst not chastise her, the animal received the
benefit of her impetus. Spriggins was a fool
by nature, and selfish by disposition. Mrs. S.
was a shrivelled shrew, with a “bit o’
money;” that was the bait at which
he, like a hungry gudgeon, had seized, and he was hooked!
The “spousals” had astonished the vulgar the
little nightingale of Twickenham would have only smiled;
for has he not sweetly sung
“There swims no goose so grey, but soon or late
She finds some honest gander for her mate;”
and her union was a verification of
this flowing couplet.
At different times, what different
meanings the self-same words obtain. According
to the reading of the new poor-law guardians, “Union,”
as far as regards man and wife, is explained “Separation;”
or, like a ship when in distress, the “Union”
is reversed! In respect of his union, Spriggins
would have most relished the reading of the former!
But there are paradoxes a species of verbal
puzzle which, in the course of this ride,
our amiable family of the Spriggins’s experienced
to their great discomfort.
Drawing up a turnpike-gate, Mrs. S.
handed a ticket to the white-aproned official of the
trust.
“You should have gone home the
way you came out that ticket won’t
do here,” said the man; “so out with your
coppers three-pence.”
“I don’t think I’ve
got any half-pence!” said Mr. S., fumbling in
his pennyless pocket.
“Well, then, I must give you change.”
“But I’m afraid I hav’nt
got any silver,” replied Mr. S., with a long
face. “I say, mister, cou’dn’t
you trust me? I’d be wery sure to
bring it to you.”
But the man only winked, and, significantly
pointing the thumb of his left hand over his sinister
shoulder, backed the horse.
“Vell, I’m blessed,”
exclaimed Mr. S. and so he was with
a scolding wife and a squalling infant; “and
they calls this here a trust, the fools! and there
ain’t no trust at all!”
And the poor animal got another vindictive
cut. Oh! Mr. Martin! thou friend
of quadrupeds! would that thou had’st
been there. “It’s all my eye and
Betty Martin!” muttered Mr. S., as he wheeled
about the jaded beast he drove, and retraced the road.
A RIMAROLE PART II
“Acti labores sunt jucundi”
The horse is really a noble animal I
hate all rail-roads, for putting his nose out of joint puffing,
blowing, smoking, jotting always going
in a straight line: if this mania should continue,
we shall soon have the whole island ruled over like
a copy-book nothing but straight lines and
sloping lines through every county in the kingdom!
Give me the green lanes and hills,
when I’m inclined to diverge; and the smooth
turnpike roads, when disposed to “go a-head.” “I
can’t bear a horse,” cries Numps:
now this feeling is not at all reciprocal, for every
horse can bear a man. “I’m off to
the Isle of Wight,” says Numps: “Then
you’re going to Ryde at last,” quoth I,
“notwithstanding your hostility to horse-flesh.”
“Wrong!” replies he, “I’m
going to Cowes.” “Then you’re
merely a mills-and-water traveller, Numps!”
The ninny! he does not know the delight of a canter
in the green fields except, indeed, the
said canter be of the genus-homo, and a field preacher!
My friend Rory’s the boy for
a horse; he and his bit o’ blood are notorious
at all the meetings. In fact I never saw him
out of the saddle: he is a perfect living specimen
of the fabled Centaur full of anecdotes
of fox-chases, and steeple-chases; he amuses me exceedingly.
I last encountered him in a green lane near Hornsey,
mounted on a roadster his “bit o’
blood” had been sent forward, and he was leisurely
making his way to the appointed spot.
“I was in Buckinghamshire last
week,” said he; “a fine turn out such
a field! I got an infernal topper tho’ smashed
my best tile; tell you how it was. There was
a high paling put Spitfire to it, and she
took it in fine style; but, as luck would have it,
the gnarled arm of an old tree came whop against my
head, and bonneted me completely! Thought I was
brained but we did it cleverly however although,
if ever I made a leap in the dark, that was one.
I was at fault for a minute but Spitfire
was all alive, and had it all her own way: with
some difficulty I got my nob out of the beaver-trap,
and was in at the death!”
I laughed heartily at his awkward
dilemma, and wishing him plenty of sport, we parted.
Poor Rory! he has suffered many a
blow and many a fall in his time; but he is still
indefatigable in the pursuit of his favourite pastime so
true is it that
“The pleasure we delight in physic’s pain;”
his days pass lightly, and all his years are leap
years!
He has lately inherited a considerable
property, accumulated by a miserly uncle, and has
most appropriately purchased an estate in one of the
Ridings of Yorkshire!
With all his love for field-sports,
however, he is no better “the better,”
says he, “is often the worse; and I’ve
no notion of losing my acres in gambling; besides,
my chief aim being to be considered a good horseman,
I should be a consummate fool, if, by my own folly,
I lost my seat!”
A RIGMAROLE PART III
“Oderunt hilarem tristes.”
The sad only hate a joke. Now,
my friend Rory is in no sense a sad fellow, and he
loves a joke exceedingly. His anecdotes of the
turf are all racy; nor do those of the field less
deserve the meed of praise! Lord F____ was a
dandy sportsman, and the butt of the regulars.
He was described by Rory as a “walkingstick” slender,
but very “knobby” with a pair
of mustaches and an eye-glass. Having lost the
scent, he rode one day slick into a gardener’s
ground, when his prad rammed his hind-legs into a
brace of hand-glasses, and his fore-legs into a tulip-bed.
The horticulturist and the haughty aristocrat how
different were their feelings the cucumber
coolness of the ‘nil admirari’
of the one was ludicrously contrasted with the indignation
of the astonished cultivator of the soil. “Have
you seen the hounds this way?” demanded Lord
F____, deliberately viewing him through his glass.
“Hounds!” bitterly repeated the gardener, clenching his fist. “Dogs, I
mean,” continued Lord F____; “you know what a pack of hounds are--don’t
you?”
“I know what a puppy is,”
retorted the man; “and if so be you don’t
budge, I’ll spile your sport. But, first
and foremost, you must lug out for the damage you
have done you’re a trespasser.”
“I’m a sportsman, fellow what
d’ye mean?”
“Then sport the blunt,” replied the gardener; and, closing his gates,
took Lord F____ prisoner: nor did he set him free till he had reimbursed
him for the mischief he had done.
This was just; and however illegal
were the means, I applauded them for the end.
Our friend B___d, that incorrigible punster, said, “that his horse had
put his foot in and he had paid his footing,”
B___d, by the bye, is a nonpareil; whether horses, guns, or dogs, he is
always “at home:” and even in yachting, (as he truly boasts) he is never
“at sea.” Riding with him one day in an omnibus, I praised the
convenience of the vehicle; “An excellent vehicle,” said he, “for
punning;” which he presently proved, for a dowager having flopped into
one of the seats, declared that she “never rid vithout fear in any of
them omnibus things.”
“What is she talking about?” said I.
“De omnibus rebus,” replied
he, “truly she talks like the first
lady of the land; but, as far as I can see, she possesses
neither the carriage nor the manners!”
“Can you read the motto on the
Conductor’s button?” I demanded.
“No;” he replied, “but I think nothing
would be more appropriate to his calling than the
monkish phrase ’pro omnibus curo!’”
At this juncture a jolt, followed
by a crash, announced that we had lost a wheel.
The Dowager shrieked. “We shall all be
killed,” cried she; “On’y to think
of meeting vun’s death in a common omnibus!”
“Mors communis omnibus!” whispered B___d, and----
I had written thus far, when spit spit splutter plop! my
end of candle slipped into the blacking bottle in
which it was “sustained,” and I was left
to admire the stars of night, and to observe
that “Charles’s wain was over the chimney;”
so I threw down my pen and, as the house
was a-bed and I am naturally of a “retiring”
disposition, I sought my pallet dreaming
of literary fame! although, in the matter
of what might be in store for me, I was completely
in the dark!
AN INTERCEPTED LETTER FROM DICK SLAMMER TO HIS FRIEND SAM FLYKE.
eppin-toosday
my dear sam
i’ve rote this ere for to let
you no i’m in jolly good health and harty as
a brick and hope my tulip as your as vell read
this to sal who can’t do the same herself
seeing as her edication aintt bin in that line give
her my love and tell her to take care o’ the
kids. i’ve got a silk vipe
for sal, tell her; and suffing for ’em all,
for i’ve made a xlent spec o’ the woy’ge
and bagg’d some tin too i can tell you; and vont
ve have a blow out ven i cums amung you napps that’s
the ass is particklar vell and
as dun his dooty like a riq’lar flint
i rode too races ar’ needn’t
say as i vun em for napps is a houtanhouter an no
mistake!
lork! didn’t i make the natifs
stare! and a gintlum as vos by, vanted to oan
’im an oferd any blunt for im but walker! says
i there aint sick a ass as this ’ere hanimal
in the hole country besides he’s
like as vun o’ me oan famly, for i’ve
brot im up in a manner from the time he vos a
babby! he’s up to a move or
too and knows my voice jist for all the world like
a Chrissen.
Red-nose Bill vot had a nook ’em
down here brings this and he’ll tell you all
about the noose i shall foller in
about, a veek or so tell sal
to keep up her sperrits and not to lush vith Bet i
dont like that ere ooman at all a
idle wagabone as is going to the Union like vinkin i’m
no temperens cove meself as you nose, sam, but enufs
enuf and as good as a feast.
The gintry as taken hervite a
likin to Napps and me they looks
upon im as hervite a projidy for
he’s licked all the donkies as run agin im the
vimmen too (you no my insinnivating
vay, sam,) and nobody nose better than me how to git
the right sow by the ear no sooner
do i see ’em a comin vith their kids, than i
slips of and doffs my tile, an i says, says i do
let the yung jentlum have a cast and
then the little in coorse begins a plegyin the old
’uns, and so the jobs
done!
vot’s to pay, my good man?
says she
oh nothink,
marm, says i, as modest as a turnip new-peeld napps
is a rig’lar racer i dont
let im hout but i’m so fond o’
children!
this here Yummeree
doos the bisnis prime, for the vimmen comes over the
jentlum and a pus is made up for anuther race and
in coorse i pockits the Bibs cos
vy? napps is nothink but a good
’un.
’tother day hearin as there
vos an hunt in the naborwood: napps,
says i-a speakin to my ass napps
ve’ll jist go and look at ’em
vell ve hadnt
got no more nor a mile wen i comes slap alongside of
a starch-up chap upatop of raythur a good lookin’
oss. but my i! vornt there bellows
to mend; and he made no more vay nor a duck in a gutter. i
says, sir, says i, dye think ve shall be in time
for the hunt? but he never turns is hed but sets bolt
uprite as stiff as pitch jist for
all the world as if his mother had vashed im in starch.
i twigs his lean
in a jiffy so i says says i “oh-you
needn’t be so shy i rides my own hannimal,”
vich i takes it
vos more nor he co’d say, for his vas nothin
more nor a borrod’un and if i dont mistake
he vos a vitechapler i think
ive seed im a sarvin out svipes and blue ruin
at the gin-spinners corner o’ summerset street
or petticut lane dunno witch.
sam, i hates pride
so i cuts his cumpny i says says
i napps it dont fit you aint
a nunter you’re o’ny a racer and that chaps
afeard his prad vill be spiled a keeping conapny with
a ass leastways i’m o’
the same opinyon in that respec consarning meself
and so i shall mizzle.
a true gintlum
as is a gintlum, sam is as difrent to these here stuck-up
fellers az a sovrin is to a coronashun copper vot’s
on’y gilt.
vell lie turns hof over the left and
vips up his animal tryin to get up a trot bobbin
up and down in his sturrups and bumpin hisself to make
a show all flummery! he
takes the middel o’ the field to hisself, and
i cox my i for a houtlet and spi’s a gait that’s
the ticket! says i; so liting the ’bacca
and blowin a cloud I trots along, and had jist cum
to the gait ven turnin’ round to look for
the gin-spinner, blow me! sam, if i didn’t see
the cove again heels over head over an edge like
a tumler at bartlmy fare; vile
his preshus hannimal vas a takin it cooly in the meddo!
“vat a rum chap” says
i, a larfin reddy to bust “vat
a rum chap to go over the ’edge that vay! ven
here’s a riglar gait to ride through!”
and so, i druv
on, but somehow, sam, i coudn’t help a thinkin’
as praps the waggerbun lead broke his nek stif
as it vas! and so i said to napps “napps,” says
i “lets go and look arter
the warmint for charity’s-sake”
napps vots as
good-natur’d a ass as his master, didn’t
make no obstacle and so ve vent –
my i! sam,
i’d a stood a Kervorten and three outs ad you
a bin there! there vas my jentlum
up to his nek in a duckpond lookin’
as miserribble as a stray o’ mutton in a batter
puddin’
“halp! halp!” says he,
a spittin’ the green veeds out of his mouth “halp
me, faller, and i’ll stand a bob” or summat
to that efeck.
but i couldn’t
hold out my fin to him for larfin and
napps begun a brayin at sich a rate vich
struck me as if he vas a larfin too, and made me larf
wusser than ever
vell, at last,
i contrivis to lug him out, and a preshus figger he
cut to be sure he had kervite a
new sute o’ black mud, vich didn’t
smell particlar sveet i can tell you.
“ain’t hurt yoursef?”
says i, “have you?”
“no” says
he “but i’m dem
wet and utterably spiled” or
vords like that for he chewd’em so fine i couldn’t
rightly hit ’em.
ater i’d
scraped him a little desent, and he’d tip’d
a hog vich vas rayther hansum i
ax’d him vere he’d left his tile?
“tile?” says
he a yogglin his i’s and openin’
his jaws like a dyin’ oyster “yes your
castor” says i, “your
beaver your hat.”
“Oh!”----says he, p’inting dismal to the pond----“gone to the devil d___
me!” so vith that he takes out a red and yuller vipe, and ties it about
his hed, lookin’ for all the vorld like a apple-ooman.
as he had come
down hansum i in coorse ofer’d to ketch his prad
vich va’n’t much difficulty and
up he jumps and lepped with a squosh into the saddle and
rid of vithout as much as sayin’ by your leave
good luck to you or anythink else
–vell, this here
vos the end and upshot o’ that day’s
fun for I vos too late for the start by ten minnits i
saw ’em goin’ it at a distance so i takes
a sight! but i had too much valley
for napes to put im to it so as to get up vith ’em or
he might a done it praps! –
i’ve lived
like a fightin cock and am as fatt as butter but
the race is goin’ to begin in a hour and i must
go and ketch napps who’s a grazin on the commun
and looks oncommun vell so no more
at present from,
Yours, my prime ’un,
dick stammer.