he, "I am pretty well." "What circumstances?" said I. "Oh!" answered he, 66 nothing but the pressure of business, a general correspondence, letters innumerable to answer, precedents to examine, friends to oblige, and so forth." " Very odd!" thought I; "what can all this mean?" I sat down and glanced my eye over the paper, whilst he stood leaning on the left haunch, the right foot advanced, his head a little inclined towards me, his right hand clenching a twopenny-post letter, and rounded like some of the bad statues in our squares, his left hand thrust into the pocket of his pantaloons, and his whole figure displaying a studied attitude! He now looked in the glass, dropped the letter as if he was presenting it to some one, stood upright, thrust the right hand into his breast, and faced me like an overgrown image, or a fulllength in a niche. "What the deuce is the matter with you?" said I. "Order, order," replied Stephen, looking at himself in the glass. "A little touched!" quoth I to myself. "I remembered hearing that his grandfather, the bacon-man, died in St. Luke's, that he left his son Roger a large fortune; that Roger became a sleeping partner in a mercantile concern, and left the profits to this Stephen, who seems to be a noon-dreamer.' I took up the paper once more. Stephen the while looked at a parcel of letters, and smiled. Then assuming another studied attitude, he faced his mirror again, and paid me the compliment of listening whilst I read a few paragraphs aloud; but I soon found he did so only to give himself an opportunity of practising the outward signs of parliamentary approbation or disapprobation. When he disliked the subject, he coughed and scraped his feet; when he liked it, he cried "Hear, hear." Upon my word," said I, "you seem to be so occupied and so out of reason, that I wish you a good morning." I hastily withdrew; the young man remaining fixed before his looking-glass. "Chair, chair," I heard, as I went down stairs. Meeting an old servant of his, I said to him, "I fear your master is not well he seems in a kind of hurry which is not consistent with sound reason. He was a very silent, dull boy when he was at the Charter-House; and he now does nothing but talk, and that very incoherently too." "Law bless ye!" replied honest John, "he is only a little overjoyed and proud. He came home last night from Cornwall; and he has done nothing ever since but place the chairs like so many folk, walk in and out of the room, practise how to take a seat with a particular grace, rise up and sit down again, scrape his feet, and cough, change his attitudes before the glass, cry Ây and No! Order! Hear! hear!". 66 - Very bad symptoms, in deed!" observed I. for me, "That's not all," said John. "He takes up a sheet of paper and fills it with nought but his name; and then he rung and when I came into the room, he made me sit down in a high chair, and standing up before me with a quire of paper rolled up in his hand, he muttered some gibberish, called the blank paper a Road Bill, and then bid me go about my business. Now I knew that I paid all the bills last week. Taking pity on him as I shut the door, I opened it again and looked back, saying, 'Master, when will you have dinner?' "When the question is disposed of,' said he 'at the division—when the House is up.'" "Ay, it is all up with him," said I. "Well, so thought I," cried John, laughing immoderately; "I thought as how Master was turned out a right fool at last; but it is no such a thing; he is only made a Parliament man of. He has BOUGHT a borough, and every mother's son in it; and has come home as pleased as the pigs (a very suitable simile, thought I). The packet before him were franks; and he has written his name fifty times to practise (as he calls it). He has spoiled a quire of paper in writing to himself, with a large M. P. at the end of his name. I mentioned Master's madness to Lord Liquorpond's scullion; and he told me for my comfort never to mind: it was only a boyish frolic. 'Bless you,' says the scullion, (and he, sir, reads the debates every day), let him have his own way; it is only the glory of the thing-the impulse of the moment; when he comes to the House he will be as mute as a mackerel. ”—“ I wish he were there now," said I. Here ended John's account; and as I was going out of the door, I heard silly Stephen call John. "John John !" said he, "run after the gentleman and ask if he will have a frank? I have only received one letter from my constituents, containing a publican's bill: it shall be laid on the table. No; on second consideration, it shall be thrown out. Therefore, John, you see that I have lots of franks to give and to receive, and if you want to write to your friends, you may call upon me. They may direct too to you, under cover,—mind, under cover, to Stephen now returned." Esq., M. P. You know that I am Mercy defend us! What a resemblance there is betwixt St. Stephen's Chapel and St. Luke's Hospital!" thought THE HERMIT IN LONDON. THE MILK-MAID AND THE BANKER. JAMES SMITH. A MILK-MAID with a very pretty face, Had a black cow, the ugliest in the place, A beast as dangerous, too, as she was frightful, And so confirmed a truant, that she bounded For then both cord and cow eloped together. Which had as usual slipped its anchor, When on the road she met a certain Banker, Who stopped to give his eyes a feast 66 By gazing on her features, crimsoned high "Are you from Acton, pretty lass?" he cried: Why then you know the laundress, Sally Wrench ?" "She is my cousin, Sir, and next-door neighbour." "That's lucky-I've a message for the wench Which needs dispatch, and you may save my labour. Give her this kiss, my dear, and say I sent it, But mind you owe me one-I've only lent it." "She shall know," cried the girl, as she brandished her bough, "Of the loving intentions you bore me; But as to the kiss, as there's haste, you'll allow Will reach Acton some minutes before me." ADDRESS TO THE MUMMY IN BELZONI'S HORACE SMITH. AND thou hast walk'd about (how strange a story!) Speak for thou long enough hast acted dummy, Not like thin ghosts or disembodied creatures, Tell us for doubtless thou canst recollect- Of either Pyramid that bears his name? Had Thebes a hundred gates, as sung by Homer? By oath to tell the secrets of thy trade- In Memnon's statue, which at sun-rise played! I need not ask thee if that hand, when arm'd, Long after thy primeval race was run. Thou couldst develope, if that withered tongue Still silent! incommunicative elf, Art sworn to secresy ! Then keep thy vows; Since in the world of spirits thou hast slumbered, What hast thou seen-what strange adventures numbered! Since first thy form was in this box extended, We have, above ground, seen some strange mutations The Roman Empire has begun and ended, New worlds have risen-we have lost old nations, And shook the Pyramids with fear and wonder, If the tomb's secrets may not be confess'd, A heart has throbb'd beneath that leathern breast, Posthumous man, who quitt'st thy narrow bed, ; |