... Following is the manner of
death incurred by Dr. Deadwood, the celebrated African
explorer, which took place at Ujijijijiji, under the
auspices of the Royal Geographical Society of England,
assisted, at some distance, by Mr. Shandy of the New
York Herald;—
An intelligent gorilla has recently
been imported to this country, who had the good fortune
to serve the Doctor as a body servant in the interior
of Africa, and he thus describes the manner of his
master’s death. The Doctor was accustomed
to pass his nights in the stomach of an acquaintance-a
crocodile about fifty feet long. Stepping out
one evening to take an observation of one of the lunar
eclipses peculiar to the country, he spoke to his host,
saying that as he should not return, until after bedtime,
he would not trouble him to sit up to let him in;
he would just leave the door open till he came home.
By way of doing so, he set up a stout fence-rail between
his landlord’s distended jaws, and went away.
Returning about midnight, he took
off his boots outside, so as not to awaken his friend,
entered softly, knocked away the prop, and prepared
to turn in. But the noise of pounding on the rail
had aroused the householder, and so great was the
feeling of relief induced by the relaxation of the
maxillary muscles, that he unconsciously shut his
mouth to smile, without giving his tenant time to
get into the bedroom. The Doctor was just stooping
to untie his drawers, when he was caught between the
floor and ceiling, like a lemon in a squeezer.
Next day the melancholy remains were
given up to our informant, who displays a singular
reticence regarding his disposition of them; merely
picking his teeth with his claws in an absent, thoughtful
kind of way, as if the subject were too mournful to
be discussed in all its harrowing details.
None of the Doctor’s maps or
instruments were recovered; his bereaved landlord
holds them as security for certain rents claimed to
be due and unpaid. It is probable that Great Britain
will make a stern demand for them, and if they are
not at once surrendered will-submit her claim to a
Conference.
.... The prim young maidens who
affiliate with the Young Men’s Christian Association
of San Francisco-who furnish the posies for their
festivals, and assist in the singing of psalms-have
a gymnasium in the temple. Thither they troop
nightly to display their skill in turning inside out
and shutting themselves up like jack-knives of the
gentler kind.
Here may be seen the godly Rachel
and the serious Ruth, suspended by their respective
toes between the heaven to which they aspire and the
wicked world they do abhor. Here the meek-eyed
Hannah, pendent from the horizontal bar, doubleth
herself upon herself and stares fixedly backward from
between her shapely limbs, a thing of beauty and a
joy for several minutes. Mehitable Ann, beloved
of young Soapenlocks, vaults lightly over a barrier
and with unspoken prayer lays hold on the unstable
trapeze mounting aloft in air. Jerusha, comeliest
of her sex, ties herself in a double bow-knot, and
meditates upon the doctrine of election.
O, blessed temple of grace divine!
O, innocence and youth and simple faith! O, water
and molasses and unsalted butter! O, niceness
absolute and godly whey! Would that we were like
unto these ewe lambs, that we might frisk and gambol
among them without evil. Would that we were female,
and Christian, and immature, with a flavour as of
green grass and a hope in heaven. Then would we,
too, sing hymns through our blessed nose, and contort
and musculate with much satisfaction of soul, even
in the gymnasium of The Straight-backed.
.... Some raging iconoclast,
after having overthrown religion by history, upset
history by science, and then toppled over science,
has now laid his impious hands upon babies’ nursing
bottles.
“The tubes of these infernal
machines,” says this tearing beast, “are
composed of india-rubber dissolved in bisulphide of
carbon, and thickened with lead, resin, and sometimes
oxysulphuret of antimony, from which, when it comes
in contact with the milk, sulphuretted hydrogen is
evolved, and lactate of lead formed in the stomach.”
This logic is irresistible. Granting
only that the tubes are made in that simple and intelligible
manner (and anybody can see for himself that they
are), the sulphuretted hydrogen and the lactate of
lead follow (down the osophagus) as a logical sequence.
But the scientific horror seems to be profoundly unaware
that these substances are not only harmless to the
child, but actually nutritious and essential to its
growth. Not only so, but nature has implanted
in its breast an instinctive craving for these very
comforts. Often have we seen some wee thing turn
disgusted from the breast and lift up its thin voice:
“Not for Joseph; give me the bottle with the
oxysulphuret of antimony tube. I take sulphuretted
hydrogen and lactate of lead in mine every time!”
And we have said: “Nature is working in
that darling. What God hath joined together let
no man put asunder!”
And we have thought of the wicked iconoclast.
.... There are a lot of evil-minded
horses about the city, who seem to take a fiendish
delight in letting fly their heels at whomsoever they
catch in a godly reverie unconscious of their proximity.
This is perfectly natural and human, but it is annoying
to be always getting horse-kicked when one is not
in a mood for it.
The worst of it is, these horses always
manage it so as to get tethered across the sidewalk
in the most populous thoroughfares, where they at
once drop into the semblance of a sound slumber.
By this means they lure the unsuspecting to their
doom, and just as some unconscious pedestrian is passing
astern of them they wake up, and without a preliminary
yawn, or even a warning shake of the tail like the
more chivalrous rattlesnake, they at once discharge
their feet at him with a rapidity and effect that
are quite surprising if the range be not too long.
Usually this occurs in Merchant-street, below Montgomery,
and the damage is merely nominal; some worthless Italian
fisherman, market gardener, or decayed gentleman oozing
out of a second-class restaurant being the only sufferer.
Rut not infrequently these playful
brutes get themselves tethered in some fashionable
promenade, and the consequence is demoralizing to
white people. We speak within the limits of possibility
when we say that we have seen no less than seven women
and children in the air at once, impelled heavenward
by as many consecutive kicks of a single skilled operator.
No longer ago than we can remember we saw an aged
party in spectacles and a clawhammer coat gyrating
through the air like an irregular bolt shot out of
a catapult. Before we could ascertain from him
the site of the quadruped from whom he had received
his impulsion, he had passed like a vague dream, and
the equine scoundrel went unwhipped of justice.
These flying squadrons are serious
inconveniences to public travel; it is conducive to
profanity to have a whizzing young woman, a rattling
old man, or a singing baby flung against one’s
face every few moments by the hoofs of some animal
whom one has never injured, and who is a perfect stranger.
It ought to be stopped.
.... In the telegraphic account
of a distressing railway accident in New York, we
find the following:—“The body of Mr.
Germain was identified by his business partner, John
Austin, who seemed terribly affected by his loss.”
O, reader, how little we think upon
the fearful possibilities hidden away in the womb
of the future. Any day may snatch from our life
its light. One moment we were happy in the possession
of some dear object, about which to twine the tendrils
of the heart; the next, we cower and shiver in the
chill gloom of a bereavement that withers the soul
and makes existence an intolerable burden! To-day
all nature smiles with a sunny warmth, and life spreads
before us a wilderness of sweets; to-morrow-we lose
our business partner!
.... Mr. J. L. Dummle, one of
our most respected citizens, left his home to go,
as he said, to his office. There was nothing unusual
in his demeanour, and he appeared to be in his customary
health and spirits. It is not known that there
was anything in his financial or domestic affairs
to make life distasteful to him. About half an
hour after parting with his family, he was seen conversing
with a friend at the corner of Kearny and Sutter-streets,
from which point he seems to have gone directly to
the Vallejo-street wharf. He was here seen by
the captain of the steamer New World, standing upon
the extreme end of the wharf, but the circumstance
did not arouse any suspicion in the mind of the Captain,
to whom he was well known. At that moment some
trivial business diverted the Captain’s attention,
and he saw Mr. Dummle no more; but it has been ascertained
that the latter proceeded directly home, where he
may now be seen by any one desiring to obtain further
particulars of the melancholy event here narrated.
Mr. Dummle speaks of it with perfect
frankness and composure.
.... In deference to a time-worn
custom, on the first day of the year the writer swore
to, affixed a revenue stamp upon, and recorded the
following document:—
“I will not, during this year,
utter a profane word-unless in sport-without having
been previously vexed by something.
“I will murder no one that does
not offend me, except for his money.
“I will commit highway robbery
upon none but small school children, and then only
under the stimulus of present or prospective hunger.
“I will not bear false witness
against my neighbour where nothing is to be made by
it.
“I will be as moral and religious
as the law shall compel me to be.
“I will run away with no man’s
wife without her full and free consent, and never,
no never, so help me heaven! will I take his children
along.
“I wont write any wicked slanders
against anybody, unless by refraining I should sacrifice
a good joke.
“I wont beat any cripples who
do not come fooling about me when I am busy; and I
will give all my neighbours’ boots to the poor.”
....A town in Vermont has a society
of young men, formed for the express purpose of rescuing
young ladies from drowning. We warn these gentlemen
that we will not accept even honorary membership in
their concern; we do not sympathize with the movement.
Upon several occasions we have stood by and seen young
ladies’ noses disappear beneath the waters blue,
with a stolid indifference that would have been creditable
in a husband. It was a trifle rough on the darlings,
but if we know our own mind we do not purpose, just
for the doubtful pleasure of saving a female’s
life, to surrender our prerogative of marrying when
and whom we like.
If we take a fancy to a woman we shall
wed her, but we’re not to be coerced into matrimony
by any ridiculous school-girl who may chance to fall
into a horse-pond. We know their tricks and their
manners -waking to consciousness in a fellow’s
arms and throwing their own wet ones about his neck,
saying, “The life you have preserved, noble
youth, is yours; whither thou goest I will go; thy
horses and carriages shall be my horses and carriages!”
We are too old a sturgeon to be caught
with a spoon-hook. Ladies in the vicinity of
our person need not hesitate to fling themselves madly
into the first goose-puddle that obstructs their way;
their liberty of action will be scrupulously respected.
.... There is a bladdery old
nasality ranging about the country upon free passes,
vexing the public ear with “hallowed songs,”
and making of himself a spectacle to the eye.
This bleating lamb calls himself the “Sacred
Singer,” and has managed to get that pleasing
title into the newspapers until it is become as offensive
as himself.
Now, therefore, we do trustfully petition
that this wearisome psalm-sharp, this miauling meter-monger,
this howling dervish of hymns devotional, may strain
his trachea, unsettle the braces of his lungs, crack
his ridiculous gizzard and perish of pneumonia starvation.
And may the good Satan seize upon the catgut strings
of his tuneful soul, and smite therefrom a wicked,
wicked waltz!
.... We hold a most unflattering
opinion of the man who will thieve a dog, but between
him and the man who will keep one, the moral difference
is not so great as to be irreconcilable.
Our own dog is a standing example
of canine inutility. The scurvy cur is not only
totally depraved in his morals, but his hair stands
the wrong way, and his tail is of that nameless type
intermediate between the pendulously pitiful and the
spirally exasperating-a tail which gives rise to conflicting
emotions in the mind of the beholder, and causes the
involuntarily uplifted hand to hesitate if it shall
knuckle away the springing tear, or fall in thunderous
vengeance upon the head of the dog’s master.
That dog spends about half his elegant
leisure in devouring the cold victuals of compassion,
and the other half in running after the bricks of
which he is the provocation and we are the target.
Within the last six years we employed as editors upon
the unhappy journal which it was intended that this
article should redeem, no less than sixteen pickpockets,
hoping they would steal him; but with an acute intelligence
of which their writing conveyed but an imperfect idea,
they shunned the glittering bait, as one walks to windward
of the deadly upas tree. We have given him away
to friends until we haven’t a friend left; we
have offered him at auction-sales, and been ourselves
knocked down; we have decoyed him into strange places
and abandoned him, until we are poor from the payment
of unpromised rewards. In the character of a
charitable donation he has been driven from the door
of every orphan asylum, foundling hospital, and reform
school in the State. Not a week passes but we
forfeit exemplary damages for inciting him to fall
foul of passing gentlemen, in the vain hope of getting
him slain.
If any one would wish to purchase
a cheap dog, we would sell this beast.
.... A religious journal published
in the Far West says that Brothers Dong, Gong, and
Tong are Chinese converts to its church. There
is a fine religious nasality about these names that
is strongly suggestive of the pulpit in the palmy
days of the Puritans.
By the way, we should dearly love
to know how to baptize a Chinaman. We have a
shrewd suspicion that it is done as the Mongolian
laundryman dampens our linen: by taking the mouth
full of water and spouting it over the convert’s
head in a fine spray. If so, it follows that
the pastor having most “cheek” is best
qualified for cleansing the pagan soul.
An important question arises here.
Suppose Dong, Gong, and Tong to have been baptized
in this way, who pronounced that efficacious formula,
“I baptize thee in the name,” etc.?
Clearly the parson, with his mouth full of water,
could not have done so at the instant of baptism,
and if the sentence was spoken by any other person
it was a falsehood. It must therefore have been
spoken either before the minister distended his cheeks,
or after he had exhausted them. In either case,
according to the learned Dr. Sicklewit, the ceremony
is utterly null and void of effect. (Study of Baptism,
vol. ix., ch. cxix. vi. p. 627, line 13 from bottom.)
Possibly, however, D., G. and T. were
not baptized in this way. Then how the devil
were they baptized?-and why?
.... Henry Wolfe, of Kentucky,
aged one hundred and eight years, who had never been
sick in his life, lay down one fine day and sawed his
neck asunder with a razor. Henry did not believe
in self-slaughter; he despised it. It was Henry’s
opinion that as God had placed us here we should stay
until it was His pleasure to remove us. That is
also our opinion, and the opinion of all other good
Christians who would like to die but are afraid to
do it. It will be observed that Henry could not
claim originality of opinion.
But there is a point beyond which
hope deferred maketh the heart sick, and Henry had
passed that point. He waited patiently till he
was naked of scalp and deaf of ear. He endured
without repining the bent back, the sightless eyes,
and the creaking joints incident to over-maturity.
But when he saw a man perish of senility, who in infancy
had called him “Old Hank,” Mr. Wolfe thought
patience had ceased to be commendable, and he abandoned
his post of duty without being regularly relieved.
It is to be hoped he will be hotly punished for it.
.... One day an obscure and unimportant
person pitched himself among the rolling porpoises,
from a ferry-boat, and an officious busy-body, not
at once clearly apprehending that the matter was none
of his immediate business, hied him down to the engineer
and commanded that official to “back her, hard!”
As it is customary upon the high seas for such orders
to emanate from the officer in command, that particular
boat kept forging ahead, and the unimportant old person
carried out his original design-that is, he went to
the bottom like an iron wedge. Rises the press
in its wrath and prates about a Grand Jury! Shrieks
an intelligent public, in chorus, at the heartless
engineer!
Meantime the pretty fish are running
away with choice bits of God’s image at the
bottom of the bay; the cunning crab makes merry with
a dead man’s eye, the nipping shrimp sweetens
himself for the table upon the clean juices of a succulent
corpse. Below all is peace and fat feasting;
above rolls the sounding ocean of eternal Bosh!
.... There is war! The woman
suffrage folk go up against one another, because that
a portion of them cleave to the error that the Bible
is a collection of fables. These will probably
divest themselves of this belief about the time that
Mr. Satan stands over them with a toasting-fork, points
significantly to a glowing gridiron, and says to each
suffrager:
“Madame, I beg your pardon,
but you will please retire to the ladies’ dressing-room,
disrobe, unpad, lay off your back-hair; and make yourself
as comfortable as possible while some fresh coals are
being put on the fire. When you have unmade your
toilet you may touch that bell, and you will be nicely
buttered and salted for the iron. A polite and
gentlemanly attendant will occasionally turn you,
and I shall take pleasure in looking in upon you once
in a million years, to see that you are being properly
done. Exceedingly sultry weather, Madame.
Au revoir.”
.... The funeral of the Rev.
Father Byrne took place from the Church of the Holy
Cross. The ceremonies were of the most solemn
and impressive character, and were keenly enjoyed
by the empty benches by which the Protestant clergy
were ably represented. Why turned ye not out,
O Biblethump, and Muddletext, and you, Hymnsing?
Is it thus that the Master was wont to treat the dead?
Now get thee into the secret recesses
of thy closet, Rev. Lovepreach; knuckle down upon
thy knees and pray to a tolerant God not to smite
thee with a plague. For lo! thou hast been a bigoted,
bat-eyed, cat-hearted fraud-a preacher of peace and
a practiser of strife. For these many years thy
tongue hath been dropping gospel honey, and thy soul
secreting bitterness. Thy voice has been as the
sound of glad horns upon a hill, but thy ways are the
ways of a gaunt hound tracking the hunted stag.
“Holier than we,” are you? And when
the worker of differing faith is gone to his account,
you turn your sleek back upon the God’s-image
as it is given to the waiting worms. Perdition
seize thee and thy holiness! we’ll none of it.
.... Two hundred dollars for
biting a woman’s neck and arms! That was
the sentence imposed upon the gentle Mr. Hill, because
His Eminence set his incisors into the yielding tissue
of Mrs. Langdon, a lady with whom his wife happened
to be debating by means of a stew-kettle.
If this monstrous decision stand,
the writer owes the treasury about ten thousand dollars.
Though by nature of a mild and gentle appetite, preferring
simple roots and herbs, yet it has been his custom
to nip all female necks and arms that have been willingly
submitted unto his teeth. He hath found in this
harmless, and he had supposed lawful, practice, an
exceeding sweetness of sensation, and a satisfaction
wherewith the delights of sausage, or the bliss of
pigs’ feet, can in nowise compare. Having
commonly found the gratification mutual, he thinks
he is justified in maintaining its innocence.
.... We are tolerably phlegmatic
and notoriously hard to provoke. We look on with
considerable composure while our favourite Chinaman
is being dismembered in the streets, and our dog publicly
insulted. Detecting an alien hand in our trousers
pocket excites in us only a feeling of temperate disapprobation,
and an open swindle executed upon our favourite cousin
by an unscrupulous shopkeeper we regard simply as
an instance of enterprise which has taken an unfortunate
direction. Slow to anger, quick to forgive, charitable
in judgment and to mercy prone; with unbounded faith
in the entire goodness of man and the complete holiness
of woman; seeking ever for palliating circumstances
in the conduct of the blackest criminal-we are at once
a model of moderation and a pattern of forbearance.
But if Mrs. Victoria Woodhull and
her swinish crew of free lovers had but a single body,
and that body lay asleep under the upturned root of
a prostrate oak, we would work with a dull jack-knife
day and night-month in and month out-through summer’s
sun and winter’s storm-to sever that giant trunk,
and let that mighty root, clasping its mountain of
inverted earth, back into the position assigned to
it by nature and by nature’s God!
.... We like a liar-a thoroughly
conscientious, industrious, and ingenious liar.
Not your ordinary prevaricator, who skirts along the
coast of truth, keeping ever within sight of the headlands
and promontories of probability-whose excursions are
limited to short, fair-weather reaches into the ocean
of imagination, and who paddles for port as if the
devil were after him whenever a capful of wind threatens
a storm of exposure; but a bold, sea-going liar, who
spurns a continent, striking straight out for blue
water, with his eyes fixed upon the horizon of boundless
mendacity.
We have found such a one, and our
hat is at half-mast in token of profound esteem and
conscious inferiority. This person gravely tells
us that at the burning of the Archiepiscopal Palace
at Bourges, among other valuable manuscripts destroyed
was the original death-warrant of Jesus Christ, signed
at Jerusalem by one Capel, and dated U. C. 783.
Not only so, but he kindly favours us with a literal
translation of it!
One cannot help warming up to a man
who can lie like that. Talk about Chatterton’s
Rowley deception, Macpherson’s Ossian fraud,
or Locke’s moon hoax! Compared with this
tremendous fib they are as but the stilly whisper
of a hearth-stone cricket to the shrill trumpeting
of a wounded elephant-the piping of a sick cocksparrow
to the brazen clang of a donkey in love!
.... For the memory of the late
John Ridd, of Illinois, we entertain the liveliest
contempt. Mr. Ridd recently despatched himself
with a firearm for the following reasons, set forth
in a letter that he left behind.
“Two years ago I discovered
that I was worthless. My great failings are insincerity
of character and sly ugliness. Any one who watched
me a little while would discover my unenviable nature.”
Now, it is not that Mr. Ridd was worthless
that we hold his memory in reprobation; nor that he
was insincere, nor sly, nor ugly. It is because
possessing these qualities he was fool enough to think
they disqualified him for the duties of life, or stood
in the way of his being an ornament to society and
an honour to his country.
....”About the first of next month,”
says a pious contemporary, “we shall discontinue
the publication of our paper in this city, and shall
remove our office and fixtures to—, where
we hope for a blessing upon our work, and a share
of advertising patronage.”
A numerous editorial staff of intelligent
jackasses will accompany the caravan. In imagination
we behold them now, trudging gravely along behind
the moving office fixtures, their goggle eyes cast
down in Christian meditation, their horizontal ears
flopping solemnly in unison with their measured tread.
Ever and anon the leader halts, uprolls the speculative
eye, arrests the oscillation of the ears, laying them
rigidly back along the neck, exalts the conscious tail,
drops the lank jaw, and warbles a psalm of praise that
shakes the blind hills from their eternal repose.
His companions take up the parable in turn, “and
the echoes, huddling in affright, like Odin’s
hounds,” go baying down the valleys and clamouring
amongst the pines, like a legion of invisible fiends
after a strange cat. Then again all is hush,
and tramp, and sanctity, and flop, and holy meditation!
And so the pilgrimage is accomplished. Selah!
Hee-haw!
.... A man in California has
in his possession the rope with which his father was
hanged by a vigilance committee in ’49 for horse-stealing.
He keeps it neatly coiled away in an old cheese-box,
and every Sunday morning he lays his left hand reverently
upon it, and with uncovered head and a look of stern
determination in his eye, raises his right to heaven,
and swears by an avenging God it served the old man
right!
It has not been deemed advisable to
put this dutiful son under bonds to keep the peace.
.... A contemporary has some
elaborate obituary commendation of a boy seven years
of age, who was “a child of more than ordinary
sprightliness, loved the Bible, and was deeply impressed
with a veneration for holy things.”
Now we would sorrowfully ask our contemporary
if he thinks flattery like this can soothe the dull
cold ear of young Dobbin? Dobbin pre may enjoy
it as light and entertaining reading, but when the
resurrecting angel shall stir the dust of young Theophilus
with his foot, and sing out “get up, Dobbin,”
we think that sprightly youth will whimper three times
for molasses gingerbread before he will signify an
audible aspiration for the Bible. A sweet-tooth
is often mistaken for early piety, and licking a sugar
archangel may be easily construed as veneration for
holy things.
.... A young physician of Troy
became enamoured of a rich female patient, and continued
his visits after she was convalescent. During
one of these he had the misfortune to give her the
small-pox, having neglected to change his clothes
after calling on another patient enjoying that malady.
The lady had to be removed to the pest-house, where
the stricken medico sedulously attends her for nothing.
His generosity does not end here: he declares
that should she recover he will marry her-if she be
not too badly pitted.
Apparently the legal profession does
not enjoy a monopoly of all the self-sacrifice that
is current in the world.
.... A young woman stood before
the mirror with a razor. Pensively she twirled
the unaccustomed instrument in her jewelled fingers,
fancying her smooth cheek clothed with a manly beard.
In imagination she saw her pouting lips shaded by
the curl of a dark moustache, and her eyes grew dim
with tears that it was not, never could be, so.
And the mirrored image wept back at her a silent sob,
the echo of her grief.
“Ah,” she sighed, “why
did not God make me a man? Must I still drag
out this hateful, whiskerless existence?”
The girlish tears welled up again
and overran her eyes. Thoughtfully she crossed
her right hand over to her left ear; carefully but
timidly she placed the keen, cold edge of the steel
against the smooth alabaster neck, twisted the fingers
of her other hand into her long black hair, drew back
her head and ripped away. There was an apparition
in that mirror as of a ripe watermelon opening its
mouth to address a public meeting; there were the thud
and jar of a sudden sitting down; and when the old
lady came in from frying doughnuts in the adjoining
room she found something that seemed to interest her-something
still and warm and wet-something kind of doubled up.
Ah! poor old wretch! your doughnuts
shall sizzle and sputter and swim unheeded in their
grease; but the beardless jaw that should have wagged
filially to chew them is dropped in death; the stomach
which they should have distended is crinkled and dry
for ever!
.... Miss Olive Logan’s
lecture upon “girls” has suggested to the
writer the propriety of delivering one upon “boys.”
He doesn’t know anything about boys, and is
therefore entirely unprejudiced. He was never
a boy himself-has always been just as old as he is
now; though the peculiar vagueness of his memory previously
to the time of building the pyramid of Cheops, and
his indistinct impressions as to the personal appearance
of Job, lead to the suspicion that his faculties at
that time were partially undeveloped. He regards
himself as the only lecturer extant who can do justice
to boys; and he prefers to do it with an axe-handle,
but is willing, like Olive Logan, to sacrifice his
mere preferences for the purpose of making money.
This lecture will take place as soon
as a sum of money has been sent to this office sufficiently
large to justify him in renting a hall for one hour’s
uninterrupted profanity-sixty minutes of careful,
accurate, and elaborate cursing. Admission-all
the money you have about you. Boys will be charged
in proportion to their estimated depravity; fifty
dollars a head for the younger sorts, and from five
hundred to one thousand for those more advanced in
general diabolism.
.... Some women in New York have
set the fashion of having costly diamonds set into
their front teeth. The attention of robbers and
garotters is called to this fact, with the recommendation
that no greater force be used than is necessary.
The use of the ordinary bludgeon or slung shot would
be quite needless; a gentle tap on the head with a
clay pipe or a toothpick will place the victim in the
proper condition to be despoiled. Great care should
be exercised in extracting the jewels; instead of
the teeth being knocked inwards, as in ordinary cases
of mere purposeless mangling, they should be artistically
lifted out by inserting the point of a crowbar into
the mouth and jumping on the other end.
.... The Coroner having broken
his leg, inquests will hereafter be held by the Justices
of the Peace. People intending to commit suicide
will confer a favour by worrying along until the Coroner
shall recover, as the Justices are all new to the business.
The cold, uncharitable world is tolerably hard to
endure, but if unfortunates will secure some respectable
employment and go to work at it they will be surprised
to find how glibly the moments will glide away.
The Coroner will probably be ready for their carcases
in about four weeks, and it would be well not to bind
themselves to service for a longer period, lest he
should find it necessary to send for them and do their
little business himself. A fair supply of street-cadavers
and water-corpses can usually be counted on, but it
is absolutely necessary to have a certain proportion
of suicides.
.... John Reed, of Illinois,
is a man who knows his rights, and knowing dares maintain.
Having communicated to a young lady his intention
of conferring upon her the honour of his company at
a Fourth of July celebration, John was pained and
disgusted to hear the proposal quietly declined.
John went thoughtfully away to a neighbour who keeps
a double-shotgun. This he secured, and again
sought the object of his hopeless preference.
The object was seated at the dinner-table contending
with her lobscouse, and did not feel his presence
near. Mr. Reed poised and sighted his artillery,
and with the very natural remark, “I think this
fetcher,” he exploded the twin charges.
A moment later might have been seen the rare spectacle
of a headless young lady sitting bolt upright at table,
spooning a wad of hash into the top of her neck.
The wall opposite presented the appearance of having
been bombarded with fresh livers and baptized with
sausage-meat.
No one in the vicinity slept any that
night. They were busy getting ready for the Fourth:
the gentlemen going about inviting the ladies to attend
the celebration, and the ladies hastily and unconditionally
accepting.
.... In answer to the ladies
who are always bothering him for a photograph, Mr.
Grile hopes to satisfy all parties by the following
meagre description of his charms.
In person he is rather thin early
in the morning, and a trifle corpulent after dinner;
in complexion pale, with a suspicion of ruby about
the gills. He wears his hair brown, and parted
crosswise of his remarkably fine head. His eyes
are of various colours, but mostly bottle-green, with
a glare in them reminding one of incipient hydrophobia-from
which he really suffers. A permanent depression
in the bridge of his nose was inherited from a dying
father what time the son mildly petitioned for a division
of the estate to which he and his seventeen brothers
were about to become the heirs. The mouth is
gentlemanly capacious, indicative of high breeding
and feeding; the under jaw projects slightly, forming
a beautiful natural reservoir for the reception of
beer and other liquids. The forehead retreats
rapidly whenever a creditor is met, or an offended
reader espied coming toward the office.
His legs are of unequal length, owing
to his constant habit of using one of them to kick
people who may happen to present a fairer mark than
the nearest dog. His hand is remarkably slender
and white, and is usually inserted in another man’s
pocket. In dress he is wonderfully fastidious,
preferring to wear nothing but what is given him.
His gait is something between those of a mud-turtle
and a jackass-rabbit, verging closely on to the latter
at periods of supposed personal danger, as before
intimated.
In conversation he is animated and
brilliant, some of his lies being quite equal to those
of Coleridge or Bolingbroke; but in repose he resembles
nothing so much as a heap of old clothes. In conclusion,
his respect for letter-writing ladies is so great that
he would not touch one of them with a ten-foot pole.
.... Only one hundred and ten
thousand pious pilgrims visited Mount Ararat in a
body this year. The urbane and gentlemanly proprietors
of the Ark Tavern complain that their receipts have
hardly been sufficient to pay for the late improvements
in this snug retreat. These gentlemen continue
to keep on hand their usual assortment of choice wines,
liquors, and cigars.
Opposite the Noah House, Shem Street,
between Ham and Japhet.
.... It is commonly supposed
that President Lopez, of Paraguay, was killed in battle;
but after reading the following slander upon him and
his mother, written some time since by a friend of
ours, it is difficult to believe he did not commit
suicide:—
“The telegraph informs us that
President Lopez, of Paraguay, has again murdered his
mother for conspiring against his life. That
sprightly, and active old lady has now been executed
three thousand times for the same offence. She
is now eighty-three years old, and erect as a telegraph
pole. Time writes no wrinkles on her awful brow,
and her teeth are as sound as on the day of her birth.
She rises every morning punctually at four o’clock
and walks ten miles; then, after a light breakfast,
enters her study and proceeds to hatch out a new conspiracy
against her first born. About 2 P. M. it is discovered,
and she is publicly executed. A light toast and
a cup of strong tea finish the day’s business;
she retires at seven and goes to sleep with her mouth
open. She has pursued this life with the most
unfaltering regularity for the last fifty years.
It is only by this unswerving adherence to hygienic
principles that she has attained her present green
old age.”
.... There is a person resident
in Stockton Street whom we cannot regard with feelings
other than those of lively disapproval. It is
not that the woman-for this person is a mature female—ever
did us any harm, or is likely to; that is not our
grievance. What we seriously object to and actively
contemn-yea, bitterly denounce-is the nose of her.
So mighty a nose we have never beheld-so spacious,
and open, and roomy a human snout the unaided imagination
is impotent to picture. It rises from her face
like a rock from a troubled sea-grand, serene, majestic!
It turns up at an angle that fills the spectator with
admiration, and impresses him with an awe that is
speechless.
But we have no space for a description
of this eternal proboscis. Suffice it that its
existence is a standing menace to society, a threat
to civilization, and a danger to commerce. The
woman who will harbour and cherish such an organ is
no better than a pirate. We do not know who she
is, and we have no desire to know. We only know
that all the angels could not pull us past her house
with a chain cable, without giving us one look at
that astounding feature. It is the one prominent
landmark of the nineteenth century-the special wonder
of the age-the solitary marvel of a generation!
We would give anything to see her blow it.
.... At the Coroner’s inquest
in the case of John Harvey there was considerable
difficulty in ascertaining the cause of death, but
as one witness testified that the deceased was pounding
fulminate of mercury at the Powder Works just previously
to his lamented demise, there is good reason to believe
he was hoist into heaven with his own petard.
In fact, such fractions of him as have come to hand,
up to date, seem to confirm this view. This evidence
is rather disjointed and fragmentary, but it is sufficient
to discourage the brutal practice of pounding fulminate
of mercury when our streets and Sunday-schools are
swarming with available Chinaman who seldom hit back.
.... We find the following touching
tale in all the newspapers. It belongs to that
class of tales concerning which the mildest doubt is
hateful blasphemy.
“A little girl in Ithaca, just
before she died, exclaimed: ’Papa, take
hold of my hand and help me across.’ Her
father had died two months before. Did she see
him?”
There is not a doubt of it; but interested
relatives have somewhat misstated the little girl’s
exclamation, which was this:—
“Papa, take hold of my hand,
and I will help you out of that.”
.... We get the most distressing
accounts of the famine in Persia. It is said
that cannibalism is as common among the starving inhabitants
as pork-eating in California.
This is very sad; it shows either
a very low state of Persian morality or a conspicuous
lack of Persian ingenuity. They ought to manage
it as the conscientious Indians do. In time of
famine these gentle creatures never disgrace themselves
by feasting upon each other: they permit their
dogs to devour the dead, and then they eat the dogs.
.... An old lady was set upon
by a fiend in human apparel, and remorselessly kissed
in the presence of her daughter.
This happened a few days since in
Iowa, where the fiend now lies buried. Any man
who is so dead to shame, and so callous of soul generally,
as to force his unwelcome endearments upon a poor,
defenceless old lady, while her beautiful young daughter
stands weeping by, equally defenceless, deserves pretty
much all the evil that can be done to him. Splitting
him like a fish is so disgracefully inadequate a punishment,
that the man who should administer it might justly
be regarded as an accomplice.
.... From London we have intelligence
of the stabbing to death of a man by mistake.
His assassin mistook him for a person related to himself,
whose loss would be his own financial gain. Fancy
the utter dejection of this stabber when he discovered
the absurd blunder he had committed! We believe
a slip like that would justify a man in throwing down
the knife and discarding murder for ever; while two
such errors would be ample excuse for him to go into
some kind of business.
.... A small but devout congregation
were at worship. When it had become a free exhibition,
in which any brother could enact a part, a queer-looking
person got up and began a pious and learned exhortation.
He spake for some two hours, and was listened to with
profound attention, his discourse punctuated with holy
groans and pious amens from an edified circle of the
saintly. Tears fell as the gentle rains from
heaven. Several souls were then and there snatched
as brands from the eternal burning, and started on
their way to heaven rejoicing. At the end of
the second hour, and as the inspired stranger approached
“eighty-seventhly,” some one became curious
to know who the teacher was, when lo! it turned out
that he was an escaped lunatic from the Asylum.
The curses of the elect were not loud
but deep. They fumed with exceeding wrath, and
slopped over with pious indignation at the swindle
put upon them. The inspired, however, escaped,
and was afterwards captured in a cornfield.
The funeral was unostentatious.
.... We hear a great deal of
sentiment with regard to the last solar eclipse.
Considerable ink has been consumed in setting forth
the terrible and awe-inspiring features of the scene.
As there will be no other good one this season, the
following recipe for producing one artificially will
be found useful:—Suspend a grindstone from
the centre of a room. Take a cheese of nearly
the same size, and after blacking one side of it,
pass it slowly across the face of the grindstone and
observe the effect in a mirror placed opposite, on
the cheese side. The effect will be terrific,
and may be heightened by taking a rum punch just at
the instant of contact. This plan is quite superior
to that of nature, for with several cheeses graduated
in size, all known varieties of eclipse may be presented.
In writing up the subsequent account, a great many
interesting phenomena may be introduced quite impossible
to obtain either by this or any other process.
.... We have observed with considerable
impatience that the authors of Sunday School books
do not seem to know anything; there is no reason why
these pleasant volumes should not be made as effective
as they are deeply interesting. The trouble is
in the method of treating wicked children; instead
of being destroyed by appalling calamities, they should
simply be made painfully ridiculous.
For example, the little scoundrel
who climbs up an apple-tree to plunder a bird’s-nest,
ought never to fall and break his neck. He should
be permitted to garner his unholy harvest of eggs in
his pocket, then lose his balance, catch the seat
of his pantaloons on a knot-hole, and hang doubled
up, with the smashed eggs trickling down his jacket,
and getting into his hair and eyes. Then the good
little girls should be lugged in, to poke fun at him,
and ask him if he likes ’em hard or soft.
This would be a most impressive warning.
The boy who neglects his prayers to
go boating on a Sunday ought not to be drowned.
He should be spilled out into the soft mud along shore,
and stuck fast where the Sunday School scholars could
pelt him with slush, and their teacher have a fair
fling at him with a dead cat.
The small female glutton who steals
jam in the pantry ought not to get poisoned.
She should get after a pot of warm glue, which should
be made to miraculously stiffen the moment she gets
it into her mouth, and have to be gouged out of her
with a chisel and hammer.
Then there is the swearing party,
who is struck by lightning-a very shallow and unprofitable
device. He should open his face to swear, dislocate
his jaw, be unable to get closed up, and the rats should
get in at night, make nests there, and breed.
There are other suggestions that might
be made, but these will give a fair idea of our method,
the foundation of which is the substitution of potent
ridicule for the current grave but imbecile rebuke.
It may be gratifying to learn that we are embodying
our views in a whole library of Sunday School literature,
adapted to the meanest capacity, and therefore equally
edifying to pupil, pastor, and parent.
.... A young correspondent, who
has lately read a great deal in the English papers
about “baby-farming,” wishes to know what
that may be. It is a new method of agriculture,
in which the young of our species are used for manure.
The babies are collected each day
and put into large vats containing equal parts of
hydrobicarbonate of oxygenated sulphide, and oxygenated
sulphide of hydrobicarbonate, where they are left to
soak overnight. In the morning they are carefully
macerated in a mortar and are then poured into shallow
copper pans, where they remain until all the liquid
portions have been evaporated by the sun. The
residuum is then scraped out, and after the addition
of a certain proportion of quicklime the whole is
thrown away. Ordinary bone dust and charcoal
are then used for manure, and the baby farmers seldom
fail of getting a good crop of whatever they plant,
provided they stick the seeds in right end up.
It will be seen that the result depends
more upon the hydrobicarbonate than upon the infants;
there isn’t much virtue in babies. But
then our correspondent should remember that there is
none at all in adults.
.... A young woman writes to
a contemporary, desiring to learn if it is true that
kissing a dead man will cure the tooth-ache. It
might; it sometimes makes a great difference whether
you take your medicine hot or cold. But we would
earnestly advise her to try kissing a multitude of
live men before taking so peculiar a prescription.
It is our impression that corpses are absolutely worthless
for kissing purposes, and if one can find no better
use for them, they might as well be handed over to
the needy and deserving worm.
.... Mr. Knettle, deceased, became
irritated, and fired three shots from a revolver into
the head of his coy sweetheart, while she was making
believe to run away from him. It has seldom been
our lot-except in the cases of a few isolated policemen-to
record so perfectly satisfactory target practice.
If that man had lived he would have made his mark
as well as hit it. He died by his own hand at
the beginning of a brilliant career, and although we
cannot hope to emulate his shooting, we may cherish
the memory of his virtues just as if we could bring
down our girl every time at ten paces.
.... A pedagogue has been sentenced
to the county gaol, for six months, for whipping a
boy in a brutal manner. The public heartily approves
the sentence, and, quite naturally, we dissent.
We know nothing whatever about this particular case,
but upon general principles we favour the extreme
flagellation of incipient Man. In our own case
the benefit of the system is apparent; had not our
pious parent administered daily rebukes with such foreign
bodies as he could lay his hands on we might have
grown up a Presbyterian deacon.
Look at us now!
.... A man who played a leading
part in a late railroad accident had had his life
insured for twenty thousand dollars. Unfortunately
the policy expired just before he did, and he had
neglected to renew it. This is a happy illustration
of the folly of procrastination. Had he got himself
killed a few days sooner his widow would have been
provided with the means of setting up housekeeping
with another man.
.... People ought not to pack
cocked pistols about in the hip pockets of their trousers;
the custom is wholly indefensible. Such is the
opinion of the last man who leaned up against the counter
in a Marysville drinking-saloon for a quiet chat with
the barkeeper.
The odd boot will be given to the poor.
.... A man ninety-seven years
of age has just died in the State of New York.
The Sun says he bad conversed with both President
Washington and President Grant.
If there were any further cause of
death it is not stated.
.... The letter following was
written by the Rev. Reuben Hankerlockew, a Persian
Christian, in relation to the late famine in his country.
The Rev. gentleman took a hopeful view of affairs.
“Peace be with you-bless your
eyes! Our country is now suffering the direst
of calamities, compared with which the punishment of
Tarantulus” (we suppose our correspondent meant
Tantalus) “was nice, and the agony of a dyspeptic
ostrich in a junk shop is a condition to be coveted.
We are in the midst of plenty, but we can’t get
anything that seems to suit. The supply of old
man is practically unlimited, but it is too tough
to chew. The market stalls are full of fresh
girl, but the scarcity of salt renders the meat entirely
useless for table purposes. Prime wife is cheap
as dirt-and about as good. There is a ‘corner’
in pickled baby, and nobody can ‘fill.’
The same article on the hoof is all held by a ring
of speculators at figures which appal the man of moderate
means. Of the various brands of ‘cemetery,’
that of Japan is most abundant, owing to the recent
pestilence, but it is, fishy and rank. As for
grain, or vegetable filling of any kind, there is
hone in Persia, except the small lot I have on hand,
which will be disposed of in limited quantities for
ready money. But don’t you foreigners bother
about us-we shall get along all right-until I have
disposed of my cereals. Persia does not need
any foreign corn until after that.”
It is improbable that the Rev. gentleman
himself perished of starvation.
.... We are filled with unspeakable
gratification to record the death of that double girl
who has been in everybody’s mouth for months.
This shameless little double-ender, with two heads
and one body-two cherries on a single stem, as it
were-has been for many moons afflicting our simple
soul with an itching desire that she might die-the
nasty pig! Two half-girls, joined squarely at
the waist, and without any legs, are not a pleasant
type of the coming woman.
Had she lived, she would have been
a bone of social, theological, and political contention,
and we should never have heard the end-of which she
had two alike. If she had lived to marry, some
mischief-making scoundrel would have procured the indictment
of her husband for bigamy. The preachers would
have fought for her, and if converted separately,
her Methodist end might have always been thrashing
her Episcopal end, or vice vers. When she came
to serve on a jury, nobody could have decided if there
ought to be eleven others or only ten; and if she
ever voted twice, the opposite party would have had
her up for repeating; and if only once, she would
have been read out of her own, for criminal apathy
in the exercise of the highest duty, etc.
We bless God for taking her away,
though what He can want with her is as difficult a
problem as herself or Himself. She will have to
wear two golden crowns, thus entailing a double expense;
she wont be able to fly any, and having no legs, she
must be constantly watched to keep her from rolling
out of heaven. She will just have to lie on a
soft cloud in some out-of-the-way corner, and eternally
toot two trumpets, without other exercise. If
Gabriel is the sensible fellow we think him, he wont
wake her at the Resurrection.
Look at this infant in any light you
please, and it is evident that she was a dead failure
and is yet. She did but one good thing, and that
was to teach the Siamese Twins how to die. After
they shall have taken the hint, we hope to have no
more foolish experiments in double folks born that
way. Married couples are sufficiently unpleasing.
.... The head biblesharp of the
New York Independent resigned his position, because
the worldly proprietor would insist upon running the
commercial column of that sheet in a secular manner,
with an eye to the goods that perish. The godly
party wished him to ignore the filthy lucre of this
world, and lay up for himself treasures in heaven;
but the sordid wretch would seize every covert opportunity
to reach out his little muckrake after the gold of
the gentile, to the neglect of the things that appertain
unto salvation. Therefore did the conscientious
driver of the piety-quill betake himself to some new
field.
Will the editors of all similar sheets
do likewise? or have they more elastic consciences?
For, behold, the muckrake is likewise visible in all.
.... Some of the Red Indians
on the plains have discarded the songs of their fathers,
and adopted certain of Dr. Watts’s hymns, which
they howl at their scalp-dances with much satisfaction.
This is encouraging, certainly, but
we dare not counsel the good missionaries to pack
up their libraries and go home with the impression
that the noble red is thoroughly converted. There
yet remains a work to do; he must be taught to mortify,
instead of paint, his countenance, and induced to
abandon the savage vice of stealing for the Christian
virtue of cheating. Likewise he must be made
to understand that although conjugal fidelity is highly
com-mendable, all civilized nations are distinguished
by a faithful adherence to the opposite practice.
.... Some raving maniac sends
us a mass of stuff, which savours strongly of Walt
Whitman, and which, probably for that reason, he calls
poetry. We have room for but a single bit of description,
which we print as an illustration of the depth of literary
depravity which may be attained by a “poet”
in love:—
“Behold, thou art fair, my love:
behold, thou art fair; thou hast dove’s eyes
within thy locks; thy hair is as a flock of goats that
appear from Mt. Gilead. Thy teeth are like
a flock of sheep that are even shorn, which came up
from the washing; whereof every one bear twins, and
none is barren among them. Thy lips are like a
thread of scarlet, and thy speech is comely; thy temples
are like a piece of pomegranate within thy locks.
Thy neck is a tower of ivory; thine eyes like the
fishpools of Heshbon, by the gate of Bath-rabbim; thy
nose is as the tower of Lebanon looking towards Damascus.”
Really, we think that will do for
one instalment. What the mischief this “poet”
means, with his goat’s hair, sheep’s teeth,
and temples like a piece of pomegranate, is quite
beyond our mental reach. We would suggest that
the ignorance of English grammar displayed in the
phrase “every one bear twins,” is not atoned
for by comparing his mistress’s eyes to a duck
pond, and her nose to the “tower of Lebanon
looking towards Damascus.” The latter simile
is suggestive of unpleasant consequences to the inhabitants
of that village in case the young lady should decide
to blow that astounding feature! Our very young
contributor will consider himself dismissed with such
ignominy as is implied by our frantic indifference.
.... A liberal reward will be
paid by the writer for a suitably vituperative epithet
to be applied to the ordinary street preacher.
The writer has himself laboured with so unflagging
a zeal in the pursuit of the proper word, has expended
the midnight oil with so lavish and matchless a prodigality,
has kneaded his brain with such a singular forgetfulness
of self-that he is gone clean daft. And all,
without adequate result! From the profoundest
deep of his teeming invention he succeeded in evolving
only such utterly unsatisfying results as “rhinoceros,”
“polypus,” and “sheeptick”
in the animal kingdom, and “rhubarb,”
“snakeroot,” and “smartweed”
in the vegetable. The mineral world was ransacked,
but gave forth only “old red sandstone,”
which is tolerably severe, but had been previously
used to stigmatize a member of the Academy of Sciences.
Now, what we wish to secure is a word
that shall contain within itself all the essential
principles of downright abuse; the mere pronouncing
of which in the public street would subject one to
the inconvenience of being rent asunder by an infuriated
populace-something so atrociously apt and so exquisitely
diabolical that any person to whom it should be applied
would go right away out and kick himself to death
with a jackass. We covenant that the inventor
shall be slain the moment we are in possession of his
infernal secret, as life would of course be a miserable
burden to him ever afterward.
With a calm reliance upon the fertile
scurrility of our readers, we leave the matter in
their hands, commending their souls to the merciful
God who contrived them.
.... We have received from a
prominent clergyman a long letter of earnest remonstrance
against what he is pleased to term our “unprovoked
attacks upon God’s elect.”
We emphatically deny that we have
ever made any unprovoked attacks upon them. “God’s
elect” are always irritating us. They are
eternally lying in wait with some monstrous absurdity,
to spring it upon us at the very moment when we are
least prepared. They take a fiendish delight
in torturing us with tantrums, galling us with gammon,
and pelting us with platitudes. Whenever we disguise
ourself in the seemly toggery of the godly, and enter
meekly into the tabernacle, hoping to pass unobserved,
the parson is sure to detect us and explode a bombful
of bosh upon our devoted head. No sooner do we
pick up a religious weekly than we stumble and sprawl
through a bewildering succession of inanities, manufactured
expressly to ensnare our simple feet. If we take
up a tract we are laid out cold by an apostolic knock
straight from the clerical shoulder. We cannot
walk out of a pleasant Sunday without being keeled
Over by a stroke of pious lightning flashed from the
tempestuous eye of an irate churchman at our secular
attire. Should we cast our thoughtless glance
upon the demure Methodist Rachel we are paralysed by
a scowl of disapprobation, which prostrates like the
shock of a gymnotus; and any of our mild pleasantry
at the expense of young Squaretoes is cut short by
a Bible rebuke, shot out of his mouth like a rock from
a catapult.
Is it any wonder that we wax gently
facetious in conversing of “the elect?”—that
in our weak way we seek to get even? Now, good
clergyman, go thou to the devil, and leave us to our
own devices; or an offended journalist shall skewer
thee upon his spit, and roast thee in a blaze of righteous
indignation.
.... The New York Tribune, descanting
upon the recent national misfortune by which the writer’s
red right hand was quietly chewed by an envious bear,
says it cannot commend the writer’s example,
but hopes “his next appearance in print may
edify his readers on the dangers of such a practice.”
We had not hitherto deemed it necessary
to raise a warning voice to a universe not much given
to fooling with bears anyhow, but embrace this opportunity
to declare ourself firmly and unalterably opposed
to the whole business. We plant our ample feet
squarely upon the platform of non-intervention, so
far as affects the social economy and individual idiosyncrasies
of bears. But if the Tribune man expects a homily
upon the sin of feeding oneself in courses to wild
animals, he is informed that we waste no words upon
the senseless wretch who is given to that species
of iniquity. We regard him with ineffable self-contempt.
.... A young girl in Grass Valley
having died, her father wrote some verses upon the
occasion, in which she is made to discourse thus:—
“Then do not detain me, for why should I stay
When cherubs in heaven call me away? Earth has
no pleasure, no joys that compare, With the joys that
await us in heaven so fair.”
As the little darling was only two
years and a fraction of age it is tolerably impossible
to divine upon what authority she sought to throw
discredit upon the joys of earth: her observation
having been limited to mother’s milk and treacle
toffy. But that’s just the way with professing
Christians; they are always disparaging the delights
which they are unfitted to enjoy.
.... The Rev. Dr. Cunningham
instructs his congregation that it is not enough to
give to the Church what they can spare, but to give
and keep giving until they feel it to be a burden and
a sacrifice. These, brethren, are the inspired
words of one who has a deep and abiding pecuniary
interest in what he is talking about. Such a man
cannot err, except by asking too little; and empires
have risen and perished, islands have sprung from
the sea, mountains have burnt their bowels out, and
rivers have run dry, since a man of God has committed
this error. OBITUARY NOTICES. Christians.
.... It is with a feeling of
professional regret that we record the death of Mr.
Jacob Pigwidgeon. Deceased was one of our earliest
pioneers, who came to this State long before he was
needed. His age is a matter of mere conjecture;
probably he was less advanced in years than Methuselah
would have been had he practised a reasonable temperance
in eating and drinking. Mr. Pigwidgeon was a gentleman
of sincere but modest piety, profoundly respected
by all who fancied themselves like him. Probably
no man of his day exercised so peculiar an influence
upon society. Ever, foremost in every good work
out of which there was anything to be made, an unstinted
dispenser of every species of charity that paid a commission
to the disburser, Mr. Pigwidgeon was a model of generosity;
but so modestly did he lavish his favours that his
left hand seldom knew what pocket his right hand was
relieving. During the troubles of ’56 he
was closely identified with the Vigilance Committee,
being entrusted by that body with the important mission
of going into Nevada and remaining there. In
1863 he was elected an honorary member of the Society
for the Prevention of Humanity to the Chinese, and
there is little doubt but he might have been anything,
so active was the esteem with which he inspired those
for whom it was desired that he should vote.
Originally born in Massachusetts,
but for twenty-one years a native of California and
partially bald, possessing a cosmopolitan nature that
loved an English shilling as well, in proportion to
its value, as a Mexican dollar, the subject of our
memoir was one whom it was an honour to know, and
whose close friendship was a luxury that only the
affluent could afford. It shall even be the writer’s
proudest boast that he enjoyed it at less than half
the usual rates.
The circumstances attending his taking
off were most mournful. He had been for some
time very much depressed in spirits of one kind and
another, and on last Wednesday morning was observed
to be foaming at the mouth. No attention was
paid to this; his family believing it to be a symptom
of hydrophobia, with which he had been afflicted from
the cradle. Suddenly a dark-eyed stranger entered
the house, took the patient’s neck between his
thumb and forefinger, threw the body across his shoulder,
winked respectfully to the bereaved widow, and withdrew
by way of the kitchen cellar. Farewell, pure
soul! we shall meet again.
.... We are reluctantly compelled
to relate the untimely death of Mrs. Margaret Ann
Picklefinch, which occurred about one o’clock
yesterday morning. The circumstances attending
the melancholy event were these:—
Just before the hour named, her husband,
the well-known temperance lecturer, and less generally
known temperance lecturee, came home from an adjourned
meeting of the Cold-Water Legion, and retired very
drunk. His estimable lady got up and pulled off
his boots, as usual. He got into bed and she
lay down beside him. She uttered a mild preliminary
oath of endearment and suddenly ceased speaking.
It must have been about this time she died. About
daylight he invited her to get up and make a fire.
Detecting no movement in her body he enforced family
discipline. The peculiar hard sound of his wife
striking the floor first aroused his suspicions of
the bereavement he had sustained, and upon rising
later in the day he found his first fears realized;
the lady had waived her claim to his further protection.
We extend to Mr. P. our sincere sympathy
in the greatest calamity that can befall an unmarriageable
man. The inconsolable survivor called at our
office last evening, conversed feelingly some moments
about the virtues of the dear departed, and left with
the air of a dog that has had his tail abbreviated
and is forced to begin life anew. Truly the decrees
of Providence appear sometimes absurd.
.... Mr. Bildad Gorcas, whose
death has cast a wet blanket of gloom over our community,
was a man comparatively unknown, but his life furnishes
an instructive lesson to fast livers. Mr. Gorcas
never in his life tasted ardent spirits, ate spiced
meats, or sat up later than nine o’clock in
the evening. He rose, summer and winter, at two
A. M., and passed an hour and three quarters immersed
in ice water. For the last twenty years he has
walked fifteen miles daily before breakfast, and then
gone without breakfast. During his waking hours
he was never a moment idle; when not hard at work he
was trying to think. Up to the time of his death,
which occurred last Sunday, he had never spoken to
a doctor, never had occasion to curse a dentist, had
a luxurious growth of variegated hair, and there was
not a wrinkle upon any part of his body. If he
had not been cut off by falling across a circular
saw at the early age of thirty-two, there is no telling
how long he might have weathered it through.
A life like his is so bright and shining
an example that we are almost sorry he died.
.... During the week just rolled
into eternity, our city has been plunged into the
deepest grief. He who doeth all things well, though
to our weak human understanding His acts may sometimes
seen to savour of injustice, has seen fit to remove
from amongst us one whose genius and blameless life
had endeared him to friend and foe alike.
In saying that Mr. Jowler was a dog
of preeminent abilities and exceptional virtues, we
but faintly echo the verdict of a bereaved Universe.
Endowed with a gigantic intellect and a warm heart,
modest in his demeanour genial in his intercourse
with friends and acquaintances, and forbearing towards
strangers (with whom he ever maintained the most cordial
relations, unmarred by the gross familiarity-too common
among dogs of inferior breeds), inoffensive in his
daily walk and conversation, the deceased was universally
respected and his loss will be even more generally
deplored.
It would be a work of supererogation
to give a rsum of the public career of one so well
known-one whose name has become a household word.
In private life his character was equally estimable.
He had ever a wag of encouragement for the young,
the ill-favoured, the belaboured, and the mangy.
Though his gentle spirit has passed away, he has left
with us the record of his virtues as a shining example
for all puppies; and the writer is pleased to admit
that so far as in him lay he has himself endeavoured
to profit by it. PAGANS.
.... Yo Hop is dead! He
was last seen alive about three o’clock yesterday
morning by a white labourer who was returning home
after an elongated orgie at a Barbary Coast inn, and
at the time seemed to be in undisputed possession
of all his faculties; the remainder of his personal
property having been transferred to the white labourer
aforesaid. At the moment alluded to, Mr. Hop was
in the act of throwing up his arms, as if to ward
off some impending danger in the hands of the sole
spectator. An instant later he experienced one
of those sudden deaths which have made this city popularly
famous and surgically interesting.
The lamented was forty years of age;
how much longer he might have lived, in his own country,
it is impossible to determine; but it is to be remarked
that the climate of California is a very trying one
to people of his peculiar organization. The body
was kindly taken in charge by a resident of the vicinity,
and now lies in state in his back yard, where it is
being carefully prepared for burial by those skilful
meathounds, Messrs. Lassirator, Mangler, and Chure,
whose names are a sufficient guarantee that the mournful
rites will be attended to in a manner befitting the
solemn occasion.
We tender the bereaved widow our sincere
sympathy at the regular rates. The cause of Mr.
Hop’s demise is unknown. It is unimportant.
.... A dead Asian was recently
found in a ditch in Nevada county. His head,
like that of a toad, had a precious jewel imbedded
in it, about the size of an ordinary watermelon, and
a clear majority of his fingers, toes, and features
had received Christian burial in the stomachs of several
contiguous hogs with roving commissions. As he
seemed unwilling to state who he was, or how he got
his deserts, he was tenderly replaced in his last
ditch, and his discoverers proceeded leisurely for
the coroner. Upon the arrival of that public
functionary some days later, a pile of nice clean bones
was discovered, with this touching epitaph inscribed
with a lead pencil upon a segment of the skull:
“Yur lize wot cant be chawd
of Chineece jaik; xekewted bi me fur a plitikle awfens,
and et bi mi starven hogs, wich aint hed nuthin afore
sence jaix boss stoal mi korn. BIL ROPER, and
ov sich is Kingdem cum.”
.... The following report of
an autopsy is of peculiar interest to physicians and
Christians:—Case 81st.—Felo de
se. Yow Kow, yellow, male, Chinese, aged 94;
found dead on the street; addicted to opium.
Autopsy-sixteen hours after death. Slobbering
at the mouth; head caved in; immense rigor mortis;
eyes dilated and gouged out; abdomen lacerated; hemorrhage
from left ear. Head. Water on the brain;
scalp congested, rather; when burst with a mallet
interior of head resembled a war map. Thorax.
Charge of buckshot in left lung; diaphragm suffused;
heart wanting-finger marks in that vicinity; traces
of hobnails outside. Abdomen. Lacerated as
aforesaid; small intestines cumbered with brick dust;
slingshot in duodenum; boot-heel imbedded in pelvis;
butcher’s knife fixed rigidly in right kidney.
Remarks: Chinese immigration
will ruin any country in the world.