Carols of Cockayne |
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Page xii
... NIGHT AND MORNING , 3. GENERAL DEBILITY , 162 163 THE COMPACT , 165 THE VISION OF THE ALDERMAN , 169 EVENING DRESS , 172 WINE , 175 MY ULTIMATUM , 177 ALL ALONE , 179 PAGE 181 66 OH NIGHTS AND SUPPERS , " ETC. xii CONTENTS .
... NIGHT AND MORNING , 3. GENERAL DEBILITY , 162 163 THE COMPACT , 165 THE VISION OF THE ALDERMAN , 169 EVENING DRESS , 172 WINE , 175 MY ULTIMATUM , 177 ALL ALONE , 179 PAGE 181 66 OH NIGHTS AND SUPPERS , " ETC. xii CONTENTS .
Page xiii
Henry Sambrooke Leigh. PAGE 181 66 OH NIGHTS AND SUPPERS , " ETC. , 183 THE WEATHER , " ON CORPULENCE , " 185 188 THE MOONLIGHT SONATA , OCCASIONAL VERSES- CHATEAUX D'ESPAGNE , TO A CERTAIN SOMEBODY , THE LORD MAYOR'S APOTHEOSIS , THE ...
Henry Sambrooke Leigh. PAGE 181 66 OH NIGHTS AND SUPPERS , " ETC. , 183 THE WEATHER , " ON CORPULENCE , " 185 188 THE MOONLIGHT SONATA , OCCASIONAL VERSES- CHATEAUX D'ESPAGNE , TO A CERTAIN SOMEBODY , THE LORD MAYOR'S APOTHEOSIS , THE ...
Page 30
... night ! For the toast shall be dry , and the tea shall be bitter , And all through your breakfast this thought shall intrude ; That a little pale brandy and Seltzer is fitter For such an occasion than animal food . STANZAS TO AN ...
... night ! For the toast shall be dry , and the tea shall be bitter , And all through your breakfast this thought shall intrude ; That a little pale brandy and Seltzer is fitter For such an occasion than animal food . STANZAS TO AN ...
Page 32
... turn'd quickly round ; Then totter'd from its resting - place- * * * That night the corse was found . CHIVALRY FOR THE CRADLE . · The king , with 32 CAROLS OF COCKAYNE . CHIVALRY FOR THE CRADLE- THE ROMAUNT OF HUMPTY-DUMPTY,
... turn'd quickly round ; Then totter'd from its resting - place- * * * That night the corse was found . CHIVALRY FOR THE CRADLE . · The king , with 32 CAROLS OF COCKAYNE . CHIVALRY FOR THE CRADLE- THE ROMAUNT OF HUMPTY-DUMPTY,
Page 35
... nights and let them fall , And in the morning , worst of all , You go and let the day break . You drop the rains of early Spring ( That set the wide world blossoming ) ; - The golden beams that mellow - Our grain towards the harvest ...
... nights and let them fall , And in the morning , worst of all , You go and let the day break . You drop the rains of early Spring ( That set the wide world blossoming ) ; - The golden beams that mellow - Our grain towards the harvest ...
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Common terms and phrases
Age of Gold ALDERMAN ALFRED CONCANEN Amongst the seasons anecdote BAB BALLADS BACCHUS ballads Barnsbury Bow Bells brain breeze bring caballitos chandelle DAVID GARRICK dear delight dress drink drop Edition ev'ry fancy fcap feel folks funny George Cruikshank gondolier hate hear you sing heard Hill Hints on Etiquette hookabadar hour illustrations IMPORTANT NEW BOOKS jeu ne vaut John Camden Hotten JOHN LEECH JOHN RUSKIN kind Lady Clara LARWOOD London look Lord melody morning morocco Nelly Moore never night Nightingale o'er once own-my upper pale Piccadilly plain play pleasure PLUTUS poet's lot pretty prosaic days recollect Répondez round s'il vous plait shabby-genteel sing sleep slumber smile sorrow Surrey side sweet Swinburne's talk tell thee THEODORE HOOK there's thine thing to-day to-night turn'd Twas upper G voice volume waggery weather wine young youth
Popular passages
Page 9 - For one of us was born a twin, Yet not a soul knew which. One day, to make the matter worse, Before our names were fixed, As we were being washed by nurse, We got completely mixed; And thus, you see, by fate's decree, Or rather nurse's whim, My brother John got...
Page 48 - I wondered hugely what she meant, And said, "I'm bad at riddles; But I know where little girls are sent For telling taradiddles. "Now, if you don't reform," said I, " You'll never go to heaven." But all in vain; each time I try, That little idiot makes reply, "I ain't had more nor seven!" POSTSCRIPT: To borrow Wordsworth's name was wrong, Or slightly misapplied; And so I'd better call my song "Lines after Ache-inside.
Page 27 - Folks were happy as days were long In the old Arcadian times ; When life seemed only a dance and song In the sweetest of all sweet climes. Our world grows bigger, and, stage by stage, As the pitiless years have rolled, We've quite forgotten the Golden Age, And come to the Age of Gold. Time went by in a sheepish way Upon Thessaly's plains of yore. In the nineteenth century lambs at play Mean mutton, and nothing more. Our swains at present are far too sage To live as one lived of old : So they couple...
Page 47 - I thought it would have sent me mad Last night about eleven." Said I, " What is it makes you bad? How many apples have you had?" She answered, "Only seven!" "And are you sure you took no more, My little maid?" quoth I; "Oh, please, sir, mother gave me four, But they were in a pie!" "If that's the case," I stammered out, "Of course you've had eleven.
Page 103 - NAY, start not from the banquet where the red wine foams .. , for thee — Though somewhat thick to perforate this epidermis be ; 'Tis madness, when the bowl invites, to linger at the brink : So haste thee, haste thee, timid one. Drink, pretty creature, drink ! I tell thee, if these azure veins could boast the regal wine Of Tudors or Plantagenets, the draught should still be thine ! Though round the goblet's beaded brim plebeian bubbles wink, 'Twill cheer and not inebriate. Drink, pretty creature,...