Punch, or the London Charivari - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Punch, or the London Charivari Part 6 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
_A._ Certainly, or I shouldn't live at all.
_Q._ Which do you prefer--a story produced in parts, or a story published as a whole?
_A._ Again a question of terms. Still, if remuneration is equal, sketches of character are easier than construction of plot.
_Q._ When is the latter necessary?
_A._ When the novel is written for a serial, and is published with the standing announcement (frequently repeated), "to be continued in our next."
_Q._ Is it difficult to sketch character?
_A._ Not if you do not mind irritating your friends and driving your foes into lunacy.
_Q._ How do you irritate your friends?
_A._ By reproducing in an amusing manner their peculiarities.
_Q._ And how do you madden your foes?
_A._ By pa.s.sing them over in a dead silence, and sternly refusing to recognise their existence.
_Q._ How should you treat your contemporaries?
_A._ If you appreciate your work at its proper (that is to say, your _own_) value, you will not admire contemporaries.
_Q._ And what will you say of authors of the past?
_A._ That it is fortunate that they did live in the past, as they certainly do not exist in the present, and will certainly not revive in the future.
_Q._ How should you criticise a contemporary's novel?
_A._ If you are sure of his influencing a criticism of your own work favourably, praise his romance sky high. If he is, from a reviewer's point of view, a negligable quant.i.ty, why, treat him on that basis.
_Q._ Then what is your motto?
_A._ "Nothing for nothing."
_Q._ Do you consider a novelist's life the best possible form of existence?
_A._ I should say yes if I did not know of a form of existence to be even better.
_Q._ And what is that?
_A._ Inheriting a fortune, putting your hands in your pockets, and for the rest of your life doing nothing.
[Ill.u.s.tration: PREHISTORIC PEEPS.
A LITTLE COVERT SHOOTING. (DRAGONS PLENTIFUL, AND STRONG ON THE WING.)]
AMARE, O!
(_By an Usher._)
With weary brain I hear again The drowsy urchins stammer, O, From _mensa_ down through every noun That's in the Latin grammar, O!
And when declensions pall, why then, The exercise to vary, O, I bid them show how well they know My sweet, sweet verb, _Amare_, O!
"_Amo_, _amas_,--I love a la.s.s,"
Her dainty name is NANCY, O, And none but she shall ever be The darling of my fancy, O!
_Amavi_--well, in love I fell, And sure 'twas no vagary, O, For since that day I've learnt the way To conjugate _Amare_, O!
I whisper now, "_Ama_, Love thou!"
Amongst the fields of barley, O, And NANCE replies, with br.i.m.m.i.n.g eyes, "I love, I love thee, CHARLIE, O!"
_Amo_, _ama_, the livelong day I'll teach my winsome fairy, O, For has not she resolved with me To conjugate _Amare_, O?
[Ill.u.s.tration: CAUTION.
_The Major._ "DON'T YOU LIKE LIQUEURS, MRS. JINKS?"
_Mrs. Jinks._ "YES; BUT THEY MAKE ONE SO _UNRESERVED_!"]
AD JOVEM PLUVIUM.
["Ju Plu has been in his best form lately."--_Sporting Paper._]
ENGLAND farewell, when showers of rain From dewy eve to dawn pour, I fly across the heaving main To Aden or to Cawnpore.
The deep floods hide my native land, No more as land I rank it, I envy on some foreign strand The brown man in his blanket.
Through sandy deserts he may roam, But bright suns s.h.i.+ne for him there, And if he wants to reach his home He never has to swim there.
There would I dwell, away, away I fly, these floods disdaining, Where Jupiter can rule the day Without a thought of raining.