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6 THE TOM AH A WK. {January 8, 1870. __
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THE SMOKING ROOM. Present. Brown SMITH {...
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UJSTCLE MARIGOLD'S Z>ARLII T \G. A Dream...
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I DREAMT I was in the Alhambra—at least ...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
The Question, Whether Mr. Lowe's Ingenio...
nation instalment , or s any after one it else has , three become month due s . in In advance factthe , or m in ost easy - - pressed portion of the people , both by imperial , and local taxa op - tion , are those very persons whose money represents hard labour , and who are taxed just as heavily in proportion to their
I means as the millionaire who has nothing to do but to write a cheque whenever he wants his thousand pounds . But Mr . Lowe would not he Mr . Lowe if he did not treat with contempt the claims of the obscure and the honest labourer , for such we consider all those whose pittances are earned by labour , whether of
the brain or the muscles . But what are the benefits we are to have in return for all this hardship ? A penny off the Income-tax . We sincerely believe that many men of small means would sooner pay 6 d . Incometax if they paid i ^ d . every quarter , than 4 d ., if they had to pay
it all at once . It is a well-known thing—even Mr . Lowe will admit this—that hundreds and thousands are saved from ruin every day by having time granted them , to pay their liabilities , just as many are ruined by having to pay at once the debt they expected to be able to liquidate by small instalments .
Supposing a man . had to buy all his tea or sugar for one year on the ist of January , how many would have to give up these luxuries . As for other reductions , the is . duty on corn was never felt by anyone , and its abolition has neither benefited the consumer in England—at best , if bread is any cheaper we wish our baker
would say so—nor the producer . Are our farmers making better profit on their wheat ? As for the Fire Insurance duty , that was doomed ; it is the only real relief given . The boasted readjustment of taxation on locomotion will , we prophecy , put a fine lot of money into the pockets of those very worst of petty
tyrants and middle men , cab proprietors . The lucky public will be treated to a continual supply of such vehicles as are resuscitated on the Derby Day , and similar occasions , but which on ordinary occasions are mercifully allowed to afford shelter to the pensive bantam or the teeming dorking . We shall see .
Meanwhile , Mr . Lowe , may your New Year be as happy as that of the numberless humble householders for whom you have loaded at the hour of its birth with burdens hard to be borne .
6 The Tom Ah A Wk. {January 8, 1870. __
6 THE TOM AH A WK . { January 8 , 1870 . __
The Smoking Room. Present. Brown Smith {...
THE SMOKING ROOM . Present . Brown SMITH { { a another pleasant ) . , chatty , satirical man about town ) . ¦ Time : 12 . 5 a . m ., ist J anuary , 1870 . Smith . — A happy New Year old to you fell , old boy . to
ni Brown ht ? . —The same to you , ow . Been anywhere - pantomi g Smith mes . —Not j East much -End , { lighting , by jov a e . cigar ) . Been doing the Brown . —Good ? was Smith the thing . —A at i . the Went Standard to the . Britannia Great big — hous really e , with capital a — first so
was rate rate good tra transformation nsformation scenery and scene scene plenty ; : and and of broad at at tthe he fun Victoria Victoria . Theatre Theatre there there Brown . —How about Covent Garden ? characte Smith r . . —Very Both good the fair indeed Harrises . Prefer good Payne , ditto thoug Nelly h in Powe male r . place Globe ought , too , to be ital under at . Fanny The Alfred Josephs good ' Management . The —the
Brown { interrupting grego ) . —Why you seem , to have been everywhere ? at S some mith . of —Quit them e . so For , dear instance boy ; but , the you stalls see at I got Drury a little Lane sleep are a" ^ ~ zvfull r ^ * ^ v w ^ v * y r comfortable ^^ r v ^ ^ m ^ m *^ ^ ^ tr ^ B ^ p vv W ^ . > w vp .
S Brown mith . — . — Oh Anything , only that else good going story on about ? little Tommy Skittles and Brown his new . — horse No . . Do Haven tell me ' t you ? heard it ? ( Cigars , redjirc , and nuiimitvd B . and S ., and scandal . ) CURTAIN .
Ujstcle Marigold's Z>Arlii T \G. A Dream...
UJSTCLE MARIGOLD'S Z > ARLII \ G . A Dream ( not Byron ' s ) .
I Dreamt I Was In The Alhambra—At Least ...
I DREAMT I was in the Alhambra—at least it was not the Alharnbra Strange at , because all , but it quite was at more home comfortable -like ; and — there and was I didn not ' t any feel smoking ^ I saw two . young ladies sitting in a passage—and I recoglook nized ¦— one ¦ % of nice the young indeed ladie " And s—and presently I said , in to came myself a , " beautiful Ah , you
lad — — —— y— very - oh * -. j so -.--vw beautiful * - »* w « . wX' ^&« !— . whom a AlAV * . £ I **¦ ^ had wWJULtJl seen V XXX . faint \* d , XX * . twenty \* C * . U \** ' - seven *\~ l \ . XXlJ . X . in times black in , one trying evening to fall ; in and love since with that Mr I ' ve . Alfre seen d Wigan her all , dressed but he looked she could so not like a but French she waiter him out a for a knife mad day with ' s revel which , that he ; gave paper , killed And And himself the tne beautiful beautilul —but that lady lady was said said long she she ago was was . a a school school--girl eirl . but but I I could could
not and believe spoke so it , very for she funny wore . such very high heels to , her shoes , bert And ; but ' then it was tall not lad her y came , and in she , who was reminded a schoolmistress me of Miss —at least Herso they presentl said—but y I she heard looked somebod far too y say smart something . outside , and " all Mary the peop dear , " cheered they cla wildl pped y their , and when hands he and came shouted on— ; and and said no wonderfor it turned out to be dear DrMarigold—without his
more prescriptions like , Pod — gers and — yet and I thoug then ht again it was I . not thoug the ht doctor it was —but Robson was he come had to all life the again conversation , but I did not to think himself that and very at long last ; I however found it , was the Ni Mr neteenth . Toole g Century iving a . lecture ori the iEsthetical , Philosophy of Marigold So I slept selling a little toasting more ; -forks and when from I a woke cart next and I afterwards found Dr . having his — - tea " ¦ ' ¦— - —— ——— in a »» j greedyAnd while , he was thus
gorging ™—— - ™~~^ J ™ — himself , the very w * Prince < 3 ^^ " ^ of Jt , ¦ way Wales ^^ J . Jfc somehow **> i * WV ^ J ^**^^ A in ^ V ^ a F ** pair - » VAAUW of people corduroy cheered trousers him and ; and a leather quite ri b elt , came , for running when , he in , took and the off his Prince hat o he f Wales looked , for very I nice saw . hi ? But n com he e turned into , a out private not box to be after the - wards . However , he was a very nice young man , —a blackon smith the , he said u he lady was in — and he evidentl high-heeled y was boots awfully He spooney soon
went away yo , and then the Right very Honourable Benjamin . Disraeli take appeared n to , call only looking mself Cheve quite n yo ix ung and again he wanted ; and it to seems he the 'd , marry you come ng at lady 9 . 30 for the his very answer high . -heeled boots too , and he said he'd woke remember « ¦^^ Then . . •¦¦^• m , ^ I Dr r w u ^* bbed w . him »— Mari ' - — - - ^ w in m gold — y j Phiz e - * tr yes j fell ^* m , * j asle and ™ ai * ep there wmmt , and ^ jmn ^ m was * « so VVW did * Mr f *> 4 . . I Dombey ; t ~ and X ^ fc ** % ^ whe % + Jt j I ust n " \> y ' ti I as TiVtuT next I Jfc
I must be seeing a play ' s pict by Dick ure , legs ens— and but all I wasn ; and 't . I made And here sure was the beautiful young lady in a bridal dress , though she'd been bored m arried er very ever mu so ch long by lea to r Benj ning amin his spe D'Israeli ech out Dombey loud in , who the . drawing-room when she wanted him to play with her . But she lou soon ning foun on W d *» so with >> mebody *«•« . « w * . to light *«^** a mu hair » W s e her and « - % AA , for dreadful VCbUi a young . bad VMVi m manners 41 an AtMAllWl came
* hey U ** g ^* said 4 *^ his na m very W e was J Teesdale , , and I suppos W ** e he had com e . after to look all after . Meanwhil the Prin e Dombey of Wale gav s ; e us ut several it was not capital that Teesdale views of his And back then , which Marigold let u came s into o n again secret —or why Uncle his neck Zacchary was , so I think stiff . haired he was called— man and came he got in kissing and was the beautiful rude lady and till th the went fairand young left Mari , to himself very but , dreadful ey comic
servant away soon burst Dr . gold bewildered j " e with a a decanter full it of was stout , port which wine Uncl , upon a e nd Zaccha my it had ry drunk the effect very gaz fast of making , and pretended him get fell very asleep crooked again , and . jerk And when head I about woke , and 1 found his words there out was , till an talki awful ng row to the going beautiful on , for lady the , and gentl Uncle eman M with arigold the had fair got hair more was crooked so I was meho afraid w than or other his ever , head , had and would g was ot in objecting ; come and Dombey off ; what and , the with who schoolmistress was the so strain angry of , , p everybody assion an else d h to is order stiff s Uncle tock togeth Marigold er ; , an out d ever of the ybody house wanted but
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Citation
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Tomahawk (1867-1870), Jan. 8, 1870, page 6, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/t/issues/ttw_08011870/page/2/
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