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A NUMBER of good clever libellers.-Any dirty

fellow will answer, and the dirtier the better. He must be able to throw dirt without stint upon the Prince of Wales, and those "great boobies," those "booby boys with corals and bells," the Royal Dukes, his brothers.-Neither principle, character, honour, or loyalty, are at all requisite.-Fabricators of harmless falsehoods, commonly called "white lies," will not answer-they must be black, virulent, and vindictive!

An expert scavenger will find this advertisement worth his notice.-He will be required also, between hours, to shovel flummery down the throats of Mr. Perceval and his coadjutors.

Application to be made at The Cripple Office (not The Courier Office), nearly opposite to the office of The British Press, in the Strand.

EPIGRAMS

ON THE RUMOURED APPOINTMENTS OF NEW MINISTERS.

THE

*[From the Morning Post, Jan. 18.]

PRESIDENT OF THE BOARD OF CONTROL.

HE maxim wisely says-" Learn self-command,
Ere ye attempt o'er other men to rule ;"

Then, Wh-tb-d, touch not the presiding wand,
Before to learn this task ye-go to school.

ANOTHER ON THE SAME.

* Fierce Lismahago of the tiger race,

Whence now for royalty thy love and zeal? Can he who urg'd one brother's downfal, grace, Wish for, support, or love the other's weal?

* Vide Mr. Stephen's admirable and characteristic speech descriptive of this amiable character.

SECRETARY FOR IRELAND.

Cries Horner in his proudest hour,
His honours now bent fully on,
"Some creatures wriggle on to power,
While bolder creatures bully-on."

TEUTHANTE.

IMPROMPTU,

TO A BROTHER NATURALIST.

[From the British Press, Jan. 30.]

YOU ask how it happens that toads are ne'er seen
Near a nobleman's house, in his park or his green?—

I'll tell you at once, for I'm certain I'm able-
The toads are all eaten, my friend, at his table.

No TOAD-EATER,

A LAUNCH. .

[From the same, Jan 30.]

SHORTLY will be launched at Westminster, one of the finest vessels that ever came off English stocks, to be called "The Regent." This gallant vessel is of true British heart of oak. She has been much longer in joining than was necessary; a delay justly attributed to a set of idle lubberly mercenary fellows employed in the cabin part of the work; who, dreading their discharge as soon as the job was done, and that no other master-carpenter would be weak enough to take them into his employ, have kept on as long as they could. The vessel is not so free in her joints as could be wished, her braces being too tight, and she has scarcely a rag of sail left-defects all owing to the obstinacy of the workmen in building her upon a very defective model, produced in 1789, by that great master-carpenter, the late Mr. Pitt. It is a great pity that

such

THE QUEEN'S BUCK-HOUNDS.

111

such fine materials should have fallen into such bad hands! The proprietors, we understand, are greatly discontented at the manner in which The Regent has been laid down and finished.-This gallant vessel ought to have been built after the model of The Royal George.

THE QUEEN'S BUCK-HOUNDS.
[From the same.]

THE
HE following is a list of some of the dogs in this
pack, of which we have heard so much in the de-
bates on the Regency Bill :-

Sweet Willy Q.-This dog was tried on the Yorkshire Wolds, where he has frequently been hunted in couples with Preacher, Methodist, Canter, and several other hounds of note. He is well-tongued, but very deficient in bone and mettle.

Brag. This is not a good dog. lies strong he hunts tolerably steady; dull, and wants fleetness. He was Mr. Bathurst.

When the scent

but he is rather bred by the late

Chancellor. This is a black dog, and perhaps one of the most sticking hounds in the pack. He is never well at a burst, or in running breast high; but when the pack is at fault, he is always busy.

Jenky.-This dog has the appearance of a sorry cur, but he has some good properties. He has been known to hunt a whole day, in the deepest and dirtiest ground, without appearing in the least blown.

The pack, of which these form a part, belonged to the late Mr. Pitt, who used them frequently in Foxhunting. The many days sport they afforded under him are recorded with rapture by the lovers of the

chase.

Little Poucett, who now hunts them, employs them chiefly in chasing the royal deer, which they have nearly

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nearly scared from the royal forests; but although they have had several severe runs, they have not been able to run one of these noble animals down.

Little Poucett has also enlarged the pack, by introducing several Irish tykes and Scotch lurchers. They are, of course, become a motley crew, and their cry is the most discordant and horrible din that ever astounded the ears of a huntsman!

We understand that he also means shortly to retire from the field, and in that case the pack will be to be sold; but the purchaser ought to be on his guard, as the mange has broken out among them. Some have also caught the old disorder, commonly called "turning tail."

IN

THE RIVAL POLITICIANS.
[From the Morning Herald, Jan. 31.]

ON craft with Boney see our great men strive;
To gain their ends alike false tales contrive;
They differ only in the game they're at―

He seizes empires, while they catch a rat * !

*The following description of the particular species of rat which these great men are so anxious to catch, is extracted from a celebrated work on natural history :

MUS MAGNUS PARLIAMENTARIUS.-Senatum, regiam, ædes publicas frequentare; caseorum frusta, candelarum reliquias, cæterasque sordes surripere ac deglutire solitus; "contentus vivere rapto;" Anglice, propter eximiam magnitudinem et rapacitatem [quasi proprio quodam jure et usu vocabuli] appellatus, A RAT.-Sic LINNEUS vel alius quidam de animalibus voracibus scriptor; quanquam enim rei auctoritas satis PER SE VALet, scriptorum copia in re notabili, haud desideratur-addit fama, etiamsi natura perquam cautum, mendaci muscipula animal sæpe capi.

TRANSLATION FOR THE USE OF THE ENGLISH READER. THE GREAT RAT O'PARLIAMENT-Infests the Senate, the Palace, and the Public Offices, carrying off and consuming cheese-parings, candle-ends, and such-like offal, content to live by pillage" called in English, on account of its extraordinary bulk and rapacity, as if by a peculiar right and habitual application of the word, "A RAT." Such is the account given by Linnæus, or some other writer on voracious animals; for although the authority of the fact is sufficiently strong in itself (Per se valer), a multitude of writers is not wanting on a subject so worthy of notice. Report adds, that this animal, although by nature extremely cautious, is often caught in a trap prepared with a false bait.

THE

( 113 )

THE GREAT SEAL-AN INFALLIBLE SPECIFIC.

TH

BY A GREAT LAW-OFFICER.

AN EPIGRAM.

[From the same.]

HROW physic to the dogs" behind!
Nor heed what doctors write or say;

The fever of the public mind

We must attack a sharper way.

The Great Seal clapp'd upon his back,
Will, if John Bull the smart endure,
Like fretful blister, in a crack,

His Constitution-kill, or cure!

AN ADDRESS TO THE PRINCE.-1811.

A PARODY.

[From the Morning Chronicle, Jan. 31.]

IN all humility we crave

Our Regent may become our slave;

And being so, we trust that he
Will thank us for our loyalty.
Then, if he'll help us to pull down
His Father's dignity and crown,
We'll make him in a year to come,
The greatest prince in Christendom.

THE THREE ESTATES-DELUSION, PHANTOM, AND FICTION.

[From the same.]

IN Britain's sad hour of grief and contention,

IN

The three new estates fairly met in convention; 'T was to help the poor country's distracted condition, And of royal authority make a partition.

Delusion's

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