Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, December 26, 1917 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 45 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, December 26, 1917.

Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, December 26, 1917 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 45 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, December 26, 1917.
“The defendant expressed regret that having misunderstood a newspaper paragraph he charged one penny for a box of ’Pilot matches.’  Directly his attention was drawn to the matter he at once charged the correct price, 3s. 43/4d.”—­South London Press.

Our journalists should really be more careful not to mislead honest tradesmen.

* * * * *

With the auxiliary patrol.

I do not think there was a single man of the ship’s company who bore the loss of poor Mnemosyne dry-eyed.  From the lieutenant down to the trimmer we had become sincerely attached to this affectionate little creature, and when unhappily, during the temporary absence of the steward, she ventured to circumvent the rim of an open condensed milk-tin, missed her footing and succumbed to a clammy death, there was not a more unhappy trawler patrolling the North Sea than ours.

She was a weevil and I found her in my ship’s biscuit.  From the first I recognised that she was no ordinary weevil; her stately bearing, the fine upward curl of her moustachios, but, more than anything else, the intelligent, often humorous gleam in her big black eyes elevated her at once above the mass of her compatriots.  She took to me wonderfully:  I secured her confidence with a piece of boiled cat-fish, and thenceforth we were scarcely ever apart.  Not that she resented the advances of the rest of the crew—­she was no snob, and would eat from the hand of the trimmer as readily as from my own, and allow anyone to stroke her; but it was I who taught her to sit up and beg, to “die for her country,” to droop her antennae whenever the name of Von tirpitz was mentioned, and to wave them for Sir David Beatty.  She would often sit with me in the wireless cabin whilst I was on watch, and never once did she disturb me during the receiving of a message by boisterous or noisy behaviour.

We had other weevils at different times, but none so intelligent or so faithful as Mnemosyne.  The lieutenant tamed one, and, being a devotee of science and despising the arts, he named him Newton Darwin; but he was a foolish fellow at the best and continually getting into somebody’s way.  The lieutenant offered to back him against Mnemosyne for a race across the cabin table, and we made a match of it.  The betting was three to two in favour of Newton Darwin, because the third hand, who had once been employed in a racing-stable, had been heard to remark that he had very fine quarters.  The stakes were half a plug of ship’s tobacco.

It was a walk-over.  On the word “Go” Mnemosyne positively leapt forward, took a crease in the tablecloth in her stride and completed the course, which measured sixteen inches, in the remarkable time of seven and two-fifths minutes.  Newton Darwin was left standing; indeed he never attempted to race, but, after staring about vacantly for some minutes, ambled leisurely off in the opposite direction, where he had seen a breadcrumb.

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Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, December 26, 1917 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.