Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 103, July 30, 1892 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 39 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 103, July 30, 1892.

Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 103, July 30, 1892 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 39 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 103, July 30, 1892.

Uninvited Member. May I ask where was this charming Party?

Algy. At the CRAMMERLY’s, Prince’s Gate.  Colonel CRAMMERLY.

Uninvited M. Colonel CRAMMERLY!  Let’s see, was he an old Crimea man?

Algy. No!—­He was Colonel in the Bounders Green Volunteers. (Roars of laughter.) You know “CRAMMERLY’s Starch”—­made a fortune out of it.

Charlie. He must have spent a bit of it last night.  They say the flowers alone cost over a thousand pounds.

[Illustration]

    Enter Captain O.

Captain O. Talking about the Colonel CRAMMERLY Party, eh? (To Uninvited M.) Were you there?

Uninvited M. (very satirically).  Oh, dear no!  I fear I’m not smart enough to warrant my admittance into that charmed and select circle. [Roars of laughter.

Capt.  O. By Jove, you were well out of it. (Addressing the Club generally.) Did—­you ever see such—­eh?

Charlie. I want to know where the deuce they get their men from.

Algy. I fancy they discover them in the City.

Jack. I never met—­such shocking people before.

Capt.  O. Too dreadful for words.  I could only conclude they must have been relations. [Roars of laughter.

Jack. By the way, did you notice that there was a “bounder” who was reversing?

Uninvited M. (with great indignation).  No!!!

Jack. I tell you it’s a positive fact—­I know it to my cost; for I was dancing with that youngest daughter, you know—­the one who has the fluffy fringe over her forehead—­and the brute bounced against us, and sent us flying.  Never even apologised.  If I could have got him outside, I declare I would have given him a deuced good hiding.  A man like that ought to be kicked.

Uninvited M. Were the women any better?

Algy. Well, if you call Mrs. DASH any better!

Uninvited M. (with tragic intensity).  You don’t mean to say she was there!

Algy. I do.

Uninvited M. But do you mean to say that Mrs. CRAMMERLY has heard—­

Jack. No.  She’s deaf. [Laughter.

Uninvited M. Well, you do surprise me! (After a long pause.) Any other shining lights of London Society?

Jack. No—­except that fearful Mrs. JUSSOPH and her daughters, who honoured me with an invitation to their afternoon party at their suburban residence at West Kensington.  I don’t know whether you regard them as an illumination. [Roars of laughter.

Uninvited M. (triumphantly.) Good gracious!  Then there was positively no one there that one knows.

Algy (thinking he has said something original).  No one, that one wants to know.

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Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 103, July 30, 1892 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.