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An' Deacon Tubbs-he all broke down,

As one might well suppose;

He took one look at Sister Brown,

And meekly scratched his nose.

He looked his hymn-book through and through
And laid it on the seat,

And then a pensive sigh he drew,

And looked completely beat.
An' when they took another bout,
He didn't even rise;

But drawed his red bandanner out,

An' "wiped his weepin' eyes."

I've been a sister, good an' true,
For five an' thirty year;

I've done what seemed my part to do,

An' prayed my duty clear;

But death will stop my voice I know,
For he is on my track;

And some day I to church will go,
And never more come back.
And when the folks get up to sing-
Whene'er that time shall be-

I do not want no PATENT thing
A squealin' over me!

LXIX.

BURIAL OF SIR JOHN MOORE.

1. Not a drum was heard, not a funeral note,
As his corse to the rampart we hurried;
Not a soldier discharged his farewell shot
O'er the grave where our hero we buried.

We buried him darkly at dead of night,
The sods with our bayonets turning ;
By the struggling moon-beam's misty light,
And the lantern dimly burning.

No useless coffin enclosed his breast,

Nor in sheet, nor in shroud, we wound him ;

But he lay, like a warrior taking his rest,

With his martial cloak around him.

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4. Few and short were the prayers we said,

And we spoke not a word of sorrow;
But we steadfastly gazed on the face of the dead,
And we bitterly thought of the morrow.

5. We thought, as we hollowed his narrow bed,
And smoothed down his lonely pillow,

How the foe and the stranger would tread o'er his head,
And we far away on the billow.

6. Lightly they'll talk of the spirit that's gone,
And o'er his cold ashes upbraid him;

But little he'll reck, if they let him sleep on,
In the grave where a Briton has laid him.

7. But half of our heavy task was done,

When the clock tolled the hour for retiring;
And we heard the distant and random gun
That the foe was suddenly firing.

8. Slowly and sadly we laid him down,

From the field of his fame fresh and gory;
We carved not a line, we raised not a stone,
But we left him alone with his glory.

LXX.

THE LOST HEIR.

"Oh where, and oh where

Is my bonnie laddie gone!"-OLD SONG.-Hood.

One day, as I was going by

That part of Holborn christened High,
I heard a loud and sudden cry

That chill'd my very blood;

And lo! from out a dirty alley,
Where pigs and Irish wont to rally,

I saw a crazy woman sally,

Bedaubed with grease and mud.

She turned her East, she turned her West,

Staring like Pythoness possest,

With streaming hair and heaving breast,

As one stark mad with grief.

This way and that she wildly ran,

Jostling with woman and with man-
Her right hand held a frying-pan,

The left a lump of beef.

At last her frenzy seemed to reach
A point just capable of speech,
And with a tone, almost a screech,
As wild as ocean birds,

Or female Ranter moved to preach,
She gave her sorrow words."

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"O Lord! O dear, my heart will break, I shall go stick stark staring wild! Has ever a one seen any thing about the streets like a crying lost-looking

child?

Lawk help me, I don't know where to look, or to run, if I only knew which

way

A Child as is lost about London streets, and especially Seven Dials, is a needle in a bottle of hay.

I am all in a quiver—get out of my sight, dɔ, you wretch, you little Kitty M'Nab!

You promised to have half an eye to him, you know you did, you dirty deceitful young drab.

The last time as ever I see him, poor thing, was with my own blessed

Motherly eyes,

Sitting as good as gold in the gutter, a playing at making little dirt pies.

I wonder he left the court, where he was better off than all the other young

boys,

With two bricks, an old shoe, nine oyster-shells, and a dead kitten by way

of toys.

When his Father comes home, and he always comes home as sure as ever the clock strikes one,

He'll be rampant, he will, at his child being lost; and the beef and the inguns not done!

La bless you, good folks, mind your own concarns, and don't be making a

mob in the street;

O Serjeant M'Farlane! you have not come across my poor little boy, have you, in your beat?

Do, good people, move on! don't stand staring at me like a parcel of stupid

stuck pigs;

Saints forbid ! but he's p'r'aps been inviggled away up a court for the sake of his clothes by the priggs;

He'd a very good jacket, for certain, för I bought it myself for a shilling one day in Rag Fair;

And his trowsers considering not very much patched, and red plush, they was once his Father's best pair.

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lis shirt, it's very lucky I'd got washing in the tub, or that might have gone

with the rest :

But he'd got on a very good pinafore with only two slits and a burn on the

breast.

He'd a goodish sort of hat, if the crown was sew'd in, and not quite so much jagged at the brim.

With one shoe on, and the other shoe is a boot, and not a fit, and you'll know by that if it's him.

Except being so well dressed, my mind would misgive, some old beggar woman in want of an orphan

Had borrowed the child to go a begging with; but I'd rather see him laid out in his coffin !

Do, good people, move on; such a rabble of boys! I'll break every bone of 'em I come near;

Go home-you're spilling the porter-go home-Tommy Jones, go along
with your beer.

This day is the sorrowfullest day of my life, ever since my name was Betty
Morgan,

Them vile Savoyards! they lost him once before all along of following a
Monkey and an Organ :

O my Billy-my head will turn right round-if he's got kiddynapp'd with
them Italians

They'll make him a plaster parish image boy, they will, the outlandish tatterdemalions.

Billy-where are you, Billy?—I'm as hoarse as a crow, with screaming for ye, you young sorrow!

And sha'n't have half a voice, no more I sha'n't, for crying fresh herrings to

morrow.

O Billy, you're bursting my heart in two, and my life won't be of no more vally,

If I'm to see other folks darlins, and none of mine, playing like angels in our

alley,

And what shall I do but cry out my eyes, when I looks at the old three

legged chair

As Billy used to make coach and horses of, and there ain't no Billy there!
I would run all the wide world over to find him, if I only knowed where to

run;

Little Murphy, now I remember, was once lost for a month through stealing a penny-bun

The Lord forbid of any child of mine! I think it would kill me raily

To find my Bill holdin' up his little innocent hand at the Old Bailey.

For though I say it as ought n't, yet I will say, you may search for miles and mileses

And not find one better brought up, and more pretty behaved, from one end to t' other of St. Giles's.

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And if I called him a beauty, it's no lie, but only as a Mother ought to speak; You never set eyes on a more handsomer face, only it has n't been washed for

a week;

As for hair, tho' it's red, it's the most nicest hair when I've time to just show it the comb;

I'll owe 'em five pounds, and a blessing besides, as will only bring him safe and sound home.

He's blue eyes, and not to be called a squint, though a little cast he's certainly got;

And his nose is still a good un' tho' the bridge is broke, by his falling on a pewter pint pot;

He's got the most elegant wide mouth in the world, and very large teeth for

his age;

And quite as fit as Mrs. Murdockson's child to play Cupid on the Drury

Lane Stage.

And then he has got such dear winning ways—but oh I never, never shall see him no more!

O dear to think of losing him just after nussing him back from death's door! Only the very last month when the windfalls, hang 'em, was at twenty a penny!

And the threepence he'd got by grottoing was spent in plums, and sixty for a child is too many,

And the Cholera man came and whitewashed us all, and, drat him! made a seize of our hog.

It's no use to send the Cryer to cry him about, he's such a blunderin' drunken

old dog;

The last time he was fetched to find a lost child, he was guzzling with his bell at the Crown,

And went and cried a boy instead of a girl, for a distracted Mother and Father about Town.

Billy-where are you, Billy, I say? come, Billy, come home, to your best of Mothers'

I'm scared when I think of them Cabroleys, they drive so, they'd run over their own Sisters and Brothers.

Or may be he's stole by some chimbly-sweeping wretch, to stick fast in nar row flues, and what not,

And be poked up behind with a picked pointed pole, when the soot has ketched, and the chimbly's red hot.

Oh I'd give the whole wide world, if the world was mine, to clap my two longin' eyes on his face.

For he's my darlin of darlins, and if he don't soon come back, you'll see me drop stone dead on the place.

I only wish I'd got him safe in these two Motherly arms, and wouldn't I hug him and kiss him!

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