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Of Wellington our mouths are full,
We dote on Sundays on John Bull,
With Pa and Ma on selfsame side,
Our house has never to divide-
No opposition members be

In our united family.

Miss Pope her "Light Guitar" enjoys,
Her father" cannot bear the noise,"
Her mother's charm'd with all her songs,
Her brother jangles with the tongs.
Thus discord out of music springs,
The most unnatural of things,
Unlike the genuine harmony
In our united family!

We all on vocal music dote;
To each belongs a tuneful throat,
And all prefer that Irish boon

Of melody-"The Young May Moon"-
By choice we all select the harp,
Nor is the voice of one too sharp,
Another flat-all in one key
Is our united family.

Miss Powell likes to draw and paint,
But then it would provoke a saint,
Her brother takes her sheep for pigs,
And says her trees are periwigs.
Pa praises all, black, blue, or brown;
And so does Ma-but upside down!
They cannot with the same eye see,
Like our united family.

Miss Patterson has been to France,
Her heart's delight is in a dance;
The thing her brother cannot bear,
So she must practise with a chair.
Then at a waltz her mother winks;
But Pa says roundly what he thinks,
All dos-à-dos, not vis-à-vis,
Like our united family.

We none of us that whirling love,
Which both our parents disapprove,
A hornpipe we delight in more,
Or graceful Minuet de la Cour-
A special favourite with Mamma,
Who used to dance it with Papa,
In this we still keep step, you see,
In our united family.

Then books-to bear the Cobb's debates!

One worships Scott-another hates,
Monk Lewis Ann fights stoutly for,

And Jane likes "Bunyan's Holy War."
The father on Macculloch pores,

The mother says all books are bores;
But blue serene as heav'n are we,

In our united family.

We never wrangle to exalt

Scott, Banim, Bulwer, Hope, or Galt,
We care not whether Smith or Hook,
So that a novel be the book,

And in one point we all are fast,

Of novels we prefer the last,

In that the very heads agree

Of our united family!

To turn to graver matters still,
How much we see of sad self-will!
Miss Scrope, with brilliant views in life,
Would be a poor lieutenant's wife.
A lawyer has her Pa's good word,
Her Ma has looked her out a Lord,
What would they not all give to be
Like our united family!

By one congenial taste allied,
Our dreams of bliss all coincide,

We're all for solitudes and cots,
And love, if we may choose our lots.
As partner in the rural plan

Each paints the same dear sort of man;
One heart alone there seems to be
In our united family.

One heart, one hope, one wish, one mind,-
One voice, one choice, all of a kind,--
And can there be a greater bliss-
A little heav'n on earth-than this?
The truth to whisper in your ear,
It must be told !-we are not near
The happiness that ought to be
In our united family!

Alas! 'tis our congenial taste
That lays our little pleasures waste-
We all delight, no doubt, to sing,

We all delight to touch the string,

But where's the heart that nine may touch?

And nine "May Moons" are eight too much-
Just fancy nine, all in one key,

Of our united family!

The play-Oh how we love a play,

But half the bliss is shorn away;

On winter nights we venture nigh,
But think of houses in July!
Nine crowded in a private box,

Is apt to pick the stiffest locks

Our curls would all fall out, though we
Are one united family!

In art the self-same line we walk,
We all are fond of heads in chalk,
We one and all our talent strain
Adelphi prizes to obtain ;
Nine turban'd Turks are duly sent,
But can the royal Duke present
Nine silver palettes-no, not he-
To our united family.

Our eating shows the very thing,
We all prefer the liver-wing,

C.

H

Asparagus when scarce and thin,
And peas directly they come in,
The marrow-bone-if there be one-
The ears of hare when crisply done,
The rabbit's brain-we all agree

In our united family.

In dress the same result is seen,

We all so doat on apple-green;

But nine in green would seem a school
Of charity to quizzing fool-

We cannot all indulge our will

With "that sweet silk on Ludgate Hill,"

No remnant can sufficient be

For our united family.

In reading hard is still our fate,

One cannot read o'erlooked by eight,

And nine "Disowned "--nine "Pioneers,"

Nine "Chaperons," nine "Buccaneers,"

Nine "Maxwells," nine "Tremaines," and such,

Would dip into our means too much

Three months are spent o'er volumes three,
In our united family.

Unhappy Muses! if the Nine

Above in doom with us combine,

In vain we breathe the tender flame,
Our sentiments are all the same,

And nine complaints address'd to Hope
Exceed the editorial scope,

One in, and eight put out, must be

Of our united family!

But this is nought—of deadlier kind,

A ninefold woe remains behind.

O why were we so art and part?

So like in taste, so one in heart?

Nine cottages may be to let,

But here's the thought to make us fret,
We cannot each add Frederick B.

To our united family.

THE DEAD ROBBERY.

"Here's that will sack a city."-HENRY THE IVTH.

F all the causes that induce mankind

To strike against themselves a mortal docket,
Two eminent above the rest we find—

To be in love, or to be out of pocket:
Both have made many melancholy martyrs,
But p'rhaps, of all the felonies de se,

By ponds, and pistols, razors, ropes, and garters,
Two-thirds have been through want of £. s. d.!
Thus happen'd it with Peter Bunce;

Both in the dumps and out of them at once,
From always drawing blanks in Fortune's lottery,
At last, impatient of the light of day,
He made his mind up to return his clay
Back to the pottery.

Feigning a raging tooth that drove him mad,
From twenty divers druggists' shops

He begg'd enough of laudanum by drops
T'effect the fatal purpose that he had;

He drank them, died, and while old Charon ferried him,
The Coroner convened a dozen men,

Who found his death was phial-ent- and then

The Parish buried him!

Unwatch'd, unwept,

As commonly a Pauper sleeps, he slept ;
There could not be a better opportunity
For bodies to steal a body so ill kept,
With all impunity.

In fact, when Night o'er human vice and folly
Had drawn her very necessary curtains,
Down came a fellow with a sack and spade,
Accustom'd many years to drive a trade,
With that Anatomy more Melancholy
Than Burton's!

The Watchman in his box was dozing;
The Sexton drinking at the Cheshire Cheese;
No fear of any creature interposing,

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