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Urania makes a mock assignation with the King, and substitutes the Queen in her place. The King describes the supposed meeting to the Confident, whom he had employed to solicit for his guilty passion.

Pyrrhus, I'll tell thee all. When now the night
Grew black enough to hide a sculking action;
And Heav'n had ne'er an eye unshut to see
Her Representative on Earth creep 'mongst
Those poor defenceless worms, whom Nature left
An humble prey to every thing, and no
Asylum but the dark; I softly stole
To yonder grotto thro' the upper walks,
And there found my Urania. But I found her,
I found her, Pyrrhus, not a Mistress, but
A Goddess rather; which made me now to be
No more her Lover, but Idolater.

She only whisper'd to me, as she promised,
Yet never heard I any voice so loud;
And, tho' her words were gentler far than those
That holy priests do speak to dying Saints,
Yet never thunder signified so much.
And (what did more impress whate'er she said)
Methought her whispers were my injured Queen's,
Her manner just like her's! and when she urged,
Among a thousand things, the injury

I did the faithful'st Princess in the world;
Who now supposed me sick, and was perchance
Upon her knees offering up holy vows

For him who mock'd both Heav'n and her, and was
Now breaking of that vow he made her, when
With sacrifice he call'd the Gods to witness:
When she urged this, and wept, and spake so like
My poor deluded Queen, Pyrrhus, I trembled ;
Almost persuaded that it was her angel
Spake thro' Urania's lips, who for her sake
Took care of me, as something she much loved.
It would be long to tell thee all she said,
How oft she sigh'd, how bitterly she wept:
But the effect-Urania still is chaste;
And with her chaster lips hath promised to
Invoke blest Heav'n for intended sin.
my

THE CUSHION DANCE.

For the Table Book.

C. L.

The concluding dance at a country wake, or other general meeting, is the “ Čushion Dance;" and if it be not called for when the company are tired with dancing, the fiddler, who has an interest in it which will be seen hereafter, frequently plays the tune to remind them of it. A young man of the company leaves the room; the poor young women, uninformed of the plot against them, suspecting nothing; but he no sooner returns, bearing a cushion in one hand and a pewter pot in the other, than they are aware of the mischief intended, and would

certainly make their escape, had not the bearer of cushion and pot, aware of the invincible aversion which young women have to be saluted by young men, prevented their flight by locking the door, and putting the key in his pocket. The dance then begins.

The young man advances to the fiddler, drops a penny in the pot, and gives it to one of his companions; cushion then dances round the room, followed by pot, and when they again reach the fiddler, the cushion in a sort of recitative, accomsays panied by the music," This dance it will no farther go."

The fiddler, in return, sings or says, for it partakes of both, "I p I pray, kind sir, why say you so?"

The answer is, "Because Joan Sanderson won't come to."

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But," replies the fiddler, 66 she must come to, and she shall come to, whether she will or no."

The young man, thus armed with the authority of the village musician, recommences his dance round the room, but stops when he comes to the girl he likes best, and drops the cushion at her feet; she puts her penny in the pewter pot, and kneels down with the young man on the cushion, and he salutes her.

When they rise, the woman takes up the cushion, and leads the dance, the man following, and holding the skirt of her gown; and having made the circuit of the room, they stop near the fiddler, and the same dialogue is repeated, except, as it is now the woman who speaks, it is John Sanderson who won't come to, and the fiddler's mandate is issued to him, not her.

The woman drops the cushion at the feet of her favourite man; the same ceremony and the same dance are repeated, till every man and woman, the pot bearer last, has been taken out, and all have danced round the room in a file.

The pence are the perquisite of the fiddler. H. N.

in Miss Hutton's " Oakwood Hall." P.S. There is a description of this dance

THE CUSHION DANCE. For the Table Book. "Saltabamus." The village-green is clear and dight Under the starlight sky; Joy in the cottage reigns to night, And brightens every eye:

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The fiddler in a corner stands,

He gives, he rules the game; A rustic takes a maiden's hands

Whose cheek is red with shame:

At custom's shrine they seal their truth,
Love fails not here to glance ;-
Happy the heart that beats in youth,
And dances in the "Cushion Dance!"

The pillow's carried round and round,

The fiddler speaks and plays; The choice is made,-the charm is wound, And parleys conquer nays :"For shame! I will not thus be kiss'd, Your beard cuts like a lance; Leave off-I'm sure you've sprained my wrist By kneeling in this Cushion Dance!'

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"Ha! princum prancum !"-Love is blest;

Both Joan and John submit ;

Friends smiling gather round and rest,

And sweethearts closely sit;Their feet and spirits languid grown,

Eyes, bright in silence, glance Like suns on seeds of beauty sown,

And nourish'd in the "Cushion Dance."

In times to come, when older we

Have children round our knees;
How will our hearts rejoice to see
Their lips and eyes at ease.
Talk ye of Swiss in valley-streams,
Of joyous pairs in France;
None of their hopes-delighting dreams
Are equal to the "Cushion Dance."

'Twas here my Maiden's love I drew
By the hushing of her bosom ;

She knelt, her mouth and press were true, And sweet as rose's blossom :

E'er since, though onward we to glory,
And cares our lives enhance,
Reflection dearly tells the "story"-
Hail!-hail!-thou "happy Cushion Dance."
J. R. PRIOR.

Islington.

ST. SEPULCHRE'S BELL.

For the Table Book.

On the right-hand side of the altar of St. Sepulchre's church is a board, with a list of charitable donations and gifts, containing the following item :

£. s. d. 1605. Mr. Robert Dowe gave 50 0 0 for ringing the greatest bell in this church on the day the condemned prisoners are executed, and for other services, for ever, concerning such condemned prisoners, for which services the sexton is paid £1. 6s. 8d.

Looking over an old volume of the Newgate Calendar, I found some elucidation of this inscription. In a narrative of the case of Stephen Gardner, (who was executed at Tyburn, February 3, 1724,) it is related that a person said to Gardner, when he was set at liberty on a former occasion, "Beware how you come here again, or the bellman will certainly say his verses over you." On this saying there is the following remark :

"It has been a very ancient practice, on the night preceding the execution of con

demned criminals, for the bellman of the
parish of St. Sepulchre, to go under New-
gate, and, ringing his bell, to repeat the
following verses, as a piece of friendly
advice to the unhappy wretches under sen-
tence of death :-

All you that in the condemn'd hold do lie,
Prepare you, for to-morrow you shall die;
Watch all, and pray, the hour is drawing near,
That you
before the Almighty must appear:
Examine well yourselves, in time repent,
That you may not to eternal flames be sent."
And when St. Sepulchre's bell to-morrow tolls,
The Lord above have mercy on your souls!
Past twelve o'clock !

In the following extract from Stowe's
London,* it will be shown that the above

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Who is it that rides thro' the forest so green,
And gazes with joy on the beautiful scene,
With the gay prancing war-horse, and helmeted head?
'Tis the monarch of England, stern William the Red.

Why starts the proud courser ? what vision is there?
The trees are scarce mov'd by the still breathing air-
All is hush'd, save the wild bird that carols on high,
The forest bee's hum, and the rivulet's sigh.

But, lo! a dark form o'er the pathway hath lean'd;
'Tis the druid of Malwood, the wild forest-fiend;
The terror of youth, of the aged the fear-

verses ought to be repeated by a clergy- The prophet of Cadenham, the death-boding seer! man, instead of a bellman :—

"Robert Doue, citizen and merchant taylor, of London, gave to the parish church of St. Sepulchres, the somme of £50. That after the several sessions of London, when the prisoners remain in the gaole, as condemned men to death, expecting execution on the morrow following: the clarke (that is the parson) of the church shoold come in the night time, and likewise early in the morning, to the window of the prison where they lye, and there ringing certain toles with a hand-bell appointed for the purpose, he doth afterwards (in most Christian manner) put them in mind of their present condition, and ensuing execution, desiring them to be prepared therefore as they ought to be. When they are in the cart, and brought before the wall of the church, there he standeth ready with the same bell, and, after certain toles, rehearseth an appointed praier, desiring all the people there present to pray for them. The beadle also of Merchant Taylors' Hall hath an honest stipend allowed to see that this is duely done."

Probably the discontinuance of this practice commenced when malefactors were first executed at Newgate, in lieu of Tyburn. The donation most certainly refers to the verses. What the "other services " are which the donor intended to be done, and for which the sexton is paid £1. 6s. 8d., and which are to be "for ever," I do not know, but I presume those services (or some other) are now continued, as the board which contains the donation seems to me to have been newly painted.

Carthusian-street, Jan. 1827.

EDWIN S-.

Page 25 of the quarto edition, 1618,

His garments were black as the night-raven's plume,
His features were veil'd in mysterious gloom,
His lean arm was awfully rais'd while he said,
"Well met, England's monarch, stern William the

Red!

"Desolation, death, ruin, the mighty shall fall-
Lamentation and woe reign in Malwood's wide hall!
Those leaves shall all fade in the winter's rude blast,
And thou shalt lie low ere the winter be past."

my

blood,

"Thou liest, vile caitiff, 'tis false, by the rood,
For know that the contract is seal'd with
'Tis written, I never shall sleep in the tomb
Till Cadenham's oak in the winter shall bloom!

"But say what art thou, strange, unsearchable thing, That dares to speak treason, and waylay a king ?"—

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Know, monarch, I dwell in the beautiful bowers
Of Eden, and poison I shed o'er the flowers.

"In darkness and storm o'er the ocean I sail,
I ride on the breath of the night-rolling gale--
I dwell in Vesuvius, 'mid torrents of flame,
Unriddle my riddle, and tell me my name !"

O pale grew the monarch, and smote on his breast,
For who was the prophet he wittingly guess'd:
"O, Jesu-Maria !" he tremblingly said,
"Bona Virgo !"-he gazed-but the vision had fled.

"Tis winter-the trees of the forest are bare,
How keenly is blowing the chilly night air!
The moonbeams shine brightly on hard-frozen flood,'
And William is riding thro' Cadenham's wood.

Why looks he with dread on the blasted oak tree?
Saint Swithin! what is it the monarch can see?
Prophetical sight! 'mid the desolate scene,
The oak is array'd in the freshest of green!

He thought of the contract, "Thou'rt safe from the
tomb,

Till Cadenham's oak in the winter shall bloom. ;"
He thought of the druid-" The mighty shall fall,
Lamentation and woe reign in Malwood's wide hall.",

As he stood near the tree, lo! a swift flying dart

Hath struck the proud monarch, and pierc'd thro' his versed and formal, being compared to the

heart;
'Twas the deed of a friend, not the deed of a foe,
For the arrow was aim'd at the breast of a roe.

In Malwood is silent the light-hearted glee,
The dance and the wassail, and wild revelrie;
Its chambers are dreary, deserted, and lone,
And the day of its greatness for ever hath flown.
A weeping is heard in Saint Swithin's huge pile-
"Dies Ira" resounds thro' the sable-dight aisle-
'Tis a dirge for the mighty, the mass for the dead-
The funeral anthem for William the Red!

London.

AQUILA.

DESCRIBED BY A WRITER IN 1634.

I will first take a survey of the long-continued deformity in the shape of your city, which is of your buildings.

Sure your ancestors contrived your narrow streets in the days of wheel-barrows, before those greater engines, carts, were invented. Is your climate so hot, that as walk you need umbrellas of tiles to you intercept the sun? or are your shambles so empty, that you are afraid to take in fresh air, lest it should sharpen your stomachs ? Oh, the goodly landscape of Old Fishstreet! which, if it had not the ill luck to be crooked, was narrow enough to have been your founder's perspective; and where the garrets, perhaps not for want of architecture, but through abundance of amity, are so narrow, that opposite neighbours may shake hands without stirring from home. Is unanimity of inhabitants in wide cities better exprest than by their coherence and uniformity of building, where streets begin, continue, and end, in a like stature and shape ?* But yours, as if they were raised in a general resurrection, where every man hath a several design, differ in all things that can make a distinction. Here stands one that aims to be a palace, and next it, one that professes to be a hovel; here a giant, there a dwarf; here slender, there broad; and all most admirably different in faces, as well as in their height and bulk. I was about to defy any

Londoner, who dares to pretend there is so much ingenious correspondence in this city, as that he can show me one house like

* If a disagreement of neighbours were to be inferred from such a circumstance, what but an unfavourable inference would be drawn from our modern style of architecture, as exemplified in Regent-street, where the houses are, as the leopard's spots are described to be, "no two alike, and every one different."

another; yet your houses seem to be refantastical looks of the moderns, which have more ovals, niches, and angles, than in your custards, and are enclosed with pasteboard walls, like those of malicious Turks, who, because themselves are not immortal, and cannot dwell for ever where they build, therefore wish not to be at charge to provide such lastingness as may entertain their children out of the rain; so slight and prettily gaudy, that if they could move, they would pass for pageants. It is your custom, where men vary often the mode of their habits, to term the nation fantastical; but where streets continually change fashion, you should make haste to chain up your city, for it is certainly mad.

You would think me a malicious tra

veller, if I should still gaze on your misshapen streets, and take no notice of the beauty of your river, therefore I will pass the importunate noise of your watermen, (who snatch at fares, as if they were to catch prisoners, plying the gentry so uncivilly, as if they had never rowed any other passengers than bear-wards,) and now step into one of your peascod-boats, whose tilts are not so sumptuous as the roofs of gondolas; nor, when you are within, are you at the ease of a chaise-a-bras.

The commodity and trade of your river belong to yourselves; but give a stranger leave to share in the pleasure of it, which will hardly be in the prospect and freedom of air; unless prospect, consisting of variety, be made up with here a palace, there a wood-yard; here a garden, there a brewhouse; here dwells a lord, there a dyer; and between both, duomo commune.

If freedom of air be inferred in the liberty of the subject, where every private man hath authority, for his own profit, to smoke up a magistrate, then the air of your Thames is open enough, because it is equally free. I will forbear to visit your it will make me giddy to shoot your bridge, courtly neighbours at Wapping, not that

but that I am loath to describe the civil silence at Billingsgate, which is so great, as if the mariners were always landing to sake, I will put to shore again, though I storm the harbour; therefore, for brevity's should be so constrained, even without my galoshes, to land at Puddle-dock.

I am now returned to visit your houses, where the roofs are so low, that I presumed your ancestors were very mannerly, and stood bare to their wives; for I cannot discern how they could wear their highcrowned hats yet I will enter, and therein

oblige you much, when you know my aversion to a certain weed that governs amongst your coarser acquaintance, as much as lavender among your coarser linen; to which, in my apprehension, your sea-coal smoke seems a very Portugal perfume. I should here hasten to a period, for fear of suffocation, if I thought you so ungracious as to use it in public assemblies; and yet I see it grow so much in fashion, that methinks your children begin to play with broken pipes instead of corals, to make way for their teeth. You will find my visit short; I cannot stay to eat with you, because your bread is too heavy, and you distrain the light substance of herbs. Your drink is too thick, and yet you are seldom over curious in washing your glasses. Nor will I lodge with you, because your beds seem no bigger than coffins; and your curtains so short, as they will hardly serve to enclose your carriers in summer, and may be held, if taffata, to have lined your grandsire's skirts,

I have now left your houses, and am passing through your streets, but not in a coach, for they are uneasily hung, and so narrow, that I took them for sedans upon wheels. Nor is it safe for a stranger to use them till the quarrel be decided, whether six of your nobles, sitting together, shall stop and give way to as many barrels of beer. Your city is the only metropolis in Europe, where there is wonderful dignity belonging to carts.

I would now make a safe retreat, but that methinks I am stopped by one of your heroic games called foot-ball; which I conceive (under your favour) not very conveniently civil in the streets, especially in such irregular and narrow roads as Crookedlane. Yet it argues your courage, much like your military pastime of throwing at cocks; but your metal would be much magnified (since you have long allowed those two valiant exercises in the streets) were you to draw your archers from Finsbury, and, during high market, let them shoot at butts in Cheapside. I have now no more to say, but what refers to a few private notes, which I shall give you in a whisper, when we meet in Moorfields, from whence (because the place was meant for public pleasure, and to show the munificence of your city) I shall desire you to banish laundresses and bleachers, whose acres of old linen make a show like the fields of Carthagena, when the five months' shifts of the whole fleet are washed and spread.*

your

A FATHER'S HOME. For the Table Book.

When oppress'd by the world, or fatigu'd with its charms,

My weary steps homeward I tread-
'Tis there, midst the prattlers that fly to my arms,
I enjoy purer pleasures instead.

Hark! the rap at the door is known as their dad's,
And rushing at once to the lock,

Wide open it flies, while the lasses and lads
Bid me welcome as chief of the flock.

Little baby himself leaves the breast for a gaze,
Glad to join in th' general joy,

While with outstretched arms and looks of amaze
He seizes the new purchas'd toy.

Then Harry, the next, climbs the knee to engage
His father's attention again;

But Bob, springing forward almost in a rage,
Resolves his own rights to maintain.

Oh, ye vot'ries of pleasure and folly's sad crew,
From your midnight carousals depart !

Look here for true joys, ever blooming and new,
When I press both these boys to my heart.
Poor grimalkin purs softly-the tea-kettle sings,
Midst glad faces and innocent hearts,
Encircling my table as happy as kings,

Right merrily playing their parts.

And Bill (the sly rogue) takes a lump, when he's able, Of sugar, so temptingly sweet,

And, archly observing, hides under the table

The spoil, till he's ready to eat.

While George, the big boy, talks of terrible" sums"
He perform'd so correctly at school;

Bill leeringly tells, with his chin on his thumbs,
"He was whipt there for playing the fool!"
This raises a strife, till in choleric mood

Each ventures a threat to his brother,
But their hearts are so good, let a stranger intrude,
They'd fight to the last for each other.

There Nan, the sweet girl, she that fags for the whole,
And keeps the young urchins in order,
Exhibits, with innocence charming the soul,

Her sister's fine sampler and border.
Kitty sings to me gaily, then chatting apace

Helps her mother to darn or to stitch,

Reminding me most of that gay laughing face

Which once did my fond heart bewitch. While she! the dear partner of all my delight,

Contrives them some innocent play;
Till, tired of all, in the silence of night,

They dream the glad moments away.
Oh, long may such fire-side scenes be my lot!

Ye children, be virtuous and true!
And think when I'm aged, alone in my cot,

How I minister'd comfort to you.

When my vigour is gone, and to manhood's estate
Ye all shall be happily grown,
Live near me, and, anxious for poor father's fate,

Show the world that you're truly my own,

*Sir W. Davenant.

R.

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