COACHMAN smokes his pipe on His accustomed throne of pride, 
And, through driving, keeps an eye 'pon All the revellers inside. Mrs. 
COACHMAN there is seated; Children twain are on her lapped, Who 
alternately are treated, And alternately are slapped.
While the painters haunt your mansion, And you're "_H_up" "The 
_H_alps" or "Rhind," Your domestics find expansion In diversions of 
the kind; And on such a day as this is, They will drink the health at 
Kew, Of "The Master and the Missis, And their bloomin' kerridge too!" 
* * * * * 
THE PALLIUM AND ARCHIEPISCOPAL OATH CONTROVERSY 
IN THE "TIMES."--No wonder this is a very dry subject, when they've 
got such a strong THURST-ON among them. Our advice, by way of 
moistening it, is, "Drop it!" 
* * * * * 
"CLERGY FEES" (_see "Times" Correspondence_).--_Growl of the 
Archiepiscopal Ogre & Co._:-- 
"Fee, fi, fo, fum! I smell the coin of a Clergyman! Hath he fat glebe, be 
he ill-fee'd, ill-fed, I'll grab his fees to butter my bread!" 
* * * * * 
A NIGHTLY CHEVALIER. 
Music-Hall Artists are not by any means "Fixed Stars." During the 
evening they manage to accomplish the somewhat 
paradoxical-sounding feat of shining in the same parts, yet in different 
places and at different times, appearing everywhere with undiminished 
brilliancy. The Student of the Music-Hall Planetary system, has only by 
observation to ascertain the exact time and place of the appearance of 
his favourite bright particular Star, and then to pay his money, take his 
choice between sitting and standing, and like a true astronomer, he 
will--glass in hand, a strong glass too,--await the great event of the 
evening, calmly and contentedly. 
If the Wirtuous Westender wandering down the Strand, after having on 
some previous nights exhausted the Pavilion and the elaborately 
gorgeous Variety Shows given at the Empire and Alhambra, seeks for
awhile a resting-place wherein to enjoy his postprandial cigar, and be 
amused, if such an one will drop into the classic Tivoli, he will find 
excellent entertainment, that is as long as their present programme 
holds the field. The Holborn and the Oxford may delight him on other 
nights, for it seems that much the same Stars shine all around; but for 
the present, taking Tivoli as synonymous with Tibur, he may, with 
Horation humour, say to himself ("himself" being not a bad audience as 
a rule):-- 
"Holborn Tibur amem ventosus, Tivoli Holborn," 
and he can then enter the Tivoli, now under the benign rule of that old 
Music Hall Hand, CAROLUS MORTONIUS, M.A., Magister Agens, 
while the experienced Mr. VERNON DOWSETT--"_Experientia 
Dowsett_"--manages the stage. Good as is the entire show, and 
especially good as is the performance of Mr. CHARLES GODFREY as 
an old Chelsea Pensioner recounting to several little Peterkins a 
touching and heart-stirring tale of the Crimean War, yet for me, the 
Costermonger Songs of Mr. ALBERT CHEVALIER are the great 
attraction. His now well-known "_Coster's Serenade_," and his 
"_Knocked 'em in the Old Kent Road_," are supplemented by a song 
and dialogue about a Coster's son, a precocious little chap, about three 
years old, and "only that 'igh, you know," in whom his father takes so 
great a pride that it works his own temporary reformation. It is so 
natural as to be just on the borderland between farce and pathos, and 
recalls time past, when ROBSON played _The Porter's Knot_, and 
such-like pieces. Now what more do Music Halls want than what Mr. 
CHEVALIER gives them? This is the very essence of a dramatic sketch 
of character, given in just the time it takes to sing the song,--that is, 
about ten minutes, if as much. The compact orchestra, under the 
directorship of Mr. ASHER, discourses excellent accompaniments, and 
the music of the CHEVALIER's songs--composed, I believe, by 
himself--is not the least among the attractions. The CHEVALIER, who, 
as he takes more than one turn every evening, may be termed a Knight 
Errant, is certainly the Coster's Laureate and accepted Representative in 
the West; the mine, which is his own, is inexhaustible. He is a magician 
in his own peculiar line, and may write himself ALBERTUS
MAGNUS. 
* * * * * 
"AL FRESCO," the Lightning Artist, whose full name is "ALFRED 
FRESCO," writes to suggest that the Alhambra under Mr. JOHN 
HOLLINGSHEAD's management should start a Rotten Row Galop and 
Kensington Gardens Quadrille to follow as in a series the highly 
successful Serpentine Dance. 
* * * * * 
NOVEL QUARTETTE.--At the next Hereford Festival there will be 
performed a concerted piece by four Short Horns. 
* * * * * 
[Illustration: STARTLING DISCOVERY ON THE YORKSHIRE 
COAST. 
Young Tripper (_on his first visit to the Sea, becoming suddenly 
conscious of the ebbing Tide_). "HI! BILL! JACK! T'WATTER BE A 
RUNNIN' OFF! BY GUM, LADS, BUT AI    
    
		
	
	
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