soaps which you can see through. I ask, What can it be 
through? Is it resin, or some other form of sin? There are soaps which 
smell too strong, and of course that must be wrong, And extremely
detrimental to the skin. 
And too much fat's injurious, and so are soaps sulphureous, Though 
they say they keep the hair from growing thin; They may keep a 
person's hair on, like the precious oil of AARON, And yet be 
detrimental to his skin. 
In short, the only soap which is fit for Prince or Pope (I have sent some 
to the KAISER at Berlin) Is the article I sell you. Don't believe the 
firms who tell you It is very detrimental to the skin. 
* * * * * 
A LIQUOR QUESTION.--Why does a toper--especially when "before 
the beak"--always say that he was "in drink," when he evidently means 
that the drink was in him? The only soaker on record who could rightly 
be said to be "in drink" was, 
"Maudlin Clarence in his Malmsey butt." 
He was "in liquor" with a vengeance. But less lucky wine-bibbers need 
not be illogical as well as inebriate. 
* * * * * 
MR. GOSCHEN'S BUDGET.--"From a fiscal point of view, the 
Tobacco receipts are extremely good." So unlike JOKIM. Of course, as 
he never loses a chance of a _jeu de mot_, what he must have said was, 
that "the Tobacco 'returns' are extremely good." "A birthday 
Budget,--many happy 'returns,'" he observed jocosely to PRINCE 
ARTHUR, "quite japing times!" And off he went for his holiday; and, 
weather permitting, as he reclines in his funny among the weeds, he 
will gently murmur, "Dulce est desipere in smoko." 
* * * * * 
THE NEWEST NARCISSUS; 
OR, THE HERO OF OUR DAYS.
["--The curious tendency towards imitation which is observed 
whenever some specially sensational crime is brought into the light of 
publicity."--Morning Post.'] 
NARCISSUS? _He_, that foul ill-favoured brute, A fevered age's most 
repulsive fruit, The murderous coxcomb, the assassin sleek? Stranger 
comparison could fancy seek? 
Truly 'tis not the self-admiring boy Nymph Echo longed so vainly to 
enjoy; Yet the old classic fable hath a phase Which seems to fit the 
opprobrium of our days. Criminal-worship seems our latest cult, And 
this strange figure is its last result. Self-conscious, self-admiring, Crime 
parades Its loathly features, not in slumdom's shades, Or in Alsatian 
sanctuaries vile. No; peacock-posing and complacent smile Pervade the 
common air, and take the town. The glory of a scandalous renown 
Lures the vain villain more than wrath or gain, And cancels all the 
shame that should restrain: Makes murder half-heroic in his sight, And 
gilds the gallows with factitious light. 
And whose the fault? Sensation it is thine! The garrulous paragraph, the 
graphic line, Poster and portrait, telegram and tale, Make shopboy 
eager and domestics pale. Over the morbid details workmen pore, Toil's 
favourite pabulum and chosen lore, Penny-a-liners pile the horrors up, 
On which the cockney _gobe-mouche_ loves to sup, And paragraph 
and picture feed the clown With the foul garbage that has gorged the 
town. "Vice is a monster of such hideous mien As to be hated needs but 
to be seen." So sang the waspish satirist long ago. Now Vice is 
sketched and Crime is made a show. A hundred eager scribes are at 
their heel To tell the public how they look and feel, How eat and drink, 
how sleep and smoke and play. Murder's itinerary for a day, Set forth in 
graphic phrase by skilful pens, With pictures of its face, its favourite 
dens, Its knife or bludgeon, pistol, paramour, Will swell the swift 
editions hour by hour, More than high news of war or of debate, The 
death of heroes or the throes of state. From club-room to street-corner 
runs the cry After the newest fact, or latest lie: The hurrying throng 
unfolded broad-sheets grasp, And read with goggled eyes and lips 
a-gasp, Blood! Blood! More Blood! It makes hot lips go pale, But gives
the sweetest zest to the unholy tale. 
What wonder if the Horror, homaged thus By frenzied eagerness and 
foolish fuss, Swells to a hideous self-importance, struts In conscious 
dignity, and gladly gluts With vanity's fantastic tricks the herd Whose 
pulses first by murderous crime it stirred. Narcissus-like, the slayer 
bends to trace Within Sensation's flowing stream its face, And, 
self-enamoured, smiles a loathsome smile Of fatuous conceit and 
gloating guile; Laughs at the shadow of the lifted knife, And thinks of 
all things save its victim's life. The "Noisy Nymph," the Echo of our 
times, The gossip, with an eager ear for crimes, Lurks, half-admiring, 
all-recording there, Watching Narcissus with persistent stare, And 
ready note-book. Nothing but a Voice? No, but its babblings travel, and 
rejoice A myriad prurient ears with noisome    
    
		
	
	
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