S4
[January 31, 1891.
GENUINE ENTHUSIASM.
(A Thaw Picture.)
Whit matter an Inch or Two of Surface-Water, if the Ice bi still sound underneath !
" ROUGE ET NOIR ! "
Or, Jonathan's Perplexing Problem.
(Some Way after Hosea Biglow's "Jonathan to
John.")
Jonathan (ivho has been reading the Articles
on " The Negro Question in the United
States," in the English " Times") log : —
It may be ez you're right, John,
And both my hands are fall;
You know ez I can fight, John,
(I've wiped out "Sitting Bull").
Ole Uncle S sez he, "I guess
We see our fix," sez he.
"The'Thunderer's' paw lays down the law,
Accordin' to J. B.
To square it's left to me ! "
Blood ain't so cool as ink, John ;
Big words are easy wrote ;
The " coons"—well, you don't think, John,
I '11 let 'em cut my throat.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess
Ghost-dance must stop," sez he.
" Suppose the ' braves ' and black ex-slaves
Hed b'longed to ole J. B.
Insted of unto me ? "
Ten art'cles in your Times, John,
Hev giv me good advice.
I mind th' old Slavery crimes, John.
I don't need tellin' twice.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess,
I only guess," sez he,
" Seven million blacks on his folkb' backs
Would kind o' rile J. B.
Ez much ez it riles me I "
The Red Man,—well, I s'pose, John,
We '11 hev to wipe him aout.
Sech pizonous trash ez those, John,
The world kin do without.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess
Injuns must go," sez he.
" Cooper's Red Man won't fit our plan,
Though he once witched J. B.
As once he fetched e'en me !"
The Black Man! Ah, that's wuss, Joh ^.
The chaps wuz right, &y joost,
Who said the Slavery cuss, John,
Wud yet come home to roost.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess
The problem set," sez he,
" By that derned Nig. is black and big,
And fairly puzzles me,
Ez it wud do J. B."
Your Times would right our wrongs, John.
—Always xouz sweet on us!—■
But on dilemma's prongs, John,
To fix me don't you fuss.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess,
Though physic's good," sez he,
" It doesn't foiler that he can swaller
Prescriptions signed J. B.
Put up by you for me I "
Thet swaggerin' black buck Nig., John,
Is jest a grown-up kid ;
Ez happy as a—pig, John,
When doin' wut he's bid.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, " I guess
He's hateful when he's free.
Equal with him, that dark-skinn'd limb ?
No ; that will not suit me,
More than it wud J. B.! "
Emigrate the whole lot, John ?
Well, that's a tallish task !
In Afric's centre hot, John,
Send 'em to breed and bask P
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess
-Z~'d be right glad," sez he,
"But—will they gof 'Taiu't done, you
As easy as J. B. Lbi'JW,
Wud settle it—for me 1"
R mge—there I see my way, John.
But Noii—thet's hard to front!
It wun't be no child's play, John,
Seven million Nigs to shunt.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, " I guess
We've a hard row," sez he,
" To hoe just now, but thet, somehow,
I fancy, friend J. B.,
Your l^i?nes may leave to me ! "
[Left considering it.
WELCOME BACK!
[Mr. Santley, who has been Ions: absent in
Australia, reappeared at St. James's Hall on Jan.
19, and was received with great enthusiasm.]
Back from your Australian trip !
Punch, my Charles, your fist must grip.
You have lighted on a time
When we're all chill, choke, and grime.
'Twere no marvel, 0 great baritone,
Did you find your voice had nary tone.
But there's none like vou can sing
" To Anthea," " TheErl-Jving."
Schubert, Gounod, English Hatton,
Equally your Fine Art's pat on.
Punch can never praise you scantly.
A voire sante, good Charles Santley !
[January 31, 1891.
GENUINE ENTHUSIASM.
(A Thaw Picture.)
Whit matter an Inch or Two of Surface-Water, if the Ice bi still sound underneath !
" ROUGE ET NOIR ! "
Or, Jonathan's Perplexing Problem.
(Some Way after Hosea Biglow's "Jonathan to
John.")
Jonathan (ivho has been reading the Articles
on " The Negro Question in the United
States," in the English " Times") log : —
It may be ez you're right, John,
And both my hands are fall;
You know ez I can fight, John,
(I've wiped out "Sitting Bull").
Ole Uncle S sez he, "I guess
We see our fix," sez he.
"The'Thunderer's' paw lays down the law,
Accordin' to J. B.
To square it's left to me ! "
Blood ain't so cool as ink, John ;
Big words are easy wrote ;
The " coons"—well, you don't think, John,
I '11 let 'em cut my throat.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess
Ghost-dance must stop," sez he.
" Suppose the ' braves ' and black ex-slaves
Hed b'longed to ole J. B.
Insted of unto me ? "
Ten art'cles in your Times, John,
Hev giv me good advice.
I mind th' old Slavery crimes, John.
I don't need tellin' twice.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess,
I only guess," sez he,
" Seven million blacks on his folkb' backs
Would kind o' rile J. B.
Ez much ez it riles me I "
The Red Man,—well, I s'pose, John,
We '11 hev to wipe him aout.
Sech pizonous trash ez those, John,
The world kin do without.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess
Injuns must go," sez he.
" Cooper's Red Man won't fit our plan,
Though he once witched J. B.
As once he fetched e'en me !"
The Black Man! Ah, that's wuss, Joh ^.
The chaps wuz right, &y joost,
Who said the Slavery cuss, John,
Wud yet come home to roost.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess
The problem set," sez he,
" By that derned Nig. is black and big,
And fairly puzzles me,
Ez it wud do J. B."
Your Times would right our wrongs, John.
—Always xouz sweet on us!—■
But on dilemma's prongs, John,
To fix me don't you fuss.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess,
Though physic's good," sez he,
" It doesn't foiler that he can swaller
Prescriptions signed J. B.
Put up by you for me I "
Thet swaggerin' black buck Nig., John,
Is jest a grown-up kid ;
Ez happy as a—pig, John,
When doin' wut he's bid.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, " I guess
He's hateful when he's free.
Equal with him, that dark-skinn'd limb ?
No ; that will not suit me,
More than it wud J. B.! "
Emigrate the whole lot, John ?
Well, that's a tallish task !
In Afric's centre hot, John,
Send 'em to breed and bask P
Ole Uncle S. sez he, "I guess
-Z~'d be right glad," sez he,
"But—will they gof 'Taiu't done, you
As easy as J. B. Lbi'JW,
Wud settle it—for me 1"
R mge—there I see my way, John.
But Noii—thet's hard to front!
It wun't be no child's play, John,
Seven million Nigs to shunt.
Ole Uncle S. sez he, " I guess
We've a hard row," sez he,
" To hoe just now, but thet, somehow,
I fancy, friend J. B.,
Your l^i?nes may leave to me ! "
[Left considering it.
WELCOME BACK!
[Mr. Santley, who has been Ions: absent in
Australia, reappeared at St. James's Hall on Jan.
19, and was received with great enthusiasm.]
Back from your Australian trip !
Punch, my Charles, your fist must grip.
You have lighted on a time
When we're all chill, choke, and grime.
'Twere no marvel, 0 great baritone,
Did you find your voice had nary tone.
But there's none like vou can sing
" To Anthea," " TheErl-Jving."
Schubert, Gounod, English Hatton,
Equally your Fine Art's pat on.
Punch can never praise you scantly.
A voire sante, good Charles Santley !
Werk/Gegenstand/Objekt
Titel
Titel/Objekt
Punch
Weitere Titel/Paralleltitel
Serientitel
Punch
Sachbegriff/Objekttyp
Inschrift/Wasserzeichen
Aufbewahrung/Standort
Aufbewahrungsort/Standort (GND)
Inv. Nr./Signatur
H 634-3 Folio
Objektbeschreibung
Maß-/Formatangaben
Auflage/Druckzustand
Werktitel/Werkverzeichnis
Herstellung/Entstehung
Künstler/Urheber/Hersteller (GND)
Entstehungsdatum
um 1891
Entstehungsdatum (normiert)
1886 - 1896
Entstehungsort (GND)
Auftrag
Publikation
Fund/Ausgrabung
Provenienz
Restaurierung
Sammlung Eingang
Ausstellung
Bearbeitung/Umgestaltung
Thema/Bildinhalt
Thema/Bildinhalt (GND)
Literaturangabe
Rechte am Objekt
Aufnahmen/Reproduktionen
Künstler/Urheber (GND)
Reproduktionstyp
Digitales Bild
Rechtsstatus
Public Domain Mark 1.0
Rechteinhaber Weblink
Creditline
Punch, 100.1891, January 31, 1891, S. 54
Beziehungen
Erschließung
Lizenz
CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication
Rechteinhaber
Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg