Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 1, December 4, 1841
The document with this title, that has got into the newspapers, has been dressed up for the public eye. We have obtained the original draft , and beg to administer it to our readers neat , in the precise language it was written in.
MR. SNOOKS says, that it being his turn to be on watch on the night of Saturday, October 30th, he went to his duty as usual, and having turned into his box, slept until he was amazed by shouts and the rolling of wheels in all directions. The upper door of his box being open, he looked out of it, and his head struck violently against something hard, upon which he attempted to open the lower door of his box, when he found he could not. Thinking there was something wrong, he became very active in raising an alarm, but could obtain no attention; and he has since found that in the hurry of moving property from different parts of the building, his box had been closely barricaded; and he, consequently, was compelled to remain in it until the following morning. He says, however, that everything was quite safe in the middle of the day when he took his great-coat to his box, and trimmed his lantern ready for the evening.
MRS. SNOOKS, wife of the above witness, corroborates the account of her husband, so far as trimming the lanthern in the daytime is concerned, and also as to his being encased in his box until the morning. She had no anxiety about him, because she had been distinctly told that the fire did not break out until past ten, and her husband she knew was sure to be snug in his box by that time.
JOHN JONES, a publican, says, at about nine o’clock on Saturday, the 30th of October, he saw a light in the Tower, which flickered very much like a candle, as if somebody was continually blowing one out and blowing it in again. He observed this for about half an hour, when it began to look as if several gas-lights were in the room and some one was turning the gas on and off very rapidly. After this he went to bed, and was disturbed shortly before midnight by hearing that the Tower was in flames.
Various
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VOL. 1.
DECEMBER 4, 1841.
OFFICIAL REPORT OF THE FIRE AT THE TOWER.
THE OFFICIAL REPORT.
A CON-CERTED CON.
RECONCILING A DIFFERENCE.
OUR WEATHERCOCK.
THE BANE AND ANTIDOTE.
THE CORSAIR.
“STUPID AS A ‘POST.’”
THE “PUFF PAPERS.”
CHAPTER I.
THE GIANT’S STAIRS.
THE KNATCHBULL TESTIMONIAL.
MUSICAL NEWS (NOOSE).
THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE LONDON MEDICAL STUDENT.
10.—THE TERMINATION OF THE HALL EXAMINATION.
LOVE AND HYMEN.
OUR CITY ARTICLE.
CON. BY SIBTHORP AND STULTZ.
THE ROMANCE OF A TEACUP.
SIP THE THIRD. GOS-SIP.
PUNCH AND THE SWISS GIANTESS!
SHERIFFS’ COURT.—WEDNESDAY.
PUNCH’S PENCILLINGS.—No. XXI.
THE FETES FOR THE POLISH—AND FATE OF THE BRITISH POOR.
THE FIRE AT THE ADELPHI THEATRE.
THE CRIMES OF EATING.
NOBODY CARES AND*
HINTS HOW TO ENJOY AN OMNIBUS.
PETER THE GREAT (FOOL?)
THE WISE MAN OF THE EAST.
SONGS OF THE SEEDY.—No. VII.
POPISH RED-DRESS.
A SPOON CASE.
A DAB FOR LAURIE.
SIBTHORPS CORNER.
CUTTING IT RATHER SHORT.
NATIONAL DISTRESS.
SONGS FOR THE SENTIMENTAL.—No. 12.
LAURIE’S RAILLERY.
A MEETING OF OLD ACQUAINTANCES.
PUNCH’S THEATRE.
LOVE EXTEMPORE.
A PERFECT VACUUM PROVED.
A CON BY O’CONNER.