A Vision of Earl's Court.
Here they go hurrying,
Up the steps scurrying,
Pushing and jostling,
Elbowing, hustling,
Squeezing and wheezing they rush to the top.
Puffing and panting,
Tearing and ranting,
(First-rate for Banting,) onward they climb.
Up on the landing,
Scarce room for standing,
Man is commanding, "There you must stop!
Don't cross the railing,
Keep to the paling;
Place for two more, Sirs,
Go on before, Sirs;
List to the roar, Sirs—ain't it sublime!
Tuck in the mackintosh,
Hold tight, Sir!" "Oh, what bosh!"
Side by side seated,
Breathless and heated,
Freezing and sneezing,
Down the Chute shooting,
Yelling and hooting,
'Arry and 'Arriet, Princess and Peer,
White man and black man and Injun to steer.
"You're sure there's no danger?" "There's nothing to fear."
"Are babies admitted?" "O no, mum, not 'ere."
And waving and raving,
And beaming and steaming,
And laughing and chaffing,
And thumping and bumping,
And plumping and jumping,
And spinning and grinning,
And chattering and clattering,
And blushing and gushing and rushing and flushing,
And bawling and sprawling and hauling and calling,
And foaming, bemoaning a bonnet dropped off,
Not hearing the jeering of people who scoff,
The peril of spilling delightfully thrilling,
Tho' incivil devil's instilling cavilling;
And screaming, not dreaming of being upset,
And splashing and dashing and dripping with wet,
And screeching and reaching for hat blown away,
Excited, affrighted, delighted, benighted,
And calling and bawling Hurrah and Hurray!
"And so never ending but always descending
Sounds and motions for ever and ever are blending;"
All at once all is o'er, with a mighty uproar,
And drenched and bedraggled they land on the shore.
"Lethe had passed her Lips."—Mrs. R. had often come across the name of this classic stream in the course of her reading. She pronounced it as one syllable, and said that "as this celebrated river was in Scotland—she knew the name quite well—what she wanted to know was, why weren't these waters bottled by a Company?"