NEMESIS.

Kindly the dentist was, for he

Had obviously sought

To keep his waiting victims free

From apprehensive thought,

Providing for those souls in fear

The Comic Press of yesteryear.

I read those jests of days agone,

Those jibes at folly flown,

And wondered should I light upon

Some trifle of my own,

A par well pointed in its time

Or fragment of reputed rhyme.

Could I retrieve some sparkling fytte

Bedecked with jeux de mots,

I fancied that the sight of it

Might soothe my present woe,

Reminding me how once I had

Been quite a jocund kind of lad.

Lo, what a foolish hope was this!

I realised too soon

The special form of Nemesis

That waits on the buffoon:

The joke I found concerned the gloom

Inside a dentist's waiting-room.


"He hadn't been dead a week when they started quarrelling over his estate."

"Did he leave much?" "No—only three gallons."