THE POTMAN AND THE PRÆTOR.—(A LAY OF THE MIDDLESEX SESSIONS).

See Times, July 14.

Flatuleius, the advocate,

His client's cause hath sped,

And Adamus, the stern Prætor,

Hath reared his learned head;

He hath summed up to the jury

With digressions, by the way,

On juvenile offenders

And the topics of the day.

Till Bibulus, the foreman,

That was beer-bemused before,

By the Prætor's various learning

Is mystified still more;

And with the eleven, his comrades,

More obfuscate e'en than he,

Hath been led forth by the lictor,

On their verdict to agree.

They have sworn another jury,

They have called another case,

An hour hath passed, but Bibulus

Hath not yet shown his face,

And the learned Prætor wonders

What the fools can be about,

For he told them what their verdict

Ought to be when they went out.

When, sudden, a plebeian

Excited, rushes in,

And, in a voice that drowneth

E'en Flatuleius' din,

Exclaimeth to the Prætor,

"My Lord, a party here

Says, as how them blessèd jury

Is a drinkin' pots o' beer."

"Ho! call the recreant lictor!"

The angry Prætor cried.

"'Twas his to guard the doorway

That nought might be supplied—

Nor meat, nor drink, nor firing,

Excepting candle-light;

For so the Law enacteth,

And the Law is always right!"

The lictor comes—"Thou traitor!

The law dost thou deride?

How came liquor to the jury?

How was the beer supplied?"

"My lord, I heard 'em drinking,

And found out that their lay

Was to summon forth the potman

Of the public o'er the way,

Who through the open window

The pewter did convey."

One moment paused the Prætor,

And with an angry blush,

For the Common Law thus outraged,

His awful face did flush.

One moment you had fancied

He was about to swear;

But he checked the rising impulse,

And spoke with awful air:

"Bring forth to me the landlord

Of the public o'er the way;

Say 'tis the Law that calls him,

And the Law brooks no delay.

And summon, too, the potman—

Him who supplied the beer—

And now bring foreman Bibulus

And his bold comrades here!"

With stealthy hand, still wiping

The froth from off his chin,

They have brought forth beery Bibulus,

And his fellows in the sin.

You had not guessed the burden

Upon their thirsty souls,

Though the Prætor's eye clean through them

Its gathered lightning rolls!

Then, in Olympic thunders,

The hoarded tempest broke:

"Ye seem to take it easy;

I'll show ye 'tis no joke!

Think ye, in this its temple

The Law to flout and jeer,

Getting in through the window

Pots of illegal beer?

"The Common Law of England

Blushes for you, through me;

Little thought I that these Sessions

Would e'er such scandal see!

Go, shameless men! I'll teach ye

Your appetites to balk,

In a room whereto no pewter

Can through the windows walk;

And when you bring your verdict,

About the fine we'll talk."

Bibulus knows the Prætor,

Nor idly pardon begs;

But goeth forth crest-fallen—

His tail between his legs—

When sudden in the lobby

Is heard a mighty din,

And before the awful Prætor

That potman is dragged in!

A loud irreverent laughter

Through all the Court-house ran,

As pot in hand he stood there,

A blank bewildered man!

And so sternly looks the Prætor,

That the potman knoweth not

If he be not going straightway

Himself, at last, to pot.

"Thou caitiff!" roared the Prætor,

(And mirth was changed for awe)

"How answerest thou this outrage

On the majesty of Law?"

Right humbly spoke the potman—

"Your worship—that's my Lord—

The beer some gem'men ordered,

And in course the beer was drored.

"But as for 'Law,' and 'majesty,'

That's neither here nor there:

The beer was served as called for,

And paid for straight and fair.

And what I say, your Lordship—

And I means to put it strong—

Is what was I brought 'ere for,

When I ha'n't done nuffin wrong?"

"No wrong!" quick spoke the Prætor.

"Ho! gaoler—let him see,

That in justice's high precinct,

Right and wrong depend on me!

Go, bear him to the dungeon—

Be the lowest cell his lot!

Meanwhile to thee, chief lictor

We give in charge the pot."

They have haled him from the Court-house,

And have locked him up below;

And the lictor guards the pewter,

With its head of froth like snow.

And never while our Prætor

Dealeth stern justice here,

Will the most thirsty jury

Venture to call for beer,

Or the most reckless potman

Bring it from public near!