THE DUTY OFF TEA.

We wonder the ladies never agitated for the reduction of the duty off tea. They should have formed an "Anti-Tea League." If they had only laid their tongues together, the death-rattle of the duty would have sounded for ever. The noise would have made ministers tremble, and the great wall of China would have shaken like a row of plates on a kitchen dresser with the tremendous reverberation. Imagine 12,000,000 tongues calling out "Repeal the duty off tea!" and then conceive, if you can, what the intensity of that clamour would be when every one of those 12,000,000 tongues was a female tongue! We pronounce this omission a terrible lapsus linguæ on the part of the Wives and Daughters and Grandmothers of England. Where, we ask, is Mrs. Ellis? that formidable female champion of Great Britain.

Let us suppose that this Utopia has arrived. Tea is free! Bohea has burst its fiscal fetters, and the "best black" is emancipated from its custom-house bonds. Now, it has been proved by every political economist that the cheapening of an article always increases its consumption. What oceans of tea then will be drank when the luxury can be procured at six farthings a cup cheaper! "A dish of tea" will be magnified into a soup-tureen; urns will swell into the size of beer-barrels; and a tea-caddy will assume the dimensions of nothing smaller than a corn-bin. The carts of "No. One, St. Paul's," will vie in grandeur with Barclay and Perkins' drays; and John will be told to go down into the cellar "to bring up another hogshead of the Best Sixpenny Mixed." Scandal, which, next to the sloe, forms the principal ingredient in every brewing of tea, will increase also in proportion to the consumption. No one's reputation will be safe. It will be quite frightful to calculate the dear innocents who will die the death of kittens in the "social cup," and the innumerable characters that will be put into scalding water, and scraped as clean as bitter-almonds, at every "Thé Réunion!" Washer-women too—the greatest trait in whose amphibious characters is proverbially the tea-tray—will be in a state of celestial scan. mag. all day, and will fine-draw their customers' respectability at the same time that they mangle their linen. Female society, in short, will grow into a species of Inhumane Society; and inquests will be held amongst gentlemen after dinner on the lost reputation of their friends, and the verdict will be "Felo-de-se at Mrs. Candour's Tea-party," or "Found Drowned in a Teetotaller's slop-basin." Husbands of England! beware of Cheap Tea, or else the sugar-tongs may be turned against you in the same way that St. Dunstan treated a certain French gentleman by the nose.

A GOOD CUP OF TEA. (WHEN THE DUTY IS TAKEN OFF)

LAYS OF MODERN BABYLON.
BY YOUNG WHAT D' Y' CALLY.
(AGED NINE YEARS AND A DAY.)
OLD MOTHER HUBBARD AND HER DOG.

The ancient dame of Hubbard,

More ancient there are none,

Has hied her to her cupboard,

To fetch her dog a bone;

From shelf to shelf her eyeballs

Quickly and madly glare,

The cupboard of Dame Hubbard

Is desolate and bare.

Again, with eagle's vision,

She scans the wretched void;

She seeks a bone; but there is none,

And none that dog enjoyed.

Now for a pleasant substitute

She racks her puzzled head,

And to the baker's darts she forth

To buy the dog some bread.

But presently returning

With all that she required,

The bread falls from her palsied hand—

Ha! ha! the dog's expired.

The mournful rights of sepulture

She hastens to fulfil;

And at an undertaker's

Incurs a heavy bill.

A coffin she has purchased,

And madly rushes in;

Jupiter Gammon! there's the dog

Upon the broad, broad grin!

Bewilderment and pleasure

For mastery contend:

Dame Hubbard's startled by the dog

But glad to see the friend.

She fain would entertain him

With something to his wish;

To fetch some tripe, she gives a wipe

To a half dusty dish.

Then, fleet of foot and gay of heart,

Returning with the tripe,

She dimly sees, through clouds of smoke,

Her dog behind a pipe.

But when did woman's patience

Fall overcome and dead?

Never while Mother Hubbard

Had heart, and heels, and head!

Off to the tavern straight she flew

For wine, drawn from the wood;

She brought it—and upon his head

The dog inverted stood.

Untiring and undaunted,

A fruiterer she sought;

The fair and fragrant gooseberry,

The currants, too, she bought;

The strawberry, whose noble leaves

Of dukedom are the type;

The raspberry, which, like the mind,

Is long in getting ripe:

She bought them all, both great and small;

But entering with the fruit,

The sound of melody she heard—

The dog did play the flute.

The dame was not insensible,

The music touched her heart;

He should have man's attire, said she,

Who plays a mortal part.

And acting on the impulse,

A tailor's shop she gained,

Where a paletot, lately register'd,

Was speedily obtained.

She had not reach'd her cottage door

(She carried still the coat)

When she beheld upon the green

Her dog, who rode a goat.

Another mission, and the last,

Dame Hubbard doth perform;

A wig, she reason'd to herself,

Would keep the dog's head warm.

Then with the wig upon her arm

She towards her dog advanced,

And found him strangely occupied—

A jig he wildly danced.

Gay hose from the hosier she obtained,

A glass he stood before,

Wrapt in self-admiration

For his gay clothes he wore.

When old men on the winter's night

Shall mix their pleasant grog,

And youth attempts its first cigar,

Think of Dame Hubbard's dog.

When the maiden of the household

For sweet repose prepares,

Taking the rushlight and the plate,

One in each hand, upstairs—

Think of the good Dame Hubbard,

And hope through life to jog

With a friend that's half as faithful

As her old eccentric dog.

G. A. a'B.

DIFFICULT THINGS TO BE MET WITH ON THE
CONTINENT.

A table d'hôte without a single Smith.

A monument that has not an English name upon it.

A waiter at any of the hotels on the Rhine that does not sell eau-de-Cologne.

A bit of soap that can be persuaded to lather.

A Frenchman on the field of the Battle of Waterloo.

Two fine young Englishmen dining without champagne.

A Dutchman on the top of the spire of Strasburg Cathedral.

A Commissionaire, or a Conducteur, or a Portier, that has not served in the Imperial Guard.

A Frenchman speaking any language but his own, an Englishman that looks happy, a German that looks clean, or a pig that has the slightest resemblance to a Christian pig.

The precise rule of arithmetic by which hotel bills, particularly in Switzerland, are made out.

An Irishman, a Welshman, and a Gascon travelling together.

A party of English ladies the payment of whose luggage does not far exceed their railway-fare.

A looking-glass without a group of Frenchmen before it.

A regular John Bull returning home who is not glad to get back again to England.