The Ingoldsby Legends or, Mirth and Marvels. By Thomas Ingoldsby [i.e. R. H. Barham] |
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Bloudie Jacke of Shrewsberrie.
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The Ingoldsby Legends | ||
Bloudie Jacke of Shrewsberrie.
THE SHROPSHIRE BLUEBEARD.
A LEGEND OF “THE PROUD SALOPIANS.”
Bloudie Jacke?
Oh! why doth thine eye gleam so bright?—
The Mother's at home, The Maid may not roam,
She never will meet thee to-night!
By the light
Of the moon—it's impossible—quite!
Bloudie Jacke!
It gleams with a fiendish delight—
Nothing under the sun
Can loose the charm'd ring, though it's slight!
Ho! ho!
It fits so remarkably tight!”
Bloudie Jacke!
The wire is as thin as a thread!—
“Though slight be the chain, Again might and main,
Cannot rend it in twain—She is wed!
She is wed!
She is mine, be she living or dead!
Haw! haw!!”
Bloudie Jacke!
Oh! laugh not so loud and so clear!
Though sweet is thy smile The heart to beguile,
Yet thy laugh is quite shocking to hear,
O dear!
It makes the blood curdle with fear!
Bloudie Jacke!
She is gone by the glen and the wood—
it's a very odd thing She should wear such a ring,
While her tresses are bound by a snood.
By the rood!
It's a thing that's not well understood!
Bloudie Jacke!
And stately she walks in her pride;
But the young Mary-Anne Runs as fast as she can,
To o'ertake her, and walk by her side!
Though she chide—
She deems not her sister a bride!
Bloudie Jacke!
She o'ertakes not her sister, It's clear she has miss'd her,
And cannot think where she can be!
Dear me
“Ho! ho!—We shall see! we shall see!”
Bloudie Jacke!
Mary-Anne she is come to the Tower!
But it makes her heart quail, For it looks like a jail,
A deal more than a fair Lady's bower,
So sour
Its ugly grey walls seem to lour.
Bloudie Jacke!
And the oak-door is heavy and brown;
And with iron it's plated And machicolated,
To pour boiling oil and lead down;
How you'd frown
Should a ladle-full fall on your crown!
Bloudie Jacke!
To gain it one's forced for to creep;
The Portcullis is strong, And the Drawbridge is long,
And the water runs all round the Keep;
At a peep
You can see that the Moat's very deep!
Bloudie Jacke!
And the Portcullis hangs in the air;
And no Warder is near, With his horn and his spear,
To give notice when people come there.—
I declare
Mary-Anne has run into the Square!
Bloudie Jacke!
But the oak-door is standing ajar,
You seem tired, Miss, with running so far—
So you are—
With grown people you're scarce on a par!”
Bloudie Jacke!
She roams o'er your Tower by herself;
She runs through, very soon, Each boudoir and saloon
And examines each closet and shelf,
Your pelf,
All your plate, and your china—and delf.
Bloudie Jacke!
So rich, all description it mocks;
And she now and then pauses To gaze at your vases
Your pictures, and or-molu clocks;
Every box,
Every cupboard, and drawer she unlocks.
Bloudie Jacke!
That adorn every wall in your house;
Your impayable pieces, Your Paul Veroneses,
Your Rembrandts, your Guidos, and Dows,
Morland's Cows,
Claude's Landscapes,—and Landseer's Bow-wows.
Bloudie Jacke!
And mighty great notice she takes
Of your Niobe crying, Your Mirmillo dying,
Your Hercules strangling the snakes,—
How he shakes
The nasty great things as he wakes!
Bloudie Jacke!
A copy of that I can See in the Vatican,
Unless the Pope's sent it away,
As they say,
In the Globe, he intended last May.
Bloudie Jacke!
Mr. Milman says none other vies.
(His lines on Apollo Beat all the rest hollow,
And gain'd him the Newdigate prize.)
How the eyes
Seem watching the shaft as it flies!
Bloudie Jacke!
There's a room full of velvets and lace,
There are drawers full of rings
And a thousand fine things,
And a splendid gold watch with a case
O'er its face,
Is in every room in the place.
Bloudie Jacke!
And every room fit for a Ball,
It's so gorgeous and rich, With so lofty a pitch,
And so long, and so broad, and so tall;
Yes, all,
Save the last one—and that's very small!
Bloudie Jacke!
But one Cabinet, costly and grand,
Which has little gold figures Of little gold Niggers,
With fishing-rods stuck in each hand.—
It's japann'd,
And it's placed on a splendid buhl stand.
Bloudie Jacke!
And of gold are its key-hole and key,
And the drawers within Have each a gold pin,
And they're number'd with 1, 2, and 3,
You may see
All the figures in gold filigree!
Bloudie Jacke!
Number 2's full of diamond and pearl;
But what does she see In drawer Number 3
That makes all her senses to whirl,
Poor Girl!
And each lock of her hair to uncurl?—
Bloudie Jacke!
To salute them one eagerly strives,
When one kneels to “propose”—
It's another quelque chose
When cut off at the knuckles with knives,
From our wives
They are tied up in bunches of fives.
Bloudie Jacke!
There lie they, five, six, seven, eight!
And by them, in rows, Lie eight little Great-Toes
To match in size, colour, and weight!
From their state,
It would seem they'd been sever'd of late.
Bloudie Jacke!
And the gold is as thin as a thread—
“Ho! ho!—She is mine— This will make up the Nine
Dear me! who those shocking words said?—
—She fled
To hide herself under the bed.
Bloudie Jacke!
And she peeps from the window on high;
Only fancy her fright And the terrible sight
Down below, which at once meets her eye!
“Oh My!!”
She half utter'd,—but stifled her cry.
Bloudie Jacke!
And she heard your unpleasant “Haw! haw!!”
While her sister, stone dead, By the hair of her head,
O'er the bridge you were trying to draw,
As she saw,—
A thing quite contra-ry to law!
Bloudie Jacke!
Bloudie Jacke! you've got hold of her hair!—
But nor Jacke nor his Man Can see young Mary. Anne,
She has hid herself under the stair,
And there
Is a horrid great Dog, I declare!
Bloudie Jacke!
He's a sad ugly cur for a pet;
He seems of the breed Of that “Billy,” indeed,
Who used to kill rats for a bet;
—I forget
How many one morning he ate.
Bloudie Jacke!
And thigh-bones;—and, though it's so dim,
Yet it's plain to be seen
He has pick'd them quite clean,—
She expects to be torn limb from limb,
So grim
He looks at her—and she looks at him.
Bloudie Jacke!
She has given him a roll and a bun,
And a Shrewsbury cake, Of Hailin's own make,
Which she happened to take ere her run
She begun—
She's been used to a luncheon at One.
Bloudie Jacke!
—Above,—there's the Maiden that's dead;
Below—growling at her— There's that Cannibal Cur
Who at present is munching her bread,—
Instead
Of her leg,—or her arm,—or her head.
Bloudie Jacke!
She is caught like a mouse in a trap;—
Stay!—there's something, I think,
That has slipp'd through a chink,
And fall'n, by a singular hap,
Slap,
Into poor little Mary-Anne's lap!
Bloudie Jacke!
Yet, though slight, it's remarkably stout,
But it's made a sad stain, Which will always remain
On her frock—for Blood will not wash out;
I doubt
Salts of Lemon won't bring it about!
Bloudie Jacke!
In an instant she stands on the floor,
She makes but one bound O'er the back of the hound,
And a hop, skip, and jump to the door,
And she's o'er
The drawbridge she'd traversed before!
Bloudie Jacke!
For gone is her “bonnet of blue.”
—Now the Barbican's past!— Her legs “go it” as fast
As two drumsticks a-beating tattoo,
As they do
At Réveille, Parade, or Review!
Bloudie Jacke!
She has called out the Beadle and May'r,
And the Justice of Peace, And the Rural Police,
Till “Battle Field” swarms like a Fair,—
And see there!—
E'en the Parson's beginning to swear!!
Bloudie Jacke!
In your Tower there's a pretty to-do!
All the people of Shrewsbury Playing old gooseberry
With your choice bits of taste and virtù;
Each bijou
Is upset in their search after you!
Bloudie Jacke!
There's your Cupid is broken in two,
And so too, between us, is Each of your Venuses,
The “Antique” ones you bought of the Jew,
And the new
One, George Robins swears came from St. Cloud.
Bloudie Jacke!
The De Medici's injured before!
And the Anadyomene 's injured in so many
Places, I think there's a score,
If not more,
Of her fingers and toes on the floor.
Bloudie Jacke!
Every person to pass is forbid,
While they turn out the closets And all their deposits—
“There's the dust-hole—come lift up the lid!”
So they did—
But they could not find where you were hid!
Bloudie Jacke!
The chimneys to search they begin;—
They have found you at last!—
There you are, sticking fast,
With your knees doubled up to your chin,
Though you're thin!
—Dear me! what a mess you are in!—
Bloudie Jacke!
Why, your face is as black as your hat!
Your fine Holland shirt Is all over dirt!
And so is your point-lace cravat!
What a Flat
To seek such an asylum as that!
Bloudie Jacke!
In the midst of their turmoil and strife;
You're not fit to be seen! —You look like Mr. Kean—
In the play where he murders his wife!—
On my life
You ought to be scraped with a knife!
Bloudie Jacke!
They have pull'd you down flat on your back!
And they smack, and they thwack,
Till your “funny bones” crack,
As if you were stretched on the rack,
At each whack!—
Good lack! what a savage attack!
Bloudie Jacke!
And the Hangman, the matter to clinch,
And they call for the Judge, But others cry “Fudge!
Don't budge Mr. Calcraft,
Mr. Lynch!
Will do very well at a pinch!”
Bloudie Jacke!
It is useless to struggle and bite!
And to kick and to scratch
You have met with your match,
And the Shrewsbury Boys hold you tight,
Despite
Your determined attempts “to show fight.”
Bloudie Jacke!
They are twisting your right leg Nor-West,
And your left leg due South,
And your knee's in your mouth,
And it's prest,
I protest, almost into your chest!
Bloudie Jacke!
As the naughty boys serve the blue flies;
And they've torn from their sockets,
And put in their pockets
Your fingers and thumbs for a prize! And your eyes
A Doctor has bottled—from Guy's.
Bloudie Jacke!
They hew, and they hack, and they chop;
And, to finish the whole, They stick up a pole
In the place that's still called the Wylde Coppe,
And they pop
Your grim gory head on the top!
Bloudie Jacke!
Of the victims so lately your prey.
From those fingers and eight toes
Sprang early potatoes,
“Ladyes' Fyngers” they're called to this day;
—So they say,—
And you usually dig them in May.
Bloudie Jacke!
What became of the young Mary Anne?
Why, I'm sadly afraid That she died an Old Maid,
For she fancied that every Young Man
Had a plan
To trepan her like “poor Sister Fan!”
Bloudie Jacke!
And mends Bachelors' small-clothes below;
The story is old, And has often been told,
But I cannot believe it is so—
No! No!
Depend on't the tale is “No Go!”
MORAL.
Bloudie Jacke!
That young Ladies should draw from my pen,—
It's—“Don't take these flights Upon moon-shiny nights
With gay, harum-scarum young men,
Down a glen!—
You really can't trust one in ten!”
Bloudie Jacke!
And don't let them liberties take,
Whether Maidens or Spouses, In Bachelors' houses;
Or, some time or another, they'll make
A Mistake!
And lose—more than a Shrewsberrie Cake!!
“The Pope is said—this fact is hardly credible—to have sold the Laocoon and the Apollo Belvidere to the Emperor of Russia for nine millions of francs.”—Globe and Traveller.
Jehan de Ketche acted as Provost Marshal to the army of William the Conqueror, and received from that monarch a grant of the dignity of Hereditary Grand Functionary of England, together with a “croft or parcel of land,” known by the name of the Old Bailie, co. Middx., to be held by him, and the heirs general of his body, in Grand Serjeantry, by the yearly presentation of “ane hempen cravatte.” After remaining for several generations in the same name, the office passed, by marriage of the heiress, into the ancient family of the Kirbys, and thence again to that of Callcraft (1st Eliz. 1558).—Abhorson Callcraft, Esq., of Saffron Hill, co. Middx. the present representative of the Ketches, exercised his “function” on a very recent occasion, and claimed and was allowed the fee of 131/2d. under the ancient grant as Hangman's Wages. Arms.—1st and 4th, Quarterly, Argent and Sable; in the first quarter a Gibbet of the second, noosed proper, Callcraft. 2nd, Sable three Night-caps Argent, tufted Gules, 2 and 1, Ketche. 3rd, Or, Nosegay fleurant, Kirby. Supporters.—Dexter: A Sheriff in his pride, robed Gules, chained and collared Or.—Sinister: An Ordinary display proper, wigged and banded Argent, nosed Gules. Motto.—Sic itur ad astra!
The Ingoldsby Legends | ||