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At A Pantomime
BY A BILIOUS ONE
An actor sits in doubtful gloom, He comes to town at Christmas-time, A hoary flowing wig his weird, To smooth his ghastly features down |
He cries, "Go on--begin, begin!
Turn on the light of lime;
I'm dressed for jolly Old Christmas in
A favourite pantomime!
" The curtain's up — the stage all black —
Time and the Year nigh sped —
(Time as an advertising quack)
The Old Year nearly dead.
The wand of Time is waved, and lo!
Revealed Old Christmas stands,
And little children chuckle and crow,
And laugh and clap their hands.
The cruel old scoundrel brightens up The little ones hail the festive King — They only see in the humbug old The old ones, palsied, blear, and hoar, |
They've seen that ghastly pantomime,
They've felt its blighting breath,
They know that rollicking Christmas-time
Meant cold and want and death —
Starvation — Poor Law Union fare,
And deadly cramps and chills,
And illness — illness everywhere —
And crime, and Christmas bills.
They know Old Christmas well, I ween,
Those men of ripened age;
They've often, often, often seen
That actor off the stage.
They see in his gay rotundity
A clumsy stuffed-out dress;
They see in the cup he waves on high
A tinselled emptiness.
Those aged men so lean and wan, And so they bear with dance and song, |
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Page Created 30 July, 2011