Part 46 (2/2)

The Jest Book Mark Lemon 25880K 2022-07-22

DOCTOR HILL, a notorious wit, physician, and man of letters, having quarrelled with the members of the Royal Society, who had refused to admit him as an a.s.sociate, resolved to avenge himself. At the time that Bishop Berkeley had issued his work on the marvellous virtues of tar-water, Hill addressed to their secretary a letter purporting to be from a country-surgeon, and reciting the particulars of a cure which he had effected. ”A sailor,” he wrote, ”_broke_ his leg, and applied to me for help. I bound together the broken portions, and washed them with the celebrated _tar-water_. Almost immediately the sailor felt the beneficial effects of this remedy, and it was not long before his leg was completely _healed_!” The letter was read, and discussed at the meetings of the Royal Society, and caused considerable difference of opinion. Papers were written for and against the tar-water and the restored leg, when a second letter arrived from the (pretended) country pract.i.tioner:--”In my last I omitted to mention that the broken limb of the sailor was a _wooden leg_!”

DCCCXXII.--AN ACCOMMODATING PHYSICIAN.

”IS there anything the matter with you?” said a physician to a person who had sent for him. ”O dear, yes, I am ill all over, but I don't know what it is, and I have no particular pain nowhere,” was the reply. ”Very well,” said the doctor, ”I'll give you something to _take away all that_.”

DCCCXXIII.--CHOICE SPIRITS.

AN eminent spirit-merchant in Dublin announced, in one of the Irish papers, that he has still a small quant.i.ty of the whiskey on sale _which was drunk by his late Majesty while in Dublin_.

DCCCXXIV.--AN EXPLANATION.

YOUNG, the author of ”Night Thoughts,” paid a visit to Potter, son of Archbishop Potter, who lived in a deep and dirty part of Kent, through which Young had scrambled with some difficulty and danger. ”Whose field was that I crossed?” asked Young, on reaching his friend. ”Mine,” said Potter. ”True,” replied the poet; ”Potter's field _to bury_ strangers in.”

DCCCXXV.--IMPROMPTU BY R.B. SHERIDAN.

LORD ERSKINE having once a.s.serted, in the presence of Lady Erskine and Mr. Sheridan, that a wife was only a tin canister tied to one's tail, Sheridan at once presented her these lines,--

Lord Erskine at woman presuming to rail, Calls a wife ”a tin canister tied to one's tail;”

And fair Lady Anne, while the subject he carries on, Seems hurt at his lords.h.i.+p's degrading comparison.

But wherefore ”degrading?” Considered aright, A canister's useful, and polished, and bright; And should dirt its original purity hide, 'Tis the fault of the puppy to whom it is tied.

DCCCXXVI.--LAW AND PHYSIC.

A LEARNED judge being asked the difference between law and equity courts, replied, ”At common law you are done for at once: at equity, you are not so easily disposed of. One is _prussic acid_, and the other _laudanum_.”

DCCCXXVII.--IMPROMPTU.

COUNSELLOR (afterwards Chief Justice) BUSHE, being on one occasion asked which of a company of actors he most admired, maliciously replied, ”The _prompter_, sir, for I have heard the most and seen the least _of him_.”

DCCCXXVIII.--NOTIONS OF HAPPINESS.

”WERE I but a _king_,” said a country boy, ”I would _eat_ my fill of fat bacon, and _swing_ upon a gate all day long.”

DCCCXXIX.--A FORGETFUL MAN.

WHEN Jack was poor, the lad was frank and free.

Of late he's grown brimful of pride and pelf; No wonder that he don't remember _me_; Why so? you see he has forgot _himself_.

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