At the other side of these domestic conveniences was a picture of Mrs Lobkins, in a scarlet body, and a hat and plume. At the back of the fair hostess stretched the blanket we have before mentioned. As a relief to the monotonous surface of this simple screen, various ballads and learned legends were pinned to the blanket. There might you read in verses, pathetic and unadorned, how,

           Sally loved a sailor lad

           As fought with famous Shovel!

There might you learn, if of two facts so instructive you were before unconscious, that

           Ben the toper loved his bottle –

           Charley only loved the lasses!

When of these, and various other poetical effusions, you were somewhat wearied, the literary fragments, in humbler prose, afforded you equal edification and delight. There might you fully enlighten yourself as to the ‘Strange and Wonderful News from Kensington, being a most full and true Relation how a Maid there is supposed to have been carried away by an Evil Spirit, on Wednesday, 15th of April last, about Midnight.’ There too, no less interesting and no less veracious, was that uncommon anecdote, touching the chief of many-throned powers, entitled ‘The Divell of Mascon; or the true Relation of the Chief Things which an Unclean Spirit did and said at Mascon, in Burgundy, in the house of one Mr Francis Pereaud: now made English by one that hath a Particular Knowledge of the Truth of the Story.’

Nor were these materials for Satanic history the only prosaic and faithful chronicles which the bibliothecal blanket afforded: equally wonderful, and equally indisputable, was the account of ‘a young lady, the daughter of a duke, with three legs, and the face of a porcupine.’ Nor less so, ‘The Awful Judgment of God upon Swearers, as exemplified in the case of John Stiles, who Dropped down Dead after swearing a Great Oath, and on stripping the unhappy man they found “Swear not at all” written on the tail of his shirt!’

Twice had Mrs Lobkins heaved a long sigh, as her eyes turned from Paul to the tranquil countenance of Dummie Dunnaker, and now, re-settling herself in her chair, as a motherly anxiety gathered over her visage, –

‘Paul, my ben cull,’ said she, ‘what gibberish hast got there?’

‘Turpin, the great highwayman!’ answered the young student, without lifting his eyes from the page, through which he was spelling his instructive way.

‘Oh! He be’s a chip of the right block, dame!’ said Mr Dunnaker, as he applied his pipe to an illumined piece of paper. ‘He’ll ride a ’oss foaled by a hacorn yet, I varrants!’

To this prophecy the dame replied only with a look of indignation, and rocking herself to and fro in her huge chair, she remained for some moments in silent thought. At last she again wistfully eyed the hopeful boy, and calling him to her side, communicated some order, in a dejected whisper. Paul, on receiving it, disappeared behind the blanket, and presently returned with a bottle and a wine-glass. With an abstracted gesture, and an air that betokened continued meditation, the good dame took the inspiring cordial from the hand of her youthful cupbearer,

           And ere a man had power to say ‘Behold!’

           The jaws of Lobkins had devoured it up:

           So quick bright things come to confusion!

The nectarean beverage seemed to operate cheerily on the matron’s system; and placing her hand on the boy’s curly head, she said, (like Andromache, dakruon gelasasa, or, as Scott hath it, ‘With a smile in her cheek, but a tear in her eye:’) –

‘Paul, thy heart be good! – Thy heart be good! – Thou didst not spill a drop of the tape! Tell me, my honey, why didst thou lick Tom Tobyson?’

‘Because,’ answered Paul, ‘he said as how you ought to have been hanged long ago!’

‘Tom Tobyson is a good-for-nought,’ returned the dame, ‘and deserves to shove the tumbler;* but, oh my child! Be not too venturesome in taking up the sticks for a blowen. It has been the ruin of many a man afore you, and when two men goes to quarrel for a ’oman, they doesn’t know the natur of the thing they quarrels about; – mind thy latter end, Paul, and reverence the old, without axing what they has been before they passed into the wale of years; – thou may’st get me my pipe, Paul, – it is up-stairs, under the pillow.’

While Paul was accomplishing this errand, the lady of the Mug, fixing her eyes upon Mr Dunnaker, said, ‘Dummie, Dummie, if little Paul should come to be scragged!’

‘Whish!’ muttered Dummie, glancing over his shoulder at Mac Grawler, – ‘mayhap that gemman,’ – here his voice became scarcely audible even to Mrs Lobkins; but his whisper seemed to imply an insinuation, that the illustrious editor of the Asinæum might be either an informer, or one of those heroes on whom an informer subsists.

Mrs Lobkins’s answer, couched in the same key, appeared to satisfy Dunnaker, for, with a look of great contempt, he chucked up his head, and said, ‘Oho! That be all, be it!’

Paul here reappeared with the pipe, and the dame, having filled the tube, leaned forward, and lighted the Virginian weed from the blower of Mr Dunnaker. As in this interesting occupation the heads of the hostess and the guest approached each other, the glowing light playing cheerily on the countenance of each, there was an honest simplicity in the picture that would have merited the racy and vigorous genius of a Cruikshank. As soon as the Promethean spark had been fully communicated to the lady’s tube, Mrs Lobkins, still possessed by the gloomy idea she had conjured up, repeated, –

‘Ah, Dummie, if little Paul should be scragged!’ Dummie, withdrawing the pipe from his mouth, heaved a sympathizing puff, but remained silent; and Mrs Lobkins, turning to Paul, who stood with mouth open and ears erect at this boding ejaculation, said, –

‘Dost think, Paul, they’d have the heart to hang thee?’

‘I think they’d have the rope, dame!’ returned the youth.

‘But you need not go for to run your neck into the noose!’ said the matron; and then, inspired by the spirit of moralizing, she turned round to the youth, and gazing upon his attentive countenance, accosted him with the following admonitions: –

‘Mind thy kittychism, child, and reverence old age. Never steal, ’specially when anyone be in the way. Never go snacks with them as be older than you, – ’cause why? The older a cove be, the more he cares for his self, and the less for his partner. At twenty, we diddles the public; at forty, we diddles our cronies! Be modest, Paul, and stick to your sitivation in life. Go not with fine tobymen, who burn out like a candle wot has a thief in it, – all flare and gone in a whiffy! Leave liquor to the aged, who can’t do without it. Tape often proves a halter, and there be’s no ruin like blue ruin! Read your Bible, and talk like a pious ’un. People goes more by your words than your actions. If you wants what is not your own, try and do without it; and if you cannot do without it, take it away by insinivation, not bluster. They as swindles, does more and risks less than they as robs; and if you cheats toppingly, you may laugh at the topping cheat.* And now go play.’

Paul seized his hat, but lingered; and the dame guessing at the signification of the pause, drew forth, and placed in the boy’s hand the sum of five halfpence and one farthing. ‘There, boy,’ quoth she, and she stroked his head fondly when she spoke; ‘you does right not to play for nothing, it’s loss of time! But play with those as be less than yoursel’, and then you can go for to beat ’em if they says you go for to cheat!’

Paul vanished; and the dame, laying her hand on Dummie’s shoulder, said, –

‘There be nothing like a friend in need, Dummie; and somehow or other, I thinks as how you knows more of the horrigin of that ’ere lad than any of us!’

‘Me, dame!’ exclaimed Dummie, with a broad gaze of astonishment.

‘Ah, you! You knows as how the mother saw more of you just afore she died, than she did of ’ere one of us. Noar, now – noar, now! Tell us all about ’un. Did she steal ’un, think ye!’

‘Lauk, mother Margery! Dost think I knows? Vot put such a crotchet in your ’ead?’

‘Well!’ said the dame with a disappointed sigh, ‘I always thought as how you were more knowing about it than you owns. Dear, dear, I shall never forgit the night when Judith brought the poor cretur here, – you knows she had been some months in my house afore ever I see’d the urchin, and when she brought it, she looked so pale and ghostly, that I had not the heart to say a word, so I stared at the brat, and it stretched out its wee little hands to me. And the mother frowned at it, and throwed it into my lap!’

‘Ah! she was a hawful voman, that ’ere!’ said Dummie, shaking his head. ‘But howsomever, the hurchin fell into good ’ands; for I be’s sure you ’as been a better mother to ’un than the raal ’un!’

‘I was always a fool about childer,’ rejoined Mrs Lobkins, ‘and I thinks as how little Paul was sent to be a comfort to my latter end! – Fill the glass, Dummie.’

‘I ’as heard as ’ow Judith was once blowen to a great lord!’ said Dummie.

‘Like enough!’ returned Mrs Lobkins, ‘like enough! She was always a favourite of mine, for she had a spuret as big as my own; and she paid her rint like a decent body, for all she was out of her sinses, or nation like it.’

‘Ay, I knows as how you liked her, – ’cause vy? – ’Tis not your vay, to let a room to a voman! You says as how ’tis not respectable, and you only likes men to wisit the Mug!’

‘And I doesn’t like all of them as comes here!’ answered the dame. ‘’Specially for Paul’s sake; but what can a lone ’oman do? Many’s the gentleman highwayman wot comes here, whose money is as good as the clerk’s of the parish. And when a bob* is in my hand, what does it sinnify whose hand it was in afore?’

‘That’s what I call being sinsible and practical,’ said Dummie, approvingly. ‘And arter all, though you ’as a mixture like, I does not know a halehouse where a cove is better entertained, nor meets of a Sunday more illegant company, than the Mug!’

Here the conversation, which the reader must know had been sustained in a key inaudible to a third person, received a check from Mr Peter Mac Grawler, who, having finished his reverie and his tankard, now rose to depart. First, however, approaching Mrs Lobkins, he observed that he had gone on credit for some days, and demanded the amount of his bill. Glancing towards certain chalk hieroglyphics inscribed on the wall at the other side of the fireplace, the dame answered, that Mr Mac Grawler was indebted to her for the sum of one shilling and ninepence three farthings.

After a short preparatory search in his waistcoat pockets, the critic hunted into one corner a solitary half crown, and having caught it between his finger and thumb, he gave it to Mrs Lobkins, and requested change.

As soon as the matron felt her hand anointed with what has been called by some ingenious Johnson of St Giles’s ‘the oil of palms,’ her countenance softened into a complacent smile; and when she gave the required change to Mr Mac Grawler, she graciously hoped as how he would recommend the Mug to the public.

‘That you may be sure of,’ said the editor of the Asinæum. ‘There is not a place where I am so much at home.’

With that the learned Scotsman buttoned his coat and went his way.

‘How spiteful the world be!’ said Mrs Lobkins after a pause, ‘’specially if a ’oman keeps a fashionable sort of a public! When Judith died, Joe, the dog’s-meat man, said I war all the better for it, and that she left I a treasure to bring up the urchin.