Only one of these I shall particularly mention, because it shows how immeasurably superior was Jack to the lady who wrote it, in that true and sincere feeling which we call friendship, and which, to my mind, is the bond of society and the only security for its well-being. She was a lady who belonged to what is called “Society,” the characteristic of which is that it exists not only independently of friendship, but in spite of it.
After condoling with me on my loss and showing her sweet womanly sympathy, she concluded her letter by informing me that she had “one of the sweetest pets eyes ever beheld, a darling devoted to her with a faithfulness which would really be a lesson to ‘our specie,’” and that, in the circumstances, she would let me have her little darling for five pounds. I was so astonished and angry at the meanness of this “lady of fashion” that I said—Well, perhaps my exact expression had better be buried in oblivion.
BALLAD OF THE UNSURPRISED JUDGE, 1895.[A]
[Footnote A: It was a well-known expression of Sir Henry Hawkins when on the Bench, “I should be surprised at nothing;” and after the long and strange experiences which these reminiscences indicate, the literal truth of the observation is not to be doubted. This clever ballad, which was written in 1895, seems sufficiently appropriate to find a place in these memoirs, and I wish I knew the name of the writer, that my thanks and apologies might be conveyed to him for this appropriation of them.]
("Mr. Justice Hawkins observed, ‘I am surprised at nothing,’”—Pitts v. Joseph, “Times” Report, March 27.)
All hail to Sir Henry, whom nothing surprises!
Ye Judges and suitors, regard
him with awe,
As he sits up aloft on the Bench and applies
his
Swift mind to the shifts and
the tricks of the law.
Many years has he lived, and has always
seen clear things
That Nox seemed to hide from
our average eyes;
But still, though encompassed with all
sorts of queer things,
He never, no, never, gives
way to surprise.
When a rogue, for example, a company-monger,
Grows fat on the gain of the
shares he has sold,
While the public gets lean, winning nothing
but hunger
And a few scraps of scrip
for its masses of gold;
When the fat man goes further and takes
to religion,
A rascal in hymn-books and
Bibles disguised,
“It’s a case,” says
Sir Henry, “of rook versus pigeon,
And the pigeon gets left—well,
I’m hardly surprised.”
There’s a Heath at Newmarket, and
horses that run there;
There are owners and jockeys,
and sharpers and flats;
There are some who do nicely, and some
who are done there;
There are loud men with pencils
and satchels and hats.
But the stewards see nothing of betting
or money,
As they stand in the blinkers
for stewards devised;
Their blindness may strike Henry Hawkins
as funny,
But he only smiles softly—he
isn’t surprised.