XVIII.
But all were at
fault;
From the heavenly
vault
The falling balloon came at last to a halt;
And bounce! with
the jar
Of descending
so far,
An outlandish Creature was thrown from the car!
XIX.
At first with
the jolt
All his wits made
a bolt,
As if he’d been flung by a mettlesome colt;
And while in his
faint,
To avoid all complaint,
The muse shall endeavor his portrait to paint.
XX.
The face of this
elf,
Round as platter
of delf,
Was pale as if only a cast of itself;
His head had a
rare
Fleece of silvery
hair,
Just like the Albino at Bartlemy Fair.
XXI.
His eyes they
were odd,
Like the eyes
of a cod,
And gave him the look of a watery God.
His nose was a
snub;
Under which, for
his grub,
Was a round open mouth like to that of a chub.
XXII.
His person was
small,
Without figure
at all,
A plump little body as round as a ball:
With two little
fins,
And a couple of
pins,
With what has been christened a bow in the shins.
XXIII.
His dress it was
new,
A full suit of
sky-blue—
With bright silver buckles in each little shoe—
Thus painted complete,
From his head
to his feet,
Conceive him laid flat in Squire Hopkins’s wheat.
XXIV.
Fine text for
the crowd!
Who disputed aloud
What sort of a creature had dropp’d from the
cloud—
“He’s
come from o’er seas,
He’s a Cochin
Chinese—
By jingo! he’s one of the wild Cherokees!”
XXV.
“Don’t
nobody know?”
“He’s
a young Esquimaux,
Turn’d white like the hares by the Arctical
snow.”
“Some angel,
my dear,
Sent from some
upper spear
For Plumtree or Agnew, too good for this-here!”
XXVI.
Meanwhile with
a sigh,
Having open’d
one eye,
The Stranger rose up on his seat by and by;
And finding his
tongue,
Thus he said,
or he sung,
“Mi criky bo biggamy kickery bung!”
XXVII.
“Lord! what
does he speak?”
“It’s
Dog-Latin—it’s Greek!”
“It’s some sort of slang for to puzzle
a Beak!”
“It’s
no like the Scotch,”
Said a Scot on
the watch,
“Pho! it’s nothing at all but a kind of
hotch-potch!”