Roundabout Papers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Roundabout Papers.

Roundabout Papers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Roundabout Papers.
You would say, “What, Blunderbore, my boy!  How do you do?  How well and fresh you look!  What’s the receipt you have for keeping so young and rosy?” And your wife would softly ask after Mrs. Blunderbore and the dear children.  Or it would be, “My dear Humguffin! try that pork.  It is home-bred, homefed, and, I promise you, tender.  Tell me if you think it is as good as yours?  John, a glass of Burgundy to Colonel Humguffin!” You don’t suppose there would be any unpleasant allusions to disagreeable home-reports regarding Humguffin’s manner of furnishing his larder?  I say we all of us know ogres.  We shake hands and dine with ogres.  And if inconvenient moralists tell us we are cowards for our pains, we turn round with a tu quoque, or say that we don’t meddle with other folk’s affairs; that people are much less black than they are painted, and so on.  What!  Won’t half the county go to Ogreham Castle?  Won’t some of the clergy say grace at dinner?  Won’t the mothers bring their daughters to dance with the young Rawheads?  And if Lady Ogreham happens to die—­I won’t say to go the way of all flesh, that is too revolting—­I say if Ogreham is a widower, do you aver, on your conscience and honor, that mothers will not be found to offer their young girls to supply the lamented lady’s place?  How stale this misanthropy is!  Something must have disagreed with this cynic.  Yes, my good woman.  I dare say you would like to call another subject.  Yes, my fine fellow; ogre at home, supple as a dancing-master abroad, and shaking in thy pumps, and wearing a horrible grin of sham gayety to conceal thy terror, lest I should point thee out:—­thou art prosperous and honored, art thou?  I say thou hast been a tyrant and a robber.  Thou hast plundered the poor.  Thou hast bullied the weak.  Thou hast laid violent hands on the goods of the innocent and confiding.  Thou hast made a prey of the meek and gentle who asked for thy protection.  Thou hast been hard to thy kinsfolk, and cruel to thy family.  Go, monster!  Ah, when shall little Jack come and drill daylight through thy wicked cannibal carcass?  I see the ogre pass on, bowing right and left to the company; and he gives a dreadful sidelong glance of suspicion as he is talking to my lord bishop in the corner there.

Ogres in our days need not be giants at all.  In former times, and in children’s books, where it is necessary to paint your moral in such large letters that there can be no mistake about it, ogres are made with that enormous mouth and ratelier which you know of, and with which they can swallow down a baby, almost without using that great knife which they always carry.  They are too cunning now-a-days.  They go about in society, slim, small, quietly dressed, and showing no especially great appetite.  In my own young days there used to be play ogres—­men who would devour a young fellow in one sitting, and leave him without a bit of flesh on his bones.  They were quiet gentlemanlike-looking people. 

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Roundabout Papers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.