Enter
JUDY
Punch.
What a sweet creature! what a handsome nose and chin!
(He pats her on the face very gently.)
Judy.
(Slapping him.) Keep quiet, do!
Punch.
Don't be cross, my dear, but give me a kiss.
Judy.
Oh, to be sure, my love.
[They kiss.
Punch.
Bless your sweet lips! (Hugging her.) This is melting moments.
I'm very fond of my wife; we must have a dance.
Judy.
Agreed.
[They both dance.
Punch.
Get out of the way! you don't dance well enough for me.
(He hits her on the nose.) Go and
fetch the baby, and mind and take care of it, and not hurt it.
[Judy exaunts.
Judy.
(Returning back with baby.) Take care of the baby, while
I go and cook the dumplings.
Punch.
(Striking Judy with his right hand.) Get out of the way!
I'll take care of the baby. [Judy exaunts.
Punch
(sits down and sings to the baby)-
'Hush-a-by,
baby, upon the tree-top,
When the wind blows the cradle will rock,
When the bough breaks the cradle will
fall,
Down comes the baby and cradle and all.'
[Baby
cries.
Punch. (Shaking it.) What
a cross boy (He lays it down on the playboard, and rolls it
backwards and forwards, to rock it to sleep, and sings again.)
'Oh.
slumber, my, darling, thy sire is a knight,
Thy mother's a lady so lovely and bright;
The hills and the dales, and the tow'rs
which you see,
They all shall belong, my dear creature,
to thee.
(Punch continues rocking the child. It
still cries, and he takes it up in his arms, saying, What
a cross child! I can't a-bear cross children. Then he vehemently
shakes it, and knocks its head up against the side of the proceedings
several times, representing to kill it, and he then throws it
out of the winder.)
Enter JUDY
Judy.
Where's the baby?
Punch.
(In a melancholy tone.) I have had a misfortune; the child
was so terrible cross, I throwed it out of the winder. (Lemontation
of Judy for the loss of her dear child. She goes into asterisks,
and then excites and fetches a cudgel, and commences beating Punch
over the head.)
Punch.
Don't be cross, my dear: I didn't go to do it.
Judy.
I'll pay yer for throwing the child out of the winder. (She
keeps on giving him knocks of the head, but Punch snatches the
stick away and commences an attack upon his wife, and beats her
severely.)
Judy.
I'll go to the constable, and have you locked up.
Punch.
Go to the devil. I don't care where you go. Get out of the way!
(Judy exaunts, and Punch then sings, 'Cherry ripe,' or 'Cheer,
boys, cheer.' All before is sentimental, now this here's comic.
Punch goes through his roo-too-to-rooey, and then the Beadle comes
up.)
Beadle.
Hi! hello, my boy!
Punch.
Hello, my boy. (He gives him a wipe over the head with his
stick, which knocks him down, but he gets up again.)
Beadle.
Do you know, sir, that I've a, special order in my pocket to take
you up?
Punch.
And I've a special order to knock you down. (He knocks him
down with simplicity, but not with brutality, for the juvenial
branches don't like to see severity practised.)
Beadle.
(Coming up again.) D'ye know, my boy, that I've an order
to take you up?
Punch.
And I've an order I tell ye to knock you down. (He sticks him.
Punch is a tyrant to the Beadle, ye know, and if he was took up,
he wouldn't go through his rambles, so in course he isn't.)
Beadle.
I've a warrant for you, my boy.
Punch.
(Striking him.) And that's a warrant for you, my boy. (The
Beadle's a determined man, ye know, and resolved to go to the
ends of justice as far as possible in his power by special authority,
so a quarrel enshoos between them.)
Beadle.
You are a blackguard.
Punch.
So are you.
(The Beadle hits Punch on the nose, and
takes the law in his own hands. Punch takes it up momentary; strikes
the Beadle, and a fight enshoos. The Beadle, faint and exhausted,
gets up once more; then he strikes Punch over the nose, which
is returned pro and con.)
Beadle.
That's a good 'un.
Punch.
That's a better.
Beadle.
That's a topper. (He hits him jolly hard.)
Punch.
(With his cudgel.) That's a wopper. (He knocks him out of his
senses, and the Beadle exaunts.)
Enter
MERRY CLOWN
Punch
sings 'Getting up Stairs,' in quick time, while the Clown is coming
up. Clown dances round Punch in all directions, and Punch with
his cudgel is determined to catch him if possible.
Clown.
No bono, allez tooti sweet, Mounseer. Look out sharp! Make haste!
catch 'em alive! Here we are! how are you? good morning! don't
you wish you may get it? Ah! coward, strike a white man! (Clown
keeps bobbing up and down, and Punch trying to hit all the time
till Punch is exhausted nearly.)
(The
Clown, ye see, sir, is the best friend to Punch, he carries him
through all his tricks, and he's a great favorite of Punch's.
He's too cunning for him though, and knows too much for him, so
they both shake hands and make it up.)
Clown.
Now it's all fair; ain't it, Punch?
Punch.
Yes.
Clown.
Now I can begin again.
(You
see., sir. the Clown gets over Punch altogether by his artful
ways, and then begins the same tricks over again; that is, if
we wants a long performance; if not, we cuts it off at the other
pint. But I'm telling you the real original style, sir.)
Clown.
Good! you can't catch me.
(Punch
gives him one whack of the head, and Clown exaunts, or goes off.)
Enter Ghost.
Punch
sings meanwhile 'Home, sweet Home.' (This is original). The Ghost
represents the ghost of Judy, because he's killed his wife, don't
you see, the Ghost making her appearance; but Punch don't know
it at the moment. Still he sits down tired, and sings in the corner
of the frame the song of 'Home, sweet Home,' while the Sperrit
appears to him.
Punch
turns round and sees the Ghost, and is most terribly timidated.
He begins to shiver and shake in great fear, bringing his guilty
conscience to his mind of what he's been guilty of doing, and
at last he falls down in a fit of frenzy. Kicking, screeching,
hollaring, and shouting 'Fifty thousand pounds for a doctor!'
Then he turns on his side, and draws hisself double with the screwmatics
in his gills.
[Ghost excites
Enter DOCTOR
Punch
is represented to be dead. This is the dying speech of Punch.
Doctor. Dear me! Bless my heart!
Here have I been running as fast ever I could walk, and very near
tumbled over a straw. I heard somebody call most lustily for a
doctor. Dear me (looking at Punch in all directions, and examining
his body), this is my pertickler friend Mr. Punch; poor man!
how pale he looks! I'll feel his pulse (counts his pulse)-
l, 2, 14, 9, 11. Hi! Punch, are you dead? are you dead? are you
dead?
Punch.
(Hitting him with his right hand over the nose, and knocking
him back.) Yes.
Doctor.
(Rubbing his nose with his hand.) I never heard a dead
man speak before. Punch, you are not dead!
Punch.
Oh, yes I am.
Doctor.
How long have you been dead?
Punch.
About six weeks.
Doctor.
Oh, you're not dead, you're only poorly; I must fetch you a little
reviving medicine, such as some stick-lickerish and balsam, and
extract of shillalagh.
Punch.
(Rising.) Make haste-(he gives the Doctor a wipe on the
nose)- make haste and fetch it.
[Doctor exaunts.
Punch.
The Doctor going to get me some physic! I'm very fond of brandy-and-water,
and rum-punch. I want my physic; the Doctor never brought me no
physic at all. I wasn't ill; it was only my fun. (Doctor reappears
with the physic-stick, and he whacks Punch over the head no harder
than he is able, and cries) -'There's physic! physic! physic!
physic! physic! Pills! balsam! sticklickerish!'
Punch.
(Rising and rubbing his head against the wing.) Yes; it
is sticklickerish.
(Ah!
it's a pretty play, sir, when it's showed well - that it is -
it's delightful to read the morals; I am werry fond of reading
the morals, I am.)
Punch.
(Taking the stick from the Doctor.) Now, I'll give you physic!
physic! physic! (He strikes at the Doctor, but misses him every
time.) The Doctor don't like his own stuff.
Punch.
(Presenting his stick, gun-fashion, at Doctor's head.) I'II shoot
ye- one, two, three.
Doctor.
(Closing with Punch.) Come to gaol along with me.
(He saves his own life by closing with Punch.
He's a desperate character is Punch, though he means no harm,
ye know.) A struggle enshoos, and the Doctor calls for help, Punch
being too powerful for him.
Doctor.
Come to gaol! You shall repent for all your past misdeeds. Help!
assistance! help, in the Queen's name!
(He's
acting as a constable, the Doctor is, though he's no business
to do it; but he's acting in self-defence. He didn't know Punch,
but he'd heard of his transactions, and when he came to examine
him, he found it was the man. The Doctor is a very sedate kind
of a person, and wishes to do good to all classes of the community
at large, especially with his physic, which he gives gratis for
nothink at all. The physic is called "Head-e-cologne, or a sure
cure for the head-ache.")
Re-enter Beadle. (Punch
and the Doctor still struggling together.)
Beadle.
(Closing with them.) Hi, hi! this is him; behold the head
of a traitor! Come along! come to gaol!
Punch.
(A-kicking.) I will not go, help!
Beadle.
(Shouting.) More help! more help! more help! more help!
Come along to gaol! come along! come along!
More help! more help!
(Oh!
it's a good lark just here, sir, but tremendous hard work, for
there's so many figures to work- and all struggling, too,- and
you have to work them all at once. This is comic, this is.)
Beadle.
More help! be quick! be quick!
[Exaunts all, Punch still singing out,
'I'll not go.'
END
OF FIRST ACT
Change
of Scene for Second Act
Scene
draws up, and discovers the exterior of a prison, with
Punch peeping through the bars, and singing
a merry song of the
merry bells of England, as of the olden
time, (That's an olden
song, you know; it's old ancient, and it's
a moral-a moral song,
you know, to show that Punch is repenting,
but pleased, and yet
don't care nothink at all about it, for
he's frolicsome, and on the
height of his frolic and amusement to all
the juveniles, old and
young, rich and poor. We must put all classes
together.)
Enter
Hangman Jack Ketch, or Mr. GRABALL
(That's
Jack Ketch's name, you know; he takes all, when they gets in his
clutches. We mustn't blame him for he must do his duty, for the
sheriffs is so close to him.)
[Preparations
commences for the execution of Punch. Punch is still looking through
the bars of Newgate.
The last scene as I had was Temple-bar Scene;
it was a prison once, ye know; that's the old ancient, ye know,
but I never let the others see it, cos it shouldn't become too
public. But I think Newgate is better, in the new edition, though
the prison is suspended, it being rather too terrific for the
beholder. It was the old ancient style; the sentence is passed
upon him, but by whom not known; he's not tried by one person,
cos nobody can't.
Jack
Ketch. Now, Mr. Punch, you are going to be executed by the
British and Foreign laws of this and other countries, and you
are to be hung up by the neck until you are dead - dead - dead.
Punch.
What, am I to die three times?
Jack.
No, no; you're only to die once.
Punch.
How is that? you said I was to be hung up by the neck
till I was dead - dead - dead? You can't
die three times.
Jack.
Oh, no; only once.
Punch.
Why, you said dead - dead - dead.
Jack.
Yes: and when you are dead - dead - dead - you will be quite dead.
Punch.
Oh! I never knowed that before.
Jack.
Now, prepare yourself for execution.
Punch.
What for?
Jack.
For killing your wife, throwing your dear little innocent baby
out of the window, and striking the Beadle unmercifully over the
head with a mop-stick. Come on.
[Exaunt
Hangman behind Scene, and re-enter, leading Punch slowly forth
to the foot of the gallows. Punch comes most willingly, having
no sense.
Jack.
Now, my boy, here is the corfin, here is the gibbet, (and here
is the pall.
Punch.
There's the corfee-shop, there's giblets, and there's St. Paul's.
Jack.
Get out, young foolish! Now then, place your head in here.
Punch.
What, up here?
Jack.
No; a little lower down.
(There's
quick business in this, you know; this is comic - a little comic
business, this is.)
Punch.
(Dodging the noose.) What, here?
Jack.
No, no; in there (showing the noose again.)
Punch.
This way?
Jack.
No, a little more this way; in there.
[Punch
falls down, and pretends he's dead.
Jack.
Get up, you're not dead.
Punch.
Oh, yes I am.
Jack.
But I say, no.
Punch.
Please, sir, (bowing to the hangman) - (Here he's an hypocrite;
he wants to exempt himself,) - do show me the way, for I never
was hung before, and I don't know the way. Please, sir, do show
me the way, and I'll feel extremely obliged to you, and return
you my most sincere thanks.
(Now,
that's well worded, sir; it's well put together; that's my beauty,
that is; I am obliged to study my language, and not have anything
vulgar whatsoever. All in simplicity, so that the young children
may not be taught anything wrong. There aren't nothing to be learnt
from it, because of its simplicity.)
Jack.
Very well; as you're so kind and condescending, I will certainly
oblige you by showing you the way. Here, my boy! now, place your
head in here, like this (hangman putting his head in the noose);
this is the right and the proper way; now, you see the rope is
placed under my chin; I'll take my head out, and I will place
yours in (that's a rhyme) and when your head is in the rope, you
must turn round to the ladies and gentlemen, and say - Good-by;
fare you well.
(Very
slowly then - a stop between each of the words; for that's not
driving the people out of the world in quick haste without giving
'em time for repentance. That's another moral, yer see. Oh, I
like all the morals to it.)
Punch
(quickly pulling the rope). Good-bye; fare you well. (Hangs
the hangman.) (What a hypocrite he is again, yer see, for
directly he's done it he says: "Now, I'm free again for frolic
and fun"; calls Joey, the clown, his old friend, because they're
both full of tricks and antics: "Joey, here's a man hung hisself":
- that's his hypocrisy again, yer see, for he tries to get exempt
after he's done it hisself.)
Enter
Clown, in quick haste, bobbing up against the gallows.
Clown.
Dear me, I've run against a milk-post! Why, dear Mr. Punch, you've
hung a man! do take him down! How came you to do it?
Punch.
He got wet through, and I hung him up to dry.
Clown.
Dear me! why you've hung him up till he's dried quite dead!
Punch.
Poor fellow! then he won't catch cold with the wet. Let's put
him in this snuff-box. [Pointing to coffin.
[Joe takes the figure down and gives
it to Punch to hold, so as the body do not turn away, and then
proceeds to remove the gallows. In doing so he by accident hits
Punch on the nose.
Punch.
Mind what you are about! (for Punch is game, yer know, right through
to the back-bone.)
Clown.
Make haste, Punch, here's somebody a-coming! (They hustle his
legs and feet in; but they can't get his head in, the undertaker
not having made the coffin large enough.)
Punch.
We'd better double him up, place the pall on, and take the man
to the grave, - not the grave, but the brave: cos he's been a
brave man in his time maybe. - Sings the song of "Bobbing around,"
while with the coffin he bobs Joey on the head, and exaunt.
Re-enter
PUNCH
Punch.
That was a jolly lark, wasn't it?
Sings,-
'I'd
be a butterfly in a bower.
Making apple-dumplings without any flour.'
All
this wit must have been born in me, or nearly so; but I got a
good lot of it from Porsini and Pike - and gleanings, you know.
[Punch
disappears and re-enters with. bell.
Punch.
This is my pianner-sixty: it plays fifty tunes all at one time.
[Goes
to the landlord of the public-house painted on the side-scene,
or cottage, represented as a tavern, or hotel. The children of
the publican are all a-bed. Punch plays up a tune and solicits
for money.
Landlord wakes up in a passion through
the terrible noise; pokes his head out of window and tells him
to go away.
(There's
a little window, and a little door to this side-scene.) If they
was to play it all through, as you're a writing, it 'ud open Drury-lane
Theatre.
Punch.
Go away? Yes, play away! Oh, you means, O'er the hills and
far away. (He misunderstands him, wilfully, the hypocrite.)
[Punch
keeps on ringing his bell violently. Publican, in a violent passion,
opens the door, and pushes him away, saying, 'Be off with
you'].
Punch.
I will not. (Hits him over the head with the bell.) You're no
judge of music. (Plays away.)
Publican
exaunts to fetch cudgel to pay him out. Punch no sooner sees cudgel
than he exaunts, taking his musical instrument with him. It's
far superior to anything of the kind you did ever see, except
"seldom." Yoy know it's silver, and that's what we says "seldom";
silver, you know is "seldom" because it's seldom you sees it.
Publican
comes out of his house with his cudgel to catch old Punch on the
grand hop. Must have a little comic.
Punch
returns again with his bell, while publican is hiding secretly
for to catch him. Publican pretends, as he stands in a corner,
to be fast asleep, but keeps his eyes wide awake all the while,
and says, "If he comes up here, I'll be one upon his tibby."
Punch
comes out from behind the opposite side, and rings his bell violently.
Publican makes a blow at him with his cudgel, and misses, saying,
'How dare you intrude upon my premises with that nasty, noisy
bell!'
Punch,
while publican is watching at this side-scene, appears over at
the other, with a hartful dodge, and again rings his bell loudly,
and again the publican misses him; and while publican is watching
at this side-scene, Punch re-enters, and draws up to him very
slowly, and rests his pianner - sixty on the board, while he slowly
advances to him, and gives him it whack on the head with his fist.
Punch then disappears, leaving his bell behind, and the Landlord
in pursession of his music.)
Landlord
(collaring the bell). Smuggings! prusession is nine points
of the law! So this bell is mine, (guarding over it with a
stick). Smuggings! this is mine, and when he comes up to take
this bell away, I shall have him. Smuggings! it's mine.
Punch
re-enters very slowly behind the publican as he is watching the
bell, and snatching up the bell, cries out, 'That's mine,' and
exaunts with it.
Publican.
Dear me! never mind; I look after him; I shall catch him some
day or other. (Hits his nose up against the post as he is going
away.) (That's comic.) Oh, my nose! never mind, I'll have
him again some time.
[Exaunt Publican.
CLOWN
re-enters with Punch
Clown.
Oh, Punch, how are you?
Punch.
I'm very glad to see you. Oh, Joey, my friend, how do you do?
Clown.
Here, Punch, are you a mind for a lark? (Peeping in at the
cottage window, represented as a public house.) Are you hungry,
Punch would you like something to eat?
Punch.
Yes.
Clown.
What would you like?
Punch.
Not peculiar.
(Not
particular, he means, you know; that's a slip word.)
Clown.
I'll go up, to the landlord, and see if he's got anything to eat.
(exaunt into cottage, and poking his head out of the window.)
Here, Punch; here's the landlord fast asleep in the kitchen cellar;
here's a lot of sausages hanging up here. (Joey's a-thieving;
don't you see, he's a robbing the landlord now ) Would you like
some for supper, eh, Punch?
Punch.
Yes, to be sure.
Clown.
Don't make a noise; you'll wake the landlord.
Punch
(whispering as low as he can bawl through the window).
Hand' em out here. (Punch pulls them out of the window.)
Clown.
What are we to fry them in? I'll go and see if I can find a frying-pan.
[Exaunt
from window, and re-appears with frying-pan, which he hands out
of window for Punch to cook sausages in and then disappears for
a moment; after which he returns, and says, with his head out
of window, ''Would you like something hot, Punch?''
Punch.
Yes, to be sure. (Punch is up to everything. He's a helping him
to rob the publican. One's as much in the mud as the other is
in the mire.)
Clown.
(Thrusting red-hot poker out of window.) Here, lay hold
- Here's a lark - Make haste - Here's the landlord a coming. (Rubs
Punch with it over the nose.)
Punch.
Oh my nose! - that is a hot 'un. [Takes poker.
Clown.
(Re-enters, and calls in at window.) Landlord, here's a
fellow stole your sausages and frying-pan. (Wakes up Landlord
and exaunts.)
Landlord.
(Appears at window.) Here's somebody been in my house and
axually stole my sausages, frying-pan, and red-hot poker!
(Clown
exhaunts when he has blamed it all to Punch. Joey stole 'em, and
Punch took 'em, and the receiver is always worse than the thief,
for if they was never no receivers there wouldn't never be no
thieves.)
Landlord.
(Seizing the sausages in Punch's hand.) How did you get
these here?
Punch.
Joey stole 'em, and I took 'em.
Landlord.
Then you're both jolly thieves, and I must have my property. (A
scuffle ensues. Punch hollars out, Joey! Joey! Here's the landlord
a stealing the sausages!)
(So
you see Punch wants to make the landlord a thief so as to exempt
himself. He's a hypocrite there again, you see again - all through
the piece he's the master-piece. Oh a most clever man is Punch,
and such a hypocrite.)
(Punch,
seizing the frying-pan, which has been on the playboard, knocks
it on the publican's head; when, there being a false bottom to
it, the head goes through it, and the sausages gets about the
Publican's neck, and Punch pulls at the pan and the sausages with
veheminence, till the landlord is exhausted, and exaunts with
his own property back again; so there is no harm done, only merely
for the lark to return to those people what belongs to 'em - What
you take away from a, person always give to them again.)
Re-enter
Clown
Clown.
Well, Mr. Punch, I shall wish you a, pleasant good morning.
Punch.
[Hits him with. his cudgel.] Good morning to you, Joey.
Exaunt Joey
Punch
sits down by the side of the poker, and Scaramouch appears without
a head.
Punch
looks, and beholds, and he's frightened, and exaunts with the
poker.
Scaramouch
does a comic dance, with his long neck shooting up and down with
the actions of his body, after which he exaunts.
Punch
re-enters again with the poker, and places it beside of him, and
takes his cudgel in his hand for protection, while he is singing
the National Anthem of 'God save the Queen and all the Royal Family.'
Satan
then appears as a dream (and it is all a dream after all), and
dressed up as the Roossian Bear (leave Politics alone as much
as you can, for Punch belongs to nobody).
Punch
has a dreadful struggle with Satan, who seizes the red-hot poker
and wants to take Punch away, for all his past mis-deeds, and
frolic and fun, to the bottomless pit.
By
struggling with Satan, Punch overpowers him, and he drops the
poker, and Punch, kills him with his cudgel, and shouts 'Bravo!
Hooray! Satan is dead,' he cries (we must have a good conclusion):
'we can now all do as we like!' - (That's the moral, you see.)
'Good-by, Ladies and Gentlemen: this is the whole of the original
performance of Mr. Punch; and I remain still your most obedient
and most humble servant to command. Good-by, good-by, good-by.
God
bless you all. I return you my most sincere thanks for your patronage
and support, and I hope you'll come out handsome with your gold
and silver.'
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