A Society Clown
anat
poor opinion I have o
e it."-R
ound the dining-room table, each with a dinner-napkin in the left hand; while the right hand was occupied in moving back chairs, to permit of the departure of the ladies for the drawing-room. I could not help thinking that, as they filed off, the ladies looked like queens; while we (especially with the aid of the serviettes) looked
Mr. -- is writing
es
t rather a pity th
asked in reply
ins to write his reminiscences he is bound
t way?"
annot very well tell stories in his own favour; and if he tells them against himself, he affects humility: if he talks about his distin
know what to say, for my consc
nion; for I have just accepted an offer from Mr. Arrowsmith to do a
for a moment. His conscience eviden
e of those things that
hat I cannot very well back out of my agreement with Mr. Arrowsmith, although, candidly speaking, I have no
time since, and have concluded that I could not
intended as a sneer at my calling. To clown properly is a very difficult art, and I am never so happy as when I am making people laugh. I am unfeignedly proud of my profession, on and o
Thackeray. Though possessed of a small voice, few people could sing better, and certainly few could play the
rs, by making an hour pass pleasantly in the library or in a railway carriage. My
e some short notes-(having been a reporter, I may say shorthand notes)-of incidents which have amused me, and which I hope will equally entertain my readers. T
y has