Page:Paul Clifford Vol 1.djvu/52

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22
PAUL CLIFFORD.

There might you learn, if of two facts so instructive you were before unconscious, that

"Ben the toper loved his bottle—
Charley only loved the lasses!"

When of these, and various other poetical effusions, you were somewhat wearied, the literary fragments, in humbler prose, afforded you equal edification and delight. There might you fully enlighten yourself as to the "Strange and Wonderful News from Kensington, being a most full and true relation, how a Maid there is supposed to have been carried away by an Evil Spirit, on Wednesday, 15th of April last, about Midnight." There too, no less interesting and no less veracious, was that uncommon anecdote, touching the chief of many-throned powers, entitled, "The Divell of Mascon; or the true relation of the Chief Things which an Unclean Spirit did and said at Mascon, in Burgundy, in the house of one Mr. Francis Pereaud, now made English by One that hath a Particular Knowledge of the Truth of the Story."