Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 329, March, 1843. Various

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Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 329, March, 1843 - Various

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in the market, Stanny?"

      Stanislaus Levisohn winked.

      "Ho—you don't say so," said the deacon. "Have you got 'em with you?"

      "After soppare, my dear sare," answered Stanislaus, who looked at me, and winked again significantly at Jehu.

      Mrs Tomkins returned, accompanied by the vocal Betsy. The cloth was spread, and real silver forks, and fine cut tumblers, and blue plates with scripture patterns, speedily appeared. Then came a dish of fried sausages and parsley—then baked potatoes—then lamb chops. Then we all sat round the table, and then, against all order and propriety, Mrs Jehu grossly and publicly insulted her husband at his own board, by calling upon the enlightened foreigner to ask a blessing upon the meal.

      The company sat down; but scarcely were we seated before Stanislaus resumed.

      "I tank you, my tear goot Mrs Tomkins for dat shop mit der brown, ven it comes to my turn to be sarved. It look just der ting."

      Mrs Jehu served her guest immediately.

      "I vill take a sossage, tear lady, also, if you please."

      "And a baked potato?"

      "And a baked potato? Yase."

      He was served.

      "I beg your pardon, Christian lady, have you got, perhaps, der littel pickel-chesnut and der crimson cabbage?"

      "Mr Tomkins, go down-stairs and get the pickles," said the mistress of the house, and Tomkins vanished like a mouse on tiptoe.

      Before he could return, Stanislaus had eaten more than half his chop, and discovered that, after all, "it was not just the ting." Mrs Jehu entreated him to try another. He declined at first; but at length suffered himself to be persuaded. Four chops had graced the dish originally; the remaining two were divided equally between the lady and myself. I begged that my share might be left for the worthy host, but receiving a recommendation from his wife "not to mind him," I said no more, but kept Mr Stanislaus Levisohn in countenance.

      "I hope you'll find it to your liking, Mr Stukely," said our hostess.

      "Mishter vat?" exclaimed the foreigner, looking quickly up. "I tink I"——

      "What is the matter, my dear sir?" enquired the lady of the house.

      "Noting, my tear friend, I tought der young gentleman vos a poor unconverted sinner dat I met a long time ago. Dat is all. Ve talk of someting else."

      Has the reader forgotten the dark-visaged individual, who at the examination of my lamented father before the Commissioners of Bankruptcy made his appearance in company with Mr Levy and the ready Ikey? Him I mean of the vivid imagination, who swore to facts which were no facts at all, and whom an unpoetic jury sentenced to vile imprisonment for wilful perjury? There he sat, transformed into a Pole, bearded and whiskered, and the hair of his head close clipped, but in every other regard the same as when the constable invited him to forsake a too prosaic and ungrateful world: and had Mr Levisohn been wise and guarded, the discovery would never have been made by me; for we had met but once before, then only for a short half hour, and under agitating circumstances. But my curiosity and attention once roused by his exclamation, it was impossible to mistake my man. I fixed my eye upon him, and the harder he pulled at his chop, and the more he attempted to evade my gaze, the more satisfied was I that a villain and an impostor was seated amongst us. Thinking, absurdly enough, to do my host and hostess a lasting service, I determined without delay to unmask the pretended saint, and to secure his victims from the designs he purposed.

      "Mr Levisohn," I said immediately, "you have told the truth—we have met before."

      "Nevare, my tear friend, you mistake; nevare in my life, upon my vurd."

      "Mrs Tomkins," I continued, rising, "I should not be worthy of your hospitality if I did not at once make known to you the character of that man. He is a convicted criminal. I have myself known him to be guilty of the grossest practices." Mr Levisohn dropped his chop, turned his greasy face up, and then looked round the room, and endeavoured to appear unconcerned, innocent, and amazed all at once. At this moment Jehu entered the room with the pickles, and the face of the deaconess grew fearfully stern.

      "Were you ever in the Court of Bankruptcy, Mr Levisohn?" I continued.

      "I have never been out of London, my good sare. You labour under de mistake.—I excuse you. Ah!" he cried our suddenly, as if a new idea had struck him very hard; "I see now vot it is. I explain. You take me for somebody else."

      "I do not, sir. I accuse you publicly of having committed perjury of the most shameless kind, and I can prove you guilty of the charge. Do you know a person of the name of Levy?"

      Mr Stanislaus looked to the ceiling after the manner of individuals who desire, or who do not desire, as the case may be, to call a subject to remembrance. "No," he answered, after a long pause; "certainly not. I never hear dat name."

      "Beware of him, Mrs Tomkins," I continued, "he is an impostor, a disgrace to mankind, and to the faith which he professes."

      "What do you mean by that, you impertinent young man?" said Mrs Tomkins, her blood rising to her face, herself rising from her chair. "I should have thought that a man who had been so recently expelled from his church would have had more decency. A pretty person you must be, to bring a charge of this kind against so good a creature as that."

      "No, do not say dat," interposted Stanny; "I am not goot. I am a brute beast."

      "Mr Tomkins," continued the lady, "I don't know what object that person has in disturbing the peace of our family, or why he comes here at all to-night. He is a mischief-making, hardened young man, or he would never have come to what he has. Well, I'm sure—What will Satan put into his head next!"

      "I vould vish you be not angry. Der young gentleman is, I dare say, vary goot at heart. He is labouring under de deloosions."

      "Mr Levisohn, pardon me, I am not. Proofs exist, and I can bring them to convict you."

      "Do you hear that, Mr Tomkins. Were you ever insulted so before? Are you master in your own house?"

      "What shall I do?" said Jehu, trembling with excitement at the door.

      "Do! What! Give him his hat, turn him out."

      "Oh, my dear goot Christian friends," said Mr Levisohn, imploringly; "de booels of der Christian growls ven he shees dese sights; vot is de goot of to fight? It is shtoopid. Let me be der peacemaker. Der yong man has been drink, perhaps. I forgive him from te bottom of my heart. If ve quarrel ve fight. If ve fight ve lose every ting.

      'So Samson, ven his hair vos lost,

      Met the Philistines to his cost,

      Shook his vain limbs in shad shurprise,

      Made feeble fight, and lost his eyes.'"

      "Mr Tomkins," I exclaimed, "I court inquiry, I can obtain proofs."

      "We want none of your proofs, you backslider," cried the deaconess.

      "Madam,

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