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Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 101, October 10, 1891 by Various
page 41 of 43 (95%)
a learned Counsel who was not a briefless impostor.

I heard afterwards that he had added the story to his fund of legal
dining-out anecdotes, and had considerably amplified it. It came out
in a shape which made FIBBINS a hero, myself an imbecile of a rather
malicious kind, PROSER helplessly cowering under FIBBINS's wealth of
arguments, and the other two Judges reduced to admiring silence. I
take this opportunity of stating that if anybody "cowered" in Court on
that memorable occasion, it was certainly not poor old PROSER.

* * * * *

THE "DISAPPOINTMENT OF DECEMBER."

["It is too early yet (says the _Telegraph_) to announce the
title of the latest of the Laureate's plays, but this much may
be said, that it is written partly in blank verse and partly
in prose, that it is what is known in theatrical circles as
a 'a costume play,' and that the scene is laid in England. It
may, however, interest sensitive dramatists to know that Lord
TENNYSON is liberal enough to place the stage detail wholly in
the competent hands of Mr. DALY. He does not wince if a line
is cut here and there, or protest if a scene or a speech has
to be supplied."]

[Illustration: A cut here and there will be necessary.]

Behold, I know not anything,--
Except that if I write two Acts in verse,
And two in prose, I might do worse
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