Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Cases - Dashwood V. Jermyn by James Williams
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Cases - Dashwood V. Jermyn

    By James Williams



(12 Chancery Division, 776)

        Captain Dashwood, who had been
        In the service of the Queen,
        Sick of "Eyes front" and "Attention,"
        Came to London on his pension.
        At the "Portland" as he stayed,
        Firm the friendship that he made
        With one William Richards, who
        Put up at the "Portland" too.
        Passed six years, then he was wrapped in
        Love's embraces, vanquished captain!
        "Yes," he cried, "I will; no bar shall
        Stop my wedding Edith Marshall."
        But there was a bar, 'twas that
        He was poorer than a rat;
        Indian pensions do not run
        More than just enough for one.
        Edith, too, had not a cent,
        Who would pay the rates and rent?
        Two more years, and Richards moved
        (He perchance had sometime loved),
        Promised them an income clear,
        'Twas five hundred pounds a year
        For his life; when he was dead,
        Then ten thousand pounds instead.
        This to Dashwood in a letter
        Wrote he, deeming it was better
        They should marry soon while he
        Lived their happiness to see.
        'Twas a modest sum, but marriage
        May be blest without a carriage,
        Forty pounds a month and more
        Keep the wolf from near the door.
        So they wed for worse or better,
        On the faith of Richards' letter.
        Scarcely was a quarter's payment
        Due when mourning was their raiment.
        Richards died. Alas! no cash would
        Find its way to Captain Dashwood.
        Dashwood's head began to swim--
        Not a shilling left to him!
        "Ha, I'll have it still," cried he;
        "Justice dwells in Chancery."
        So the case was straightway taken
        To the court of V.-C. Bacon.
        Vainly Dashwood cash expended
        The executors defended,
        Claiming that what Richards wrote
        Was not worth a five-pound note;
        First because the dead testator
        Well, not wisely, loved the "cratur,"
        More than that, had often been
        In delirium tremens seen;
        Secondly, because he signed
        When he did not know his mind;
        Third, because pollicitation
        Is not good consideration.
        Law, of justice independent,
        Gave its judgment for defendant.
        Poorer than he was at first,
        That unhappy plaintiff cursed,
        With a special satisfaction
        Cursed the day he brought his action.
        Would that he'd in India tarried!
        Would that he had never married!
        He, alas, is tied for life
        Pauper to a pauper wife,
        Scarce consoled that on his name
        Equity reports shower fame,
        Bearing down to endless ages
        Dashwood's story on their pages.



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