with which they are pafted over. pafted over. The ballads, fongs, and other trifles "light as air," are to form a light manoeuvring flotilla, while the Quack advertisements, if they can be brought into action, cannot fail to produce great havoc among the enemy. After all the harbours, great and small, of France, Spain, and Holland, have been thus blocked up by the literary lumber of the warehouses, fhould any fuperfluous force remain, Mr. Phillips propofes that it fhall be applied as follows: The Crown and Royal to be fent upon an expedition to effect the restoration of the Bourbons to the throne of France; the Imperial to go as a fubfidy to the Emperor; the Demi to be formed into demi light brigades; and the Fool's-cap to be worn as a helmet by the inventor of the plan. HINTS TO THE MINISTER! [From the Oracle.] IN the fpirit of fairnefs which we hope has always diftinguifhed our labours, we lay before the Public a portion of an elaborate Poem which has been sent to us, containing fome most excellent advice to Mr. AdOur limits will not allow of our giving the whole of this ingenious compofition, nor to analyze it with critical feverity; but that our readers may judge for themfelves, we fhall extract the following fpecimen, both of the text and notes. The title is THE STONE EXPEDITION; or, The Doctor's Head Good for Something!!! The poet, after a defcription of the caufes and nature of the plan, and of the veffels employed in the expedition, of which, to fay the truth, he does not speak L 6 100 too favourably-(in order, we suppose, the more to recommend the expedient which is the main object of his work)-thus continues: "Invading myriads Gallia's fhores poffefs, He then boldly and poetically apoftrophizes the Doctor in the following fpirited lines: "Thou who haft dragg'd the country down fo low, "This act fhall purge from fin thy guilty foul, Hi-y and Br-ge no vengeance fhall purfue- "Doctor, adieu!-Through the green deep, in thee, The kernel of the gath'ring lump we fee! Slime, foft and smoother than thy smoothest speech, Shall, to augment thee, leave their neighbouring beach : A vifcous coating for thy length provide, And double all thy volume in a tide. Boulogne, Boulogne, from fragrant Cloacinian store, Blafphemes, and forms, and weeps, and tears his hair.” The poet proceeds to ftate the coming out of the flotilla, for the attack of England, in fpite of the Ad—onian mud-bank.-We regret that we have no room to infert the fpirited defeription of the various loffes of the enemy; fome fhips having their bottoms beaten out by ftriking on the Doctor's os frontis; others foundering on the occiput, &c. &c. NOTES FOR THE CONTINUATION. -n, Mr. Vanfittart proposes to the Cabinet to vifit, in a diving-bell, the remains of the late Doctor Adnow, for his country's fake, converted into a mudbank. They all admit the propriety of paying this tribute of gratitude to a perfon once fo refpected by and fo dear to them; but make different excufes for declining the enterprise. Lord Hawkesbury is always fick in a diving-bell. Lord Caftlereagh cannot abfent himself from his office till the arrival of dispatches from India fhall inform him why we are at war in that country. Lord St. Vincent, from the first, washed his hands of the project, it being a naval enterprife, in which the Admiralty did not interfere. Mr. Secretary Yorke was entirely occupied in fram ing ing a queftion for the Attorney General's opinion, in order to afcertain the real meaning of his (Mr. Yorke's) laft explanatory bill refpecting the volunteers and the defence of the country against an invafion, which the Administration believed would have taken place nine months ago. Mr. Vanfittart then applies to others, but without fuccefs. Makes no impreffion on Mr. Sheridan. Mr. Tierney cannot leave unfinished a pamphlet, in which he means to prove that our fhips loft by the war, or worn out by the hard fervice to which they have been expofed, need not be replaced with new ones, from either the merchants or His Majesty's dock-yards, &c. &c. WHILST Bonaparté deals in chains and locks, DOGGREL. THE DOCTOR'S NAVAL ADVISERS. CONSULT our naval veterans, great and good, Who rais'd the honour of the British name; Ask Parker, Duncan, Waldegrave, Bridport, Hood, How best to guard our coafts, our flag and fame. "Nay," quoth the Doctor, " truft to me your fate, You know not yet how highly you should prize me; And, to cut fhort all doubt and all debate, Lieutenants Day and Tokeley fhall advise me!!!" BRODUM. ON THE DOCTOR'S NAVAL SUPPORTERS. [From the fame.] F Tokeley and Day OF All this we can fay Of their noble and happy conditions: Be feamen no more, But, fix'd to the fhore, Be Adn's naval phyficians! THE TIMES. JIGGER TACK. N former wars, it is allow'd, IN As well by Whig as Tory, That if John paid, why John was proud- But John now tells a different tale, For Ad- -n has turu'd the fcale: The glory's fled, th' expenfe remains Oh! change our Minifters, or give them-brains! TIM TELL-TRUTH. LINES SPOKEN BY THE SHIPS ON THE STONE EXPEDITION: DOOM'D to be funk in death were England's friends! Some folks would fink were Pitt to gain his ends. THE NAVAL DEBATE; OR, A SECOND SHOT DOCTOR, your nerves to close with Pitt are flack ; L. M. P. |