Don't take too much of double X!-and don't at night go out To fetch your beer yourself, but make the pot-boy bring your stout! And when you go to Margate next, just stop, and ring the bell, Give my respects to Mrs. Jones, and say I'm pretty well! And now for his Legend, which, if the facts took place rather beyond "the memory of the oldest inhabitant," are yet well known to have occurred in the neighbourhood "once on a time:" and the scene of them will be readily pointed out by any one of the fifty intelligent fly-drivers who ply upon the pier, and who will convey you safely to the spot for a guerdon which they term "three bob." THE SMUGGLER'S LEAP. A LEGEND OF THANET. "Near this hamlet (Acol) is a long-disused chalk-pit of formidable depth, known by the name of 'The Smuggler's Leap.' The tradition of the parish runs, that a riding-officer from Sandwich, called Anthony Gill, lost his life here in the early part of the present (last) century, while in pursuit of a smuggler. A fog coming on, both parties went over the precipice. The smuggler's horse only, it is said, was found crushed beneath its rider. The spot has, of course, been haunted ever since." See "Supplement to Lewis's History of Thanet," by the Rev. Samuel Pegge, A.M., Vicar of Gomersham (W. Bristow, Canterbury, 1796), p. 127. THE fire-flash shines from Reculver Cliff, And there they stand, That smuggling band, "Now lower away! come, lower away! And should come, and should catch us here, what would he say? Come, lower away, lads-once on the hill, The cargo's lower'd from the dark skiff's side, No trick nor flam, But your real Schiedam. But the rich point-lace, In the oil-skin case Of proof to guard its contents from ill, Merrily now in a goodly row, Away and away those Smugglers go, And they laugh at Exciseman Gill, ho! ho! When out from the turn Of the road to Herne, Comes Gill, wide awake to the whole concern! Sauve qui peut! That lawless crew, Like a covey of birds when the sportsmen miss; These in their hurry Make for Sturry, With Custom-house officers close in their rear, Down Rushbourne Lane, and so by Westbere, None of them stopping, But shooting and popping, And the gin spirts out And squirts all about, Sauve qui peut! That lawless crew, And they gallop on after them far and wide! Smuggler Bill is six feet high, He has curling locks, and a roving eye, From St. Nicholas quite To the Foreland Light, But that eye, and that tongue, and that smile will wheedle her To have done with the Grocer and make him her Tea dealer; There is not a farmer there but he still Buys gin and tobacco from Smuggler Bill. Smuggler Bill rides gallant and gay In sooth he had need Fodder his steed, -Nor oats nor beans, nor the best of old hay, Down Chistlett Lane, so free and so fleet Sarre Bridge is won- Bill thinks it fun; Away, away Goes the fleet dapple-grey, Fresh as the breeze and free as the wind, And Exciseman Gill lags far behind. " I would give my soul," quoth Exciseman Gill, "For a nag that would catch that Smuggler Bill !No matter for blood, no matter for bone, No matter for colour, bay, brown, or roan, So I had but one!" A voice cried "Done!" "Ay, dun," said Exciseman Gill, and he spied A Custom-house officer close by his side, On a high-trotting horse with a dun-coloured hide.“ Devil take me," again quoth Exciseman Gill, "If I had but that horse, I'd have Smuggler Bill!" From his using such shocking expressions it's plain That Exciseman Gill was rather profane. |