ARI Smart Content - Data Table

Click to show on right, Sources for Song below
Bargery Number 425
Music (Given or Suggested) No tune given but It survived in the oral tradition. A rendition of part of the tune can be heard in Mike Yates Collection: British Library National Sound Archive C 796/257 (VWML CDA Yates). http://sussextraditions.org/record/studying-economy-3/
Printer or Publisher Such
Author Unknown
Latest Date 1845
Evidence for Latest Date The song was also printed under the title The Swell`s Diary (Bar541) by Hodges of London on the same sheet as a song called "Let Me like a Soldier Fall" composed by William Vincent Wallace for the ballad opera Maritana produced at the Drury Lane theatre in 1845 (http://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/dw.asp?dc=W4376_GBAJY0337413&vw=dc)
Source of Text Bodleian Library, Harding B 11(3681A)
Where Printed London
Roud V22028
Parsed Title Study Economy
First Line I`m a gent reduced by railway speculations
Variant Set The song was printed by three London Printers (Ryle, Such, and Forty).
Source Title Study Economy

Study Economy

Field recording of a fragment of the tune see Music Comment

I’m a gent reduced by railway speculations
Tho’ not possessed of ample means, I’ve splendid expectations¹
My uncle’s a director of a round-the-corner-junction
So I often borrow a pound or two without the least compunction
For upon my word, by studying economy I live like a lord

Now since I’ve been upon the town by fickle fortune undone
I’ve found that there’s more ways than one to live slap(1) in London
The world is bad, but I contrive, first rate to rattle through it
So if you list a while to me I’ll tell you how I do it.

I rise at half-past nine a.m. and then I make my toilet
Put on my dickey¹, rub my boots, my hair with candle oil it
As breakfast is a matter of pure taste; why I don’t mind it
And if I’ve none, I go without, and healthy too I find it.

At ten I sally out and go to hear the band play
This takes to till eleven than I promenade the Strand way
Then I get up to London Bridge that rendezvous of schemers
When half an hour passes by admiring the steamers

This brings me round to twelve o’clock when I invest a joey(1)
In half a loaf, and pick out one slack backed and rather doughy
Because you see it satisfies; I feel compelled to tell it
And a drink of water at the pump to twice the size will swell it.

At one I buy a mutton pie and pop it in my pocket
And then bolt down a narrow court and bol(sic) it like a rocket.
It does not do to let the world know what you have for dinner
For if they think you’re living queer; they’ll swear you’re getting thinner.

At two I reach a coffee shop and read a book till seven
The half-a-pint of good four-ale will last me till eleven
By twelve get home and make no row for fear of mother Randall
Then in the dark I go to bed because it saves a candle

Sometimes to raise a sumptuous feast I tax my ingenuity
I don’t indulge in meat for that I think a superfluity
I can’t abide block ornaments for fear of the small maggots
So I wait till eight o clock comes round and patronise the faggots

I used to smoke a meerschaum pipe one upon a time I bought one
But now time are altered quite I glad to smoke a short one.
When I’ve no pieces of cigars and am getting low in coppers
I toddle round St James’ park and pick up all the topper(1)s

The faculty they all agree, light suppers aid digestion
And I decidedly agree with their view of the question
But if a friend should ask me out, I’ll not refuse the offer
Not I speculate my brown(1)s in a trotter(1) or a gouffer

I told you all the particulars of how I pass the day away
Thro’ studying economy I don’t have much to pay away
Though sometimes I reduced to pease pudding on a Friday
And (all) things considering I get on pretty tidy.

 

3 across Articles in this Category: click a link

Jeames of Buckley Square

bar553: Dates ----~1845|

 A poem satirising the participation of the servant classes in railway speculation

Rail, the Rail, The

bar321: Dates 1845~1856|

An unscrupulous dealer in railway shares

Railway Footman

bar329: Dates ----~1856|

A satire mocking members of the lower classes (personified as a domestic servant) who invested in railway shares.

Railway King

bar562: Dates 1847~1849|

In praise of Thomas Hudson.

Railway Mania

bar336: Dates ----~1846|

The singer warns of the consequences of the frenzied investment in railways.

Railway Stag, the

bar560: Dates 1846~1854|

After initial success, the hero falls victim to the speculative bubble

Study Economy

bar425: Dates ----~1845|

A young man ruined by railway speculation describes how he copes with poverty

Railway Calls

bar327a: Dates 1847~----|

Laments the financial consequences of Railway Mania.

Falmouth Railway Share Broker

bar119: Dates ~|

A broker sells shares he knows to be worthless

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