Page:A Bayard from Bengal.djvu/110

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66
A BAYARD FROM BENGAL

might be allowed to compete in the approaching Derby.

Now this was a more delicately ticklish matter than might be supposed, owing to the circumstance that the said pundits are such warm men, and so well endowed with this world's riches that they are practically non-corruptible.

Fortunately, Mr Bhosh, as a dabster in English composition, was a pastmaster in drawing a petition, and, sitting down, he constructed the following:—


To Those Most Worshipful Bigheads in
control of Jockeys Club.

Benign Personages!

This Petition humbly sheweth:

(1.) That your Petitioner is a native Indian Cambridge B.A., a Barrister-at-law, and a most loyal and devoted subject of Her Majesty the Queen-Empress.
(2.) That it is of excessive importance to