Now is he a green array, And now an eve" and now a "day;" He's a man that can't write verses, And he's forfeits, cards, and wassails, Every body's family; for ever, clever. Beef and pudding, and mince-pies, Whom their seniors ask arch questions, Feigning fears of indigestions, (As if they, forsooth, the old ones IIadn't privately tenfold ones!) IIe's a dinner, and a fire, Heap'd beyond your heart's desire, And your cheek the fire outstares, LEIGH HUNT. The Philosopher and her Father. "Papa, you know it very well That sound-it was Saint Pancras Bell." "My own Louise, put down the cat, And come and stand by me; I'm sad to hear you talk like that, Where's your philosophy? That sound-attend to what I tell That sound was not Saint Pancras Bell. "Sound is the name the sage selects For the concluding term Of a long series of effects, Of which that blow's the germ. The following brief analysis "The blow which, when the clapper slips, Falls on your friend, the Bell, Changes its circle to ellipse, (A word you'd better spell,) And then comes elasticity, Restoring what it used to be. 'Nay, making it a little more, The circle shifts about, As much as it shrunk in before The Bell, you see, swells out; And so a new ellipse is made, (You're not attending, I'm afraid.) "This change of form disturbs the air, Which in its turn behaves In like elastic fashion there, Creating waves on waves; These press each other onward, dear, "And then, papa, I hear the sound, You're only talking round and round, All that you say about the Bell, My Uncle George would call a 'sell.' "Not so, my child, my child, not so, Sweet image of your sire! A long way farther we must go Before it's time to tire. This wondrous, wandering wave, or tide, Has only reached your ear's outside. "Within that ear the surgeons find A tympanum, or drum, Which has a little bone behind,- But those not proud of Latin Grammar, "The wave's vibrations this transmits (Incus means anvil, which it hits,) "The stapes next-the name recalls Each fill'd with limpid water; Their curious lining, you'll observe, Made of the auditory nerve. "This vibrates next-and then we find The mystic work is crown'd; See what a host of causes swell To make up what you call the Bell.'" Awhile she paused, my bright Louise, Then, settling that he meant to tease, SHIRLEY BROOKS. The Little Seaman. In her lofty bower a virgin sat When there came a little seaman by, And would the maid behold. But with golden dice they played, they played away! “And hear now, little seaman, Hear what I say to thee! An' hast thou any mind this hour To play gold dice with me?". But with golden dice they played, they played away! "But how and can I play now That I can stake 'gainst thee." But with golden dice they played, they played away! "And surely thou canst stake thy jacket, Canst stake thy jacket gray; While there against myself will stake My own fair gold rings twae." But with golden dice they played, they played away! So then the first gold die, I wot, On table-board did run; And the little seaman lost his stake, And the pretty maiden won.— But with golden dice they played, they played away! |