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"Compel me not to long for your reply;

Suspense makes havoc with the mind"-(and muscles); "Winged Hope takes flight,”—(which means that I must

fly,

Default of funds, to Paris or to Brussels);

"I cannot wait! My own, my queen-Priscilla ! Write by return." And now for a Manilla !

"Miss Blank," at "Blank." Jemima, let it go; And I, meanwhile, will idle with "Sir Walter;" Stay, let me keep the first rough copy, though—

'Twill serve again. There's but the name to alter, And Love, that starves,-must knock at every portal, In forma pauperis. We are but mortal!

THE MISOGYNIST.

"Il était un jeune homme d'un bien beau passé."

WHEN

HEN first he sought our haunts, he wore
His locks in Hamlet-style ;

His brow with thought was "sicklied o'er,”—

We rarely saw him smile;

And, e'en when none were looking on,

His air was always woe-begone.

He kept, I think, his bosom bare

To imitate Jean Paul;

His solitary topics were

Esthetics, Fate, and Soul ;Although at times, but not for long, He bowed his Intellect to song.

He served, he said, a Muse of Tears:
I know his verses breathed

A fine funereal air of biers,

And objects cypress-wreathed ;-
Indeed, his tried acquaintance fled
An ode he named "The Sheeted Dead."

In these light moods, I call to mind,
He darkly would allude

To some dread sorrow undefined,-
Some passion unsubdued;
Then break into a ghastly laugh,
And talk of Keats his epitaph.

He railed at women's faith as Cant;
We thought him grandest when
He named them Siren-shapes that “chant
On blanching bones of Men;"-

Alas, not e'en the great go free
From that insidious minstrelsy!

His lot, he oft would gravely urge,
Lay on a lone Rock where
Around Time-beaten bases surge

The Billows of Despair.

We dreamed it true. We never knew

What gentler ears he told it to.

We, bound with him in common care,

One-minded, celibate,

Resolved to Thought and Diet spare

Our lives to dedicate ;

We, truly, in no common sense

Deserved his closest confidence!

But soon, and yet, though soon, too late,

We, sorrowing, sighed to find A gradual softness enervate

That all superior mind, Until,-in full assembly met,

He dared to speak of Etiquette.

The verse that we severe had known,
Assumed a wanton air,-

A fond effeminate monotone

Of eyebrows, lips, and hair;
Not ἦθος stirred him now or νοῦς,
He read "The Angel in the House !"

Nay worse. He, once sublime to chaff, Grew whimsically sore

If we but named a photograph

We found him simpering o'er ;
Or told how in his chambers lurked
A watch-guard intricately worked.

Then worse again. He tried to dress; He trimmed his tragic mane; Announced at length (to our distress) He had not "lived in vain";— Thenceforth his one prevailing mood Became a base beatitude.

And O Jean Paul, and Fate, and Soul !
We met him last, grown stout,
His throat with wedlock's triple roll,
"All wool,"-enwound about;

His very hat had changed its brim ;-

Our course was clear,-WE BANISHED HIM!

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