Opened Rosina to the unknown comer. 'Twas a young girl—“ une pauvre fille," she said, "They had been growing poorer all the summer; Father was lame, and mother lately dead; Bread was so dear, and,-oh! but want was bitter, Would Monsieur pay to have her for a sitter? Men called her pretty." Boucher looked a minute: Yes, she was pretty; and her face beside Shamed her poor clothing by a something in it,— Meantime the Painter, with a mixed emotion, Thrice-happy France, whose facile sons inherit Power to forget! Our Boucher rose, I say, With hand still prest to heart, with pulses throbbing, And blankly stared at poor Rosina sobbing. "This was no model, M'sieu, but a lady." Boucher was silent, for he knew it.true. "Est-ce que vous l'aimez?" Never answer made he! Ah, for the old love fighting with the new! "Est-ce que vous l'aimez?" sobbed Rosina's sorrow. "Bon!" murmured Boucher; "she will come to-morrow." How like a Hunter thou, O Time, dost harry Us, thine oppressed, and pleasured with the chase, Sparest to strike thy sorely-running quarry, Following not less with unrelenting face. Time, if Love hunt, and Sorrow hunt, with thee, Woe to Rosina! By To-morrow stricken, Swift from her life the sun of gold declined. Only a little by the door she lingers,- No, not a sign. Already with the Painter Grace and the nymphs began recovered reign; Truth was no more, and Nature, waxing fainter, Paled to the old sick Artifice again. Seeing Rosina going out to die, How should he know what Fame had passed him by? Going to die! For who shall waste in sadness, So, in a little, when those Two had parted,Tired of himself, and weary as before, Boucher remembering, sick and sorry-hearted, Stayed for a moment by Rosina's door. "Ah, the poor child !" the neighbours cry of her, "Morte, M'sieu, morte! On dit,—des peines du cœur!” Just for a second, say, the tidings shocked him, Then, he forgot her. But, for you that slew her, Just for a moment's fancy could undo her, Be the sky silent, be the sea serene; 1 As for Rosina,-for the quiet sleeper, Whether stone hides her, or the happy grass, If the sun quickens, if the dews beweep her, Laid in the Madeleine or Montparnasse, Nothing we know,-but that her heart is cold, Poor beating heart! And so the story's told. |