Every privilege rank confers :— Flagon of ale at Holborn Bar; Friends (in mourning) to follow his Car("t" is omitted where HEROES are!) Every one knows the speech he made; Waved to the crowd with his gold-laced hat; Turned to the Topsman undismayed. . And this is the Ballad that seemed to hide In the leaves of a dusty "LONDONER'S GUIDE"; ‘Humbly Inscrib’d” (with curls and tails) By the Author to FREDERICK, Prince of WALES : "Published by FRANCIS and OLIVER PINE; Ludgate-Hill, at the Blackmoor Sign. Seventeen-Hundred-and-Thirty-Nine.' UNE MARQUISE. A RHYMED MONOLOGUE IN THE LOUVRE. "Belle Marquise, vos beaux yeux me font mourir d'amour." MOLIÈRE. Servants to your least frill flutter, "Belle Marquise !”— As you sit there growing prouder, And your ringed hands glance and go, And your Ah, you used them on the Painter, As you know, For the Sieur Larose spoke fainter, Bowing low, Thanked Madame and Heaven for Mercy That each sitter was not Circe, Or at least he told you so ; Growing proud, I say, and prouder Fickle Queen of Fop and Beau, Sure to please, Do we love you most or like you, "Belle Marquise !" II. You are fair; O yes, we know it Well, Marquise ; For he swore it, your last poet, On his knees; And he called all heaven to witness Of his ballad and its fitness, "Belle Marquise !”— You were everything in ère With the rest of rhymes as well; You were Reine," and "Mère d'Amour"; You were "" Vénus à Cythère" ; With the nameless finer leaven Followed these; And you liked it, when he said it (On his knees), And you kept it, and you read it, “ Belle Marquise!” III. Yet with us your toilet graces Fail to please, And the last of your last faces, And your mise ; For we hold you just as real, "Belle Marquise!” As your Bergers and Bergères, As your Naiads and your trees ;Just as near the old ideal Calm and ease, As the Venus there, by Coustou, That a fan would make quite flighty, Is to her the gods were used to,— Sprung from seas. You are just a porcelain trifle, "Belle Marquise!" Just a thing of puffs and patches, Made for madrigals and catches, Not for heart-wounds, but for scratches, O Marquise ! Just a pinky porcelain trifle, "Belle Marquise !” Wrought in rarest rose-Dubarry, Quick at verbal point and parry, Clever, doubtless ;-but to marry, No, Marquise! IV. For your Cupid, you have clipped him, Rouged and patched him, nipped and snipped him, And with chapeau-bras equipped him, "Belle Marquise!" Just to arm you through your wife-time, And the languors of your life-time, "Belle Marquise !” Say, to trim your toilet tapers, Or,-to twist your hair in papers, D |