L’ENVOI.

“Well, but that’s not the end?”

“Yes it is, my good friend.”

“Oh, I say!

That wont pay;

’Tis a shocking bad way

To leave off so abruptly. I wanted to hear

A great many particulars: first, I’m not clear,

Is the young woman killed?” “Be at rest on that head,

She’s completely defunct, most excessively dead.

Blaker’s shot did the business; she’d just strength to fly,

Reached her home, rang the bell, and then sank down to die.”

“Poor girl! really it’s horrid! However I knew it

Could come to no good—I felt certain she’d rue it—

But pray, why in the world did the jade go to do it?”

“’Tis not easy to say; but at first, I suppose,

Just by way of a freak she rode out in man’s clothes.”

“Then her taking the money?” “A mere idiosyncrasy,

As when, some years since, a young gent, being with drink crazy,

Set off straight on end to the British Museum,

And, having arrived there, transgressed all the laws

Of good breeding, by smashing the famed Portland Vase;

Or the shop-lifting ladies, by dozens you see ’em,

For despising the diff’rence ’twixt tuum and meum,

Brought before the Lord Mayor every week, in the papers.

Why, the chief linen-drapers

Have a man in their shops solely paid for revealing

When they can’t keep their fair hands from picking and stealing.

’Twas a mere woman’s fancy, a female caprice,

And you know at that time they’d no rural police.”

“Hum! it may have been so. Well, is that all about it?”

“No; there’s more to be told, though I dare say you’ll doubt it-

s being true; but the story goes on to relate,

That, after Maude’s death, the old Hall and estate

Were put up to auction, and Master Blair thought it

Seemed a famous investment, bid for it and bought it,

And fitted it up in extremely bad taste;

But scarce had he placed

His foot o’er the threshold,—the very first night,

He woke up in a fright,

Being roused from his sleep by a terrible cry

Of ‘Fire!’—had only a minute to fly

In his shirt, Mrs. Blair in her⸺Well, never mind,

In the dress she had on at the time; while behind

Followed ten little blessings, who looked very winning

In ten little nightgowns of Irish linen;

They’d just time to escape, when the flames, with a roar

Like thunder, burst forth from each window and door;

And there, with affright,

They perceive by the light

Maude Allinghame’s sprite—

Her real positive ghost—no fantastic illusion

Conceived by their brains from the smoke and confusion—

With a hot flaming brand

In each shadowy hand,

Flaring up, like a fiend, in the midst of the fire,

And exciting the flames to burn fiercer and higher.

From what follows we learn that ghosts, spirits, and elves,

Are the creatures of habit as well as ourselves;

For Maude (that is, ghost Maude), when once she had done

The trick, seemed to think it was capital fun;

And whenever the house is rebuilt, and prepared

For a tenant, the rooms being all well scrubbed and aired,

The very first night the new owner arrives

Maude’s implacable spirit still ever contrives

Many various ways in

To set it a blazing;

In this way she’s done

Both the Phœnix and Sun

So especially brown by the fires she’s lighted,

That now, being invited

To grant an insurance, they always say when a nice

Offer is made them,

’Tis no use to persuade them,

If a ghost’s in the case, they wont do it at any price.”