A GEOLOGICAL MADRIGAL.

(SHENSTONE)

I have found out a sift for my fair;

I know where the fossils abound,

Where the footprints of Aves declare

The birds that once walked on the ground;

Oh, come, and—in technical speech—

We'll walk this Devonian shore,

Or on some Silurian beach

We'll wander, my love, evermore.

I will show thee the sinuous track

By the slow-moving annelid made,

Or the Trilobite that, farther back,

In the old Potsdam sandstone was laid;

Thou shalt see, in his Jurassic tomb,

The Plesiosaurus embalmed;

In his Oolitic prime and his bloom,

Iguanodon safe and unharmed!

You wished—I remember it well,

And I loved you the more for that wish—

For a perfect cystedian shell,

And a whole holocephalic fish.

And oh, if Earth's strata contains

In its lowest Silurian drift,

Or palæozoic remains

The same,—'tis your lover's free gift!

Than come, love, and never say nay,

But calm all your maidenly fears;

We'll note, love, in one summer's day

The record of millions of years;

And though the Darwinian plan

Your sensitive feelings may shock,

We'll find the beginning of man,—

Our fossil ancestors, in rock!