THE BEGGING CUPID

A piece of Sculpture

I watched as they stood before it,—

A girl with a face as fair

As any among the marbles,

So cold in their whiteness there;

And a youth in whose glance, entreaty

Each lineament seemed to stir,

She only had eyes for the sculpture;

He only had eyes for her.

And poising in critic-fashion

The delicate upturned head,

“Was ever so sweet a beggar?”

With sudden appeal, she said.

“Just look at the innocent archness,

The simple and childish grace,

Half mirthful and half pathetic,

That dimples his pleading face.

“Whoever could think that mischief

Was hidden in such a guise?

Or even that rosy sorrows

Lurk in those lambent eyes?

Deny him? Perhaps! though never

With hardness or scorn or blame;

For I think I should sob with pity,

If that were the way he came.”

She turned as she spoke: the glamour

Of feeling had made her blind

To the trick of the stealthy arrow

The Cupid concealed behind:

“Ah, ha!” she cried, while the color

Rubied her neck of snow—

“You plausible, wheedling beggar!

I have nothing to give you,—Go!”

Margaret J. Preston.