THE LAY OF THE "ANCIENT."

As I sit in my chambers, old and bare,

That look on the busy street,

And hear the roar of the town below,

And the tramp of hurrying feet,

I think, as I smoke my well-worn pipe,

Ensconced in my old arm-chair,

Of the days that have passed, like the sigh of the blast,

When the world was fresh and fair.

Of the joyous time when I joined the inn,

Nearly forty years ago,

When the fire of youth was in my veins,

Where the blood now runs so slow.

'Twas well in that far off happy time,

That I could not see before,

When we flirted and gambled, and sometimes worked,

In the student days of yore.

When all was common to him in need,

And nothing we called our own.

Gone are those days, and can never return—

We reap the crop we have sown.

Each of us thought that we should succeed,

Though others of course might fail;

And we went with the tide in our youthful pride,

Like a ship without a sail.

Where are they now all these friends of our youth?

Scattered abroad o'er the earth.

Some few are famous and some are dead,

And the world knew not their worth.

Some, like myself, are still found in "Hall,"

Pitied by those we meet,

And who pray that their end it may never be

To sit in the ancients' seat.


NO GOT!

Reichemberg and Got declare

La Maison de Molière

They'll resign and leave for ever.

Ah! Suzanne, the sparkling, clever,

Long the Comédie's pride and pet,

Don't desert your votaries—yet.

Try a quarter-century longer,

Years but make you brighter, stronger;

And Got's "go" we can't spare. No,

Chaos comes if Got should go!


Pedestrian Poetry.—"The pleasures that lie about our feet"—Comfortable slippers after a long walk.