"GRAND NIGHTS."

O benchers of the various ancient Inns

At whose so generous tables I have battened,

Where potions of the best and fruitiest bins

And fare on which Lucullus might have fattened

Tend to reduce the awe

Proper to laymen shadowed by the Law;

How good I find it, full of meat, to sit

(The while Oporto's juice of '87,

Served on the polished board with silver lit,

Heartens me to postpone the joys of Heaven)

And hear, remotis curis,

The legal jest, the apt scintilla juris.

But most I compliment, with thanks profuse,

The touch that gives your feasts their crowning savour,

Whose absence must have marred the duckling mousse,

Ruined the neige au Kirsch, and soured the flavour

Of Madame Melba's peaches—

I mean the pledge upon my card, "No Speeches."

There's only one I like, and that's "The King"!

(I give the text in full—no superfluities);

Why should I have to hear some dodderer sing

Praise of the Government (whichever crew it is),

While some one else endorses

The obvious merits of our fighting forces?

If I have dined too well, to-morrow's cure

Shall be the fine for my excessive feasting;

But, at the night's tail-end, I can't endure

A punishment that bores me like a bee-sting,

Poisoning all the mirth

That should companion my distended girth.

For this relief from those who spoil the vine

(How oft have I refused, O learned Benchers,

For fear of speeches, other men's and mine,

The chance of feeding off the choicest trenchers)—

For this relief I rank you

High up among my benefactors. Thank you.

O. S.