FIRST LOVE AND LAST.

[It is pointed out by a contemporary that the dressmaker's waxen model has quite lost her old insipid air. The latest examples of the modeller's art show the "glad eye" and features with which "any man might fall in love.">[

In the days when I started to toddle

I loved with a frenzy sublime

A dressmaker's beauteous model—

I think I was three at the time;

She was fair in the foolish old fashion,

And they found me again and again

With my nose in an access of passion

Glued tight to the pane.

But I thought they were gone past returning

Till Time should go back on his tracks,

Those days of a child's undiscerning

But fervent devotion to wax;

Could a heart, though admittedly restive,

Recapture that innocent mood

At sixty next birthday? I'm blest if

I thought that it could.

But Art, ever bent on progression,

Has taken the model in hand,

And brought in the line of succession

A figure more pleasingly planned;

Her eyes with the gladdest of glances,

Her lips and her hair and her cheek

Can puncture like so many lances

A bosom of teak.