To take the other Object of our love.

This has a faint verbal resemblance to the opening of Flatman's genuine poem on James (see [p. 394]), and the misattribution may be due to this.


Upon a Chine of Beef.

I.

A chine of beef, God save us all,

Far larger than the butcher's stall,

And sturdier than the City-wall.

II.