LORD ROCHESTER'S SONG.

("Un soldat au dur visage.")
{CROMWELL, ACT I.}

"Hold, little blue-eyed page!"
So cried the watchers surly,
Stern to his pretty rage
And golden hair so curly—
"Methinks your satin cloak
Masks something bulky under;
I take this as no joke—
Oh, thief with stolen plunder!"
"I am of high repute,
And famed among the truthful:
This silver-handled lute
Is meet for one still youthful
Who goes to keep a tryst
With her who is his dearest.
I charge you to desist;
My cause is of the clearest."
But guardsmen are so sharp,
Their eyes are as the lynx's:
"That's neither lute nor harp—
Your mark is not the minxes.
Your loving we dispute—
That string of steel so cruel
For music does not suit—
You go to fight a duel!"


THE BEGGAR'S QUATRAIN.

("Aveugle comme Homère.")
{Improvised at the Café de Paris.}

Blind, as was Homer; as Belisarius, blind,
But one weak child to guide his vision dim.
The hand which dealt him bread, in pity kind—
He'll never see; God sees it, though, for him.
H.L.C., "London Society."