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LOVE AND THE FLIMSIES
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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LOVE AND THE FLIMSIES

By T. M., Esq.

Ο δ' Ερως, χιτωνα δησας
Ψ(περ αυχενος ΠΑΠΨΡΩι.
—Anacr.

Little Cupid one day on a sunbeam was floating,
Above a green vale where a paper-mill played;
And he hovered in ether, delightedly noting
The whirl and the splash that the water-wheel made.
The air was all filled with the scent of the roses,
Round the miller's viranda that clustered and twined;
And he thought if the sky were all made up of noses,
This spot of the earth would be most to its mind.
And forth came the miller, a quaker in verity,
Rigid of limb and complacent of face,
And behind him a Scotchman was singing “Prosperity,”
And picking his pocket with infinite grace.

118

And “Walth and prosparity,” “Walth and prosparity,”
His bonny Scotch burthen arose on the air,
To a song all in praise of that primitive charity,
Which begins with sweet home and which terminates there.
But sudden a tumult arose from a distance,
And in rushed a rabble with steel and with stone,
And ere the scared miller could call for assistance,
The mill to a million of atoms was blown.
Scarce mounted the fragments in ether to hurtle,
When the quaker was vanished no eye had seen where;
And the Scotchman thrown flat on his back like a turtle,
Was sprawling and bawling with heels in the air.
Little Cupid continued to hover and flutter,
Pursuing the fragments that floated on high,
As light as the fly that is christened from butter,
Till he gathered his handsfull and flew to the sky.
“Oh mother,” he cried, as he shewed them to Venus,
“What are these little talismans cyphered—One—One?
If you think them worth having we'll share them between us,
Though their smell is like, none of the newest, poor John.”

119

“My darling,” says Venus, “away from you throw them,
They're a sort of fool's gold among mortals 'tis true;
But we want them not here, though I think you might know them,
Since on earth they so often have bought and sold you.”