Mrs. Katherine's Lantern

268 Words
WRITTEN IN A LADY'S ALBUM. "Coming from a gloomy court, Place of Israelite resort, This old lamp I've brought with me. Madam, on its panes you'll see The initials K and E." "An old lantern brought to me? Ugly, dingy, battered, black!" (Here a lady I suppose Turning up a pretty nose)-- "Pray, sir, take the old thing back. I've no taste for bricabrac." "Please to mark the letters twain"-- (I'm supposed to speak again)-- "Graven on the lantern pane. Can you tell me who was she, Mistress of the flowery wreath, And the anagram beneath-- The mysterious K E? "Full a hundred years are gone Since the little beacon shone From a Venice balcony: There, on summer nights, it hung, And her Lovers came and sung To their beautiful K E. "Hush! in the canal below Don't you hear the plash of oars Underneath the lantern's glow, And a thrilling voice begins To the sound of mandolins? Begins singing of amore And delire and dolore-- O the ravishing tenore! "Lady, do you know the tune? Ah, we all of us have hummed it! I've an old guitar has thrummed it, Under many a changing moon. Shall I try it? Do Re MI . . What is this? Ma foi, the fact is, That my hand is out of practice, And my poor old fiddle cracked is, And a man--I let the truth out,-- Who's had almost every tooth out, Cannot sing as once he sung, When he was young as you are young, When he was young and lutes were strung, And love-lamps in the casement hung."
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