BALLADE OF THE BOOK-MAN'S PARADISE.

By Andrew Lang

Here is a Heaven, or here, or there,—

A Heaven there is, for me and you,

Where bargains meet for purses spare,

Like ours, are not so far and few.

Thuanus’ bees go humming through

The learned groves,‘ neath rainless skies,

O'er volumes old and volumes new,

Within that Book-man's Paradise!

There treasures bound for Longepierre

Keep brilliant their morocco blue,

There Hookes’ Amanda is not rare,

Nor early tracts upon Peru!

Racine is common as Rotrou,

No Shakespeare Quarto search defies,

And Caxtons grow as blossoms grew,

Within that Book-man's Paradise!

There's Eve,— not our first mother fair,—

But Clovis Eve, a binder true;

Thither does Bauzonnet repair,

Derome, Le Gascon, Padeloup!

But never come the cropping crew

That dock a volume's honest size,

Nor they that “letter” backs askew,

Within that Book-man's Paradise!

Friend, do not Heber and De Thou,

And Scott, and Southey, kind and wise,

La chasse au bouquin still pursue

Within that Book-man's Paradise?