MRS. KATHERINE'S LANTERN.

By William Makepeace Thackeray

“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

Do n'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.”