THE GHOST.

By Thomas Hood

In Middle Row, some years ago,

There lived one Mr. Brown;

And many folks considered him

The stoutest man in town.

But Brown and stout will both wear out —

One Friday he died hard,

And left a widow'd wife to mourn,

At twenty pence a yard.

Now widow B. in two short months

Thought mourning quite a tax;

And wished, like Mr. Wilberforce,

To manumit her blacks.

With Mr. Street she soon was sweet;

The thing came thus about:

She asked him in at home, and then

At church, he asked her out!

Assurance such as this the man

In ashes could not stand;

So like a Phoenix he rose up

Against the Hand in Hand!

One dreary night the angry sprite

Appeared before her view;

It came a little after one,

But she was after two!

“O Mrs. B., O Mrs. B.!

Are these your sorrow's deeds,

Already getting up a flame,

To burn your widows’ weeds?

“It's not so long since I have left

For aye the mortal scene;

My memory — like Rogers's —

Should still be bound in green!

“Yet if my face you still retrace,

I almost have a doubt —

I'm like an old Forget-me-not,

With all the leaves torn out!

“To think that on that finger joint

Another pledge should cling;

O Bess! upon my very soul

It struck like‘ Knock and Ring,’”

“A ton of marble on my breast

Ca n't hinder my return;

Your conduct, ma'am, has set my blood

A-boiling in my urn!”

“Remember, oh! remember, how

The marriage rite did run,—

If ever we one flesh should be

‘ Tis now — when I have none!

“And you, Sir — once a bosom friend —

Of perjured faith convict,

As ghostly toe can give no blow,

Consider you are kick'd.

“A hollow voice is all I have,

But this I tell you plain,

Marry come up!— you marry, ma'am,

And I'll come up again.”

More he had said, but chanticleer

The spritely shade did shock

With sudden crow,— and off he went,

Like fowling-piece at cock!