"There Stands A City"

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Ingoldsby
Year by year do Beauty's daughters,
  In the sweetest gloves and shawls,
Troop to taste the Chattenham waters,
  And adorn the Chattenham balls.

'Nulla non donanda lauru'
  Is that city:  you could not,
Placing England's map before you,
  Light on a more favoured spot.

If no clear translucent river
  Winds 'neath willow-shaded paths,
"Children and adults" may shiver
  All day in "Chalybeate baths:"

If "the inimitable Fechter"
  Never brings the gallery down,
Constantly "the Great Protector"
  There "rejects the British crown:"

And on every side the painter
  Looks on wooded vale and plain
And on fair hills, faint and fainter
  Outlined as they near the main.

There I met with him, my chosen
  Friend--the 'long' but not 'stern swell,' {15a}
Faultless in his hats and hosen,
  Whom the Johnian lawns know well:-

Oh my comrade, ever valued!
  Still I see your festive face;
Hear you humming of "the gal you'd
  Left behind" in massive bass:

See you sit with that composure
  On the eeliest of hacks,
That the novice would suppose your
  Manly limbs encased in wax:

Or anon,--when evening lent her
  Tranquil light to hill and vale, -
Urge, towards the table's centre,
  With unerring hand, the squail.

Ah delectablest of summers!
  How my heart--that "muffled drum"
Which ignores the aid of drummers -
  Beats, as back thy memories come!

Oh, among the dancers peerless,
  Fleet of foot, and soft of eye!
Need I say to you that cheerless
  Must my days be till I die?

At my side she mashed the fragrant
  Strawberry; lashes soft as silk
Drooped o'er saddened eyes, when vagrant
  Gnats sought watery graves in milk:

Then we danced, we walked together;
  Talked--no doubt on trivial topics;
Such as Blondin, or the weather,
  Which "recalled us to the tropics."

But--oh! in the deuxtemps peerless,
  Fleet of foot, and soft of eye! -
Once more I repeat, that cheerless
  Shall my days be till I die.

And the lean and hungry raven,
  As he picks my bones, will start
To observe 'M. N.' engraven
  Neatly on my blighted heart.

© Charles Stuart Calverley