R. F. Murray: His Poems with a Memoir
THE WASTER SINGING AT MIDNIGHT.

Andrew Lan

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AFTER LONGFELLOW.

Loud he sang the song Ta Phershon

For his personal diversion,

Sang the chorus U-pi-dee,

Sang about the Barley Bree.

In that hour when all is quiet

Sang he songs of noise and riot,

In a voice so loud and queer

That I wakened up to hear.

Songs that distantly resembled

Those one hears from men assembled

In the old Cross Keys Hotel,

Only sung not half so well.

For the time of this ecstatic

Amateur was most erratic,

And he only hit the key

Once in every melody.

If "he wot prigs wot isn't his'n

Ven he's cotched is sent to prison,"

He who murders sleep might well

Adorn a solitary cell.

But, if no obliging peeler

Will arrest this midnight squealer,

My own peculiar arm of might

Must undertake the job to-night.

The following fragment is but doubtfully autobiographical. 'The swift four-wheeler' seldom devastates the streets where, of old, the Archbishop's jackmen sliced Presbyterian professors with the claymore, as James Melville tells us:—

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