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The Court Journal, 7th November 1835, pages 705-706


ON FIRST SEEING THE PORTRAIT OF L. E. L.



"Is this the face that fired a thousand ships,
And burned the topless towers of Ilium?
Sweet Helen!"Marlowe



Ah! no, not Helen; Hel—e—n
   Of old—but L. E. L.;
Those letters which the spell-bound pen
    Have vainly sought to spell.

Not Helen, who so long ago
    Set Paris in a blaze,
But one who laid proud London low,
    And lit up later days.

Is this your meaning, mystic Three!
    Handwriting on Fame's wall!
Ye thrice fair letters, can ye be
    A lady, after all!

How have I wondered what ye meant,
    Ye alphabetic Graces!
And so you really represent
    One of dear Nature's faces!

Well, how I've guessed! your meaning rare
    No guessing seemed to touch;
Ye riddles! the weird-sisters ne'er
    Be-witched me half so much.

One knows the power of D. C. L.,
    The grandeur of K. G.;
And F. R. S. will science spell,
    And valour, G. C. B.

The sage, the schoolboy, both can tell
    The worth of L. S. D.
But then the worth of L. E. L.!
    All letters told in three!

In vain. I've sought to illustrate
    Each letter with a word;
’T was only trying to translate
    The language of a bird.

I've read ye, L. E. L., quite bare;
    Thus—Logic, Ethics, Lays:
Lines, Episodes, and Lyrics fair–
    I've guessed away my days.