Lamb, Charles, "Verses for an Album." in The Bijou; (London: William Pickering , 1828) The Bijou; or Annual of Literature and the Arts compiled by William Fraser William Pickering London 1828 pp. 24-25 24 Verses for an Album By Charles Lamb, Esq. FRESH clad from heaven in robes of white, A young probationer of light, Thou wert, my soul, an Album bright. A spotless leaf; but thought, and care — And friends and foes, in foul or fair, Have "written strange defeature" there. And time, with heaviest hand of all, Like that fierce writing on the wall, Hath stamp'd sad dates — he can't recall. And error, gilding worst designs — Like speckled snake that strays and shines — Betrays his path by crooked lines. And vice hath left his ugly blot — And good resolves, a moment hot, Fairly began — but finished not. A fruitless late remorse doth trace — Like Hebrew lore, a backward pace — Her irrecoverable race. 25 Disjointed numbers — sense unknit — Huge reams of folly — shreds of wit — Compose the mingled mass of it. My scalded eyes no longer brook, Upon this ink- blurr'd thing to look. Go — shut the leaves — and clasp the book! —