VIVE LE TAILLEUR DU ROI.

["Le duc d'Orléans a voulu donner une leçon aux mauvais patriotes; il habite Londres, il charge un tailleur parisien du soin de garnir sa garde-robe."—French Press.]

Along the boulevard's busy curb

That bristles bravely with étrennes,

A thing has threatened to disturb

The careless vie parisienne;

It isn't spies or journalist blackmailers,

It is the question of monarchic tailors.

For lo! from perfide Albion

Has lately come a ducal note

With patterns for a pantalon

And therewithal a redingote;

(Observe, in passing, that the royal billet

Says nothing of the corresponding gilet).

Now while in matters of the gown

The monde of Paris sets the mode,

Their gay flâneurs that paint the town

Long since affect a foreign code,

Developing in fact a steady passion

For dressing in the latest London fashion.

With any perfect patriot

How bitterly it stirs the bile,

This craze for being clothed in what

Is thought to be the English style;

It makes the language of his heated brain

Occasionally verge on the profane.

And now the Exile, armed with red

Hot coals of living anthracite,

Projects them on his country's head,

And more in pity than in spite

Bids France that hunted him and his like rabbits

Henceforth to execute his daily habits.

Some fancy, romping at results,

The constitution's overthrow,

A view unworthy of adults,

According to the Figaro;

It makes a democrat extremely nettled.

To hear the thing is practically settled.

Of course there may be something in

That strange omission of the vest,

Yet were it little short of sin

To lay this unction to the breast;

A person isn't worth a paltry filet

Who stakes the Third Republic on a gilet.

There lacks, you see, a final law

To guide in France the statesman's game

The casual ignited straw

Will set the camel's hump aflame;

A redingote may raise enough éclat

To bring about a pretty coup d'état.