He’s no estate, he’s lost his pay,
Yet thousands go from day to day
In working France for Boulanger.
Who finds the money?
In London he has settled down;
He means to have his fling in town—
A little king without a crown.
Who finds the money?
When kings and princes meet at tea,
When statesmen other statesmen see,
They jerk their thumbs at General B——
And whisper on the strict q.t.,
Who finds the money?
The Paris Exhibition.
ITHIN, without, abroad, at home,
Though all appears a bilious chrome,
With May shall flee dyspeptic throes
And life assume a tint of rose—
For France, the gay and debonair,
Will ask us to her fancy fair,
The Exhibition.
Then East and West and South and North
Will pour their choicest treasures forth,
And all the world will hie away
Upon a pleasant holiday;
While Frenchmen cry, and chink the cash,
“We’re glad Boulanger did not smash
The Exhibition!”
And you, ma mie, of years ago,
Who with me wandered to and fro
Through all the aisles of wonder set
Like gems in some vast coronet—
How sweet you were, ma’mselle, to me!—
Will you be there this time to see
The Exhibition?
O’er both our heads the years have rolled,
And I am stout and growing old;
And you are married, I dare say,
And know a mother’s cares to-day.
Maybe our chairs—bath-chairs, I mean—
May pass some day ere we’ve quite seen
The Exhibition.