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Monsieur le Blond on London
Air — "Fall of Paris"
Fun, II - 3rd March 1866
I've spent three weeks, my SKETCHLEY, in your fog-enveloped Fatherland, And really, sir, upon the shores of Tartarus I'd rather land. I mean to show it up at home, so with the lying curtain hence! That shrouds your wretched country and your insular impertinence. I landed inside out, and asking, "Is it heels or is it head?" And this decided fact from my condition I elicited. |
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The sea around you shows, When a strong sou'-wester blows, |
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That it never was intended that you Vandals should be visited. | |
Creaking, squeaking, groaning, moaning, Rolling, bowling, baggage-owning; |
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Agonising illness, culminating in a trance, | |
You hurl, or 'twouldn't be you, sir, At those who come to see you, sir, — |
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We manage all these little matters better far in France! |
Your infamous outspoken press the emblem is of sinistry, Abusing, as they please, the Opposition and the Ministry; Of freedom of opinion in their minds there seems a drop or two, For really they appear to say whatever they think proper to! Your journals are absurdly cheap, and even the tip-topper ones Are always to be had, I find, for prices that are copper ones; |
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Which seems absurd to me, And I really blush to see |
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That all their illustrations are ridiculously proper ones! | |
Reading, weeding, selling, quelling, Stopping, whopping, press-compelling, |
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Safety and continuance of kindgom to enhance; | |
Publishing diurnal lists Of too outspoken journalists, |
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Are matters that we always manage better far in France! |
Your theatres suffer from a dullness which appears incurable; Your actors and your actresses are simply unendurable; The whole affair is dull, and melancholy, and dejectable; The dresses, too, with hardly an exception, are respectable! Then the idiotic words and songs your operas you fetter to, Opera and ballad, comic song, and operetta, too. |
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I go to see a play That's original, you say, |
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And I've always seen it done at home, and done a great deal better, too! | |
Laughing, chaffing, playing, saying, Talking, walking, stage-arraying; |
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Opera, or vaudeville, or incidental dance: | |
Paris in and out of it, There cannot be a doubt of it, |
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We manage all these little matters better far in France! |
I find my little pleasant ways entirely unsocketed; The waiter tells me that the sugar isn't to be pocketed, I answer him by looking with a noble air his face in full, And when he isn't looking, sir, I stow away the basin-full! But landlords, on the other hand, show foolish incongruity, In giving soap to customers they lose a small annuity. |
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You'll find our people will Charge it extra in the bill, |
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For we always look upon it as a dainty superfluity! | |
Splashing, dashing, scrubbing, rubbing, Messing, dressing, drubbing, tubbing, |
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Taking hip or shower bath whenever you've a chance; | |
It's shocking inhumanity, Amounting to insanity, — |
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We manage all these little matters better far in France! |
Your ladies must be beautiful, I grant you, for unless they were They never could afford to walk out in the dreadful dress they wear. But married dames and single girls all dress so very shady-like, And all your ladies really are ridiculously ladylike. As soon as they are married they prefer to stop all day at home, And always take their dinners in a formal kind of way at home; |
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A tedious affair, And Parisian ladies stare, |
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And wonder what on earth can make your Englishwomen stay at home. | |
Frizzing, quizzing, eyeing, sighing, Painting, fainting, tresses-dyeing, |
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Giving you three volumes of a novel at a glance. | |
Before they marry, dutiful, Then flirty, oh it's beautiful! |
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Now that's the way our womankind behave themselves in France! |
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Page Created 29 July, 2011