Page:The Story of the Treasure Seekers.djvu/84

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THE TREASURE SEEKERS


          They don't like fishing, and it's true
          You sometimes soak a suit or two:
          They look on fireworks, though they're dry,
          With quite a disapproving eye.

          They do not understand the way
          To get the most out of your day:
          They do not know how hunger feels
          Nor what you need between your meals.

          And when you're sent to bed at night,
          They're happy, but they're not polite.
          For through the door you hear them say:
          "He's done his mischief for the day!"

She told us a lot of other pieces but I cannot remember them, and she talked to us all the way up, and when we got nearly to Cannon Street she said—

"I've got two new shillings here! Do you think they would help to smooth the path to Fame?"

Noël said, "Thank you," and was going to take the shilling. But Oswald, who always remembers what he is told, said—

"Thank you very much, but Father told us we ought never to take anything from strangers."

"That's a nasty one," said the lady—she didn't talk a bit like a real lady, but more like a jolly sort of grown-up boy in a dress and hat