whistled him before he had curtains up they are whistling him | | 1 |
still after his curtain's doom's doom. Ei fu. His husband, poor old | | 2 |
A'Hara (Okaroff?) crestfallen by things and down at heels at the | | 3 |
time, they squeak, accepted the (Zassnoch!) ardree's shilling at | | 4 |
the conclusion of the Crimean war and, having flown his wild | | 5 |
geese, alohned in crowds to warnder on like Shuley Luney, | | 6 |
enlisted in Tyrone's horse, the Irish whites, and soldiered a bit | | 7 |
with Wolsey under the assumed name of Blanco Fusilovna Buck- | | 8 |
lovitch (spurious) after which the cawer and the marble halls | | 9 |
of Pump Court Columbarium, the home of the old seakings, | | 10 |
looked upon each other and queth their haven evermore for it | | 11 |
transpires that on the other side of the water it came about that on | | 12 |
the field of Vasileff's Cornix inauspiciously with his unit he | | 13 |
perished, saying, this papal leafless to old chap give, rawl chaw- | | 14 |
clates for mouther-in-louth. Booil. Poor old dear Paul Horan, | | 15 |
to satisfy his literary as well as his criminal aspirations, at the | | 16 |
suggestion thrown out by the doomster in loquacity lunacy, so | | 17 |
says the Dublin Intelligence, was thrown into a Ridley's for | | 18 |
inmates in the northern counties. Under the name of Orani he | | 19 |
may have been the utility man of the troupe capable of sustain- | | 20 |
ing long parts at short notice. He was. Sordid Sam, a dour decent | | 21 |
deblancer, the unwashed, haunted always by his ham, the unwished, | | 22 |
at a word from Israfel the Summoner, passed away painlessly | | 23 |
after life's upsomdowns one hallowe'en night, ebbrous and in | | 24 |
the state of nature, propelled from Behind into the great Beyond | | 25 |
by footblows coulinclouted upon his oyster and atlas on behanged | | 26 |
and behooved and behicked and behulked of his last fishandblood | | 27 |
bedscrappers, a Northwegian and his mate of the Sheawolving | | 28 |
class. Though the last straw glimt his baring this stage thunkhard | | 29 |
is said (the pitfallen gagged him as 'Promptboxer') to have | | 30 |
solemnly said?--- as had the brief thot but fell in till his head like | | 31 |
a bass dropt neck fust in till a bung crate (cogged!): Me drames, | | 32 |
O'Loughlins, has come through! Now let the centuple celves of | | 33 |
my egourge as Micholas de Cusack calls them, ---?of all of whose | | 34 |
I in my hereinafter of course by recourse demission me --- by | | 35 |
the coincidance of their contraries reamalgamerge in that indentity | | 36 |