mien, we are in rearing of a norewhig. So weenybeeny- | | 1 |
veenyteeny. Comsy see! Het wis if ee newt. Lissom! lissom! | | 2 |
I am doing it. Hark, the corne entreats! And the larpnotes | | 3 |
prittle. | | 4 |
It was of a night, late, lang time agone, in an auldstane eld, | | 5 |
when Adam was delvin and his madameen spinning watersilts, | | 6 |
when mulk mountynotty man was everybully and the first leal | | 7 |
ribberrobber that ever had her ainway everybuddy to his love- | | 8 |
saking eyes and everybilly lived alove with everybiddy else, and | | 9 |
Jarl van Hoother had his burnt head high up in his lamphouse, | | 10 |
laying cold hands on himself. And his two little jiminies, cousins | | 11 |
of ourn, Tristopher and Hilary, were kickaheeling their dummy | | 12 |
on the oil cloth flure of his homerigh, castle and earthenhouse. | | 13 |
And, be dermot, who come to the keep of his inn only the niece- | | 14 |
of-his-in-law, the prankquean. And the prankquean pulled a rosy | | 15 |
one and made her wit foreninst the dour. And she lit up and fire- | | 16 |
land was ablaze. And spoke she to the dour in her petty perusi- | | 17 |
enne: Mark the Wans, why do I am alook alike a poss of porter- | | 18 |
pease? And that was how the skirtmisshes began. But the dour | | 19 |
handworded her grace in dootch nossow: Shut! So her grace | | 20 |
o'malice kidsnapped up the jiminy Tristopher and into the shan- | | 21 |
dy westerness she rain, rain, rain. And Jarl van Hoother war- | | 22 |
lessed after her with soft dovesgall: Stop deef stop come back to | | 23 |
my earin stop. But she swaradid to him: Unlikelihud. And there | | 24 |
was a brannewail that same sabboath night of falling angles some- | | 25 |
where in Erio. And the prankquean went for her forty years' | | 26 |
walk in Tourlemonde and she washed the blessings of the love- | | 27 |
spots off the jiminy with soap sulliver suddles and she had her | | 28 |
four owlers masters for to tauch him his tickles and she convor- | | 29 |
ted him to the onesure allgood and he became a luderman. So then | | 30 |
she started to rain and to rain and, be redtom, she was back again | | 31 |
at Jarl van Hoother's in a brace of samers and the jiminy with | | 32 |
her in her pinafrond, lace at night, at another time. And where | | 33 |
did she come but to the bar of his bristolry. And Jarl von Hoo- | | 34 |
ther had his baretholobruised heels drowned in his cellarmalt, | | 35 |
shaking warm hands with himself and the jimminy Hilary and | | 36 |