on the greene, agirlies, the gretnass of joyboys, from Pat Mullen, | 1 |
Tom Mallon, Dan Meldon, Don Maldon a slickstick picnic made | 2 |
in Moate by Muldoons. The solid man saved by his sillied woman. | 3 |
Crackajolking away like a hearse on fire. The elm that whimpers | 4 |
at the top told the stone that moans when stricken. Wind broke | 5 |
it. Wave bore it. Reed wrote of it. Syce ran with it. Hand tore | 6 |
it and wild went war. Hen trieved it and plight pledged peace. | 7 |
It was folded with cunning, sealed with crime, uptied by a harlot, | 8 |
undone by a child. It was life but was it fair? It was free but was | 9 |
it art? The old hunks on the hill read it to perlection. It made | 10 |
ma make merry and sissy so shy and rubbed some shine off Shem | 11 |
and put some shame into Shaun. Yet Una and Ita spill famine | 12 |
with drought and Agrippa, the propastored, spells tripulations | 13 |
in his threne. Ah, furchte fruchte, timid Danaides! Ena milo melo- | 14 |
mon, frai is frau and swee is too, swee is two when swoo is free, | 15 |
ana mala woe is we! A pair of sycopanties with amygdaleine | 16 |
eyes, one old obster lumpky pumpkin and three meddlars on | 17 |
their slies. And that was how framm Sin fromm Son, acity arose, | 18 |
finfin funfun, a sitting arrows. Now tell me, tell me, tell me then! | 19 |
What was it? | 20 |
                    A .......... ! | 21 |
                    ? ..........0! | 22 |
So there you are now there they were, when all was over | 23 |
again, the four with them, setting around upin their judges' | 24 |
chambers, in the muniment room, of their marshalsea, under the | 25 |
suspices of Lally, around their old traditional tables of the law | 26 |
like Somany Solans to talk it over rallthesameagain. Well and | 27 |
druly dry. Suffering law the dring. Accourting to king's evelyns. | 28 |
So help her goat and kiss the bouc. Festives and highajinks and | 29 |
jintyaun and her beetyrossy bettydoaty and not to forget now | 30 |
a'duna o'darnel. The four of them and thank court now there | 31 |
were no more of them. So pass the push for port sake. Be it soon. | 32 |
Ah ho! And do you remember, Singabob, the badfather, the | 33 |
same, the great Howdoyoucallem, and his old nickname, Dirty | 34 |
Daddy Pantaloons, in his monopoleums, behind the war of the | 35 |
two roses, with Michael Victory, the sheemen's preester, before | 36 |