Difference between revisions of "Page 139"
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stout upon his footles; [[stutters fore he falls]] and goes mad entirely | stout upon his footles; [[stutters fore he falls]] and goes mad entirely | ||
[[when he's waked]]; is Timb to the pearly mom and Tomb to the | [[when he's waked]]; is Timb to the pearly mom and Tomb to the | ||
− | mourning night; and an he had the [[best bunbaked bricks]] in bould | + | mourning night; and an he had the [[best bunbaked bricks]] in [[bould Babylon|bould]] |
− | Babylon for his pitching plays he'd be lost for the want of his | + | [[bould Babylon|Babylon]] for his pitching plays he'd be lost for the want of his |
wan wubblin wall? | wan wubblin wall? | ||
Answer: Finn MacCool! | Answer: Finn MacCool! | ||
2. Does your mutter know your mike? | 2. Does your mutter know your mike? | ||
− | Answer: [[When I | + | Answer: [[When I turn meoptics]], from suchurban prospects, |
'tis my filial's bosom, doth behold with pride, that [[pontificator]], | 'tis my filial's bosom, doth behold with pride, that [[pontificator]], | ||
and [[circumvallator]], [[with his dam night garrulous]], slipt by his | and [[circumvallator]], [[with his dam night garrulous]], slipt by his |
Latest revision as of 04:44, 17 May 2020
of nature set a veiled world agrin and went within a sheet of tissuepaper of the option of three gaols; who could see at one blick a saumon taken with a lance, hunters pursuing a doe, a swallowship in full sail, a whyterobe lifting a host; faced flappery like old King Cnut and turned his back like Cincinnatus; is a farfar and morefar and a hoar father Nakedbucker in villas old as new; squats aquart and cracks aquaint when it's flaggin in town and on haven; blows whiskery around his summit but stehts stout upon his footles; stutters fore he falls and goes mad entirely when he's waked; is Timb to the pearly mom and Tomb to the mourning night; and an he had the best bunbaked bricks in bould Babylon for his pitching plays he'd be lost for the want of his wan wubblin wall? Answer: Finn MacCool! 2. Does your mutter know your mike? Answer: When I turn meoptics, from suchurban prospects, 'tis my filial's bosom, doth behold with pride, that pontificator, and circumvallator, with his dam night garrulous, slipt by his side. Ann alive, the lisp of her, 'twould grig mountains whisper her, and the bergs of Iceland melt in waves of fire, and her spoon- me-spondees, and her dirckle-me-ondenees, make the Rageous Ossean, kneel and quaff a lyre! If Dann's dane, Ann's dirty, if he's plane she's purty, if he's fane, she's flirty, with her auburnt streams, and her coy cajoleries, and her dabblin drolleries, for to rouse his rudderup, or to drench his dreams. If hot Hammurabi, or cowld Clesiastes, could espy her pranklings, they'd burst bounds agin, and renounce their ruings, and denounce their do- ings, for river and iver, and a night. Amin! 3. Which title is the true-to-type motto-in-lieu for that Tick for Teac thatchment painted witt wheth one darkness, where asnake is under clover and birds aprowl are in the rookeries and a magda went to monkishouse and a riverpaard was spotted, which is not Whichcroft Whorort not Ousterholm Dreyschluss not Haraldsby, grocer, not Vatandcan, vintner, not Houseboat and Hive not Knox-atta-Belle not O'Faynix Coalprince not Wohn Squarr Roomyeck not Ebblawn Downes not Le Decer