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neverheedthemHORSEluggarsandlisteltomine

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Art Neuendorffer

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Apr 19, 2007, 6:18:46 PM4/19/07
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<<[Stratford's] principal industry was that of malting. Quiney wrote
that it was 'ancient in this trade of malting and have ever served to
Birmingham from whence Wales, Salop, Stafford, Cheshire and Lancashire
also are served. Our houses are made to no other use than malting':
1/3 of the more substantial householders held stores of malt,
including Shakespeare, who had ten quarters at New Place.>>
. - _William Shakespeare_ by A.L. Rowse
--------------------------------------------------------------
. St. Augustine of Hippo : Patron of brewers
.
<<St. Augustine of Hippo is the patron of brewers because of
his conversion from a former life of loose living, which included
parties, entertainment, and worldly ambitions. His complete
turnaround and conversion has been an inspiration to many who
struggle with a particular vice or habit they long to break.
This famous son of St. Monica was born in Africa and spent
many years of his life in wicked living and in false beliefs.>>
--------------------------------------------------------------
. THE RED HORSE (Hippo) OF TYSOE
. http://www.whitedragon.org.uk/articles/redhorse.htm
.
. "My Red Horse of you all contemned lies,
. The Fault not in me, but in the wretched time ..."
. - Michael Drayton.
.
<<Pagans visiting the chalk downs of southern England will be more
than familiar with the white horses of various ages which dot the
landscape. The earliest surviving one is of course the most famous
the White Horse of Uffington; the majority date from the 18th &
early 19th centuries and are very stylised and sterile by comparison.
It is not widely known, however, that Warwickshire once had its own
horse carved into the landscape and a truly unique beast it was
- the Red Horse of Tysoe, the site of which lies on the A422
between Banbury and Stratford upon Avon not a few miles
from the site of the battle of Edgehill.
.
By the standards of hill figures around the country, this was an
early example. The first mention of it appears in 1607, before the
explosion of interest in "antiquities" which developed later that
century and has continued ever since. At that date it was described
thus: "Of the redy soil here comes the names of Rodway and Rodley;
yea, and a great part of the very Vale is thereupon termed
the vale of Red Horse, of the shape of a horse cut out in
a red hill by the country people hard by Pillerton."
.
Some years later, Sir William Dugdale, who had fought at the
Battle of Edgehill, was given the task of recording features
of interest around the country in case the Parliamentarians
should seek to destroy them.
.
Dugdale wrote: "Within the precinct of the Mannour of Tishoe now
belonging to the Earl of Northampton .... there is cut upon the side
of Edgehill the proportion of a Horse in a very large forme; which
by reason of the ruddy colour of the earth is called the Red Horse,
and giveth denomination to that fruitful and pleasant country
thereabouts, commonly called the Vale of the Red Horse: the trenches
of which ground where the shape of the said Horse is so cut out,
being yearly scoured by a Freeholder in this Lordship,
who holds certain lands there by that service."
.
During the 18th century there were a number of squabbles between
various antiquarians (strangely, many of them Church of England
clergy) about the purpose or meaning of the horse. The Reverends
Wise and Asplin, for example, bickered over Wise's theory that
the horse had been cut to commemorate the Earl of Warwick's
slaughter of his horse at the Battle of Towton in 1461
- regarded as a crackpot theory by Asplin. In 1767 Rev Jago
suggested that the horse marked the earlier boundary between
Saxon & Celtic hegemonies of an earlier age. Probably more
romantic than crackpot .... Perhaps the annual scouring in
those days was overseen by the druids ..... or even Merlin....!
.
Up until 1800 there had been a feudal obligation imposed on the
local peasantry by the landowner of the district, the Earl of
Northampton, that the Red Horse should be scoured each Palm Sunday.
Such a stipulation would, in many years, bring the date very close
to the full moon around the time of the spring Equinox, as the
Church reckons Easter Sunday to be the Sunday after the full moon
after the vernal Equinox. In 1800 the new landlord of Sun Rising
House, the local pub, destroyed the horse to symbolise the freeing
of the said peasantry from said feudal oppression. This proved
to be an own goal, however, as the landlord discovered that he
had lost one of his big money-spinners of the year - the sale
of ale and other refreshments to the said oppressed peasantry
during the said scouring; he soon cut an even smaller horse,
only 17 feet long, more as a pub sign than anything else.
This also disappeared during the course of the century and
it was left to a Mr Savory, the then landowner, to re-cut
a new horse, the fifth one, just after the turn of this century
- only to destroy it around 1910. It must have been quite a
tourist attraction because it is recorded that Mr Savory
became fed up with sightseers traipsing all over the site.>>
-----------------------------------------------------------------
http://freespace.virgin.net/kevin.skates/redhorseoftysoe.htm
<<The Red Horse of Tysoe is the name given to the figure of a horse
that used to be cut onto the hillside above the village of Tysoe
in Warwickshire, England. The turf had been cut away to expose the
ruddy coloured soil beneath, in the shape of a galloping or leaping
horse. The figure is no longer visible today as it has been allowed
to grass over by successive generations of local villagers and
landowners and the actual site , a slope of some 30 degrees has
been planted with softwood trees, completely obscuring any visible
trace of the figure. However, the Horse was at one time famous
enough to cause the area to be known as The Vale of the Red Horse.
The name of Tysoe has been suggested as meaning 'Tiw's hoh' which
means a spur of land dedicated to the God Tiw, an Anglo-Saxon God
of war. Legend connects Tiw with the binding of an evil beast, ie.
a story of the triumph of good over evil and it may be that the
original Horse dates from the Saxon period, cut by them perhaps
to commemorate a victory. There is ,however little hard evidence
to prove this dating. Certainly some other Hillfigures such as
the Uffington Horse and the Cerne Giant do have some greater
antiquity and it is not impossible, therefore that
the Red Horse does date from the Dark ages.
.
The earliest documentary evidence for the existence of the Horse
is from 1606 when cartographer John Speed, talking of Warwickshire
mentions the 'Vale of the Red Horse'. In 1607 the figure itself
is mentioned in Camdens' 'Brittania':
.
".... and a great part of the very Vale is thereupon termed
the Vale of the Red Horse, of the shape of a horse cut out
in a red hill by the country people, hard by Pillerton."
.
Sir William Dugdale who was commissioned to record the
nations treasures during the Civil war may have seen
the Horse when at the Battle of Edgehill in 1642:
.
"Within the precinct of the Manor of Tishoe now belonging to the
Earl of Northampton, there is cut upon the side of Edgehill the
proportion of a horse in very large form; which by by reason of
the ruddy colour of the earth is called the Red Horse and giveth
denomination to that fruitful and pleasant country thereabouts,
commonly called the Vale of the Red Horse: the trenches of
which ground where the shape of the said Horse is so cut out,
being yearly scoured by a Free-holder in this Lordship
who holds certain land there by that service">>
--------------------------------------------
Portrait of the Artist
.
2.314: It was the last tram. The lank brown *HORSES* knew it and
shook their bells to the clear night in admonition. The conductor
talked with the driver, both nodding often in the green light of
the lamp. On the empty seats of the tram were scattered a few
coloured tickets. No sound of footsteps came up or down the road.
No sound broke the peace of the night save when the lank brown
*HORSES* rubbed their noses together and shook their bells.

2.369: Now it seemed as if he would fail again but, by dint of
brooding on the incident, he thought himself into confidence.
During this process all those elements which he deemed common
and insignificant fell out of the scene. There remained no trace
of the tram itself nor of the tram-men nor of the *HORSES*:
nor did he and she appear vividly.

2.475: there stood the stout leather-jacketed vaulting *HORSE*
2.489: major was testing with his foot
. the springboard of the vaulting *HORSE*.
2.991: That is *HORSE* piss and rotted straw, he thought.
4.275: he had imagined the reins by which *HORSES* are driven

5.1926: It was the last tram; the lank brown *HORSES* knew it and
shook their bells to the clear night in admonition. The conductor
talked with the driver, both nodding often in the green light of
the lamp. They stood on the steps of the tram, he on the upper,
she on the lower. She came up to his step many times between their
phrases and went down again and once or twice remained beside
him forgetting to go down and then went down. Let be! Let be!

5.2846: -- I fear many things: dogs, *HORSES*,
. fire-arms, the sea, thunder-storms,
-------------------------------
. Ulysses
.
[Telemachus] Horn of a bull, hoof of a *HORSE*, smile of a Saxon.

[Nestor] Framed around the walls images
. of vanished *HORSES* stood in homage,
[Nestor] Percentage of salted *HORSES*. Rinderpest.
Emperor's *HORSES* at

[Proteus] waters amid seasnakes, rearing *HORSES*, rocks.

[Lotus-Eaters] --I want to see about that French *HORSE*
. that's running today, Bantam
[Hades] White *HORSES* with white frontlet plumes came round the
Rotunda
[Hades] slacktethered *HORSE*. Aboard of the BUGABU.
[Hades] A team of *HORSES* passed from Finglas
. with toiling plodding tread,
[Hades] Coffin now. Got here before us, dead as he is.
. *HORSE* looking round at it

[Aeolus] Emperor's *HORSES*. Habsburg. An Irishman saved his life
[Lestrygonians] Riding astride. Sit her *HORSE* like a man.
[Lestrygonians] high *HORSE*, cocked hat, puffed, powdered and shaved.
[Lestrygonians] *HORSE*.
[Lestrygonians] many a man, the same *HORSES*.
[Lestrygonians] Will I tell him that *HORSE* Lenehan? He knows
already.
[Lestrygonians] He has some bloody *HORSE* up his sleeve
. for the Gold cup. A dead snip.
[Lestrygonians] *HORSE* drooping. Driver in John
[Lestrygonians] Behind a bull: in front of a *HORSE*.
[Wandering Rocks] there going to back a bloody *HORSE*
. someone gave him that hasn't an
[Wandering Rocks] Runaway *HORSE*.
[Wandering Rocks] he saw the *HORSES* pass Parliament street,
[Wandering Rocks] foreleg of King Billy's *HORSE*
. pawed the air Mrs Breen plucked her
[Wandering Rocks] As the glossy *HORSES* pranced by Merrion square
[Cyclops] (wild *HORSES* shall not drag it from us!)
[Cyclops] sold the same *HORSES* twice over
. to the government to fight the Boers.
[Cyclops] *HORSES* even today, the Irish hobbies,
[Cyclops] sticking up pictures of all the *HORSES* his jockeys
[Cyclops] --Is it that whiteeyed kaffir? says the citizen,
. that never backed a *HORSE*
[Cyclops] that *HORSE* only I put him off it
. and he told me Bloom gave him the tip.
[Cyclops] A dark *HORSE*.
[Cyclops] --He's a bloody dark *HORSE* himself, says Joe.
[Cyclops] when they were in the (dark *HORSE*) pisser Burke
[Cyclops] and he on his high *HORSE* about the jews
[Nausicaa] here's his two *HORSES*, here's his gingerbread carriage
[Nausicaa] spurs at the *HORSE* show.
[Nausicaa] Circus *HORSE*
[Oxen of the Sun] when all were in close order the dark *HORSE*
[Circe] Harold's cross bridge for illusing
. the poor *HORSE* with his harness scab.

[Circe] HERALDIC SEAL ENGRAVERS, *HORSE* REPOSITORY HANDS, BULLION
BROKERS, CRICKET AND ARCHERY OUTFITTERS, RIDDLEMAKERS, EGG AND POTATO
FACTORS, HOSIERS AND GLOVERS, PLUMBING CONTRACTORS. AFTER THEM MARCH
GENTLEMEN OF THE BEDCHAMBER, BLACK ROD, DEPUTY GARTER, GOLD STICK,
THE MASTER OF *HORSE* , THE LORD GREAT CHAMBERLAIN, THE EARL MARSHAL,
THE HIGH CONSTABLE CARRYING THE SWORD OF STATE, SAINT STEPHEN?S IRON
CROWN, THE CHALICE AND BIBLE. FOUR BUGLERS ON FOOT BLOW A SENNET.
BEEFEATERS REPLY, WINDING CLARIONS OF WELCOME. UNDER AN ARCH OF
TRIUMPH BLOOM APPEARS, BAREHEADED, IN A CRIMSON VELVET MANTLE
TRIMMED WITH ERMINE, BEARING SAINT EDWARD?S STAFF THE ORB AND
SCEPTRE WITH THE DOVE, THE CURTANA. HE IS SEATED ON A MILKWHITE
*HORSE* WITH LONG FLOWING CRIMSON TAIL, RICHLY CAPARISONED,
WITH GOLDEN HEADSTALL.

[Circe] our light *HORSE* swept across the heights of Plevna
[Circe] LADY GWENDOLEN DUBEDAT BURSTS THROUGH THE THRONG,
. LEAPS ON HIS *HORSE* AND

(A DARK *HORSE*, RIDERLESS, BOLTS LIKE A PHANTOM PAST THE
WINNINGPOST,
HIS MANE MOONFOAMING, HIS EYEBALLS STARS. THE FIELD FOLLOWS, A BUNCH
OF
BUCKING MOUNTS. SKELETON *HORSES* , SCEPTRE, MAXIMUM THE SECOND,
ZINFANDEL, THE DUKE OF WESTMINSTER?S SHOTOVER, REPULSE, THE DUKE OF
BEAUFORT?S CEYLON, PRIX DE PARIS. DWARFS RIDE THEM, RUSTYARMOURED,
LEAPING, LEAPING IN THEIR, IN THEIR SADDLES. LAST IN A DRIZZLE OF
RAIN
ON A BROKENWINDED ISABELLE NAG, COCK OF THE NORTH, THE FAVOURITE,
HONEY
CAP, GREEN JACKET, ORANGE SLEEVES, GARRETT DEASY UP, GRIPPING THE
REINS,
A HOCKEYSTICK AT THE READY. HIS NAG ON SPAVINED WHITEGAITERED FEET
JOGS
ALONG THE ROCKY ROAD.)

[Circe] *HORSE*, NAG, STEER, PIGLINGS,
[Circe] PROBYN'S *HORSE*, LINCOLN'S INN BENCHER
[Circe] (THE *HORSE* NEIGHS.)
[Circe] THE *HORSE*: Hohohohohohoh! Hohohohome!
[Circe] AT THE *HORSE*. BLOOM, IN GLOOM, LOOMS DOWN.)
[Circe] THE *HORSE*: (NEIGHS) Hohohohohome.
[Circe] (CORNY KELLEHER RETURNS TO THE OUTSIDE CAR AND MOUNTS IT.
. THE *HORSE* HARNESS JINGLES.
[Circe] AND *HORSE* BACK SLOWLY, AWKWARDLY, AND TURN.
[Eumeus] I saw him a few times in the Bleeding *HORSE*
[Eumeus] the livers of *HORSES*. Look here. Here they are.
[Eumeus] it's a *HORSE* of quite another colour to say...
[Eumeus] apparently awoke a *HORSE* of the cabrank. A hoof scooped
[Eumeus] after a strong hint to a blind *HORSE*
[Eumeus] dark *HORSE* SIR HUGO captured the blue ribband at long
odds.
[Eumeus] Also ran: J de Bremond's (French *HORSE*
[Eumeus] the swingchains a *HORSE*, dragging a sweeper,
[Eumeus] By the chains the *HORSE* slowly swerved to turn,
[Eumeus] Bloom looked at the head of a *HORSE* not worth
[Eumeus] He was just a big nervous foolish noodly kind of a *HORSE*,
[Eumeus] The *HORSE* was just then.
[Eumeus] The *HORSE* having reached the end of his tether,
[Ithaca] unspoken unremembered conversation with a *HORSE*
[Ithaca] the Royal Dublin Society's *HORSE* Show,
[Penelope] though I laughed Im not a *HORSE* or an ass
[Penelope] walk in all the *HORSES* dung I could find
[Penelope] his father made his money over selling the *HORSES*
[Penelope] he whole insides out of those poor *HORSES*
[Penelope] have him examining all the *HORSES*
[Penelope] reversed arms muffled drums the poor *HORSE*
. walking behind in black L Boom
[Penelope] penny they have and losing it on *HORSES* yes
------------------------------------------------------
[1:1 23.28] the wave of
. *neverheedthemHORSEluggarsandlisteltomine*
------------------------------------------------------
[1:2 32.35] The Lily on all *HORSErie* show command nights
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:2 40.6] my *HORSE* delayed,
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:2 47.31] And not all the king's men nor his *HORSES*
Will resurrehct his corpus
For there's no *TRUE* spell in Connacht or hell
(bis) That's able to raise a Cain.
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:3 49.7] alohned in crowds to warnder on like Shuley Luney,
enlisted in Tyrone's *HORSE*, the Irish whites,
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:4 75.16] (Twillby! Twillby!) he conscious of enemies, a kingbilly
*whiteHORSEd* in a Finglas mill, prayed, as he sat on anxious seat,
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:4 84.27] a whit the *wHORSE* for her whacking.
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:4 95.15] Gob and I nose him too well as I do meself,
heaving up the Kay Wall by the 32 to II with his limelooking
*HORSEbags* full of sesameseed, the Whiteside Kaffir,
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:5 108.16] Elberfeld's Calculating *HORSES* .
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:5 111.27] almost any photoist worth his chemicots will tip
anyone asking him the teaser that if a negative of a *HORSE*
happens to melt enough while drying, well, what you do get is,
well, a positively grotesquely distorted macromass of all sorts
of *HORSEhappy* values and masses of meltwhile *HORSE*. Tip.
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:5 116.5] the cat, the cat's meeter, the meeter's cat's
wife, the meeter's cat's wife's half better, the meeter's
cat's wife's half better's meeter, and so back to our *HORSES*
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:5 118.6] to volt back to our desultory *HORSES* ,
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:5 121.23] see a rightheaded ladywhite don a *corkHORSE*
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:6 132.12] his threefaced stonehead was found on
a *whiteHORSE* hill and the print of his costellous feet
is seen in the goat's grasscircle; pull the blind,
toll the deaf and call dumb, lame and halty;
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:6 135.22] his great wide cloak lies on fifteen acres
and his little white *HORSE* decks by dozens our doors;
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:6 137.17] a footprinse on the Megacene, hetman *unwHORSEd*
by Searingsand; honorary captain of the extemporised fire brigade,
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:6 137.28] lights his pipe with a rosin tree
. and hires a *towHORSE* to haul his shoes;
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:7 201.16] I wonder, that'd dip me a dace or two in
cash for washing and darning his worshipful socks
for him now we're run out of *HORSEbrose* and milk?
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:7 201.24] If a mahun of the *HORSE* but hard me!
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:7 203.2] go foaming under *HORSEpass* bridge,
------------------------------------------------------------
[1:7 214.15] where the bobby restrained you making
sugarstuck pouts to the ghostwhite *HORSE* of the Peppers.
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:8 221.18] With futurist *oneHORSE* balletbattle pictures
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:8 231.14] feastking of shellies by googling Lovvey, regally
freytherem, eagelly plumed, and wasbut gumboil owrithy prods
wretched some *HORSEry* megee plods coffin acid odarkery pluds
dense floppens mugurdy) as thought it had been zawhen intwo.
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:8 246.23] 'Twastold. And vamp, vamp, vamp, the girls
are merchand. The *HORSEShow* magnete draws his field
and don't the fillyings fly?
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:9 272.17] Here, Hengegst and *HORSESauce* ,
take your heads 3 out of that taletub! And leave
your hinnyhennyhindyou! It's haunted.
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:10 321.26] Odorozone, now ourmenial servent, blanding rum,
milk and toddy with I hand it to you. Saying whiches, see
his bow on the hapence, with a pattedyr but digit here,
he scooped the hens, hounds and *HORSES* biddy by bunny,
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:10 322.17] who did you do at doyle today, my
*HORSEy* dorksey gentryman. Serge Mee, suit!
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:10 360.30] Whet the bee as to deflowret greendy grassies
*yellowHORSE*. Kematitis, cele our erdours! Did you aye,
did you eye, did you everysee suchaway, suchawhy,
eeriewhigg airywhugger? Even to the extremity of the world?
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:10 365.33] for yet was it marly lowease or just a feel
with these which olderman K.K. Alwayswelly he is showing ot
the fullnights for my palmspread was gav to a parsleysprig,
the curliest weedeen old ocean coils around, so spruce
a spice for *saltHORSE*, sonnies, and as tear
to the thrusty as Taylor's Spring,
------------------------------------------------------------
[FW 370.23] Stunner of oddstodds on bluebleeding *boarHORSE*
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:10 377.23] hike, here's the hearse and four *HORSES* with
the interprovincial crucifixioners throwing lots inside to know
whose to be their gosson and whereas to brake the news to morhor.
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:11 386.27] the jaypee, off Hoggin Green, after he made
the centuries, going to the tailturn *HORSEShow* ,
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:11 386.36] all the tercentenary *HORSES* and priest hunters,
------------------------------------------------------------
[2:11 387.11] from Strathlyffe and Aylesburg and Northumberland
Anglesey, the whole yaghoodurt sweepstakings and all the
*HORSE*powers.
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:12 413.7] To the Very Honourable The Memory of Disgrace,
the Most Noble, Sometime Sweepyard at the Service of the Writer.
Salutem dicint. The just defunct Mrs Sanders who (the Loyd insure
her!) I was shift and shuft too, with her shester Mrs Shunders,
both mudical dauctors from *highschoolHORSE* and aslyke as
Easther's leggs. She was the niceliest person
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:12 418.20] As I once played the piper I must now pay
the count So saida to Moyhammlet and marhaba to your Mount!
Let who likes lump above so what flies be a full 'un;
I could not feel moregruggy if this was prompollen.
I pick up your reproof, the *HORSEgift* of a friend,
For the prize of your save is the price of my spend.
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:13 446.24] till they'll bet we're the cuckoo derby
when cherries next come back to Ealing as come they must, as
they musted in their past, as they must for my pressing season,
as hereinafter must they chirrywill immediately suant on my
safe return to ignorance and bliss in my *HORSEless* Coppal
Poor, through suirland and noreland,kings country and queens,
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:13 459.33] You can trust me that though I change thy name
though not the letter never while I become engaged with my
first *HORSEpower* , masterthief of hearts,
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:14 482.5] -- Me das has or oreils. Piercey, piercey, piercey,
piercey!-- White eyeluscious and *muddyHORSEbroth* Pig Pursyriley!
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:14 487.32] But in my shelter you'll miss me. When Lapac
walks backwords he's darkest *HORSE* in Capalisoot. You knew
me once but you won't know me twice. I am simpliciter arduus,
ars of the schoo, Freeday's child in loving and thieving.
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:14 510.30] with Rodey O'echolowing how his breadcost on
the voters would be a comeback for e'er a one, like the
depredations of Scandalknivery, in and on usedtowobble sloops
off cloasts, eh? Would that be a talltale too? This was the
grandsire Orther. This was his innwhite *HORSE*. Sip?
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:14 521.12] I ask you to say on your scotty pictail you
were promised fines times with some staggerjuice or
*deadHORSE*, on strip or in larges, at the Raven and
Sugarloaf, either Jones's lame or Jamesy's gait, anyhow?
-- Bushmillah ! Do you think for a moment? Yes, by the way.
*How very necessarily TRUE*! Give me fair play. When?
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:14 522.16] Playing bull before shebears or the
hindlegs off a *clothesHORSE* ? Did any orangepeelers or
greengoaters appear periodically up your sylvan family tree?
-- Buggered if I know! It all depends on how much family
silver you want for a nass-and-pair. Hah!
-- What do you mean, sir, behind your hah! You don't hah
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:14 568.27] Arise, sir Pompkey Dompkey! Ear! Ear! Weakear!
An allness eversides! We but miss that *HORSE* elder yet
cherchant of the wise graveleek in cabbuchin garden.
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:14 571.25] but only I am soso sorry about all in
my saarasplace. Listen, listen ! I am doing it.
Hear more to those voices! Always I am hearing them.
*HORSEhem* coughs enough. Annshee lispes privily.
------------------------------------------------------------
[3:14 576.26] would-to-the-large which bring hills
to molehunter, home through first husband, perils
behind swine and *HORSEpower* down to hungerford,
------------------------------------------------------------
[4:15 600.1] if they don't say nothings about it
they don't tell us lie, the gist of the pantomime, from
cannibal king to the property *HORSE* , being, slumply and
slopely, to remind us how, in this drury world of ours,
------------------------------------------------------------
[4:15 606.35] He may be humpy, nay, he may be dumpy but there
is always something racey about, say, a sailor on a *HORSE*.
------------------------------------------------------------
[4:15 610.2] Juva: Bulkily: and he is fundementially
theosophagusted over the *wHORSE* proceedings.
Muta: Petrificationibus ! O horild haraflare ! Who his
dickhuns now rearrexes from undernearth the memorialorum?
------------------------------------------------------------
[4:15 617.22] His fooneral will sneak pleace by creeps
o'clock toosday. Kingen will commen. Allso brewbeer.
Pens picture at Manchem House *HORSEgardens* shown
in Morning post as from Boston transcripped.
Femelles will be preadaminant as from twentyeight to twelve.
------------------------------------------------------------
Art Neuendorffer

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