Read Complete Works of James Joyce Online
Authors: Unknown
| Una Unica, charmers, who, under the branches | | |
| of the elms, in shoes as yet unshent by stoni- | | |
| ness, wend, went, will wend a way of honey | | |
| myrrh and rambler roses mistmusk while still | | |
| the maybe mantles the meiblume or ever her | | |
| 1 For Rose Point see Inishmacsaint. | | |
2 Mannequins’ Pose. | | ||
3 Their holy presumption and hers sinfly desprit. | | ||
4 Anama anamaba anamabapa. | | ||
5 Only for he’s fathering law I could skewer that old one and slosh her | | ||
out | | ||
many’s the time but I thinks more of my pottles and ketts. | | ||
6 All abunk for Tarararat! Look slipper, soppyhat, we’ve a doss in the | | ||
manger. | | ||
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Telltale me all | if have faded from the fleur,1 their arms | EARLY | |
of annaryllies. | enlocked, (ringrang, the chimes of sex appeal- | NOTIONS OF | |
Will you carry | ing as conchitas with sentas stray,2 rung!), all | ACQUIRED | |
my can and | thinking all of it, the It with an itch in it, the All | RIGHTS AND | |
fight the fairies? | every inch of it, the pleasure each will preen her | THE INFLU- | |
Allma Mathers, | for, the business each was bred to breed by.3 | ENCE OF | |
Auctioneer. | Soon jemmijohns will cudgel about some | COLLECTIVE | |
Old Gavelkind | a rhythmatick or other over Browne and | TRADITION | |
the Gamper and | Nolan’s divisional tables whereas she, of | UPON THE | |
he’s as daff as | minions’ novence charily being cupid, for | INDIVIDUAL. | |
you’re erse. | mug’s wumping, grooser’s grubbiness, andt’s | | |
| avarice and grossopper’s grandegaffe, with her | | |
| tootpettypout of jemenfichue will sit and knit | | |
| on solfa sofa.4 Stew of the evening, booksyful | | |
| stew. And a bodikin a boss in the Thimble | | |
| Theatre. But all is her-inbourne. Intend. From | | |
| gramma’s grammar she has it that if there is a | | |
| third person, mascarine, phelinine or nuder, | | |
| being spoken abad it moods prosodes from a | | |
| person speaking to her second which is the | | |
| direct object that has been spoken to, with and | | |
| at. Take the dative with his oblative5 for, even | | |
| if obsolete, it is always of interest, so spake | | |
| gramma on the impetus of her imperative, only | | |
| mind your genderous towards his reflexives | | |
| such that I was to your grappa (Bott’s trousend, | | |
| hore a man uff!) when him was me hedon6 | | |
| and mine, what the lewdy saying, his analec- | | |
| tual pygmyhop.7 There is comfortism in the | | |
| 1 One must sell it to some one, the sacred name of love. | | |
2 Making it up as we goes along. | | ||
3 The law of the jungerl. | | ||
4 Let me blush to think of all those halfwayhoist pullovers. | | ||
5 I’d like his pink’s cheek. | | ||
6 Frech devil in red hairing! So that’s why you ran away to sea, Mrs | | ||
Lappy. Leap me, Locklaun, for you have sensed! | | ||
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Undante | knowledge that often hate on first hearing | | |
umoroso. | comes of love by second sight. Have your | | |
M. 50-50. | little sintalks in the dunk of subjunctions, dual | | |
oþk þþàáoþ | in duel and prude with pruriel, but even the | |