Thursday, October 23, 2014

Cursive Nome



Breakfast meal Oats the Milk adding sugar spoon the tip while Bowl is thought to Skull,
spinning Hands on clock of Scene taking water Soap a stern Shampoo`d with gel,
blow lifts Chin shaving spread Mustache harrie in bake of Stairs seems the twitch is steering sperm.

Down the walk drive the Flock shall a Bring look to sweat the drip of rain or is it Same,
rather Either horrified Morn is bracing stumps are rides AREO plain in boat Can new pea Eon.

Great that touching On & Ons flavored with the ole drawn dawn Left treat Teak with bones,
creek which runs from Lock to shag a prison on the Planet bag entry feed is Nape a read,
face the Some 'Kind' of trouble on the beach or synchromatic Double singing Shacked.

Groan the relative with Ant Hill be dirt came with the Texas flee The Travelers eating flesh,
bites Welt sound fingers Itch at the leg of Skin brine glitch Pacified by salve,
cream Sum glad Mr. Dad ask the missy can That fad to Cycle on the Wire rad,
Oops`ing Teach the redder Preach a profit from the Ages lay description on the Thumb!!

First a string Strange in pun sad Eyes blue dye saying 'Whoa' is Mi on Fly jean 'E' try,
sudden leap a lap to Tease wiggle Spring to know the game Card dealers Hour sprain,
ankle drivers Gas petals rosy cheeks Button-Ups skirting the singer Abrupts.

Reason sticks The Rains in repertoire of the Famer on foot worn tar speech Hollywood restrooms,
cinema Film preview Local store by Vegas broom 'What' is what 'Was' it winced so quick,
shrinking spot with leaner Jock silkings Soylent wafer doat Schicks used armies Razor stoke,
Sharpies.


~ Heart of Oak Books ____^____^____ NOTES. Page 107 ___^___^___ Copyright 1895, 1902 ~
By Charles Eliot Norton

    The "farrago of fables" which Thackeray introduces in the opening chapter of "The Newcomes" is but one of many instances of how deeply these stories have sunk into the minds of the people.  They come out of the dawning twilight of the world's history and have girdled the globe     North and South, East and West.  "The tales were told," he says, "ages before AEsop : and asses under lions' manes roared in Hebrew : and sly foxes flattered in Etruscan : and wolves in sheep's clothing gnashed their teeth in Sanskrit."
    Although, as Mr. Joseph Jacobs     whose notes on the Fables sum up all that we know of their origin, and their history     says, the truths they have to teach "are too simple to correspond to the facts of our complex civilization . . . as we all pass through in our lives the various stages of ancestral culture, there comes a time when these rough sketches of life have their appeal to us as thy had for our forefathers.  The allegory gives us a pleasing and not too strenuous stimulation of the intellectual powers : the lesson is not too complicated for childlike minds.  Indeed in their grotesque grace, in their quaint humor, in their trust in simpler virtues, in their insight into the cruder voices . . . AEsop's Fables are as little children.  They are as little children and for that reason they will forever find a home in the heaven of little children's souls."

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