|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Lonesome EJ Date: 08 Mar 02 - 01:03 PM Well, now that I've dried off, and Mario has kicked off the song circle, I'll take my guitar and offer another. THE WHALE CATCHERS
On the twenty-third of March, my boys
Crying, "Heav'n above protect us
With a sweet and a pleasant gale."
We never was down-hearted
Nor let our courage fail
But bore away up to Greenland
For to catch the Greenland whale,
For to catch the Greenland whale.
And when we came to Greenland
Where the bitter winds did blow,
We tacked about all in the north
Among the frost and snow.
Our finger-tops were frozen off,
And likewise our toe-nails,
As we crawled on the deck, my boys,
Looking out for the Greenland whale
Looking out for the Greenland whale.
And when we came to Davis Strait
Where the mountains flowed with snow,
We tacked about all in the north
Till we heard the whalefish blow.
And when we catch that whale, brave boys,
Homeward we will steer.
We'll make them valleys ring, my boys,
A-drinking of strong beer.
We'll make them lofty alehouses
In London town to roar;
And when our money is all gone,
To Greenland go for more, To Greenland go for more.
|
|
Subject: Add: THE DREAM From: MMario Date: 08 Mar 02 - 01:25 PM And for a change of pace:
THE DREAM
MIDI file: dream.mid Timebase: 192 Name: THE DREAM This program is worth the effort of learning it. To download the latest version of MIDItext and get instructions on how to use it click here ABC format: X:1
|
|
Subject: ADD: SEVEN FROGS From: MMario Date: 08 Mar 02 - 01:56 PM ONE MORE!
SEVEN FROGS Hears the melody:
MIDI file: 7_frogs.mid Timebase: 192 Name: SEVEN FROGS This program is worth the effort of learning it. To download the latest version of MIDItext and get instructions on how to use it click here ABC format: X:1
AND HERE'S the Harmony!
MIDI file: 7_frogs_harmony.mid Timebase: 192 Name: SEVEN FROGS This program is worth the effort of learning it. To download the latest version of MIDItext and get instructions on how to use it click here ABC format: X:1
Port watch takes the melody, starboard watch the harmony...ready?
|
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Charley Noble Date: 08 Mar 02 - 03:41 PM Then up jumps a mermaid covered with muck, We took 'er below and had a good time (sic), Stormy weather, boys, stormy weather, When the wind blows our barge will go. |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Amos Date: 08 Mar 02 - 03:58 PM Haul away lively, buckos!! We're rounding the point by noon to pick up Capting Morse on the Downer Eastern shores, somewhere East of Boothbay, I believe....
Were you ever down on the Eastern Shore,
Bring her up, bring her up a point -- steady there...now, ready her asbout, and hard-a-lee!!! |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Little Hawk Date: 08 Mar 02 - 04:10 PM Ah prefair tae build model ships whit can be puit on the shelf. And why is that? Because the swell o' the salt sea dinna agree wi' my stomach. I wuid rather swallow eels and eel broth than venture forth upon the waves wi' the lot of ye. However, if ye can supply me wi' a case o' gravol, Ah will consider the ma''er...that an' a case o' 20 year old Scotch whiskey. Make that 2 cases o' both. Och aye! Noo where are the mairmaids? - LH |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Dead Horse Date: 08 Mar 02 - 04:11 PM MOBY DICK Fact. In the 1956 film Moby Dick, the whale was made of plastic and rubber stretched over a steel frame and it was controlled electronically. Two additional whales were made as back-ups. The three whales were constructed at a cost of between $25,000 and $30,000 each. Two were lost in the sea when towlines broke and for years were seen bobbing about the high seas, mistaken for the real thing. The Ode Come all you gallant lads, and a tale to you I'll tell. Of a queer thing as'appened off Cape Clear. How we foundered in a gale, a-hunting of a whale Tis 'orrible. 'Twill make you spill yer beer! 'Twas in the year of '56 when we said goodbye to land And set off to hunt the Great White Whale We was sailing full an' bye, heading for the Isle of Skye By way of St James and old Kinsale 'Twas a fine and pleasant day, with the seagulls in the air A-following us as all them seagulls do When I thought I'd have some fun, so I took out my old gun Just to see if I could bag me one or two. Now I aint one o' them twitchers, and all birds look the same So I pops away quite heedless, as yer do. And I shot a brace of bigguns, Mother Carey's chickens And a parrot, a rare Norwegian Blue. Now when I got that parrot, the crew they gave a gasp 'Cos shooting of a parrot is a hex They fished that parrot in, tried revivin' it with gin But 'twere dead, so they hung it round me neck. I felt like The Ancient Mariner with that thing upon me chest But it certainly served to make me think To shoot a Norwegian Blue is a rotten thing to do And t'weren't long before it began to stink. The crew they kept their distance, and nobody talked to me And the wind increased into a fearful gale Then the lookout in the crows, bellowed loudly "Thar she blows" (Which means he thinks he sees a whale) The Skipper ordered "Away all boats" and we began to row And we was chasing after that old fish We pulls her up 'longside, bungs a 'arpoon in his hide Then he gives his tail a mighty swish. I fell into the briny sea and thought I'd breathed me last But I fetched up on that great levi-a-than That old fishes blubber was all slippery, made of rubber And on his back there stood another man He offered me his hand and pulled me up to him Saying "Welcome aboard, I'm out for a cruise" "My name is Gregory Peck. What's that thing about your neck?" "I believe it's one of them Norwegian Blues" I said as how it was, an' told him my sad tale But seeing the funny side, we had a laugh Then he put me safe ashore, in a place they call Tramore But before I left, I got his autograph. That's the end of my little story that I relate to you Of how I sailed upon a plastic levi-a-thon Where is that old parrot? It wasn't worth a carrot I gave it to the crew of the S.S. Monty Py-athon. Tar-rahhhhhhh.
|
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Gareth Date: 08 Mar 02 - 06:45 PM What land lubber put that &%"£*!* Galvanised Metal bucket next to the binacal. We're sailing in song cicles! But as every good Yachty knows :-
TANQUERAY MARTINIS, OH
We set out from Stamford town
cho: So haul the sheets back with one hand,
At Greenwich harbor we put in
Nine parts of gin and one vermouth cho:
|
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Peg Date: 09 Mar 02 - 12:31 AM A mermaid found a swimming lad, Picked him for her own, Pressed her body to his body, Laughed; and plunging down Forgot in cruel happiness That even lovers drown. -- William Butler Yeats The way in which the mythic elements of the mermaid's existence have developed over the centuries has always fascinated me. I believe that the legendary beauty attributed to mermaids, as well as the importance of their toilette (the comb and mirror), results from wishful thinking or, if you like, embarrassment, on the parts of sailors and seamen who perpetuate these myths. If a sailor, long at sea and lonely as salt, succumbed to the charms of a dugong or manatee, of a seal or other sloe-eyed creature of the sea, shouldn't he naturally want to, uh, romanticize the experience? If there truly exists a sea creature with breasts, expressive facial features, etc., then it's not too far-fetched to assume that humans would attempt to justify their sexual trespassings by mythologizing the creature into something beautiful and mysterious. This might also help explain the legendary seductive prowess of the mermaid's beauty, and the often deadly lure (isn't that what fishermen call their bait?) of her singing. The taboos surrounding sex between humans and animals are just too deeply ingrained for the mermaid to remain a mere mammal in the eyes (and hearts) of those men compelled to make love to her.
One thing that confounds my love of the English painter Waterhouse is that he uses the same model for so many of his paintings, from his famous The Mermaid, to La Belle Dame Sans Merci, to Circe, to Ophelia. Several of these have connections to Arthurian legend, but it is his portrayal of the mermaid which is somehow more magical than any other heroine he has painted from the annals of myth. Is it a cruel joke that a man named "Waterhouse" should create so many paintings whose primary element is water? Think of his two most famous works: The Lady of Shalott in her lonely boat. And The Mermaid, endlessly perched at the ocean's edge. She sits upon ancient, sea-hewn rock, combing her long hair, a shell dripping with pearl necklaces and other aquatic treasure beside her. She gazes with intensity at something we cannot see, her eyes (the blue of frozen oceans) fastened, perhaps, upon the waves, awaiting a ship, awaiting a sailor... will she fall in love? Will he? Shall he be dragged, salt-drunk, down and down into her kingdom of coral, her bed of vermilion anemones? Shall he swim at her side, willingly, down and down until his lungs burst, his last thought that he has never seen anything so beautiful as her golden hair? Or will she be the one tempted, to leave the sea, her sisters, her mirrors, her combs, to relinquish her melodious voice, to split her tail in searing agony, so that she may walk beside him on dry, dry earth? What, precisely, is the nature of seduction? What is its price? (the above is excerpted from an article I wrote a while back..I was actually looking for a mermaid poem I wrote for the same magazine but this is all I could find...p'raps you can all envision its waterlogged pages washing up on the deck?) Peg
|
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Amos Date: 09 Mar 02 - 12:35 AM Aw, Jeez Peg -- ya make the old salts laugh, ya make 'em cry. Beautifully done. A |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Lonesome EJ Date: 09 Mar 02 - 12:53 AM Sung as sweetly as a siren, Peg. Amos, buy the lady a beer. |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Dead Horse Date: 09 Mar 02 - 02:05 AM My Lady of Shallot, brings tears to my eyes. As do leeks. |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Charley Noble Date: 09 Mar 02 - 09:35 AM Gareth - I think you'll find it was JON Campbell who wrote that fine contemporary shanty "TANQUERAY MARTINIS, OH." We have our own version of this ditty which we sing in Maine, only the names are changed to implicate the relevant parties: Tanqueray Martini-O (Words & Music by Jon Campbell © Adapted for Maine by Charlie Ipcar - 1992 As Sung by Roll & Go) As we set sail from Portland Town, With a fleet of CrisCrafts all around, From up on deck a call came down Tanqueray Martini-o! 'Tis all the captains and the crew Must have the drink you can look right through, And 'tis really nothing else will do Tanqueray Martini-o! Chorus: 'Tis haul the sheets back with one hand, Set your drink down if you can, And we never sail out of sight of land Tanqueray Martini-o! At Bailey's Island we put in, Being nearly out of gin, To continue on would've been a sin Tanqueray Martini-o! The captain's laid out on the floor, Being elected to get some more, But he's broke his leg tryin' to get on shore Tanqueray Martini-o!(CHO) 'Tis nine parts gin to one Vermouth, 'Tis a yachtsman's friend and that's the truth, From Casco Bay to the Bay of Booth Tanqueray Martini-o! "All hands on deck!" comes the cry, As gale force winds shred the sky, But we stay dry 'cause we're so high Tanqueray Martini-o!(CHO) Them Camden girls sure look fine, Rigged loose up front and snug behind, With a quarterboard reading Calvin Klein Tanqueray Martini-o! Them Portland boys must be seen, All decked out by L.L. Bean, But with the first swell they turn quite green Tanqueray Martini-o!(CHO) Vast Heavin'! |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: The Pooka Date: 09 Mar 02 - 01:04 PM But when Gareth and Charlie finish off their Tanqueray Martinis-Oh with a little Guinness chaser and lurch topside for to clear their heads in the salt-sea air, it's then that peerin' a bit squiddy-eyed off to starboard, the both of 'em swears they spy a great grey Seal a-swimmin' alongside, lookin' longingly up at the frolicking crew with her mournful, soulful, somehow-human-seeming eyes.... |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: kendall Date: 09 Mar 02 - 01:39 PM Come down Morticia, helmsperson, steer nothing to the left of 090. Gather 'round and listen to an old tale of the sea. It's from memory, so, cut me some slack.
The Loch Arcre' was a clipper tall
Hear the yarn of a sailor, 'tis an old yarn
The dockside loafers gave her the shout
Then the grayness, the coming on of night
They crossed the line, and all went well
Now, the wives the girlfriends they wait in the rain |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: kendall Date: 09 Mar 02 - 01:44 PM ...learned at SEA |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Lonesome EJ Date: 09 Mar 02 - 02:34 PM Good song, Cap'n! Do ye know the story of |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Lonesome EJ Date: 09 Mar 02 - 02:36 PM the Wanderer? |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Gareth Date: 09 Mar 02 - 03:00 PM Nice one Kendall - It's The Lay of the Loch Ashray (from memory) And remember always lean over the lee rail, otherwise you get your own back. Gareth |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: kendall Date: 09 Mar 02 - 03:17 PM One doesn't get to be Poet Laureate of England by writing drivel. |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Amos Date: 09 Mar 02 - 03:42 PM Now we have the bugger aboard, can we set a course to the Spanish ocean, where the trades will heal him, the blue waves make him sing? What ho, Caping -- kin we set us south by east, then?
In the harbor, in the island, in the Spanish Seas,
There is the red wine, the nutty Spanish ale,
And o' nights there's fire-flies and the yellow moon, Warm winds, and a fine rolling sea, A
|
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Lonesome EJ Date: 09 Mar 02 - 04:57 PM On the distant isle of Abaco In a palm-thatched tropic bar Over icy beer and rum punch I met a tanned old tar He said "I left the rat race years ago Quit the job and left the wife And headed down to Abaco To live a sailin' life And I've got a little money But I've got a lot of friends Who'll help me to my sailboat When the evening finally ends And I hold no expectations But take days as they come And live on time and sunshine And grouper, beans, and rum
For when I've had my fill |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Amos Date: 09 Mar 02 - 05:04 PM There's a tenor and counterpoint for you. Nicely sung, Lonesome!! Ya wanna found a little grass-roof bar on a distant island shore? I have all the requirements listed out. LOL! Grouper, beans and rum, aye!!! A |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Peg Date: 09 Mar 02 - 06:55 PM The stowaway with ragged skirts and the scent of seaweed in her hair offers a net bag of apples and a flask of port for the humble repast...oh and a bar of bittersweet chocolate...and maybe a song when we've digested our dinner... Peg |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Gareth Date: 09 Mar 02 - 07:03 PM Kendall, you ain't read our present Laureat, to use a bad pun "it ai'nt poetry in motion" Meanwhile that metal bucket has not been moved away from the Compass - and we are still sailing in song circles. All and sundry are anticipating what they will do when our Gallant ship docks in dear Old Swansea Town. MAGGIE MAY
Now you jolly sailor lads, come listen to my tale,
cho: Oh Maggie, Maggie May
I was staying at the Home, from a voyage to Sierre Leone,
cho:
She gave me a saucy nod, and I, like a farmer's clod, Let her take me line abreast in tow,
Next morning when I woke, I found that I was broke,
So to Lewis' I did go, but no clothing could I find,
She was chained and sent away from Swansea Town one day, Gareth |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Amos Date: 09 Mar 02 - 07:08 PM Yeehaw, G! Just the sort of song Capting Morse'd appreciate I yam sure!! LOL!! A |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Dave Bryant Date: 09 Mar 02 - 07:18 PM Up came a mermaid covered in slime, We took her to the wheelhouse and had a good time.... What are the vital statistics of a mermaid.... 38 - 24 - £2.10 (about $3) per pound. |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Gareth Date: 09 Mar 02 - 07:22 PM For it's stormy old weather, Windy old weather If we've got to go Then we'll all go together ! Gareth |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: GUEST,kendall Date: 09 Mar 02 - 07:57 PM As a matter of fact, I appreciated Maggie Mae enough to record it for Folk Legacy! |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Charley Noble Date: 10 Mar 02 - 09:30 AM Then the mate ran for'ard as we cleared the dock, And the skipper caught his xxxxx's in the main sheet block... What joy! |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Amos Date: 10 Mar 02 - 09:31 AM And the bos'n called out, Whoop Jamboree!! Haul away!! A |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: DMcG Date: 10 Mar 02 - 09:38 AM He had bought a large map representing the sea, Without the least vestige of land: And the crew were much pleased when they found it to be A map they could all understand.
"What's the good of Mercator's North Poles and Equators,
"Other maps are such shapes, with their islands and capes!
Lewis Carroll - The Hunting of the Snark
|
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Dead Horse Date: 10 Mar 02 - 06:03 PM Have you got any news of the iceberg?
Well a poor old man come a-riding by, |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Gareth Date: 10 Mar 02 - 07:08 PM Hmmm! The way this thread is going I think we need this song of disaster in American Waters to cheer us up !
We sailed away from Huntington Bay
And it's yo ho over the sea
The tranquillity three miles out to sea
So it's yo ho over the sea
My husband the captain was checking the charts
So it's yo ho over the sea
We ran out of fuel by mid-afternoon
And it's yo ho over the sea
Epilogue
Gareth |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: SINSULL Date: 11 Mar 02 - 12:01 AM Heads up! As Social Director for this sorry excuse for a cruise, I insist on adding a little order to the proceedings. First: All chanteymen, folk singers, and musicians to the stern. That's the back of the ship to you first time sailors. Second: All Pirate Wannabees to the bow. Captain Morse will show you the basics of hanging, walking the plank, and keel-hauling. I strongly suggest that you lose the eye patches and join the musicians in the stern. Mermaids, camp followers, and street walkers to the starboard side for health examinations. Please note that beastiality is limited to llamas by order of Captain Kendall. Lastly. There is a huge ocean surrounding this ship and capable of dealing with bodily wastes, raw sewerage, and vomit. Please do not flush these offending materials down the sink with champagne. Some of us prefer it to beer, grog, and rum. OK then. First seating for dinner is at 17:00 in the Main Dining Room. Second seating is at 19:00 followed by an ice sculpture demonstration on th Promenade.Skeet Shooting follows in the bow assuming Captain Morse has no pirates to be executed.06:00 breakfast followed by fire drills and facials in the Main Salon. Any questions? |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Amos Date: 11 Mar 02 - 12:05 AM LOL!! This whacky cruise is getting thicker by the hour!! Are we lost yet? |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Dave Bryant Date: 11 Mar 02 - 05:41 AM Suddenly a cry rings out from the Crow's Nest - Yo Ho for land I see - I see Jerusalem & Madagascaar And North & South Amerikee I seee the British fleet at anchor And Admiral Nelson, K.C.B. And we all shout back, "Morty - what the hell are you on ?", "You haven't been smoking dried Seagull shit again, have you ?"
|
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Nigel Parsons Date: 11 Mar 02 - 05:47 AM To quote from a recently seen T-Shirt "I'd rather be in a boat with a drink 'on the rocks'; than in the drink with a boat on the rocks" |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Charley Noble Date: 11 Mar 02 - 07:43 AM More verses from "A Sailor's Yarn" by J.J. Roche, circa 1890 as adapted by Charlie Ipcar in 1993 to the tune of "Whup Jamboree": "Pray, bosun, down in the for'ard hold, What water do you show?" "Four foot and a half by the royal gaff And rather more below."... "Then, sailors, collar your marline spikes And roll each belaying pin; Come, stir your stumps to spike the pumps, Or more will be coming in."... They stirred their stumps, they spiked the pumps, They spliced the mizzen brace; Aloft and alow they worked, but, oh! The water gained apace... They bored a hole beneath her line To let the water out, But more and more with an awful roar, The water in did spout... Then up spoke the cook of our gallant ship – And he was a lubber brave – "I've several wives in various ports, And me bacon I would save."... The next to speak was our bosun bold, Who feared neither fish nor fog – "'Tis dreadful to die, but 'tis worse to go dry, And I move we pipes to grog."... The last to speak was our second mate, Whose courage was second to none – "Takes more than lip to save a ship, I'll show you how 'tis done!"... Then hoasting the anchor upon his back, He leapt into the main; Through foam and spray he clove his way, And sunk and rose again... Through foam and spray, a league away, The anchor stout he bore, Till safe at last, he made it fast, And warped the ship ashore! Yes, he warped the ship ashore! ;~) |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Les from Hull Date: 11 Mar 02 - 08:53 AM Is it alright if my mate, Albert Ross, comes aboard? I've just got to have look round first to make sure that no silly bugger has brought a crossbow. |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: GUEST,DMcG at work Date: 11 Mar 02 - 09:06 AM It is an ancient virus check And it stoppeth one in three... |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: kendall Date: 11 Mar 02 - 09:17 AM Gareth, that piece sounds familiar. Where is it from? I like that. Fun is fun folks but, keep a weather eye out for strange sea creatures. Where there is a giant squid, there are sperm whales too, and they have been known to get pissed off and sink ships. Years ago, it was off the coast of Switzerland, the words of an old sailor warned me not to sail on the Pequod, he said, "There'll come a day at sea when you'll smell land where there be no land; and on that day, Ahab will go to his grave; but, he will rise again and beckon, and all, save one, will follow." That voyage ended badly; so, look alive there! |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: MMario Date: 11 Mar 02 - 09:23 AM `By thy download and senseless text, Now wherefore plague thou me ? The PalTalk's doors are opened wide, And I am patch-ed in ; The room is met, the mikes are set : Doth hear the merry din?' |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Amos Date: 11 Mar 02 - 09:26 AM ...by embedded loops, and BigEndian bytes Now, wherefore stop's't thou me?
|
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Dave Bryant Date: 11 Mar 02 - 10:17 AM I haven't got the time to listen to any yarns from ancient mariners at the moment - I've got a wedding to get to...... |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: GUEST, Abbot of Aberbrothok Date: 11 Mar 02 - 10:30 AM Bells, get yer loverly bells 'ere Top quality, just what yer need, love To keep yer safe and sound |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: MMario Date: 11 Mar 02 - 10:31 AM what had appeared to be a pile of rags, stirred, lurched upwards and grabbed Dave by the arm No - you must listen to me...there was a ship...and we sailed out oe'r the sea - past Joe Offer's lighthouse, out onto the open sea. Then south - until the sun topped the mast at noon. Then came the storm. The storm.... The pile of rags subsides again, muttering |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: Amos Date: 11 Mar 02 - 10:54 AM He holds him with his glittering eye-- The Mudcat Host stood still, And listens like a three years' child: The Checker hath his will. The Mudcat Host sat on a stone: 'The ship was cheered, the harbour cleared, The Sun came up upon the left, Closer and closer came the day, Now Max hath paced into the hall, The Mudcat Host he beats his breast, And now attachments came, and they |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: MMario Date: 11 Mar 02 - 11:11 AM BRAVO! |
|
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat Tavern-at-Sea From: kendall Date: 11 Mar 02 - 12:57 PM Man! I love this place; so many well read people. |