Assigned reading
(3 2/2 pars [] plus 96 notes)
[secondary]
[McH]
[*]
FDV: "and who seen the rest of the plum and who leff that there and who put this here and whatareyou rubbing the flowerofthe sideofthe parlourwith Shite will you have a plateful?
O 7. Who are the components parts of our whole who are latecomers by anticipation, are the porters of the passions in virtue of ratiocination and, unify their voxes contributing the conflingent controversies of differentiation in the voice of vaticination, who crack the crust of comfort due to depradation, quaff the meed of misery to incur intoxication, condone every evil by practical justification condemn any good for its own gratification; who are ruled, roped, _____, by two angel demons of their laws, preservation, fornication, humiliation and reexaltation.
8) And how war your maggies?
They war loving, they love laughing, they laugh crying, they cry smelling, they smell smiling, they smile hating, they hate thinking, they think feeling, they feel tempting, they tempt daring, they dare waiting, they wait taking, they take thanking, they thank asking for as born for lorn in love to live and wive in wile and rile and rule by rune of ruse made rose and"
FDV2: "and who seen the rest of the goosebellies and who leff that there and who put this here & who put the jam pot in the yard and whatin the love of the whatin the name of Sin Pollareyou rubbing the sideofthe flowerofthe parlourwith Shite will you have a plateful?
O 7. Who are the components parts of our whole who are latecomers by anticipation, are the porters of the passions in virtue of ratiocination and, contributing the conflingent controversies of differentiation, unify their voxes in one voice of vaticination, who crack the crust of comfort due to depradation, drain the meed for misery to incur intoxication, condone every evil by practical justification condemn any good for its own gratification; who are ruled, roped, _____, by two angel demons, feekeepers of their laws, consternation, fornication, association and recreation.
8) And how war yore maggies?
They war loving, they love laughing, they laugh weeping, they weep smelling, they smell smiling, they smile hating, they hate thinking, they think feeling, they feel tempting, they tempt daring, they dare waiting, they wait taking, they take thanking, they thank still seeking as born for lorn in lose of love to live the life of wife and wife wive by wile and rile and rule by rune of ruse made rose and"
mysteries:
[01:35-03:28]
I.6:
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
Pages
▼
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Friday, January 24, 2014
Page 141
Assigned reading
(3 2/2 pars [] plus 158 notes)
[secondary]
[*]
FDV: "I caught my thoroughgoen the first in Spanish Place, Mayo's make, Tuam's take, Sligo's pea Galway's grace, Holy eel and sainted salmon jumping chubb and ducking dace, I never saw your aequal! says she, leppin half the lane.
S 5. Whad slags of a lad would retten oleflacks, emptout old mans, melk vitious geit, scare off jackjills, smoothpick waste paper pastures, bear around village, louden on the Kirkpeal, give foottreats to malafides, might underhold three barnets, putzpulish all boots, nightcover all firelights, serve time to boss, full over boarded, lewd man of the method in godliness, perhaps he now sits in the spoorwaggen, must begripe irers' language, joblander or northquain preferred, drinklords to please obtain, may get earnst, no get combitch, he is fatherly soondigged inmudmined persho but aleconnermen, ney, that must he isn't?
Answer — Poor old Joe!
K 6) Where means Summon in the Housewipe Dina? Gellory be to the sails of cloth nowandI have to beeswax the bringing in all the muck of the parks to us and I thawght I knew the his stain on the flower and who broke the dandleass and who seen the rest of the plum and who leff that there and who put this here and whatareyou rubbing the flowerofthe sideofthe parlourwith Shite will you have a plateful?"
FDV2: "I hooked my thoroughgoin trotty first in Spanish Place, Mayo I make, Tuam I take, Sligo's sin but Galway's grace, Holy eel and sainted salmon chuck chubb and duckin dace, I never saw your aequal! says she, leppin half the lane.
S 5. Whad slags of a lad would retten smuttyflesks, emptout old mans, melk vitious geit, scare off jackjills, smoothpick waste papish pastures, sprink dirted water, bear around village, louden on the Kirkpeal, footreats given to malafides, might underhold three barnets, putzpulish all boots, nightcover all firelights, serve time to boss, grindstone his knivses, full over boarded, lewd man of the method in godliness, perchance he now sits in the spoorwaggen, must fallstandingly begripe irers' langurge, joblander or northquain bigger prefurred, drinklords to please obtain, may get earnst, no get combitch, he is fatherlow soundigged inmoodmined pershoon but aleconnermon, ney, that must he isn't?
Answer — Poor old Joe!
K 6) What means Summon in the Housesweep Dina? Gellory be to the sails of cloth nowandI have to beeswax the bringing in all the muck of the parks to us and I thawght I knew his stain on the flower and who broke the dandleass and who seen the rest of the goosebellies and who leff that there and who put this here & who put the jam pot in the yard and whatin the love of the whatin the name of Sin Pollareyou rubbing the sideofthe flowerofthe parlourwith Shite will you have a plateful?"
mysteries:
[09:83-10:13]
[00:00-01:36]
I.6: 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168
FDV: "I caught my thoroughgoen the first in Spanish Place, Mayo's make, Tuam's take, Sligo's pea Galway's grace, Holy eel and sainted salmon jumping chubb and ducking dace, I never saw your aequal! says she, leppin half the lane.
S 5. Whad slags of a lad would retten oleflacks, emptout old mans, melk vitious geit, scare off jackjills, smoothpick waste paper pastures, bear around village, louden on the Kirkpeal, give foottreats to malafides, might underhold three barnets, putzpulish all boots, nightcover all firelights, serve time to boss, full over boarded, lewd man of the method in godliness, perhaps he now sits in the spoorwaggen, must begripe irers' language, joblander or northquain preferred, drinklords to please obtain, may get earnst, no get combitch, he is fatherly soondigged inmudmined persho but aleconnermen, ney, that must he isn't?
Answer — Poor old Joe!
K 6) Where means Summon in the Housewipe Dina? Gellory be to the sails of cloth nowandI have to beeswax the bringing in all the muck of the parks to us and I thawght I knew the his stain on the flower and who broke the dandleass and who seen the rest of the plum and who leff that there and who put this here and whatareyou rubbing the flowerofthe sideofthe parlourwith Shite will you have a plateful?"
FDV2: "I hooked my thoroughgoin trotty first in Spanish Place, Mayo I make, Tuam I take, Sligo's sin but Galway's grace, Holy eel and sainted salmon chuck chubb and duckin dace, I never saw your aequal! says she, leppin half the lane.
S 5. Whad slags of a lad would retten smuttyflesks, emptout old mans, melk vitious geit, scare off jackjills, smoothpick waste papish pastures, sprink dirted water, bear around village, louden on the Kirkpeal, footreats given to malafides, might underhold three barnets, putzpulish all boots, nightcover all firelights, serve time to boss, grindstone his knivses, full over boarded, lewd man of the method in godliness, perchance he now sits in the spoorwaggen, must fallstandingly begripe irers' langurge, joblander or northquain bigger prefurred, drinklords to please obtain, may get earnst, no get combitch, he is fatherlow soundigged inmoodmined pershoon but aleconnermon, ney, that must he isn't?
Answer — Poor old Joe!
K 6) What means Summon in the Housesweep Dina? Gellory be to the sails of cloth nowandI have to beeswax the bringing in all the muck of the parks to us and I thawght I knew his stain on the flower and who broke the dandleass and who seen the rest of the goosebellies and who leff that there and who put this here & who put the jam pot in the yard and whatin the love of the whatin the name of Sin Pollareyou rubbing the sideofthe flowerofthe parlourwith Shite will you have a plateful?"
mysteries:
[09:83-10:13]
[00:00-01:36]
I.6: 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Page 140
Assigned reading
(2 2/2 par [] plus 142 notes)
[secondary]
[*]
the 4 have different accents [theory] [3min-audio]
FDV: "not Le Decer Le Mieux not Benjamin's Lea not Tholomews Haddington not the Arch not the Smug not The Dutch House not The Oval not Weir's not Byrne's not Nagle's not Mooney's nothing Grand nothing splendid nayther Erat Est Erit noor Non Michi sed Lucefro?
Answer — The obesity of the civilian is the felicitude of us!
X 4. What Irish capitol city of six letters boast of having a) the most expensive brewing industry in the world b) the most expansive public thoroughfare in the world c) the most extensive park in the world d) the most philohippic theobibbis in the world?
Answer — a) Belfast. (Ul) And when you'll hear the hommers of my heart, my lossy, bingbanging again the ribs of yer resistance and the tenderbolts of my rivets working to your detraction, ye'll be sheverin with yer dinful sobs for the day when we'll go riding. You with yer orange garland and me with my cordial, down the greaseways of rollicking into the waters of wetted life. b) Dorghk. (Mu) And sure where can you have such good old chimes anywhere, and leave you, and how I'd be engaging you with my softest of accents and descanting on the scene with my two hand braceliting the silks of your ankles and your wildmouth bobbing at the soapstone of speech. c) Nublid (Ga) Isha, why wouldn't be happy, avourneen, on the mills money he'll be leaving you when I've my own garden to recruit on by Dr. Cheek's orders with my panful of soybeans & Irish in my east hand and an bottle in my west, after the errors of history, with yourself churning over the new butter (more power to you!) the best and the cheapest from Atlanta to Oconee while I'll drowse in the gaarden. d) Galway. I caught my"
FDV2: "not Le Decer Le Mieux not Benjamin's Lea not Tholomews Whaddingtun not Antwarp not Byrne's not Weir's not The Arch not The Smug not The Dotch House not The Uval nothing Grand nothing splendid (Grahot Granho or Spletel Splotel) nayther Erat Est Erit norr Non Michi Sed Lucefro?
Answer — Thine obesity, O civilian, hits the felicitude of our orb!
X 4. What Irish capitol city (ah dea o dea) with a deltoid deltic origin and a nunous end (a dust to dust!) of two syllables six letters can boast of having a) the most expensive brewing industry in the world b) the most expansive public thoroughfare in the world c) the most extensive people's park in the world d) the most phillohippuc theobibbous paupulation in the world?
Answer — a) Delfas. And when you'll hear the hommers of my heart, my floxy loss, bingbanging again the ribs of yer resistance and the tenderbolts of my rivets working to your destraction, ye'll be sheverin with all yer dinful sobs for the day when we'll go riding copecurly. You with yer orange garland and me with my conny cordial, down the greaseways of rollicking into the waters of wetted life. b) Dorghk. And sure where can you have such good old chimes anywhere, and leave you, and how I'd be engaging you with my plovery soft accents and descanting on the scene below me of the loose vines of your hairafall with my two loving loofs braceliting the slims of your ankles and your mouth's flower rosy and bobbing round the soapstone of speech. c) Nublid Isha, why wouldn't be happy, avourneen, on the mills money he'll soon be leaving you when I've my owned streamy Georgian mansion lawn to recruit upon by Dr. Cheek's special orders with my panful of soybeans & Irish in my east hand and an james's gate in my west, after all the errears & erroriboose of embottled history, with yourself churning over the newleaved butter (more power to you!) the best and the cheapest from Atlanta to Oconee whilst I'll be drowsing in the gaarden. d) Dalway. I hooked my"
mysteries:
[07:34-09:39]
I.6: 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168
the 4 have different accents [theory] [3min-audio]
FDV: "not Le Decer Le Mieux not Benjamin's Lea not Tholomews Haddington not the Arch not the Smug not The Dutch House not The Oval not Weir's not Byrne's not Nagle's not Mooney's nothing Grand nothing splendid nayther Erat Est Erit noor Non Michi sed Lucefro?
Answer — The obesity of the civilian is the felicitude of us!
X 4. What Irish capitol city of six letters boast of having a) the most expensive brewing industry in the world b) the most expansive public thoroughfare in the world c) the most extensive park in the world d) the most philohippic theobibbis in the world?
Answer — a) Belfast. (Ul) And when you'll hear the hommers of my heart, my lossy, bingbanging again the ribs of yer resistance and the tenderbolts of my rivets working to your detraction, ye'll be sheverin with yer dinful sobs for the day when we'll go riding. You with yer orange garland and me with my cordial, down the greaseways of rollicking into the waters of wetted life. b) Dorghk. (Mu) And sure where can you have such good old chimes anywhere, and leave you, and how I'd be engaging you with my softest of accents and descanting on the scene with my two hand braceliting the silks of your ankles and your wildmouth bobbing at the soapstone of speech. c) Nublid (Ga) Isha, why wouldn't be happy, avourneen, on the mills money he'll be leaving you when I've my own garden to recruit on by Dr. Cheek's orders with my panful of soybeans & Irish in my east hand and an bottle in my west, after the errors of history, with yourself churning over the new butter (more power to you!) the best and the cheapest from Atlanta to Oconee while I'll drowse in the gaarden. d) Galway. I caught my"
FDV2: "not Le Decer Le Mieux not Benjamin's Lea not Tholomews Whaddingtun not Antwarp not Byrne's not Weir's not The Arch not The Smug not The Dotch House not The Uval nothing Grand nothing splendid (Grahot Granho or Spletel Splotel) nayther Erat Est Erit norr Non Michi Sed Lucefro?
Answer — Thine obesity, O civilian, hits the felicitude of our orb!
X 4. What Irish capitol city (ah dea o dea) with a deltoid deltic origin and a nunous end (a dust to dust!) of two syllables six letters can boast of having a) the most expensive brewing industry in the world b) the most expansive public thoroughfare in the world c) the most extensive people's park in the world d) the most phillohippuc theobibbous paupulation in the world?
Answer — a) Delfas. And when you'll hear the hommers of my heart, my floxy loss, bingbanging again the ribs of yer resistance and the tenderbolts of my rivets working to your destraction, ye'll be sheverin with all yer dinful sobs for the day when we'll go riding copecurly. You with yer orange garland and me with my conny cordial, down the greaseways of rollicking into the waters of wetted life. b) Dorghk. And sure where can you have such good old chimes anywhere, and leave you, and how I'd be engaging you with my plovery soft accents and descanting on the scene below me of the loose vines of your hairafall with my two loving loofs braceliting the slims of your ankles and your mouth's flower rosy and bobbing round the soapstone of speech. c) Nublid Isha, why wouldn't be happy, avourneen, on the mills money he'll soon be leaving you when I've my owned streamy Georgian mansion lawn to recruit upon by Dr. Cheek's special orders with my panful of soybeans & Irish in my east hand and an james's gate in my west, after all the errears & erroriboose of embottled history, with yourself churning over the newleaved butter (more power to you!) the best and the cheapest from Atlanta to Oconee whilst I'll be drowsing in the gaarden. d) Dalway. I hooked my"
mysteries:
[07:34-09:39]
I.6: 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Page 139
Assigned reading
(3 2/2 pars [] plus 116 notes)
[secondary]
[*]
FDV: "stutters when he falls and gets up when he's waked, is Timb in the pearly morn and Tomb in the weeping night and if he had all the red bricks of Babylon he'd been ogling a poor wall?
Answer - Finn MacCool!
2. Does your mutter know your mike?
Answer - If she's plain she's purty, if she's fain she's flirty, if she's if he's dane she's dirty With her hair in streams and her cool cajolery and her darkish drollery, for to rouse his rudderup or to drench his dreams. If great wise Hammurabi and Ecclesiastes could but hear her prattlings, faith, they'd rise amain to renounce their ruings, and denounce their doings foriver and and river, and a night. Amen!
3. Which is the truest title for that Tiec for Teac which is not whichcraft whichcroft not Ousterholm not Haraldsby not Vatandcan not Houseboat and Hive not Knox-at-a-Belle not O'Faynix Coalprince not Wohn Squarr Roomyegg not Ebblawn Downes not Le Decer"
FDV2: "blows whiskey around the head but thinks stout upon his feet, was dubbed out of joke and limned in raw ochre, stutters when he falls and goes mad entirely when he's waked, is Timb to the pearly morn and Tomb by the mourning night and though he had all the baked bricks of bould Babylon to his lusting placys he'd be lost for the want of an ould wubblin wall?
Answer - Finn MacCool!
△ 2. Does your mutter know your mike?
Answer - When I turn me optics / From such urban prospects / Tis my filial bosom's / Doth Behold with pride / That pontificator / And circumvallator with his dam so garrulous / All by his side. / Annealive, the lisp of her / Would make mountains whisper her / And the bergs of Iceland / Melt in waves of fire / And her spoon me spondees and her meet me yonders drickle-me-yondees / Make the rageous Ossean kneel to her / And quaff a lyre. / If Dann's plane Ann's purty, if he's fane she's flirty, if she's if he's dane she's dirty with her auburn streams and her coy cajoleries and her dabblin drolleries, for to rouse his rudderup or to drench his dreams. If hot Hammurabi and cowld Clesiastes could espy her pranklettes, they'd break bounds again, and renounce their ruings, and denounce their doings for river and river, and a night. Amen!
◻ 3. Which title is the true-to-type motto-in-lieu for that Tiec for Teac thatchment which is not whichcroft 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"
mysteries:
[05:18-07:35]
I.6: 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168
FDV: "stutters when he falls and gets up when he's waked, is Timb in the pearly morn and Tomb in the weeping night and if he had all the red bricks of Babylon he'd been ogling a poor wall?
Answer - Finn MacCool!
2. Does your mutter know your mike?
Answer - If she's plain she's purty, if she's fain she's flirty, if she's if he's dane she's dirty With her hair in streams and her cool cajolery and her darkish drollery, for to rouse his rudderup or to drench his dreams. If great wise Hammurabi and Ecclesiastes could but hear her prattlings, faith, they'd rise amain to renounce their ruings, and denounce their doings foriver and and river, and a night. Amen!
3. Which is the truest title for that Tiec for Teac which is not whichcraft whichcroft not Ousterholm not Haraldsby not Vatandcan not Houseboat and Hive not Knox-at-a-Belle not O'Faynix Coalprince not Wohn Squarr Roomyegg not Ebblawn Downes not Le Decer"
FDV2: "blows whiskey around the head but thinks stout upon his feet, was dubbed out of joke and limned in raw ochre, stutters when he falls and goes mad entirely when he's waked, is Timb to the pearly morn and Tomb by the mourning night and though he had all the baked bricks of bould Babylon to his lusting placys he'd be lost for the want of an ould wubblin wall?
Answer - Finn MacCool!
△ 2. Does your mutter know your mike?
Answer - When I turn me optics / From such urban prospects / Tis my filial bosom's / Doth Behold with pride / That pontificator / And circumvallator with his dam so garrulous / All by his side. / Annealive, the lisp of her / Would make mountains whisper her / And the bergs of Iceland / Melt in waves of fire / And her spoon me spondees and her meet me yonders drickle-me-yondees / Make the rageous Ossean kneel to her / And quaff a lyre. / If Dann's plane Ann's purty, if he's fane she's flirty, if she's if he's dane she's dirty with her auburn streams and her coy cajoleries and her dabblin drolleries, for to rouse his rudderup or to drench his dreams. If hot Hammurabi and cowld Clesiastes could espy her pranklettes, they'd break bounds again, and renounce their ruings, and denounce their doings for river and river, and a night. Amen!
◻ 3. Which title is the true-to-type motto-in-lieu for that Tiec for Teac thatchment which is not whichcroft 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"
mysteries:
[05:18-07:35]
I.6: 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Page 138
Assigned reading
(1 par [] plus 143 notes)
[secondary]
[*]
FDV: "was waylaid by a parker and beshotten by a buckeley, kicks lintels to when he's cuppy and gives Jacob's to the childer on the parish, owns the bulgiest bungbarrel that was ever tiptapped in the Mullingar Inn, hears the cricket on the earth and annoys the life out of preachers, made Man with one jerk and minted money with many,"
FDV2: "was waylaid by a parker and beshotten by a buckeley, kicks lintils when he's cuppy andchucks casts Jacob's to his childer on the parish, owns the bulgiest bungbarrel that was ever tiptapped in the private privace of Mullingar Inn, hears the cricket on the earth but annoys the life out of predicants, made Man with guts one jerk and minted money mong many,"
mysteries:
[03:26-05:19]
I.6: 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168
FDV: "was waylaid by a parker and beshotten by a buckeley, kicks lintels to when he's cuppy and gives Jacob's to the childer on the parish, owns the bulgiest bungbarrel that was ever tiptapped in the Mullingar Inn, hears the cricket on the earth and annoys the life out of preachers, made Man with one jerk and minted money with many,"
FDV2: "was waylaid by a parker and beshotten by a buckeley, kicks lintils when he's cuppy and
mysteries:
[03:26-05:19]
I.6: 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168
Monday, January 20, 2014
Sunday, January 19, 2014
Page 136
Assigned reading
(1 par [] plus 136 notes)
[secondary]
[McH]
[*]
FDV: "brewed the beer of sapientia out of the nettles of rashness, put a roof on the house for God and a cog in the pot for homo,"
FDV2: "pressed the beer of ale age out of the nettles of rashness, put a roof on the lodge for Hymn and a cog in his pot for homo,"
mysteries:
[09:21-09:41]
[00:00-01:32]
I.6: 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168
FDV: "brewed the beer of sapientia out of the nettles of rashness, put a roof on the house for God and a cog in the pot for homo,"
FDV2: "pressed the beer of ale age out of the nettles of rashness, put a roof on the lodge for Hymn and a cog in his pot for homo,"
mysteries:
[09:21-09:41]
[00:00-01:32]
I.6: 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168