FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   5231   5232   5233   5234   5235   5236   5237   5238   5239   5240   5241   5242   5243   5244   5245   5246   5247   5248   5249   5250   5251   5252   5253   5254   5255  
5256   5257   5258   5259   5260   5261   5262   5263   5264   5265   5266   5267   5268   5269   5270   5271   5272   5273   5274   5275   5276   5277   5278   5279   5280   >>   >|  
damage. More work before breakfast, and a fine account I must give of myself to my hostess of the Three Holy Kings!' Farina recovered the destructive little instrument. 'I am ready,' said he. 'But hark! there's little work for us there, I fancy. Those be lads of Cologne, no grunters of the wild. 'Tis the White Rose Club. Always too late for service.' Voices singing a hunting glee, popular in that age, swelled up the clear morning air; and gradually the words became distinct. The Kaiser went a-hunting, A-hunting, tra-ra: With his bugle-horn at springing morn, The Kaiser trampled bud and thorn: Tra-ra! And the dew shakes green as the horsemen rear, And a thousand feathers they flutter with fear; And a pang drives quick to the heart of the deer; For the Kaiser's out a-hunting, Tra-ra! Ta, ta, ta, ta, Tra-ra, tra-ra, Ta-ta, tra-ra, tra-ra! the owner of the truncheon awoke to these reviving tones, and uttered a faint responsive 'Tra-ra!' 'Hark again!' said Farina, in reply to the commendation of the Goshawk, whose face was dimpled over with the harmony. The wild boar lay a-grunting, A-grunting, tra-ra! And, boom! comes the Kaiser to hunt up me? Or, queak! the small birdie that hops on the tree? Tra-ra! O birdie, and boar, and deer, lie tame! For a maiden in bloom, or a full-blown dame, Are the daintiest prey, and the windingest game, When Kaisers go a-hunting, Tra-ra! Ha, ha, ha, ha, Tra-ra, tra-ra, Ha-ha, tra-ra, tra-ra! The voices held long on the last note, and let it die in a forest cadence. ''Fore Gad! well done. Hurrah! Tra-ra, ha-ha, tra-ra! That's a trick we're not half alive to at home,' said Guy. 'I feel friendly with these German lads.' The Goshawk's disposition toward German lads was that moment harshly tested by a smart rap on the shoulder from an end of German oak, and a proclamation that he was prisoner of the hand that gave the greeting, in the name of the White Rose Club. Following that, his staff was wrested from him by a dozen stout young fellows, who gave him no time to get his famous distance for defence against numbers; and he and Farina were marched forthwith to th
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   5231   5232   5233   5234   5235   5236   5237   5238   5239   5240   5241   5242   5243   5244   5245   5246   5247   5248   5249   5250   5251   5252   5253   5254   5255  
5256   5257   5258   5259   5260   5261   5262   5263   5264   5265   5266   5267   5268   5269   5270   5271   5272   5273   5274   5275   5276   5277   5278   5279   5280   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

hunting

 
Kaiser
 

German

 

Farina

 

grunting

 
Goshawk
 

birdie

 

forest

 

cadence

 

windingest


maiden

 
Kaisers
 

daintiest

 
voices
 

wrested

 

fellows

 
Following
 

prisoner

 
greeting
 

marched


forthwith

 
numbers
 
famous
 
distance
 

defence

 
proclamation
 
Hurrah
 

friendly

 
shoulder
 

tested


disposition

 

moment

 
harshly
 

reviving

 

service

 

Voices

 
Always
 
Cologne
 
grunters
 

singing


gradually

 

distinct

 

morning

 
popular
 

swelled

 

account

 

damage

 

breakfast

 
hostess
 

instrument