Krindlesyke by Wilfrid Wilson Gibson
page 126 of 186 (67%)
page 126 of 186 (67%)
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Not your tame wife, lad: and Iâll go my gait.
MICHAEL: You shall not go, for all your crazy cackle-- My mother, on the road, a tinkerâs baggage, While Iâve a roof to shelter her! BELL: You pull The handle downwards towards you, and the beer Spouts out. No hope for you, Ruth: lass, youâre safe-- Safe as a linnet in a cage, for life: No need to read your hand, to tell your fortune: No gallivanting with the dark-eyed stranger, Calleevering over all the countryside, When the owls are hooting to the hunterâs moon, For the wife of Michael Barrasford. Well, boy, What if I choose to be a tinkerâs baggage? It was a tinkerâs baggage mothered you-- For tying a white apron round the waist Has never made a housewife of a gipsy-- And a tinkerâs baggage went out of her way To set you well on yours: and now she turns. MICHAEL: You shall not go, I say. Iâm master here: And I wonât let you shame me. Iâve been decent; And have always done my duty by the sheep, Working to keep a decent home together To bring a wife to: and, for all your jeers, |
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