Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 102, April 30, 1892 by Various
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page 3 of 46 (06%)
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brooding cumulus and rested gorgeously upon the landscape. On each
side of this a thin silvery veil of mist crept slowly up and hung in impalpable folds. The Atlantic sand stretching away to the North shone with the effulgence of burnished copper. And now brilliant flickers of coloured light, saffron, purple, green and rose danced over the heaven's startled face. The piled clouds opened and showed in the interspace a lurid lake of blood tinged with the pale violet of an Irishwoman's eyes. Great pillars of flame sprang up rebelliously and spread over the burning horizon. Then a strange, soft, yellow and vaporous light raised its twelve bore breech-loading ejector to its shoulder and shot across the Cryanlaughin hills, and the cattle shone red in the green pastures, and everything else glowed, and the whole world burned with the bewildering glare of a stout publican's nose in a London fog. And silence came down upon the everlasting hills whose outlines gleamed in a prismatic-- "That will do," said a mysterious Voice, "the paint-box is exhausted!" CHAPTER III. I was shocked at this rude interruption. "Sir!" I said, "I cannot see you, though I hear your voice. Will you not disclose yourself?" "Nonsense, man," said the aggravating, but invisible one, "do not waste time. Let us get on with the story. You know what comes next. _Revenons à nos saumons._ Ha, Ha! spare the rod and spoil the book!" I was vexed, but I had to obey, and this was the result: |
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