Look down on the floor And view it, Lusmore ! " When these words were said, poor little Lusmore felt himself so light and so happy, that he thought he could have bounded at one jump over the moon, like the cow in the history of the cat and the fiddle,... Folk-lore and Legends: Ireland - Page 421889 - 192 pagesFull view - About this book
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - English literature - 1825 - 576 pages
..." Lusmore ! Lusmore ! Doubt not, nor deplore, For the hump which you bore On your back is no more; Look down on the floor, And view it, Lusmore !" '...light, and so happy, that he thought he could have hounded at one jump over the moon, like the cow in the history of the cat and the fiddle ; and In1... | |
| Thomas Crofton Croker - Folklore - 1825 - 396 pages
..." Lusmore ! Lusmore ! Doubt not, nor deplore, For the hump which you bore On your back is no more ; Look down on the floor, And view it, Lusmore !" When these words were said, poor little more felt himself so light, and so happy he thought he could have bounded at one over the moon, like... | |
| Catholics - 1825 - 362 pages
..." Lusmore ! Lusmore ! Doubt not, nor deplore, For the hump which you bore On your back is no more ; Look down on the floor, And view it, Lusmore !" When these words were said, poor litile Lusmore felt himself so light, and >o happy, that he thought he could have bounded at one jump... | |
| Thomas Crofton Croker - Folklore - 1859 - 392 pages
...Lusmore ! Lusmore! Doubt not, nor deplore, For the hump which you bore On your back is no more ! — Look down on the floor, And view it, Lusmore ! " When...he thought he could have bounded at one jump over c the moon, like the cow in the history of the cat and the fiddle ; and he saw, with inexpressible... | |
| William Alexander Clouston - Fairy tales - 1887 - 512 pages
...it, Lusmore ! " When these words were said, poor little Lusmore felt himself so happy and so light, that he thought he could have bounded at one jump over the moon ; and he saw, with inexpressible pleasure, his hump tumble from his shoulders to the ground. At last... | |
| Elizabeth Gmeyner - Juvenile Nonfiction - 2004 - 134 pages
...said: "Lusmore! Lusmore! Doubt not, nor deplore. For the hump which you bore On your back is no more; Look down on the floor. And view it, Lusmore!" When...thought he could have bounded at one jump over the moon; and he saw his hump tumble down upon the ground from his shoulders. He then tried to lift up his head... | |
| Alfred Perceval Graves - Fiction - 2005 - 377 pages
...the hump which you bore On your back is no more ; Look down on the fioor, And view it, Lusmore ! HEN these words were said, poor little Lusmore felt himself...shoulders. He then tried to lift up his head, and did so with becoming caution, fearing that he might knock it against the ceiling of the great hall... | |
| 1825 - 578 pages
..." Lusmore ! Lusmore ! Doubt not, nor deplore, For the hump which you bore On your back is no more ; Look down on the floor, And view it, Lusmore !" '...words were said, poor little Lusmore felt himself solight, and so happy, that he thought he could have bounded at one jump over the moon, like the cow... | |
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