| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111 | For the Garaths at Sorn, by the seas great and black,  As they waited for all of their wives to come back  And fired their surrs at the tumelant whales  From the grelleking ships with no wind in their sails,  The longest of days in all the long years  Was the wintry cold Festival of Fears.  The moon, it was white, and the sun, it shone black,  The torizant leader crawled out of his sack  And looked at the rough, inimisal sky  Through one bloody black and one bright blue eye.  He called with a voice like terical leather  And gathered the whole symbadle together.  “Take a look at the sky!” He intoned, stret and strong,  “It has not been thus imfelled for too long!  I fear for the terrors this day has in store,”  He sholled with a tone like Hesago of Tor.  The men of the group stood up with a start  and began untellasting the ropes, part by part.  'Twas not half past krim when the specter appeared  With two fish in his hand and three streaks in his beard  His entility shone like a torch to the camp  And the men gathered round to hear his weftramp.  He circled two times round the statue of Triff  and with ultiffe in his eyes made off with a skiff.  Barely two hours hence an old baker named Shem  With a passion for baking fresh pan-à-la-sième  Stood up with a look of gelicine malice-  He huftily went and stole the chief's chalice  Then drowning himself with the vin de la çasse  He had stored for the cooking of malacanasse.  As the company stood by observing the cook  lying dead with the belicine cup that he took  they heard the somnaste of the spirits that flow  from the caverns of Krell to the fields of Sampó  which signaled the death of a servant of Hell  like a great, unholy Chamva-hall bell.  “'Tis a foul day indeed,” said the captain, vensure,  with a soul that was strong and a heart that was pure  but his men did not share his outlook on the day  with a garrable yell they all fled away  to the phenistal docks, behind which they'd play  their games of Pesmash and Sooda-Jalay.  In a blink of an eye came a thallaying shout  that prompted the captain to run quickly out  to the men who dempann'd and surra'd in their fear  of the corpse that was hanging off of the pier  with a look of incaelistic hate in his eye  They men, they all cried, “Oh, Marcello! Oh, why?”  With a bone-chilling beat all the graves opened wide  and skeletons started to dance deep inside  of the stone-laden shests and dirt-filled vadrós  that dotted Saint-Vien de les Grandes Sechosse.  The leader's old father stood up by the stone  that marked his small coffin on which no sun shone.  Every corpse had a black kyava-bird on their head  that filled all the terrified soldiers with dread  they dashed to the little flacsammed town square  and though they had just two surrs to share  they held out for an hour, and fought off the foe  that vitissied up from deep down below.  It would have been fine if it ended just there  but the oldest trempator received such a scare  that the heart nearly jumped right out of his chest  he fell on his knees, among all the rest.  “O samiscal day! O terrible knaft!”  He cried as he stole off with Serryman's raft.  Then all hell broke loose – though one might well say  that hell was much finer than that horrid day.  The sky bellased wide and out of it poured  snow cold as tristic, ice sharp as swords,  the men close to buildings, they quickly insook  and the ones who were further – well, they didn't look.  The wailing and screaming continued all day  while men lost their money at Sooda-Jalay  sembled inside of the homes in the town  fearing to look at the death raining down  fearing to look for their friends who were lost  out in the cold and ossamic frost.  By the time the frost cleared, twas the hour of Kvarz,  they jinellecked out to look at the stars  though the oranic ice had thawed from the ground  their fillicks and friends all could not be found.  The company stood about twenty or so –  the others, they guess, had gone up or below.  I wish I could tell you it ended right there,  the end of that horrible, destituous fair,  but truth will be told, the Garaths at Sorn  were struck with peurettre when they heard the horn,  the long low blestatto that signaled the tchaque  of the fears of the day – their wives had come back.  For the Garaths at Sorn, by the seas great and black,  in servitude now that their wives had come back,  as they worked at the gads making pan-à-la-stuque  and cleaning the house, every cranny and nook,  the longest of days in all the long years  was the wintry cold Festival of Fears.  
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