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- 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 – there 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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