Once Upon a Time in Old England

Once upon a time in old England there lived a girl named Elizabeth and her brother named Charles. One day they were playing in their garage in their new home but were making too much noise, so their father, Mr. Robert had to quell them with a warning in their bower garage. Now her father was just elected as an alderman in the wet streets of London.

Inside the house the family's slave was cleaning the kitchen with a cleanser. The poor slave was sick and his eyes were sallow. Elizabeth was eating meat. Without thinking she put the gristle into her mouth. Elizabeth's mother, Mrs. Margrett was nestling on the couch and sipping tea.

Elizabeth and Charles wanted to play Hide & Seek even though Charles did not abide by the rules of the game. After the game they had to read the gospel. One of the Bibles was placed on the nether stool. Under the Bible there was a farthing which Elizabeth put in her piggy bank. She bought a wagon with a picture of a wanton witch. Before getting the wagon she thought of buying a mattock so the slave could dig up the soil to put a new seed in their backyard. It behooved her to do her work.

Just then Elizabeth heard her garage door opening. Her father was just back from a local husting. He said the metal chair was transformed into a large bench, hammered on a large anvil. Mr. Rogers said he sat on a hassock. Elizabeth touched his hand. It was watery. She thought it was sweat.

Elizabeth bought a new vase. It was an earthenware. Elizabeth was the pretend bookkeeper who did bookkeeping in her fake buisness.She was the noisiest person in the game. Elizabeth had just found a stringy yarn. It was newfangled. Elizabeth was mootable. She pretended it was her fake friend. Her folkisness with it was very high. She was the 100th person to discover that a non-living thing cannot ever be tamed. It was long it was not yieldable. So instead she kept it outside in the barrow. Then the monarel started staring at the barrow.

While Elizabeth was inside her house the dog started chewing the yarn so much that the yarn flew and landed in the water. When Elizabeth started to find the string, she encountered an earwig on the fennel. Elizabeth searched everywhere, even next to the heifer. Then she looked at the loam. It was not there. Then she saw that her dad's kirtle was on the string to dry. She was chary not to let it fall. It was her dad's behest. It was of course shorter than a furlong. She liked the strip which looked like a threshold. Loam was stuck to it.


The hawthorn almost hit her head so harsh because of the wind. It was forlorned by her neighbors. People thought it was an aspen. Some thought it made barley. They saw the orcahrd was full of dry leaves from a tree next to their house. Suddenly the wind howled. It acted like it was a fiend. She felt like something creepy was following her. She saw it was a gnat. She went back home and saw there was a lot of dairy foods on the dining table. She bought it at a timely time. Her mom was womanly. She looked worrisome. A while after she heard that her mom hurt herself on the hurdle. She ran to her mom but she hurt herself with the icicle on the door frame. The hue of the icicle was odd. It was kind of blue. It had the dearth of coldness. Then she realized it was a fake icicle put up for winter. When she went inside her mom was blithe. She also acted like nothing happened. She also seemed reckless. She went outside, and saw a man belaying a rope around a rock. She found a paper. She read it and said "BEQUEATH" and it had a picture of a lithe person. The thoughts about what bequeath were always fickling. Then an Indian came slaughtering an animal while riding on his horse. He suddenly dropped a few linseeds. She saw the nightingale pick up the seeds. She started singing, then the bird accidently dropped the seeds. She flew to her kiths. She thought she saw a carpenter yield a table in the distance and a customer buy it. He had to pay tithe. The customer was quivering because he realized that he did'nt have enough money, so out of a toy mermaid, he tried to produce money unsuccesfully, so he threw it near the leaves of the linden tree and forgot about them.

Inside the room she warmed herself by the hearth. She remembered the man with the goatee, selling tables. He owned a dealership business. He seemed learned according to Elizabeth. He was on an errand to the shop. He crossed a tall broadleaf. He needed to improve on workmanship. He needed dogged determination. Elizabeth saw an Indian manhandling an animal. He was also holding a roughhewn lantern. Then she saw a bunch of kippers inside another man's sack. ELizabeth also saw pinafores inside it. Elizabeth was wearing a beautiful pink pinafore. She also put salve on her skin. Then she saw a shrieval party. A sherrif shot a mistletoe for fun. He was a wiccan, so
he thought he would see a witch putting her broom on him. Then he accidentally shot himself. He was dreary. He seemed about a fathom when he was five ft..

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