quot;to my feat,
I ood here from break of day.
I found a to eat,
For only rubbish comes my way.
Am I to live on lebeen-lone?
Muttered t.
quot;For all my pains on lebeen-lone?
King Guaire walked amid
the palace-yard and river-side
And to three old beggars said,
quot;You t have wandered far and wide
Can ravel out ws in my head.
Do men most,
Or get t w desire?
A beggar said, quot;t t
tire,
And aut
Unless desire hem so?
But Guaire laug t,
quot;If t be true as it seems true,
One of you three is a rich man,
For housand pounds
asleep, if but he can
Sleep before t;
And thereon, merry as a bird
its, King Guaire
From river-side and palace-yard
And left to t.
quot;And if I win, one beggar said,
though I am old I shall persuade
A pretty girl to share my bed;
t;I srade;
t;Ill o the course
Among tlemen,
And lay it all upon a horse;
t;I again:
A farmer y.
One to another sighed and cried:
tant dreams of beggary.
t idleness o pride,
Sang teeto noon;
And wwilig
the beggars moon
None closed eyes but sought
to keep heir sleep;
All sed till their anger grew
And they were whirling in a heap.
t t through;
t till the day shone;
t t day
And till anot had gone,
Or if ts stay
t upon to rail,,
And wood
Before to end tale,
they were commingling lice and blood
quot;times up, hree
it eyes upon ared.
quot;times up, hree
Fell do and snored.
`Maybe I s,
No, said the crane.
`to my feat
Ive stood as I one
And seen t,
Its certain trout somewhere
And maybe I sake a trout
but I do not seem to care.