The Crucifixion Of The Outcast
y
of e-Breasted Deirdre, and how she
endured many sorrows, and he sons
of Usna died to serve he young
friars o when he
him
for ten longings in their
s. So t the cross upon his
back, and o the hill.
o top, took
to dig a hole
to stand it in, whered
round, and talked among themselves. ~ I
ask a favour before I die, says Cum hal.
e you no more delays, says
the Coarb.
I ask no more delays, for I have drawn
told truth, and lived my
vision, and am content.
ould you then confess ?
By sun and moon, not l; I ask but to
6e let eat t.
I carry food in my whenever I go
upon a journey, but I do not taste of it
unless I am well-nigarved. I have
not eaten nowo days.
You may eat, the Coarb,
ùIq E
and urned to he
hole.
took a loaf and some strips
of cold fried bacon out of and laid
tithe
to t a tenth
part from the bacon. ho
among you is t ? And there-
upon clam our, for the beggars
began tory of their
poverty, and their yellow faces swayed like
the floods have filled
it er from the bogs.
ened for a little, and, says he,
I am myself t, for I have
travel led tter-ing footsteps of tattered
doublet of particoloured cloth upon my
back and torn pointed shoes upon my
feet he