English:
Identifier: parodyoniolanthe00dalz (find matches)
Title: A parody on Iolanthe
Year: 1883 (1880s)
Authors: Dalziel, D. (Davison) McVickar, H. W. (Harry Whitney), b. 1860
Subjects: Sullivan, Arthur, Sir, 1842-1900 Sullivan, Arthur, Sir, 1842-1900 Chicago and Alton Railroad Company Railroads Railroads
Publisher: (Chicago, Ill.) : Published by D. Dalziel
Contributing Library: University of Illinois at Chicago
Digitizing Sponsor: CARLI: Consortium of Academic and Research Libraries in Illinois
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ew No matter. The Queen of our road and its fairies shall protect you. See, here they come. (Enter Fairies.) (Strephon enibrases Iolanthe. sobbing. Enter Phyllis. She sees Strephonembrace his mother, and starts violently.) song.QTREPHON—The little girl I love has caught me talking to another. TT LL — Oh, fie ! Strephon is a rogue. CTREPHON — But then, upon my honor, that other is my mother. chorus. Taradiddle, taradiddle, fol lol de lay.CTTREPHOX — She wont believe my statement, and declares we must be parted, Although I m just as true as an Alton train when started; And if she gets another hub, a brakeman, broken-hearted, I shall be, taradiddle dee, taradiddle dee.QUEEN — You cruel and heartless counselor to part them from each other; You ve done him an injustice, for this lady is his mother.(70UNSELOR — That yarn requires obesity its thinness well to cover; I did nt see her face, but he acted like her lover. And how could she, at seventeen, be an Alton brakemans mother ?
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