Page:Daniel O'Rourke's wonderful voyage to the moon (1).pdf/14

14 Why, upon horsebaekhorseback [sic], like me, to be sure, said the little man.

Is it after making a fool of me you’d be, said Billy, bidding me get a horeback upon that bit of a rush? May be you want to persuade me that the rush I pulled but a while ago out of the bog over there is a horse?

Up! up! and no words, said the little man, looking very angry; the best horse you ever rode was but a fool to it. So Billy, thinking all this was in joke and fearing to vex his master, straddled across the rush: Borram! Borram! Borram! cried the little man three times, (which, in Engglish, means to become great,) and Billy did the same after him: presently the rushes, swelled up into fine horses, and away they went full speed; but Billy, who had put the rush between his legs without minding much how he did it, found himself sitting on horseback the wrong way, which was rather awkward, with his face to the horse’s tail; and so quickly had his steed started off with him, that he had no power to turn round, and there was therefore nothing for it but to hold on by the tail.

At last they came to their journey’s end, and stopped at the gate of a fine house: Now, Billy, said the little man, do as you see me do, and follow me close; but as you do not know your horse’s head from his tail, mind that your own head does not spin round until you can’t tell whether you are standing on it or on your heels; for remember that old liquor, though able to make a cat speak, can make a man dumb.

The little man then said some queer kind of words, out of which Billy could make no meaning, but he contrived to say them after him for all that; and in they both went through the key-hole