Page:History of the yellow dwarf.pdf/9

9 followed, by the flashes whereof were perceived two vomiting fire on each sidoside [sic] of thothe [sic] Yellow Dwarf.

The King behaved with such undaunted courage, as to givogive [sic] thothe [sic] Dwarf great perplexity; but was dismayed, he saw the Desert Fairy, mounted on a winged, with her head covered with snakes, strike the  so hard with a lance, that she fell into the  arms all covered with blood. This tendortender [sic], who was touched to the very soul to see horher [sic] in this condition, made most sad complaints;  for thothe [sic] King, hohe [sic] lost both his reason and courage,  the combat, and ran to thothe [sic] Princess, to succour horher [sic], diodie [sic] with horher [sic]; but thothe [sic] Yellow Dwarf would not allow  timotime [sic] to get to her, but flew on his Spanish cat into  balcony wherowhere [sic] shoshe [sic] was, and took her out of her  arms, and from all thothe [sic] ladies, and then leaping  the top of the palace, disappeared with his prize.

As the King stood confused and astonished at this adventure, hohe [sic] suddenly found a mist before his



, and himself lifted up in thothe [sic] air by some oxtradinaryextraordinary [sic] power: for thothe [sic] Desert Fairy had fallonfallen [sic] in love him. To secure him for herself, thereforethereforo [sic], shoshe [sic] him to a frightful cavern, hoping hohe [sic] would there  All-Fair, and tried many artifices to complete her. But finding this schemoscheme [sic] ineffectual, shoshe [sic] to carry him to a place altogotheraltogether [sic] as pleasant the other was terrible; and accordingly sat him by  in a chariot drawn by swans. In passing through