9 Verbs to Use for the Word waggoners

"Ah!" nodded the Waggoner, "there ain't a man, in or out o' the parish, from Squire down, as don't think the very same.

" "Lord!" cried the Waggoner with a sudden, great laugh, "you don't owe me nothin' for that,not nohow,I owe you one for a knocking of me into that ditch, back yonder, though, to be sure, I did give ye one or two good 'uns, didn't I?"

" "You don't mean to say as your 'eart's broke, do ye?" enquired the Waggoner in a tone of such vast surprise and disbelief, that Bellew turned, and propped himself on an indignant elbow.

"W'otagain!" exclaimed the Waggoner with a grin, "you do be for ever a-sleepin' I do believe!"

Wordsworth seemed at a loss to know in what "class" of his poems to place 'The Waggoner;' and his frequent changesremoving it from one group to anothershew the artificial character of these classes.

He rebukes the waggoner, rescues Alma, and escorts her across a field to her father's cottage.

Another parody, which ridiculed the affection for donkeys displayed both by Wordsworth and Coleridge, was called The Dead Asses: A Lyrical Ballad; and an elaborate production, the author of which I have not been able to discover, was published later on in the year, Benjamin the Waggoner (Baldwin, Craddock and Joy, 1819), which, although the title suggests The Waggoner of Wordsworth, is entirely taken up with making fun of Peter Bell.

When within a few days journey of the court of Mangu, one of his waggons broke down, and a servant of Mangu happened to assist the waggoner in repairing it.

XXXVII They looked and saw a lengthening road, and wain 325 That rang down a bare slope not far remote: The barrows glistered bright with drops of rain, Whistled the waggoner with merry note, The cock far off sounded his clarion throat; But town, or farm, or hamlet, none they viewed, 330 Only were told there stood a lonely cot A long mile thence.

9 Verbs to Use for the Word  waggoners