Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Read carefully, and you will learn a lot!!

The inhabitants of Egypt were called mummies.
They lived in the Sarah Dessert and traveled by Camelot.

The climate of the Sarah is such that the inhabitants have to live
elsewhere, so certain areas of the dessert are cultivated by
irritation.

The Egyptians built the Pyramids in the shape of a huge triangular cube.
The Pyramids are a range of mountains between France and Spain.

The Bible is full of interesting caricatures.

In the first book of the Bible, Guinesses, Adam and Eve were created
from an apple tree.
One of their children, Cain, asked "Am I my brother's son?"

God asked Abraham to sacrifice Issac on Mount Montezuma.

Jacob, son of Issac, stole his brother's birthmark. Jacob was a
Partiarch who brought up his twelve sons to be partiarchs, but they
did not take to it.
One of Jacob's sons, Joseph, gave refuse to the Israelites.

Pharaoh forced the Hebrew slaves to make bread without straw.

Moses led them to the Red Sea, where they made unleavened bread, which
is bread made without any ingredients.

Afterwards, Moses went up on Mount Cyanide to get the ten commandments.

David was a Hebrew king skilled at playing the liar. He fought with
the Philatelists, a race of people who lived in Biblical times.

Solomon, one of David's sons, had 500 wives and 500 porcupines.

Without the Greeks, we wouldn't have history.

The Greeks invented three kinds of columns - Corinthian, Doric and
Ironic. They also had myths.

A myth is a female moth.

One myth says that the mother of Achilles dipped him in the River
Stynx until he became intolerable.
Achilles appears in "The Illiad", by Homer.

Homer also wrote the "Oddity", in which Penelope was the last hardship
that Ulysses endured on his journey.
Actually, Homer was not written by Homer but by another man of that name.

Socrates was a famous Greek teacher who went around giving people advice.
They killed him.
Socrates died from an overdose of wedlock.

In the Olympic Games, Greeks ran races, jumped, hurled the biscuits,
and threw the Java.
The reward to the victor was a coral wreath.

The government of Athens was democratic because the people took the
law into their own hands.

There were no wars in Greece, as the mountains were so high that they
couldn't climb over to see what their neighbours were doing.
When they fought the Parisians, the Greeks were outnumbered because
the Persians had more men.

Eventually, the Ramons conquered the Geeks.

History call people Romans because they never stayed in one place for very long.

At Roman banquets, the guests wore garlic in their hair.

Julius Caesar extinguished himself on the battlefields of Gaul.

The Ides of March killed him because they thought he was going to be made king.

Nero was a cruel tyranny who would torture his poor subjects by
playing the fiddle to them.

Then came the Middle Ages.
King Alfred conquered the Dames, King Arthur lived in the Age of
Shivery, King Harlod mustarded his troops before the Battle of
Hastings,

Joan of Arc was cannonized by George Bernard Shaw, and the victims of
the Black Death grew boobs on their necks.

Finally, the Magna Carta provided that no free man should be hanged
twice for the same offense.

In midevil times most of the people were alliterate.

The greatest writer of the time was Chaucer, who wrote many poems and
verse and also wrote literature.

Another tale tells of William Tell, who shot an arrow through an apple
while standing on his son's head.

The Renaissance was an age in which more individuals felt the value of
their human being.

Martin Luther was nailed to the church door at Wittenberg for selling
papal indulgences. He died a horrible death, being excommunicated by a
bull.

It was the painter Donatello's interest in the female nude that made
him the father of the Renaissance.

It was an age of great inventions and discoveries.
Gutenberg invented the Bible.

Sir Walter Raleigh is a historical figure because he invented cigarettes.

Another important invention was the circulation of blood.
Sir Francis Drake circumcised the world with a 100-foot clipper.

The government of England was a limited mockery.
Henry VIII found walking difficult because he had an abbess on his knee.

Queen Elizabeth was the "Virgin Queen."
As a queen she was a success.
When Elizabeth exposed herself before her troops, they all shouted "hurrah."
Then her navy went out and defeated the Spanish Armadillo.

The greatest writer of the Renaissance was William Shakespear.
Shakespear never made much money and is famous only because of his plays.
He lived in Windsor with his merry wives, writing tragedies, comedies
and errors.

In one of Shakespear's famous plays, Hamlet rations out his situation
by relieving himself in a long soliloquy.
In another, Lady Macbeth tries to convince Macbeth to kill the King by
attacking his manhood.
Romeo and Juliet are an example of a heroic couplet.

Writing at the same time as Shakespear was Miquel Cervantes.
He wrote "Donkey Hote".
The next great author was John Milton. Milton wrote "Paradise Lost."
Then his wife dies and he wrote "Paradise Regained."

During the Renaissance America began. Christopher Columbus was a great
navigator who discovered America while cursing about the Atlantic.
His ships were called the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Fe.

Later the Pilgrims crossed the Ocean, and the was called the Pilgrim's Progress.
When they landed at Plymouth Rock, they were greeted by Indians, who
came down the hill rolling their was hoops before them.

The Indian squabs carried porposies on their back.
Many of the Indian heroes were killed, along with their cabooses,
which proved very fatal to them.

The winter of 1620 was a hard one for the settlers.
Many people died and many babies were born.
Captain John Smith was responsible for all this.

One of the causes of the Revolutionary Wars was the English put tacks
in their tea. Also, the colonists would send their pacels through the
post without stamps.

During the War, Red Coats and Paul Revere was throwing balls over stone walls.
The dogs were barking and the peacocks crowing.
Finally, the colonists won the War and no longer had to pay for taxis.

Delegates from the original thirteen states formed the Contented Congress.
Thomas Jefferson, a Virgin, and Benjamin Franklin were two singers of
the Declaration of Independence.

Franklin had gone to Boston carrying all his clothes in his pocket and
a loaf of bread under each arm.

He invented electricity by rubbing cats backwards and declared "a
horse divided against itself cannot stand."

Franklin died in 1790 and is still dead.

George Washington married Matha Curtis and in due time became the
Father of Our Country.
Them the Constitution of the United States was adopted to secure
domestic hostility.

Under the Constitution the people enjoyed the right to keep bare arms.

Abraham Lincoln became America's greatest Precedent. Lincoln's mother
died in infancy, and he was born in a log cabin which he built with
his own hands.

When Lincoln was President, he wore only a tall silk hat.

He said, "In onion there is strength."

Abraham Lincoln write the Gettysburg address while traveling from
Washington to Gettysburg on the back of an envelope.

He also signed the Emasculation Proclamation, and the Fourteenth
Amendment gave the ex-Negroes citizenship.

But the Clue Clux Clan would torcher and lynch the ex-Negroes and
other innocent victims.

On the night of April 14, 1865, Lincoln went to the theater and got
shot in his seat by one of the actors in a moving picture show.
The believed assinator was John Wilkes Booth, a supposedl insane actor.
This ruined Booth's career.

Meanwhile in Europe, the enlightenment was a reasonable time.
Voltare invented electricity and also wrote a book called "Candy".

Gravity was invented by Issac Walton.
It is chiefly noticeable in the autumn, when the apples are flaling
off the trees.

Bach was the most famous composer in the world, and so was Handel.
Handel was half German, half Italian and half English.
He was very large.
Bach died from 1750 to the present.

Beethoven wrote music even though he was deaf.
He was so deaf he wrote loud music.
He took long walks in the forest even when everyone was calling for him.

Beethoven expired in 1827 and later died for this.

France was in a very serious state.
The French Revolution was accomplished before it happened.

The Marseillaise was the theme song of the French Revolution, and it
catapulted into Napoleon.

During the Napoleonic Wars, the crowned heads of Europe were trembling
in their shoes.
Then the Spanish gorrilas came down from the hills and nipped at
Napoleon's flanks.

Napoleon became ill with bladder problems and was very tense and unrestrained.
He wanted an heir to inheret his power, but since Josephine was a
baroness, she couldn't bear him any children.

The sun never set on the British Empire because the British Empire is
in the East and the sun sets in the West.

Queen Victoria was the longest queen.
She sat on a thorn for 63 years.
He (sic) reclining years and finally the end of her life were
exemplatory of a great personality.
Her death was the final event which ended her reign.

The nineteenth century was a time of many great inventions and thoughts.

The invention of the steamboat caused a network of rivers to spring up.

Cyrus McCormick invented the McCormick Raper, which did the work of a
hundred men.

Samuel Morse invented a code for telepathy.

Louis Pastuer discovered a cure for rabbis.

Charles Darwin was a naturailst who wrote the "Organ of the Species".

Madman Curie discovered radium.
And Karl Marx became one of the Marx Brothers.

The First World War, cause by the assignation of the Arch-Duck by a
surf, ushered in a new error in the anals of human history.