Mischief Night

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Jamiednm

Player Valuation: £40m
I would’ve posted this last night, but I was arrested for loitering.

Did you chaps get up to any mischief last night? Did you lash eggs at a Church, put your boot through a Rabbit hutch or murder anyone?

What do you think of these people like yourselves that go around causing mischief, taking justification from a centuries-old tradition?
 

I would’ve posted this last night, but I was arrested for loitering.

Did you chaps get up to any mischief last night? Did you lash eggs at a Church, put your boot through a Rabbit hutch or murder anyone?

What do you think of these people like yourselves that go around causing mischief, taking justification from a centuries-old tradition?

Mischief last night? Nah.

Tonight? Also nah.
 
I would’ve posted this last night, but I was arrested for loitering.

Did you chaps get up to any mischief last night? Did you lash eggs at a Church, put your boot through a Rabbit hutch or murder anyone?

What do you think of these people like yourselves that go around causing mischief, taking justification from a centuries-old tradition?
Bit early to be smashed out of your brains isn't it?
 
I would’ve posted this last night, but I was arrested for loitering.

Did you chaps get up to any mischief last night? Did you lash eggs at a Church, put your boot through a Rabbit hutch or murder anyone?

What do you think of these people like yourselves that go around causing mischief, taking justification from a centuries-old tradition?

...I can categorically report that nobody ‘lashed me at a church!!’
 

Mischief night, is that even a thing, like a traditional thing ?

It dates back to the 1700s apparently. In parts of the North of England, they’d suspend certain laws for the night and people would get up to harmless capers like swapping signs around and throwing cabbages at a bank.

These days, you can knife a tramp and burn his corpse and pass it off as ‘mischief night’.
 
It dates back to the 1700s apparently. In parts of the North of England, they’d suspend certain laws for the night and people would get up to harmless capers like swapping signs around and throwing cabbages at a bank.

These days, you can knife a tramp and burn his corpse and pass it off as ‘mischief night’.

All souls isn't it? A day for respecting the deceased.
 
It dates back to the 1700s apparently. In parts of the North of England, they’d suspend certain laws for the night and people would get up to harmless capers like swapping signs around and throwing cabbages at a bank.

These days, you can knife a tramp and burn his corpse and pass it off as ‘mischief night’.

I threw a lettuce at a bank once, just cos.
 


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