Identify the errors in verb forms and write down the correct forms of the verbs.
- "Wonderful!" he said to himself as he studied the book. "Wonderful!"
- The book was an old one, yellowed with age - just the kind of book my uncle enjoyed the most.
- "Did you want me for something, Uncle?" I ask.
- "It is the Heims-Kringla of Snorre Tarleson," he said. "The famous Icelandic author of the twelfth century. It is a true account of the Norwegian princes who ruled Iceland."
- "What language is it in?" I asked, hoped that it would be a German translation that I can read. But my uncle would have nothing of translations - only originals would do.
- "It is a Runic manuscript," he said. "The language of the original polulation of Iceland." He is angry at my ignorance.
- My uncle picked up the book to show me the strange letters of this language and a scrap of paper falls from between two of the yellowed pages.
- My uncle seizes the paper like a hungry man snatch at a morsel of bread. It was an ancient parchment, about three inches by five inches, with strange-looked characters written all over it.
- "It is Runic," my uncle declares, his voice and fingers trembling.
- I look at it closely. Little do I know then that this small parchment would lead us on one of the most wonderous adventures ever known to man.
- But while my uncle could read Runic, he cannot not decipher the meaning of the letters on the parchment.
- Just then the cook calls up to us that dinner was ready. "I cannot be bothered with dinner!" my uncle yelled.
- But I was hungry and went to dinner. I was just finishing the last of my dessert and wine when I hear my uncle roaring for me to come at once. I leap for the stairs to his study, so loud and fierce was his call.