However, I can't imagine a typical Yorkshireman who would use "thee" and "thou" being sufficiently delicate as to use the word "thine". I do agree with Janus though, that "art" is the verb required in "Who art thou?"
What may be a mistake is the use of thee instead of thou for the nominative — this shift of Quakers to using thee rather than thou took place approximately one hundred years after the novel was set, in the late eighteenth century. On the other hand, the author may have deliberately decided to use this anachronistic language for artistic reasons.
Vaarwel is the Dutch equivalent of farewell, which is not quite the same as fare thee well (‘vare [het] jou wel’). Specifically, farewell and fare thee well are historically two different constructions using two different meanings of the verb fare (imperative ‘get on, manage’ vs. subjunctive ‘happen, turn out’).
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