| earth and all it has gone through and by all means, after a good | 1 |
| ground kiss to Terracussa and for wars luck our lefftoff's flung | 2 |
| over our home homoplate, cling to it as with drowning hands, | 3 |
| hoping against hope all the while that, by the light of philo- | 4 |
| phosy, (and may she never folsage us!) things will begin to clear | 5 |
| up a bit one way or another within the next quarrel of an hour | 6 |
| and be hanged to them as ten to one they will too, please the pigs, | 7 |
| as they ought to categorically, as, stricly between ourselves,there | 8 |
| is a limit to all things so this will never do. | 9 |
|     For, with that farmfrow's foul flair for that flayfell foxfetor, | 10 |
| (the calamite's columitas calling for calamitous calamitance) who | 11 |
| that scrutinising marvels at those indignant whiplooplashes; those | 12 |
| so prudently bolted or blocked rounds; the touching reminiscence | 13 |
| of an incompletet trail or dropped final; a round thousand whirli- | 14 |
| gig glorioles, prefaced by (alas!) now illegible airy plumeflights, | 15 |
| all tiberiously ambiembellishing the initials majuscule of Ear- | 16 |
wicker: the meant to be baffling chrismon trilithon sign , finally | 17 |
| called after some his hes hecitency Hec,which, moved contra- | 18 |
watchwise, represents his title in sigla as the smaller , fontly | 19 |
| called following a certain change of state of grace of nature alp | 20 |
| or delta, when single, stands for or tautologically stands beside | 21 |
| the consort: (though for that matter, since we have heard from | 22 |
| Cathay cyrcles how the hen is not mirely a tick or two after the | 23 |
first fifth fourth of the second eighth twelfth siangchang | 24 |
hongkong sansheneul but yirely the other and thirtieth of the | 25 |
| ninth from the twentieth, our own vulgar 432 and 1132 irre- | 26 |
| spectively, why not take the former for a village inn, the latter | 27 |
| for an upsidown bridge, a multiplication marking for crossroads | 28 |
| ahead, which you like pothook for the family gibbet, their old | 29 |
| fourwheedler for the bucker's field, a tea anyway for a tryst | 30 |
| someday, and his onesidemissing for an allblind alley leading to | 31 |
| an Irish plot in the Champ de Mors, not?) the steady monologuy | 32 |
| of the interiors; the pardonable confusion for which some blame | 33 |
| the cudgel and more blame the soot but unthanks to which | 34 |
| the pees with their caps awry are quite as often as not taken | 35 |
| for kews with their tails in their or are quite as often as not | 36 |