| of all those fourlegged ems: and why spell dear god with a big | 1 |
| thick dhee (why, O why, O why?): the cut and dry aks and wise | 2 |
| form of the semifinal; and, eighteenthly or twentyfourthly, but | 3 |
| at least, thank Maurice, lastly when all is zed and done, the pene- | 4 |
| lopean patience of its last paraphe, a colophon of no fewer than | 5 |
seven hundred and thirtytwo strokes tailed by a leaping lasso | 6 |
| who thus at all this marvelling but will press on hotly to see the | 7 |
| vaulting feminine libido of those interbranching ogham sex up- | 8 |
| andinsweeps sternly controlled and easily repersuaded by the | 9 |
| uniform matteroffactness of a meandering male fist? | 10 |
|     Duff-Muggli, who now may be quoted by very kind arrange- | 11 |
| ment (his dectroscophonious photosensition under suprasonic | 12 |
| light control may be logged for by our none too distant futures | 13 |
| as soon astone values can be turned out from Chromophilomos, | 14 |
| Limited at a millicentime the microamp), first called this kind of | 15 |
| paddygoeasy partnership the ulykkhean or tetrachiric or quad- | 16 |
| rumane or ducks and drakes or debts and dishes perplex (v. Some | 17 |
| Forestallings over that Studium of Sexophonologistic Schizophre- | 18 |
| nesis, vol. xxiv, pp. 2-555) after the wellinformed observation, | 19 |
| made miles apart from the Master by Tung-Toyd (cf. Later | 20 |
| Frustrations amengst the Neomugglian Teachings abaft the Semi- | 21 |
| unconscience, passim) that in the case of the littleknown periplic | 22 |
| bestteller popularly associated with the names of the wretched | 23 |
| mariner (trianforan deffwedoff our plumsucked pattern shape- | 24 |
| keeper) a Punic admiralty report, From MacPerson's Oshean | 25 |
| Round By the Tides of Jason's Cruise, had been cleverly capsized | 26 |
| and saucily republished as a dodecanesian baedeker of the every- | 27 |
| tale-a-treat-in-itself variety which could hope satisfactorily to | 28 |
| tickle me gander as game as your goose. | 29 |
|     The unmistaken identity of the persons in the Tiberiast du- | 30 |
| plex came to light in the most devious of ways. The original | 31 |
| document was in what is known as Hanno O'Nonhanno's un- | 32 |
| brookable script, that is to say, it showed no signs of punctua- | 33 |
| tion of any sort. Yet on holding the verso against a lit rush this | 34 |
| new book of Morses responded most remarkably to the silent | 35 |
| query of our world's oldest light and its recto let out the piquant | 36 |