| by his ain fireside,wondering was it hebrew set to himmeltones | 1 |
| or the quicksilversong of qwaternions; his troubles may be over | 2 |
| but his doubles have still to come; the lobster pot that crabbed | 3 |
| our keel, the garden pet that spoiled our squeezed peas; he stands | 4 |
| in a lovely park, sea is not far, importunate towns of X, Y and | 5 |
| Z are easily over reached; is an excrescence to civilised humanity | 6 |
| and but a wart on Europe; wanamade singsigns to soundsense | 7 |
| an yit he wanna git all his flesch nuemaid motts truly prural and | 8 |
| plusible; has excisively large rings and is uncustomarily perfumed; | 9 |
| lusteth ath he listeth the cleah whithpeh of a themise; is a prince | 10 |
| of the fingallian in a hiberniad of hoolies; has a hodge to wherry | 11 |
| him and a frenchy to curry him and a brabanson for his beeter and | 12 |
| a fritz at his switch; was waylaid of a parker and beschotten by a | 13 |
| buckeley; kicks lintils when he's cuppy and casts Jacob's arroroots, | 14 |
| dime after dime, to poor waifstrays on the perish; reads the charms | 15 |
| of H. C. Endersen all the weaks of his evenin and the crimes of | 16 |
| Ivaun the Taurrible every strongday morn; soaps you soft to your | 17 |
| face and slaps himself when he's badend; owns the bulgiest bung- | 18 |
| barrel that ever was tiptapped in the privace of the Mullingar | 19 |
| Inn; was bom with a nuasilver tongue in his mouth and went | 20 |
| round the coast of Iron with his lift hand to the scene; raised but | 21 |
| two fingers and yet smelt it would day; for whom it is easier to | 22 |
| found a see in Ebblannah than for I or you to find a dubbeltye | 23 |
| in Dampsterdamp; to live with whom is a lifemayor and to know | 24 |
| whom a liberal education; was dipped in Hoily Olives and chrys- | 25 |
| med in Scent Otooles; hears cricket on the earth but annoys the | 26 |
| life out of predikants; still turns the durc's ear of Darius to the | 27 |
| now thoroughly infurioted one of God; made Man with juts | 28 |
| that jerk and minted money mong maney; likes a six acup pud- | 29 |
| ding when he's come whome sweetwhome; has come through all | 30 |
| the eras of livsadventure from moonshine and shampaying down | 31 |
| to clouts and pottled porter; woollem the farsed, hahnreich the | 32 |
| althe, charge the sackend, writchad the thord; if a mandrake | 33 |
| shricked to convultures at last surviving his birth the weibduck | 34 |
| will wail bitternly over the rotter's resurrection; loses weight in | 35 |
| the moon night but gird girder by the sundawn; with one touch | 36 |