| when not in that order sundering in some different order, alter | 1 |
| three thirty and a hundred times by the binomial dioram and | 2 |
| the penic walls and the ind, the Inklespill legends and the rure, | 3 |
| the rule of the hoop and the blessons of expedience and the jus, | 4 |
| the jugicants of Pontius Pilax and all the mummyscrips in Sick | 5 |
| Bokes' Juncroom and the Chapters for the Cunning of the Chap- | 6 |
| ters of the Conning Fox by Tail. | 7 |
|     While that Mooksius with preprocession and with propre- | 8 |
| cession, duplicitly and diplussedly, was promulgating ipsofacts | 9 |
| and sadcontras this raskolly Gripos he had allbust seceded in | 10 |
| monophysicking his illsobordunates. But asawfulas he had | 11 |
| caught his base semenoyous sarchnaktiers to combuccinate upon | 12 |
| the silipses of his aspillouts and the acheporeoozers of his haggy- | 13 |
| own pneumax to synerethetise with the breadchestviousness of | 14 |
| his sweeatovular ducose sofarfully the loggerthuds of his sakel- | 15 |
| laries were fond at variance with the synodals of his somepooliom | 16 |
| and his babskissed nepogreasymost got the hoof from his philio- | 17 |
| quus. | 18 |
    Efter thousand yaws, O Gripes con my sheepskins, yow | 19 |
| will be belined to the world, enscayed Mookse the pius. | 20 |
    Ofter thousand yores, amsered Gripes the gregary, be the | 21 |
| goat of MacHammud's, yours may be still, O Mookse, more | 22 |
| botheared. | 23 |
    Us shall be chosen as the first of the last by the electress of | 24 |
| Vale Hollow, obselved the Mookse nobily, for par the unicum | 25 |
| of Elelijiacks, Us am in Our stabulary and that is what Ruby and | 26 |
| Roby fall for, blissim. | 27 |
|     The Pills, the Nasal Wash (Yardly's), the Army Man Cut, as | 28 |
| british as bondstrict and as straightcut as when that broken- | 29 |
| arched traveller from Nuzuland . . . | 30 |
    Wee, cumfused the Gripes limply, shall not even be the | 31 |
| last of the first, wee hope, when oust are visitated by the Veiled | 32 |
| Horror. And, he added: Mee are relying entirely, see the forte- | 33 |
| thurd of Elissabed, on the weightiness of mear's breath. Puffut! | 34 |
|     Unsightbared embouscher, relentless foe to social and business | 35 |
| succes! (Hourihaleine) It might have been a happy evening but . . . | 36 |