| (the best thing that could happen to it!) and attack the roulade | 1 |
| with a swift colpo di glottide to the lug (though Maace I will | 2 |
| insist was reclined from overdoing this, his recovery often being | 3 |
| slow) and then, O! on the third dead beat, O! to cluse her eyes | 4 |
| and aiopen her oath and see what spice I may send her. How? | 5 |
| Cease thee, cantatrickee! I fain would be solo. Arouse thee, my | 6 |
| valour! And save for e'er my true Bdur! | 7 |
|     I shall have a word to say in a few yards about the acoustic | 8 |
| and orchidectural management of the tonehall but, as ours is a | 9 |
| vivarious where one plant's breaf is a lunger planner's byscent | 10 |
| and you may not care for argon, it will be very convenient for | 11 |
| me for the emolument to pursue Burrus and Caseous for a rung | 12 |
| or two up their isocelating biangle. Every admirer has seen my | 13 |
| goulache of Marge (she is so like the sister, you don't know, and | 14 |
| they both dress A L I K E !) which I titled The Very Picture of | 15 |
| a Needlesswoman which in the presence ornates our national | 16 |
| cruetstand. This genre of portraiture of changes of mind in order | 17 |
| to be truly torse should evoke the bush soul of females so I am | 18 |
| leaving it to the experienced victim to complete the general | 19 |
| suggestion by the mental addition of a wallopy bound or, should | 20 |
| the zulugical zealot prefer it, a congorool teal. The hatboxes | 21 |
| which composed Rhomba, lady Trabezond (Marge in her ex- | 22 |
| celsis), also comprised the climactogram up which B and C may | 23 |
| fondly be imagined ascending and are suggestive of gentlemen's | 24 |
| spring modes, these modes carrying us back to the superimposed | 25 |
| claylayers of eocene and pleastoseen formation and the gradual | 26 |
| morphological changes in our body politic which Professor | 27 |
Ebahi-Ahuri of Philadespoinis (Ill) whose bluebutterbust I | 28 |
have just given his coupe de grass to neatly names a boîte à | 29 |
| surprises. The boxes, if I may break the subject gently, are worth | 30 |
| about fourpence pourbox but I am inventing a more patent pro- | 31 |
| cess, foolproof and pryperfect (I should like to ask that Shedlock | 32 |
| Homes person who is out for removing the roofs of our criminal | 33 |
| classics by what deductio ad domunum he hopes de tacto to detect | 34 |
| anything unless he happens of himself, movibile tectu, to have a | 35 |
| slade off) after which they can be reduced to a fragment of their | 36 |