| of findingos, with a shillto shallto slipny stripny, in he skittled. | 1 |
| Swikey! The allwhite poors guardiant, pulpably of balltossic | 2 |
| stummung, was literally astundished over the painful sake, how | 3 |
| he burstteself, which he was gone to, where he intent to did he, | 4 |
| whether you think will, wherend the whole current of the after- | 5 |
| noon whats the souch of a surch hads of hits of hims, urged and | 6 |
| staggered thereto in his countryports at the caledosian capacity | 7 |
| for Lieutuvisky of the caftan's wineskin and even more so, | 8 |
| during, looking his bigmost astonishments, it was said him, | 9 |
| aschu, fun the concerned outgift of the dead med dirt, how that, | 10 |
| arrahbejibbers, conspuent to the dominical order and exking | 11 |
| noblish permish, he was namely coon at bringer at home two | 12 |
| gallonts,as per royal,full poultry till his murder. Nip up and nab | 13 |
| it! | 14 |
|     Polthergeistkotzdondherhoploits ! Kick? What mother? Whose | 15 |
| porter? Which pair? Why namely coon? But our undilligence has | 16 |
| been plutherotested so enough of such porterblack lowneess, too | 17 |
| base for printink! Perpending that Putterick O'Purcell pulls the | 18 |
| coald stoane out of Winterwater's and Silder Seas sing for Harreng | 19 |
| our Keng,sept okt nov dez John Phibbs march! We cannot,in | 20 |
| mercy or justice nor on the lovom for labaryntos,stay here for | 21 |
| the residence of our existings,discussing Tamstar Ham of Ten- | 22 |
| man's thirst. | 23 |
|     JUSTIUS (to himother): Brawn is my name and broad is my | 24 |
| nature and I've breit on my brow and all's right with every fea- | 25 |
| ture and I'll brune this bird or Brown Bess's bung's gone bandy. | 26 |
| I'm the boy to bruise and braise. Baus! | 27 |
|     Stand forth, Nayman of Noland (for no longer will I follow | 28 |
| you obliquelike through the inspired form of the third person | 29 |
| singular and the moods and hesitensies of the deponent but ad- | 30 |
| dress myself to you, with the empirative of my vendettative, pro- | 31 |
| vocative and out direct), stand forth, come boldly, jolly me, | 32 |
| move me, zwilling though I am, to laughter in your true colours | 33 |
| ere you be back for ever till I give you your talkingto! Shem | 34 |
| Macadamson, you know me and I know you and all your she- | 35 |
| meries. Where have you been in the uterim, enjoying yourself | 36 |