| yord! With harm and aches till farther alters! Wild primates not | 1 |
| stop him frem at rearing a writing in handy antics. Nom de | 2 |
| plume! Gout strap Fenlanns! And send Jarge for Mary Ink- | 3 |
| lenders! And daunt you logh if his vineshanky's schwemmy! | 4 |
| For he is the general, make no mistake in he. He is General | 5 |
| Jinglesome. | 6 |
|     Go in for scribenery with the satiety of arthurs in S.P.Q.R.ish | 7 |
| and inform to the old sniggering publicking press and its nation | 8 |
| of sheepcopers about the whole plighty troth between them, ma- | 9 |
| lady of milady made melodi of malodi, she, the lalage of lyon- | 10 |
| esses, and him, her knave arrant. To Wildrose La Gilligan from | 11 |
| Croppy Crowhore. For all within crystal range. | 12 |
|     Ukalepe. Loathers' leave. Had Days. Nemo in Patria. The Luncher Out. | 13 |
| Skilly and Carubdish. A Wondering Wreck. From the Mer- | 14 |
| maids' Tavern. Bullyfamous. Naughtsycalves. Mother of Misery. | 15 |
| Walpurgas Nackt. | 16 |
|     Maleesh! He would bare to untired world of Leimunconon- | 17 |
| nulstria (and what a strip poker globbtrottel they pairs would | 18 |
| looks!) how wholefallows, his guffer, the sabbatarian (might | 19 |
| faction split his beard!), he too had a great big oh in the | 20 |
| megafundum of his tomashunders and how her Lettyshape, his | 21 |
| gummer, that congealed sponsar, she had never cessed at waking | 22 |
| malters among the jemassons since the duft that meataxe delt | 23 |
| her made her microchasm as gap as down low. So they fished | 24 |
| in the kettle and fought free and if she bit his tailibout all hat | 25 |
| tiffin for thea. He would jused sit it all write down just as he | 26 |
| would jused set it up all writhefully rate in blotch and void, | 27 |
| yielding to no man in hymns ignorance,seeing how heartsilly | 28 |
| sorey he was, owning to the condrition of his bikestool. And, | 29 |
| reading off his fleshskin and writing with his quillbone, fillfull | 30 |
| ninequires with it for his auditers, Caxton and Pollock, a most | 31 |
| moraculous jeeremyhead sindbook for all the peoples, under the | 32 |
| presidency of the suchess of sceaunonsceau, a hadtobe heldin, | 33 |
| thoroughly enjoyed by many so meny on block at Boyrut season | 34 |
| and for their account ottorly admired by her husband in sole in- | 35 |
| timacy, about whose told his innersense and the grusomehed's | 36 |