| haunt of the hungred bordles, as it is told me. Shop
Illicit, | 1 |
| flourishing like a lordmajor or a buaboabaybohm, litting
flop | 2 |
| a deadlop (aloose!) to lee but lifting a bennbranch a
yardalong | 3 |
| (Ivoeh!) the breezy side (for showm!), the height of
Brew- | 4 |
| ster's chimpney and as broad below as Phineas Barnum;
humph- | 5 |
| ing his share of the showthers is senken on him he's such
a | 6 |
| grandfallar, with a pocked wife in pickle that's a flyfire and
three | 7 |
| lice nittle clinkers, two twilling bugs and one midgit
pucelle. | 8 |
| And aither he cursed and recursed and was everseen doing
what | 9 |
| your fourfootlers saw or he was never done seeing what you cool- | 10 |
| pigeons know, weep the clouds aboon for smiledown witnesses, | 11 |
| and that'll do now about the fairyhees and the frailyshees. | 12 |
| Though Eset fibble it to the zephiroth and Artsa zoom it round | 13 |
| her heavens for ever. Creator he has created for his creatured | 14 |
| ones a creation. White monothoid? Red theatrocrat? And all the | 15 |
| pinkprophets cohalething? Very much so! But however 'twas | 16 |
| 'tis sure for one thing, what sherif Toragh voucherfors and | 17 |
| Mapqiq makes put out, that the man, Humme the Cheapner, | 18 |
| Esc, overseen as we thought him, yet a worthy of the naym, | 19 |
| came at this timecoloured place where we live in our paroqial | 20 |
| fermament one tide on another, with a bumrush in a hull of a | 21 |
| wherry, the twin turbane dhow, The Bey for Dybbling, this | 22 |
| archipelago's first visiting schooner, with a wicklowpattern | 23 |
| waxenwench at her prow for a figurehead, the deadsea dugong | 24 |
| updipdripping from his depths, and has been repreaching him- | 25 |
| self like a fishmummer these siktyten years ever since, his shebi | 26 |
| by his shide, adi and aid, growing hoarish under his turban and | 27 |
| changing cane sugar into sethulose starch (Tuttut's cess to him!) | 28 |
| as also that, batin the bulkihood he bloats about when innebbi- | 29 |
| ated, our old offender was humile, commune and ensectuous | 30 |
| from his nature, which you may gauge after the bynames was | 31 |
| put under him, in lashons of languages, (honnein suit and | 32 |
| praisers be!) and, totalisating him, even hamissim of himashim | 33 |
| that he, sober serious, he is ee and no counter he who will be | 34 |
| ultimendly respunchable for the hubbub caused in Eden- | 35 |
| borough. | 36 |