| lugger. Stolp, tief, stolp, come bag to Moy Eireann! And the | 1 |
| Norweeger's capstan swaradeed, some blowfish out of schooling: | 2 |
| All lykkehud! Below taiyor he ikan heavin sets. But they broken | 3 |
| waters and they made whole waters at they surfered bark to the | 4 |
| lots of his vauce. And aweigh he yankered on the Norgean run so | 5 |
| that seven sailend sonnenrounders was he breastbare to the brina- | 6 |
| bath, where bottoms out has fatthoms full, fram Franz José | 7 |
| Land til Cabo Thormendoso, evenstarde and risingsoon. Up the | 8 |
| Rivor Tanneiry and down the Golfe Desombres. Farety days and | 9 |
| fearty nights. Enjoy yourself, O maremen! And the tides made, | 10 |
| veer and haul, and the times marred, rear and fall, and, holey | 11 |
| bucket, dinned he raign! | 12 |
    Hump! Hump! bassed the broaders-in-laugh with a quick | 13 |
| piddysnip that wee halfbit a second. | 14 |
    I will do that, sazd Kersse, mainingstaying the rigout for her | 15 |
| wife's lairdship. Nett sew? they hunched back at the earpicker. | 16 |
|     But old sporty, as endth lord, in ryehouse reigner, he nought | 17 |
| feared crimp or cramp of shore sharks, plotsome to getsome. It | 18 |
| was whol niet godthaab of errol Loritz off his Cape of Good | 19 |
| Howthe and his trippertrice loretta lady, a maomette to his | 20 |
| monetone, with twy twy twinky her stone hairpins, only not, | 21 |
| if not, a queen of Prancess their telling tabled who was for his | 22 |
| seeming a casket through the heavenly, nay, heart of the sweet | 23 |
| (had he hows would he keep her as niece as a fiddle!) but in the | 24 |
| mealtub it was wohl yeas sputsbargain what, rarer of recent, an | 25 |
| occasional conformity, he, with Muggleton Muckers, alwagers | 26 |
| allalong most certainly allowed, as pilerinnager's grace to peti- | 27 |
| tionists of right, of the three blend cupstoomerries with their | 28 |
| customed spirits, the Gill gob, the Burklley bump, the Wallisey | 29 |
| wanderlook, having their ceilidhe gailydhe in his shaunty irish. | 30 |
| Group drinkards maaks grope thinkards or how reads rotary, | 31 |
| jewr of a chrestend, respecting the otherdogs churchees, so long | 32 |
| plubs will be plebs but plabs by low frequency amplification may | 33 |
| later agree to have another. For the people of the shed are the | 34 |
| sure ads of all quorum. Lorimers and leathersellers, skinners and | 35 |
| salters, pewterers and paperstainers, parishclerks, fletcherbowyers, | 36 |