| girdlers, mercers, cordwainers and first, and not last, the weavers. | 1 |
| Our library he is hoping to ye public. | 2 |
|     Innholder, upholder. | 3 |
    Sets on sayfohrt! Go to it, agitator! they bassabosuned over | 4 |
| the flowre of their hoose. Godeown moseys and skeep thy beeble | 5 |
| bee! | 6 |
    I will do that, acordial, by mine hand, sazd Kersse, piece | 7 |
| Cod, and in the flap of a jacket, ructified after his nap of a blankit | 8 |
| their o'cousin, as sober as the ship's husband he was one my god- | 9 |
| father when he told me saw whileupon I am now well and jurily | 10 |
| sagasfide after the boonamorse the widower, according to rider, | 11 |
| following pnomoneya, he is consistently blown to Adams. So | 12 |
| help me boyg who keeps the book! | 13 |
|     Whereofter, behest his suzerain law the Thing and the pilsener | 14 |
| had the baar, Recknar Jarl, (they called him Roguenor, Irl call | 15 |
| him) still passing the change-a-pennies, pengeypigses, a several | 16 |
| sort of coyne in livery, pushed their whisper in his hairing, | 17 |
| (seemed, a some shipshep's sottovoxed stalement, a dearagadye, | 18 |
| to hasvey anyone doing duty for duff point of dorkland compors) | 19 |
| the same to the good ind ast velut discharge after which he had | 20 |
| exemptied more than orphan for the ballast of his nurtural life. | 21 |
| And threw a cast. A few pigses and hare you are and no chicking, | 22 |
| tribune's tribute, if you guess mimic miening. Meanly in his lewd- | 23 |
| brogue take your tyon coppels token, with this good sixtric | 24 |
| from mine runbag of juwels. Nummers that is summus that is | 25 |
| toptip that is bottombay that is Twomeys that is Digges that is | 26 |
| Heres. In the frameshape of hard mettles. For we all would fain | 27 |
| make glories. It is minely well mint. | 28 |
|     Thus as count the costs of liquid courage, a bullyon gauger, | 29 |
| stowed stivers pengapung in bulk in hold (fight great finnence! | 30 |
| brayvoh, little bratton!) keen his kenning, the queriest of the | 31 |
| crew, with that fellow fearing for his own misshapes, should he be | 32 |
| himpself namesakely a foully fallen dissentant from the peripu- | 33 |
| lator, sued towerds Meade-Reid and Lynn-Duff, rubbing the | 34 |
| hodden son of a pookal, leaden be light, lather be dry and it be | 35 |
| drownd on all the ealsth beside,how the camel and where the | 36 |