| there an iota of from the faust to the lost. And that is at most re- | 1 |
| doubtedly an overthrew of each and ilkermann of us, I persuade | 2 |
| myself, before Gow, gentlemen, so true as this are my kopfinpot | 3 |
| astrode on these is my boardsoldereds. | 4 |
|     It sollecited, grobbling hummley, his roundhouse of seven | 5 |
| orofaces, of all, guiltshouters or crimemummers, to be sayd by, | 6 |
| codnops, advices for, free of gracies, scamps encloded, com- | 7 |
| petitioning them, if they had steadied Jura or when they had | 8 |
| raced Messafissi, husband of your wifebetter or bestman botcha- | 9 |
| lover of you yourself, how comes ever a body in our taylorised | 10 |
| world to selve out thishis, whither it gives a primeum nobilees | 11 |
| for our notomise or naught, the farst wriggle from the ubivence, | 12 |
| whereom is man, that old offender, nother man, wheile he is | 13 |
| asame. And fullexampling. The pints in question. With some by- | 14 |
| spills. And sicsecs to provim hurtig. Soup's on! | 15 |
    A time. And a find time. Whenin aye was a kiddling. And | 16 |
| the tarikies held sowansopper. Let there beam a frishfrey. And | 17 |
| they sodhe gudhe rudhe brodhe wedhe swedhe medhe in the | 18 |
| kanddledrum. I have just (let us suppraise) been reading in a | 19 |
(suppressed) book it is notwithstempting by meassures long | 20 |
and limited the latterpress is eminently legligible and the paper, | 21 |
| so he eagerly seized upon, has scarsely been buttered in works of | 22 |
| previous publicity wholebeit in keener notcase would I turf aside | 23 |
| for pastureuration. Packen paper paineth whomto is sacred | 24 |
| scriptured sign. Who straps it scraps it that might, if ashed, have | 25 |
| healped. Enough, however, have I read of it, like my good bedst | 26 |
| friend, to augur in the hurry of the times that it will cocommend | 27 |
| the widest circulation and a reputation coextensive with its merits | 28 |
| when inthrusted into safe and pious hands upon so edifying a | 29 |
| mission as it, I can see, as is his. It his ambullished with expurga- | 30 |
| tive plates, replete in information and accampaigning the action | 31 |
| passiom, slopbang, whizzcrash, boomarattling from burst to | 32 |
| past, as I have just been seeing, with my warmest venerections, | 33 |
| of a timmersome townside upthecountrylifer, (Guard place the | 34 |
| town!) allthose everwhalmed upon that preposterous blank seat, | 35 |
| before the wordcraft of this early woodcutter, a master of vignett- | 36 |