| door, or leaning out of the chair, or kneeling under the sofa- | 1 |
| cover and setting on the souptureen, getting into their way | 2 |
| something barbarous, changing the one wet underdown convi- | 3 |
| brational bed or they used to slumper under, when hope was there | 4 |
| no more, and putting on their half a hat and falling over all synop- | 5 |
| ticals and a panegyric and repeating themselves, like svvollovv- | 6 |
| ing, like the time they were dadging the talkeycook that chased | 7 |
| them, look look all round the stool, walk everywhere for a jool, | 8 |
| to break fyre to all the rancers, to collect all and bits of brown, | 9 |
| the rathure's evelopment in spirits of time in all fathom of space | 10 |
| and slooping around in a bawneen and bath slippers and go away | 11 |
| to Oldpatrick and see a doctor Walker. And after that so glad | 12 |
| they had their night tentacles and there they used to be, flapping | 13 |
| and cycling, and a dooing a doonloop, panementically, around | 14 |
| the waists of the ships, in the wake of their good old Foehn | 15 |
| again, as tyred as they were, at their windswidths in the | 16 |
| waveslength, the clipperbuilt and the five fourmasters and | 17 |
| Lally of the cleftoft bagoderts and Roe of the fair cheats, ex- | 18 |
| changing fleas from host to host, with arthroposophia, and he | 19 |
| selling him before he forgot, issle issle, after having prealably | 20 |
| dephlegmatised his gutterful of throatyfrogs, with a lungible fong | 21 |
| in his suckmouth ear, while the dear invoked to the coolun dare | 22 |
| by a palpabrows lift left no doubt in his minder, till he was in- | 23 |
| stant and he was trustin, sister soul in brother hand, the subjects | 24 |
| being their passion grand, that one fresh from the cow about | 25 |
| Aithne Meithne married a mailde and that one too from Engr- | 26 |
| vakon saga abooth a gooth a gev a gotheny egg and the park- | 27 |
| side pranks of quality queens, katte efter kinne, for Earl Hooved- | 28 |
| soon's choosing and Huber and Harman orhowwhen theeupon- | 29 |
| thus (chchch!) eysolt of binnoculises memostinmust egotum | 30 |
| sabcunsciously senses upers the deprofundity of multimathema- | 31 |
| tical immaterialities wherebejubers in the pancosmic urge the | 32 |
| allimmanence of that which Itself is Itself Alone (hear, O hear, | 33 |
| Caller Errin!) exteriorises on this ourherenow plane in disunited | 34 |
| solod, likeward and gushious bodies with (science, say!) peril- | 35 |
| whitened passionpanting pugnoplangent intuitions of reunited | 36 |