| bulls!): from Livland, hoks zivios, from Lettland, skall vives! | 1 |
| With Impress of Asias and Queen Columbia for her pairanymphs | 2 |
| and the singing sands for herbrides' music: goosegaze annoynted | 3 |
| uns, canailles canzoned and me to she her shyblumes lifted: and | 4 |
| I pudd a name and wedlock boltoned round her the which to | 5 |
| carry till her grave, my durdin dearly, Appia Lippia Pluviabilla, | 6 |
| whiles I herr lifer amstell and been: I chained her chastemate to | 7 |
| grippe fiuming snugglers, her chambrett I bestank so to spunish | 8 |
| furiosos: I was her hochsized, her cleavunto, her everest, she was | 9 |
| my annie, my lauralad, my pisoved: who cut her ribbons when | 10 |
| nought my prowes? who expoused that havenliness to beacha- | 11 |
| lured ankerrides when not I, freipforter?: in trinity huts they | 12 |
| met my dame, pick of their poke for me: when I foregather 'twas | 13 |
| my sumbad, if I farseeker itch my list: had I not workit in my | 14 |
| cattagut with dogshunds' crotts to clene and had I not gifted | 15 |
| of my coataways, constantonoble's aim: and, fortiffed by my | 16 |
| right as man of capitol, I did umgyrdle her about, my vermin- | 17 |
| celly vinagerette, with all loving kindness as far as in man's | 18 |
| might it lay and enfranchised her to liberties of fringes: and I | 19 |
| gave until my lilienyounger turkeythighs soft goods and hard- | 20 |
| ware (catalogue, passim) and ladderproof hosiery lines (see | 21 |
| stockinger's raiment), cocquette coiffs (see Agnes' hats) and | 22 |
| peningsworths of the best taste of knaggs of jets and silvered | 23 |
| waterroses and geegaws of my pretty novelties and wispywaspy | 24 |
| frocks of redferns and lauralworths, trancepearances such as | 25 |
| women cattle bare and peltries piled, the peak of Pim's and | 26 |
| Slyne's and Sparrow's, loomends day lumineused luxories on | 27 |
| looks, La Primamère, Pyrrha Pyrrhine, Or de Reinebeau, Sourire | 28 |
| d'Hiver and a crinoline, wide a shire, and pattens for her trilibies | 29 |
| that know she might the tortuours of the boots and bedes of | 30 |
| wampun with to toy and a murcery glaze of shard to mirrow, for | 31 |
| all daintiness by me and theetime, the cupandnaggin hour: and | 32 |
| I wound around my swanchen's neckplace a school of shells of | 33 |
| moyles marine to swing their saysangs in her silents: and, upping | 34 |
| her at king's count, her aldritch cry oloss unheading, what | 35 |
| though exceeding bitter, I pierced her beak with order of the | 36 |