| raised the rains have levelled but we hear the pointers and can | 1 |
| gauge their compass for the melos yields the mode and the mode | 2 |
| the manners plicyman, plansiman, plousiman, plab. Tsin tsin tsin | 3 |
| tsin! The forefarther folkers for a prize of two peaches with | 4 |
| Ming, Ching and Shunny on the lie low lea. We'll sit down on | 5 |
| the hope of the ghouly ghost for the titheman troubleth but his | 6 |
| hantitat hies not here. They answer from their Zoans; Hear the | 7 |
| four of them! Hark torroar of them! I, says Armagh, and a'm | 8 |
| proud o'it. I, says Clonakilty, God help us! I, says Deansgrange, | 9 |
| and say nothing. I, says Barna, and whatabout it? Hee haw! Be- | 10 |
| fore he fell hill he filled heaven: a stream, alplapping streamlet, | 11 |
| coyly coiled um, cool of her curls: We were but thermites then, | 12 |
| wee, wee. Our antheap we sensed as a Hill of Allen, the Barrow | 13 |
| for an People, one Jotnursfjaell: and it was a grummelung amung | 14 |
| the porktroop that wonderstruck us as a thunder, yunder. | 15 |
|     Thus the unfacts, did we possess them, are too imprecisely | 16 |
| few to warrant our certitude, the evidencegivers by legpoll too | 17 |
| untrustworthily irreperible where his adjugers are semmingly | 18 |
| freak threes but his judicandees plainly minus twos. Neverthe- | 19 |
| less Madam's Toshowus waxes largely more lifeliked (entrance, | 20 |
| one kudos; exits, free) and our notional gullery is now com- | 21 |
| pletely complacent, an exegious monument, aerily perennious. | 22 |
| Oblige with your blackthorns; gamps, degrace! And there many | 23 |
| have paused before that exposure of him by old Tom Quad, a | 24 |
| flashback in which he sits sated, gowndabout, in clericalease ha- | 25 |
| bit, watching bland sol slithe dodgsomely into the nethermore, | 26 |
| a globule of maugdleness about to corrugitate his mild dewed | 27 |
| cheek and the tata of a tiny victorienne, Alys, pressed by his | 28 |
| limper looser. | 29 |
|     Yet certes one is. Eher the following winter had overed the | 30 |
| pages of nature's book and till Ceadurbar-atta-Cleath became | 31 |
| Dablena Tertia, the shadow of the huge outlander, maladik, mult- | 32 |
| vult, magnoperous, had bulked at the bar of a rota of tribunals in | 33 |
| manor hall as in thieves' kitchen, mid pillow talk and chithouse | 34 |
| chat, on Marlborough Green as through Molesworth Fields, here | 35 |
| sentenced pro tried with Jedburgh justice, there acquitted con- | 36 |