| shipchild with the waif of his bosun, Dunmow's flitcher with | 1 |
| duck-on-the-rock, down the scales, the way they went up, | 2 |
| under talls and threading tormentors, shunning the startraps and | 3 |
| slipping in sliders, risking a runway, ruing reveals, from Elder | 4 |
| Arbor to La Puirée, eskipping the clockback, crystal in carbon, | 5 |
| sweetheartedly. Hot and cold and electrickery with attendance | 6 |
| and lounge and promenade free. In spite of all that science could | 7 |
| boot or art could eke. Bolt the grinden. Cave and can em. | 8 |
| Single wrecks for the weak, double axe for the mail, and quick | 9 |
| queck quack for the radiose. Renove that bible. You will never | 10 |
| have post in your pocket unless you have brasse on your plate. | 11 |
| Beggards outdoor. Goat to the Endth, thou slowguard! Mind | 12 |
| the Monks and their Grasps. Scrape your souls. Commit no | 13 |
| miracles. Postpone no bills. Respect the uniform. Hold the raa- | 14 |
| bers for the kunning his plethoron. Let leash the dooves to the | 15 |
| cooin her coynth. Hatenot havenots. Share the wealth and spoil | 16 |
| the weal. Peg the pound to tom the devil. My time is on draught. | 17 |
| Bottle your own. Love my label like myself. Earn before eating. | 18 |
| Drudge after drink. Credit tomorrow. Follow my dealing. Fetch | 19 |
| my price. Buy not from dives. Sell not to freund. Herenow chuck | 20 |
| english and learn to pray plain. Lean on your lunch. No cods | 21 |
| before Me. Practise preaching. Think in your stomach. Import | 22 |
| through the nose. By faith alone. Season's weather. Gomorrha. | 23 |
| Salong. Lots feed from my tidetable. Oil's wells in our lands. Let | 24 |
| earwigger's wivable teach you the dance! | 25 |
|     Now their laws assist them and ease their fall ! | 26 |
|     For they met and mated and bedded and buckled and got and | 27 |
| gave and reared and raised and brought Thawland within Har | 28 |
| danger, and turned them, tarrying to the sea and planted and | 29 |
| plundered and pawned our souls and pillaged the pounds of the | 30 |
| extramurals and fought and feigned with strained relations and | 31 |
| bequeathed us their ills and recrutched cripples gait and under- | 32 |
| mined lungachers, manplanting seven sisters while wan warm- | 33 |
| wooed woman scrubbs, and turned out coats and removed their | 34 |
| origins and never learned the first day's lesson and tried to | 35 |
| mingle and managed to save and feathered foes' nests and fouled | 36 |