| quested that no cobsmoking, spitting, pubchat, wrastle rounds, | 1 |
| coarse courting, smut, etc, will take place amongst those hours | 2 |
| so devoted to repose. Look before behind before you strip you. | 3 |
| Disrobe clothed in the strictest secrecy which privacy can afford. | 4 |
| Water non to be discharged coram grate or ex window. Never | 5 |
| divorce in the bedding the glove that will give you away. Maid | 6 |
| Maud ninnies nay but blabs to Omama (for your life, would you!) | 7 |
| she to her bosom friend who does all chores (and what do you | 8 |
| think my Madeleine saw?): this ignorant mostly sweeps it out | 9 |
| along with all the rather old corporators (have you heard of one | 10 |
| humbledown jungleman how he bet byrn-and-bushe playing | 11 |
| peg and pom?): the maudlin river then gets its dues (adding a | 12 |
| din a ding or do): thence those laundresses (O, muddle me more | 13 |
| about the maggies! I mean bawnee Madge Ellis and brownie | 14 |
| Mag Dillon). Attention at all ! Every ditcher's dastard in Dupling | 15 |
| will let us know about it if you have paid the mulctman by | 16 |
| whether your rent is open to be foreclosed or aback in your | 17 |
| arrears. This is seriously meant. Here is a homelet not a hothel. | 18 |
|     That's right, old oldun! | 19 |
|     All in fact is soon as all of old right as anywas ever in very | 20 |
| old place. Were he, hwen scalded of that couverfowl, to beat the | 21 |
| bounds by here at such a point of time as this is for at sammel | 22 |
| up all wood's haypence and riviers argent (half back from three | 23 |
| gangs multaplussed on a twentylot add allto a fiver with the | 24 |
| deuce or roamer's numbers ell a fee and do little ones) with the | 25 |
| caboosh on him opheld for thrushes' mistiles yet singing oud his | 26 |
| parasangs in cornish token: mean fawthery eastend appullcelery, | 27 |
| old laddy he high hole: pollysigh patrolman Seekersenn, towney's | 28 |
| tanquam, crumlin quiet down from his hoonger, he would mac | 29 |
| siccar of inket goodsforetombed ereshiningem of light turkling | 30 |
| eitheranny of thuncle's windopes. More, unless we were neverso | 31 |
| wrongtaken, if he brought his boots to pause in peace, the one | 32 |
| beside the other one, right on the road, he would seize no sound | 33 |
| from cache or cave beyond the flow of wand was gypsing water, | 34 |
| telling him now, telling him all, all about ham and livery, stay | 35 |
| and toast ham in livery, and buttermore with murmurladen, to | 36 |