| his citadear of refuge, whither (would we believe the laimen and | 1 |
| their counts), beyond the outraved gales of Atreeatic, changing | 2 |
| clues with a baggermalster, the hejirite had fled, silentioussue- | 3 |
| meant under night's altosonority, shipalone, a raven of the wave, | 4 |
| (be mercy, Mara! A he whence Rahoulas!) from the ostmen's | 5 |
| dirtby on the old vic, to forget in expiating manslaughter and, | 6 |
| reberthing in remarriment out of dead seekness to devine previ- | 7 |
| dence, (if you are looking for the bilder deep your ear on the | 8 |
| movietone!) to league his lot, palm and patte, with a papishee. | 9 |
| For mine qvinne I thee giftake and bind my hosenband I thee | 10 |
| halter. The wastobe land, a lottuse land, a luctuous land, Emerald- | 11 |
| illuim, the peasant pastured, in which by the fourth commandment | 12 |
| with promise his days apostolic were to be long by the abundant | 13 |
| mercy of Him Which Thundereth From On High, murmured, | 14 |
| would rise against him with all which in them were, franchisab- | 15 |
| les and inhabitands, astea as agora, helotsphilots, do him hurt, | 16 |
| poor jink, ghostly following bodily, as were he made a curse for | 17 |
| them, the corruptible lay quick, all saints of incorruption-of-an | 18 |
| holy nation, the common or ere-in-garden castaway, in red re- | 19 |
| surrection to condemn so they might convince him, first pha- | 20 |
| roah, Humpheres Cheops Exarchas, of their proper sins. Busi- | 21 |
| ness bred to speak with a stiff upper lip to all men and most occa- | 22 |
| sions the Man we wot of took little short of fighting chances but | 23 |
| for all that he or his or his care were subjected to the horrors of | 24 |
| the premier terror of Errorland. (perorhaps!) | 25 |
|     We seem to us (the real Us !) to be reading our Amenti in the | 26 |
| sixth sealed chapter of the going forth by black. It was after the | 27 |
| show at Wednesbury that one tall man, humping a suspicious | 28 |
| parcel, when returning late amid a dense particular on his home | 29 |
| way from the second house of the Boore and Burgess Christy | 30 |
| Menestrels by the old spot, Roy's Corner, had a barkiss revolver | 31 |
| placed to his faced with the words: you're shot, major: by an un- | 32 |
| knowable assailant (masked) against whom he had been jealous | 33 |
| over, Lotta Crabtree or Pomona Evlyn. More than that Whenn | 34 |
| the Waylayer (not a Lucalizod diocesan or even of the Glenda- | 35 |
| lough see, but hailing fro' the prow of Little Britain), mention- | 36 |