| from Osterich, the U.S.E. paying (Gaul save the mark!) 11/- in | 1 |
| the week (Gosh, these wholly romads!) of conscience money in | 2 |
| the first deal of Yuly wheil he was, swishing beesnest with bles- | 3 |
| sure,and swobbing broguen eeriesh myth brockendootsch, mak- | 4 |
| ing his reporterage on Der Fall Adams for the Frankofurto Siding, | 5 |
| a Fastland payrodicule, and er, consstated that one had on him | 6 |
| the Lynn O'Brien, a meltoned lammswolle, disturbed, and wider | 7 |
| he might the same zurichschicken other he would, with tosend | 8 |
| and obertosend tonnowatters, one monkey's damages become. | 9 |
| Now you must know, franksman, to make a heart of glass, that | 10 |
| the game of gaze and bandstand butchery was merely a Patsy | 11 |
| O'Strap tissue of threats and obuses such as roebucks raugh at | 12 |
| pinnacle's peak and after this sort. Humphrey's unsolicited visitor, | 13 |
| Davy or Titus, on a burgley's clan march from the middle west, | 14 |
| a hikely excellent crude man about road who knew his Bullfoost | 15 |
| Mountains like a starling bierd, after doing a long dance untidled | 16 |
| to Cloudy Green, deposend his bockstump on the waityoumay- | 17 |
| wantme, after having blew some quaker's (for you! Oates!) in | 18 |
| through the houseking's keyhole to attract attention, bleated | 19 |
| through the gale outside which the tairor of his clothes was hog- | 20 |
| callering, first, be the hirsuiter, that he would break his bulshey- | 21 |
| wigger's head for him, next, be the heeltapper, that he would | 22 |
| break the gage over his lankyduckling head the same way he | 23 |
| would crack a nut with a monkeywrench and, last of all, be the | 24 |
| stirabouter, that he would give him his (or theumperom's or any- | 25 |
| bloody else's) thickerthanwater to drink and his bleday steppe- | 26 |
| brodhar's into the bucket. He demanded more wood alcohol to | 27 |
| pitch in with, alleging that his granfather's was all taxis and that | 28 |
| it was only after ten o'connell, and this his isbar was a public | 29 |
| oven for the sake of irsk irskusky, and then, not easily dis- | 30 |
| couraged, opened the wrathfloods of his atillarery and went on at | 31 |
| a wicked rate, weathering against him in mooxed metaphores | 32 |
| from eleven thirty to two in the afternoon without even a lunch- | 33 |
| eonette interval for House, son of Clod, to come out, you jew- | 34 |
| beggar, to be Executed Amen. Earwicker, that patternmind, that | 35 |
| paradigmatic ear, receptoretentive as his of Dionysius, longsuffer- | 36 |