and the face in the treebark feigns afear. This | MODES COA- | 1 | |
is rainstones ringing. Strangely cult for this | LESCING | 2 | |
ceasing of the yore. But Erigureen is ever. | PROLIFER- | 3 | |
Pot price pon patrilinear plop, if the osseletion | ATE HOMO- | 4 | |
of the onkring gives omen nome? Since alls | GENUINE | 5 | |
war that end war let sports be leisure and | HOMOGEN- | 6 | |
bring and buy fair. Ah ah athclete, blest your | EITY. | 7 | |
bally bathfeet! Towntoquest, fortorest, the | 8 | ||
hour that hies is hurley. A halt for hearsake. 1 | 9 | ||
1 Come, smooth of my slate,to the beat of my blosh! With all these gelded | |||
ewes jilting about and the thrills and ills of laylock blossoms three's so much | |||
more plants than chants for cecilies that I was thinking fairly killing times of | |||
putting an end to myself and my malody, when I remembered all your pupil- | |||
teacher's erringnesses in perfection class. You sh'undn't write you can't if you | |||
w'udn't pass for undevelopmented. This is the propper way to say that, Sr. If | |||
it's me chews to swallow all you saidn't you can eat my words for it as sure as | |||
there's a key in my kiss. Quick erit faciofacey. When we will conjugate to- | |||
gether toloseher tomaster tomiss while morrow fans amare hour, verbe de vie | |||
and verve to vie, with love ay loved have I on my back spine and does for | |||
ever. Your are me severe? Then rue. My intended, Jr, who I'm throne away | |||
on, (here he inst, my lifstack, a newfolly likon) when I slip through my pettigo | |||
I'll get my decree and take seidens when I'm not ploughed first by some | |||
Rolando the Lasso, and flaunt on the flimsyfilmsies for to grig my collage | |||
juniorees who, though they flush fuchsia, are they octette and virginity in my | |||
shade but always my figurants. They may be yea of my year but they're nary | |||
nay of my day. Wait till spring has sprung in spickness and prigs beg in to pry | |||
they'll be plentyprime of housepets to pimp and pamper my. Impending mar- | |||
riage. Nature tells everybody about but I learned all the runes of the gamest | |||
game ever from my old nourse Asa. A most adventuring trot is her and she | |||
vicking well knowed them all heartswise and fourwords. How Olive d'Oyly | |||
and Winnie Carr,bejupers, they reized the dressing of a salandmon and how a | |||
peeper coster and a salt sailor med a mustied poet atwaimen. It most have | |||
bean Mad Mullans planted him. Bina de Bisse and Trestrine von Terrefin. | |||
Sago sound, rite go round, kill kackle, kook kettle and (remember all should | |||
I forget to) bolt the thor. Auden. Wasn't it just divining that dog of a dag | |||
in Skokholme as I sat astrid uppum their Drewitt's altar, as cooledas as cul- | |||
cumbre, slapping my straights till the sloping ruins, postillion, postallion, a | |||
swinge a swank, with you offering me clouts of illscents and them horners | |||
stagstruck on the leasward! Don't be of red, you blanching mench! This | |||
isabella I'm on knows the ruelles of the rut and she don't fear andy mandy. So | |||
sing loud, sweet cheeriot, like anegreon in heaven! The good fother with the | |||
twingling in his eye will always have cakes in his pocket to bethroat us with | |||
for our allmichael good. Amum. Amum. And Amum again. For tough troth | |||
is stronger than fortuitous fiction and it's the surplice money, oh my young | |||
friend and ah me sweet creature, what buys the bed while wits borrows the | |||
clothes. |