lovely tint, embellished by the charms of art and very well con- | 1 |
ducted and nicely mannered and all the horrid rudy noisies locked | 2 |
up in nasty cubbyhole!) as tired as they were, the three jolly | 3 |
topers, with their mouths watering, all the four, the old connu- | 4 |
bial men of the sea, yambing around with their old pantometer, | 5 |
in duckasaloppics, Luke and Johnny MacDougall and all wishen- | 6 |
ing for anything at all of the bygone times, the wald times and | 7 |
the fald times and the hempty times and the dempty times, for a | 8 |
cup of kindness yet, for four farback tumblerfuls of woman | 9 |
squash, with them, all four, listening and spraining their ears for | 10 |
the millennium and all their mouths making water. | 11 |
    Johnny. Ah well, sure, that's the way (up) and it so happened | 12 |
there was poor Matt Gregory (up), their pater familias, and (up) | 13 |
the others and now really and (up) truly they were four dear | 14 |
old heladies and really they looked awfully pretty and so nice and | 15 |
bespectable and after that they had their fathomglasses to find | 16 |
out all the fathoms and their half a tall hat, just now like the old | 17 |
Merquus of Pawerschoof, the old determined despot, (quiescents | 18 |
in brage!) only for the extrusion of the saltwater or the auctioneer | 19 |
there dormont, in front of the place near O'Clery's, at the darku- | 20 |
mound numbur wan, beside that ancient Dame street, where the | 21 |
statue of Mrs Dana O'Connell, prostituent behind the Trinity | 22 |
College, that arranges all the auctions of the valuable colleges, | 23 |
Bootersbay Sisters, like the auctioneer Battersby Sisters, the pru- | 24 |
misceous creaters, that sells all the emancipated statues and | 25 |
flowersports, James H. Tickell, the jaypee, off Hoggin Green, | 26 |
after he made the centuries, going to the tailturn horseshow, be- | 27 |
fore the angler nomads flood, along with another fellow, active | 28 |
impalsive, and the shoeblacks and the redshanks and plebeians | 29 |
and the barrancos and the cappunchers childerun, Jules, every- | 30 |
one, Gotopoxy, with the houghers on them, highstepping the | 31 |
fissure and fracture lines, seven five threes up, three five | 32 |
sevens down, to get out of his way, onasmuck as their withers | 33 |
conditions could not possibly have been improved upon, | 34 |
(praisers be to deeseesee!) like hopolopocattls, erumping oround | 35 |
their Judgity Yaman, and all the tercentenary horses and priest- | 36 |