pence, some rhino, rhine, O joyoust rhine, was handled over spon- | 1 |
daneously by me (and bundle end to my illwishers' Miss Anders! | 2 |
she woor her wraith of ruins the night she lost I left!) in the ligname | 3 |
of Mr van Howten of Tredcastles, Clowntalkin, timbreman, among | 4 |
my prodigits nabobs and navious of every subscription entitled | 5 |
the Bois in the Boscoor, our evicted tenemants. What I say is (and | 6 |
I am noen roehorn or culkilt permit me to tell you, if uninformed), | 7 |
I never spont it. Nor have I the ghuest of innation on me the way | 8 |
to. It is my rule so. It went anyway like hot pottagebake. And | 9 |
this brings me to my fresh point. Quoniam, I am as plain as | 10 |
portable enveloped, inhowmuch, you will now parably receive, | 11 |
care of one of Mooseyeare Goonness's registered andouterthus | 12 |
barrels. Quick take um whiffat andrainit. Now! | 13 |
    | 14 |
Hold forth! | 15 |
    | 16 |
you one from the grimm gests of Jacko and Esaup, fable one, | 17 |
feeble too. Let us here consider the casus, my dear little cousis | 18 |
(husstenhasstencaffincoffintussemtossemdamandamnacosaghcusa- | 19 |
ghhobixhatouxpeswchbechoscashlcarcarcaract) of the Ondt and | 20 |
the Gracehoper. | 21 |
    The Gracehoper was always jigging ajog, hoppy on akkant | 22 |
of his joyicity, (he had a partner pair of findlestilts to supplant | 23 |
him), or, if not, he was always making ungraceful overtures to | 24 |
Floh and Luse and Bienie and Vespatilla to play pupa-pupa and | 25 |
pulicy-pulicy and langtennas and pushpygyddyum and to com- | 26 |
mence insects with him, there mouthparts to his orefice and his | 27 |
gambills to there airy processes, even if only in chaste, ameng | 28 |
the everlistings, behold a waspering pot. He would of curse | 29 |
melissciously, by his fore feelhers, flexors, contractors, depres- | 30 |
sors and extensors, lamely, harry me, marry me, bury me, bind | 31 |
me, till she was puce for shame and allso fourmish her in Spin- | 32 |
ner's housery at the earthsbest schoppinhour so summery as his | 33 |
cottage, which was cald fourmillierly Tingsomingenting, groped | 34 |
up. Or, if he was always striking up funny funereels with Bester- | 35 |
farther Zeuts, the Aged One, With all his wigeared corollas, albe- | 36 |