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though it was willed might nevewtheless lead somehow on to | 3 |
good towawd the genewality? | 4 |
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by a show of hands, whether declaratory or effective, in all | 6 |
seriousness, has it become to dawn in you yet that the deponent, | 7 |
the man from Saint Yves, may have been (one is reluctant to use | 8 |
the passive voiced) may be been as much sinned against as sin- | 9 |
ning, for if we look at it verbally perhaps there is no true noun in | 10 |
active nature where every bally being | 11 |
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the strong form and reform alltogether! | 13 |
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reached, well over countless hands, sieur of many winners and | 15 |
losers, groomed by S. Samson and son, bred by dilalahs, will | 16 |
stand at Bay (Dublin) from nun till dan and vites inversion and | 17 |
at Miss or Mrs's MacMannigan's Yard. | 18 |
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rebus. | 20 |
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your singular interrogation our asseveralation. Ladiegent, pals | 22 |
will smile but me and Frisky Shorty, my inmate friend, as is un- | 23 |
common struck on poplar poetry, and a few fleabesides round at | 24 |
West Pauper Bosquet, was glad to be back again with the chaps | 25 |
and just arguing friendlylike at the Doddercan Easehouse having | 26 |
a wee chatty with our hosty in his comfy estably over the old | 27 |
middlesex party and his moral turps, meaning flu, pock, pox | 28 |
and mizzles, grip, gripe, gleet and sprue, caries, rabies, numps | 29 |
and dumps. What me and Frisky in our concensus and the whole | 30 |
double gigscrew of suscribers, notto say the burman, having | 31 |
successfully concluded our tour of bibel, wants to know is thisa- | 32 |
here. Supposing, for an ethical fict, him, which the findings | 33 |
showed, to have taken his epscene licence before the norsect's | 34 |
divisional respectively as regards them male privates and or | 35 |
concomitantly with all common or neuter respects to them | 36 |