| so as he was able to add) lobe before the Great Schoolmaster's. | 1 |
| (I tell you no story.) Smile! | 2 |
|     The house of Atreox is fallen indeedust (Ilyam, Ilyum! Mae- | 3 |
| romor Mournomates !) averging on blight like the mundibanks of | 4 |
| Fennyana, but deeds bounds going arise again. Life, he himself | 5 |
| said once, (his biografiend, in fact, kills him verysoon, if yet not, | 6 |
| after) is a wake, livit or krikit, and on the bunk of our bread- | 7 |
| winning lies the cropse of our seedfather, a phrase which the | 8 |
| establisher of the world by law might pretinately write across | 9 |
| the chestfront of all manorwombanborn. The scene, refreshed, | 10 |
| reroused, was never to be forgotten, the hen and crusader ever- | 11 |
| intermutuomergent, for later in the century one of that puisne | 12 |
| band of factferreters, (then an excivily (out of the custom huts) | 13 |
| (retired), (hurt), under the sixtyfives act) in a dressy black modern | 14 |
| style and wewere shiny tan burlingtons, (tam, homd and dicky, | 15 |
| quopriquos and peajagd) rehearsed it, pippa pointing, with a | 16 |
| dignified (copied) bow to a namecousin of the late archdeacon | 17 |
| F. X. Preserved Coppinger (a hot fellow in his night, may the | 18 |
| mouther of guard have mastic on him!) in a pullwoman of our | 19 |
| first transhibernian with one still sadder circumstance which is a | 20 |
| dirkandurk heartskewerer if ever to bring bouncing brimmers | 21 |
| from marbled eyes. Cycloptically through the windowdisks and | 22 |
| with eddying awes the round eyes of the rundreisers,back to back, | 23 |
| buck to bucker, on their airish chaunting car, beheld with in- | 24 |
| touristing anterestedness the clad pursue the bare, the bare the | 25 |
| green, the green the frore, the frore the cladagain, as their convoy | 26 |
| wheeled encirculingly abound the gigantig's lifetree, our fire- | 27 |
| leaved loverlucky blomsterbohm, phoenix in our woodlessness, | 28 |
| haughty, cacuminal, erubescent (repetition!) whose roots they be | 29 |
| asches with lustres of peins. For as often as the Archicadenus, | 30 |
| pleacing aside his Irish Field and craving their auriculars to re- | 31 |
| cepticle particulars before they got the bump at Castlebar (mat | 32 |
| and far!) spoke of it by request all, hearing in this new reading | 33 |
| of the part whereby, because of Dyas in his machina, the new | 34 |
| garrickson's grimacing grimaldism hypostasised by substintua- | 35 |
| tion the axiomatic orerotundity of that once grand old elrington | 36 |