Anyhow (the matter is a troublous and a peniloose) have they | 1 |
not called him at many's their mock indignation meeting, veh- | 2 |
men's vengeance vective volleying, inwader and uitlander, the | 3 |
notables, crashing libels in their sullivan's mounted beards about | 4 |
him, their right renownsable patriarch? Heinz cans everywhere | 5 |
and the swanee her ainsell and Eyrewaker's family sock that they | 6 |
smuggled to life betune them, roaring (Big Reilly was the worst): | 7 |
free boose for the man from the nark, sure, he never was worth | 8 |
a cornerwall fark, and his banishee's bedpan she's a quareold bite | 9 |
of a tark: as they wendelled their zingaway wivewards from his | 10 |
find me cool's moist opulent vinery, highjacking through the | 11 |
nagginneck pass, as they hauled home with their hogsheads, | 12 |
axpoxtelating, and claiming cowled consollation, sursumcordial, | 13 |
from the bluefunkfires of the dipper and the martian's frost? | 14 |
    Use they not, our noesmall termtraders, to abhors offrom | 15 |
him, the yet unregendered thunderslog, whose sbrogue cunneth | 16 |
none lordmade undersiding, how betwixt wifely rule and mens | 17 |
conscia recti, then hemale man all unbracing to omniwomen, but | 18 |
now shedropping his hitches like any maidavale oppersite orse- | 19 |
riders in an idinhole? Ah, dearo! Dearo, dear! And her illian! | 20 |
And his willyum! When they were all there now, matinmarked | 21 |
for lookin on. At the carryfour with awlus plawshus, their happy- | 22 |
ass cloudious! And then and too the trivials! And their bivouac! | 23 |
And his monomyth! Ah ho! Say no more about it! I'm sorry! | 24 |
I saw. I'm sorry! I'm sorry to say I saw! | 25 |
    Gives there not too amongst us after all events (or so grunts | 26 |
a leading hebdromadary) some togethergush of stillandbutall- | 27 |
youknow that, insofarforth as, all up and down the whole con- | 28 |
creation say, efficient first gets there finally every time, as a com- | 29 |
plex matter of pure form, for those excess and that pasphault | 30 |
hardhearingness from their eldfar, in grippes and rumblions, | 31 |
through fresh taint and old treason, another like that alter but | 32 |
not quite such anander and stillandbut one not all the selfsame | 33 |
and butstillone just the maim and encore emmerhim may always, | 34 |
with a little difference, till the latest up to date so early in the | 35 |
morning, have evertheless been allmade amenable? | 36 |