cognance and their ilks and their orts and their everythings that | 1 |
is be will was theirs. | 2 |
    Much obliged. Time-o'-Thay! But wherth, O clerk? | 3 |
    Whithr a clonk? Vartman! See you not soo the pfath they | 4 |
pfunded, oura vatars that arred in Himmal, harruad bathar na- | 5 |
mas, the gow, the stiar, the tigara, the liofant, when even thurst | 6 |
was athar vetals, mid trefoils slipped the sable rampant, hoof, | 7 |
hoof, hoof, hoof, padapodopudupedding on fattafottafutt. Ere | 8 |
we are! Signifying, if tungs may tolkan, that, primeval condi- | 9 |
tions having gradually receded but nevertheless the emplacement | 10 |
of solid and fluid having to a great extent persisted through | 11 |
intermittences of sullemn fulminance, sollemn nuptialism, sallemn | 12 |
sepulture and providential divining, making possible and even; | 13 |
inevitable, after his a time has a tense haves and havenots hesitency, | 14 |
at the place and period under consideration a socially organic | 15 |
entity of a millenary military maritory monetary morphological | 16 |
circumformation in a more- or less settled state of equonomic | 17 |
ecolube equalobe equilab equilibbrium. Gam on, Gearge! Nomo- | 18 |
morphemy for me! Lessnatbe angardsmanlake! You jast gat a | 19 |
tache of army on the stumuk. To the Angar at Anker. Aecquo- | 20 |
tincts. Seeworthy. Lots thankyouful, polite pointsins! There's | 21 |
a tavarn in the tarn. | 22 |
    Tip. Take Tamotimo's topical. Tip. Browne yet Noland. Tip. | 23 |
Advert. | 24 |
    Where. Cumulonubulocirrhonimbant heaven electing, the dart | 25 |
of desire has gored the heart of secret waters and the poplarest | 26 |
wood in the entire district is being grown at present, eminently | 27 |
adapted for the requirements of pacnincstricken humanity and, | 28 |
between all the goings up and the whole of the comings down and | 29 |
the fog of the cloud in which we toil and the cloud of the fog | 30 |
under which we labour, bomb the thing's to be domb about it so | 31 |
that, beyond indicating the locality, it is felt that one cannot with | 32 |
advantage add a very great deal to the aforegoing by what, such as | 33 |
it is to be, follows, just mentioning however that the old man of | 34 |
the sea and the old woman in the sky if they don't say nothings | 35 |
about it they don't tell us lie, the gist of the pantomime, from | 36 |