for in the byways of high improvidence that's what makes life- | | 1 |
work leaving and the world's a cell for citters to cit in. Let young | | 2 |
wimman run away with the story and let young min talk smooth | | 3 |
behind the butteler's back. She knows her knight's duty while | | 4 |
Luntum sleeps. Did ye save any tin? says he. Did I what? with | | 5 |
a grin says she. And we all like a marriedann because she is mer- | | 6 |
cenary. Though the length of the land lies under liquidation | | 7 |
(floote!) and there's nare a hairbrow nor an eyebush on this glau- | | 8 |
brous phace of Herrschuft Whatarwelter she'll loan a vesta and | | 9 |
hire some peat and sarch the shores her cockles to heat and she'll | | 10 |
do all a turfwoman can to piff the business on. Paff. To puff the | | 11 |
blaziness on. Poffpoff. And even if Humpty shell fall frumpty | | 12 |
times as awkward again in the beardsboosoloom of all our grand | | 13 |
remonstrancers there'll be iggs for the brekkers come to mourn- | | 14 |
him, sunny side up with care. So true is it that therewhere's a | | 15 |
turnover the tay is wet too and when you think you ketch sight | | 16 |
of a hind make sure but you're cocked by a hin. | | 17 |
Then as she is on her behaviourite job of quainance bandy, | | 18 |
fruting for firstlings and taking her tithe, we may take our review | | 19 |
of the two mounds to see nothing of the himples here as at else- | | 20 |
where, by sixes and sevens, like so many heegills and collines, | | 21 |
sitton aroont, scentbreeched and somepotreek, in their swisha- | | 22 |
wish satins and their taffetaffe tights, playing Wharton's Folly, | | 23 |
at a treepurty on the planko in the purk. Stand up, mickos! | | 24 |
Make strake for minnas ! By order, Nicholas Proud. We may see | | 25 |
and hear nothing if we choose of the shortlegged bergins off | | 26 |
Corkhill or the bergamoors of Arbourhill or the bergagambols | | 27 |
of Summerhill or the bergincellies of Miseryhill or the country- | | 28 |
bossed bergones of Constitutionhill though every crowd has its | | 29 |
several tones and every trade has its clever mechanics and each | | 30 |
harmonical has a point of its own, Olaf's on the rise and Ivor's | | 31 |
on the lift and Sitric's place's between them. But all they are all | | 32 |
there scraping along to sneeze out a likelihood that will solve | | 33 |
and salve life's robulous rebus, hopping round his middle like | | 34 |
kippers on a griddle, O, as he lays dormont from the macroborg | | 35 |
of Holdhard to the microbirg of Pied de Poudre. Behove this | | 36 |