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De wurld hab got to go ahead, an' dem what's young and strong Mus' do deir best, wid all de rest, to roll de wurld along. De lazy man does all he can to stop its whirlin' round. If he was king he'd loaf an' sing and guzzle, I'll be bound, He always shirk de hardest work, an' t'ink he's awful clebbar, But boder his head to earn his bread, Oh! no, he'll nebber, nebber. Chorus Oh when de sun, etc.

A poor decrepid old man undid the bolt and let us in. "Ohon a reel Ohon a reel What make you all this boder for come you to help us to wake poor ould Kate there, and bring you the whisky wid you?" "Old man, where is Pat Doolan?" said the lieutenant.

De wurld hab got to go ahead, an' dem what's young and strong Mus' do deir best, wid all de rest, to roll de wurld along. De lazy man does all he can to stop its whirlin' round. If he was king he'd loaf an' sing and guzzle, I'll be bound, He always shirk de hardest work, an' t'ink he's awful clebbar, But boder his head to earn his bread, Oh! no, he'll nebber, nebber.

"Who should escort her save myself?" said the graceful Verronax, turning at the same moment from replying to some inquiries from the Bishop. "I doubt whether his escort be not the most perilous thing of all," sighed Marina. "Come, Marina," said her husband good-humouredly, "be not always a boder of ill.

"Dam lie dat, as I am a gentleman!" roared a ragged black vagabond. "Come in de Monkey, massa; no flying fish can beat she." "Don't boder de gentleman," yelled a fourth, "massa love de stamp and go no so, massa?" as he saw me make a step in the direction of his boat.

"O massa!" interrupted the negro, assuming the sympathetic gaze instantly, and speaking with intense feeling, "it's not in de stummik, am it?" He placed his hand gently on the region referred to. "No, Quash," Lawrence replied, with a laugh, "it is not the body at all that affects me; it is the mind." "Oh! is dat all?" said the negro, quite relieved. "Den you not need to boder you'self.

"It is hard to tell what is the best course," said Jack, who, while talking, was moving slowly toward the Mississippi, watching, meanwhile, every point of the compass. "But, somehow or other I feel there's less danger by the river than anywhere else." "I likes it dere better than other places, for if we finds the Indians are going to boder us, we can cheat 'em as easy as nefer vos." "How?"

"Mind, I tells it you, master; and somehow or other I thinks and I has experience in these things by the fey, of his eye and the drop of his lip, that the captain's time will be up to-day!" Here the robber lost all patience, and pushing the hoary boder of evil against the wall, he turned on his heel, and sought some more agreeable companion to share his stirrup-cup.

A poor decrepit old man undid the bolt and let us in. "Ohon a ree! Ohon a ree! What make you all this boder for come you to help us to wake poor ould Kate there, and bring you the whisky wid you?" "Old man, where is Pat Doolan?" said the lieutenant.

"You tink I's a free man! but I's a slabe, same as yourself, on'y de diff'rence am dat dere's nobody to ransum me, so dey don't boder deir heads 'bout me s'long as I do my work. If I don't do my work I'm whacked; if I rebel and kick up a shindy I'm whacked wuss; if I tries to run away I'm whacked till I'm dead. Das all. But I's not free. No, no not at all!