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"Hanim an diouol!" said Reillaghan, bitterly, in Irish, "but I doubt the red-handed villain has cut short the lives of my two brave sons! I only hope he may stop in the country: I'm not widout friends an' followers that 'ud think it no sin in a just cause to pay him in his own coin, an' to take from him an' his a pound o' blood for every ounce of ours they shed."

I'll see you I'll see you Hanim an dioul! what's this? I must be off like a shot oh, murdher sheery? but but I'll see you to-morrow. In the mane time, I'm I'm for ever oblaged to you for for lendin' me the loan of oh, by the vestments, I'm a gone man! for lendin' me the loan of the ten guineas Oh, I'm gone!"

"But I know where he's gone," said Phelim, "an' may the divil's luck go wid him, an' God's curse on the day I ever had anything to do wid that hell-fire Ribbon business! 'Twas he first brought me into it, the villain; an' now I'd give the town land we're in to be fairly out of it." "Hanim an diouol!" said the father, "is the ten guineas gone? The curse of hell upon him, for a black desaver!

Give us my cant! Are yez gone? Oh, by this and by that hell eh aren't yez " But ere he could finish the sentence, they had set chit. "Now," he exclaimed in a voice whose tremendous tones were strongly at variance with his own injunctions "Now, neighbors, d n yez, keep silence. Mrs. Reillaghan, get a bottle of whiskey an' a mug o' wather. Make haste. Hanim an diouol! don't be all night!"