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"Ye don't intind to escape!" exclaimed his friend, with a look of blank amazement at the spot where the voice of the other came from. "No; I don't deserve to live, Paddy, so I shall remain and be hanged." "I'll be hanged if ye do," said Paddy, with much decision. "Come, now, don't be talkin' nonsense. It's jokin' ye are, av coorse."

"Because, me bhoy, I intind to take a look in there and see what there is to be seen," he replied. "If you will excuse my saying so, I think you had better not," said I. "In my opinion it would be wiser to meddle with these other places as little as possible until we have beaten up Merlani's quarters.

"About seven thank you, Art; an' now listen; sure the boys intind to play off some prank upon you afore you lave us."

"Now, Mrs. Doran, you think I thrated you ondacent; but do you see that book?" said he, producing a book of ballads, on which he had sworn many a similar oath before? "Be the contints o' that book, as sure as you're beside me, it's you I intind to marry. These other two the curse o' the crows upon them!

"I didn't intind to tell you, but I had it laid out for you." "Faith, you're a beauty, Ellish. What'll we call this young chap that's comin', acushla?" "Now, Pether, none o' your capers. It's time enough when the thing happens to be thinkin' o' that, Glory be to God!" "Well, you may talk as you plase, but I'll call him Pether." "An' how do you know but he'll be a girl, you omadhawn?"

Be this time Zola has come back; an' he jumps up, an', says he, 'Jackuse, he says. An' they thrun him out. "'Befure we go anny farther, says th' lawyer f'r th' difinse, 'I wish to sarve notice that, whin this thrile is over, I intind, he says, 'to wait outside, he says, 'an' hammer th' hon'rable coort into an omelet, he says. 'With these few remarks I will close, he says.

"Pether," said she, "it's like a dhrame to me that you're neglectin' your business, alanna." "Is it you, beauty? but, maybe, you'd first point out to me what business, barrin' buttherin' up yourself, I have to mind, you phanix bright?" "Quit yourself, Pether! it's time for you to give up your ould ways; you caught one bird wid them, an' that's enough. What do you intind to do!

An' I suppose, that you are acting the Pathrun, too, Thady, and intind to take this young wild-goose under your protection?" "Why, sir, isn't he a poor scholar? Sure he mustn't want his bit an' sup, nor his night's lodgin', anyhow. You're to give him his larnin' only, sir." "I suppose so, Mr. Thaddeus; but this is the penalty of celebrity.

My fear was lest Mike should knock the canoe against the branches of the overhanging trees and make a hole in her bottom, so I sang out to him to be cautious. "Faix! Masther Roger, it's that same I intind to be," he answered. "I have no fancy to walk all the way back again, or forward either, if this is the sort of ground we should have to pass over."

The family, you see, an' the childhre, an' the cares o' the world, pull me down: throth, the same family's a throuble to me. I wish I had them all settled safe, any way." "What do you intind to do with them, Dominick?" "In throth, that's what brought me to yer Reverence. I've one boy Jimmy a smart chap entirely, an' he has taken it into his head to go as a poor scholar to Munster.