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Updated: June 12, 2025
"Well, well, Bid," replied the Bodagh, "maybe neither Ned nor yourself will be a loser by it. If you're bent on layin' your heads together we'll find you a weddin' present, anyway." "Bedad, sir, I'm puzzled to know how they got in so aisy," said Ned. "That matter remains to be cleared up yet," said John. "There is certainly treachery in the camp somewhere."
"Arrah! howld yer noise, an' I'll hear better," cried Teddy Maroon, looking over the top edge of the lighthouse. "My thumb's caught i' the chain!" yelled Dorkin. "Ease it off." "Och! poor thing," exclaimed Teddy, springing back and casting loose the chain. "Are ye aisy now?" he cried, again looking down at his friend.
It's aisy seen you're but young in the business yet." "This is my first night to be out," replied the youth. "Well, then," rejoined our friend, "it's in the expectation of meetin' an enemy, especially some one that's marked." "An' what would they do if they did?" "Do? said the other; "do for him!. If they met sich a one, they'd take care his supper wouldn't cost him much."
"It's a girl, Pete," said Grannie, lifting the child out of the bed. "A girl, is it?" said Pete doubtfully. "Well," he said, with a wag of the head, "thank God for a girl." Then, with another and more resolute wag, "Yes, thank God for a living mother and a living child, if it is a girl," and he stretched out his arms to take the baby. "Aisy, now, Pete aisy," said Grannie, holding it out to him.
"So ye tur-rned in an' give th' crayther himsilf a foight an' ye win ut? An' phwat does th' gir-rl think av ut?" "What!" "Th' gir-rl. Is she proud av ye? Or is she wan av thim that thinks ut aisy to quit be just lavin' ut alone? For, sure, ut niver intered th' head av man let alone a McKim, to tur-rn ag'in' liquor, lessen they was a gir-rl at th' bottom av ut.
If 'twas another man, an' a couple more at his back, myself an' Pat Moran 'id wallop them out of the house, an' into the river, be gannies; as aisy as say an ave.
"We've ate but once in twenty-four hours, and I've jist learned from me stomach that it would have no objection to breaking the same fast; so do yez jist kape still till I pops him over." "Can you hit him?" asked Howard, scarcely less excited than his companion. "Be aisy now till ye see the scientific manner I takes to doot." "Well, be quick, for he is likely to vanish any moment."
"Dyin's that aisy aisy enough, but for wan thing." "'Ere, speak out, Pete." "Sure, there's no wan but you, Withers, not a wife nor a child av me own to say, 'Poor Peter Macnamara, he is gone." "There's one," said Henry Withers firmly. "There's one, old pal." "Who's that?" said Macnamara huskily. "Kitty." "She's no wife," said Macnamara, shaking his head.
"Grandfather," said Bryan, "make your mind aisy; we won't take you from the brave ould places, and you will sleep in Carndhu with Peggy Na Laveen; make your heart and mind easy, then, for you won't be parted."
"You said you could ruin Phil. It's aisy for a woman to do that, I admit. No matter how hard the church may be on 'em, and how much other women may cut 'em dead for doin' wrong things, a woman can go into a coort-room and swear a man's character away, an' the jury'll give her judgment every time. The law's a lot aisier with the women than the crowd you associate with is."
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