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"Admirable girl! that is just what I have been led to expect from you, and you shall not regret it; I have, as I said, everything provided that can make you happy." "Happy! I can't bear this, sir; I'm desavin' you. I'm not what you think me." "You are ill, I fear, my dear Miss Sullivan; the bustle and disturbance have agitated you too much, and you are ill." "You are speaking truth.

"Let the honest man go, Traynor. What do ye hawl him that way for, ye gallis pet'?" "Honest!" replied Traynor; "how very honest he is, the desavin' villain, to be stand-in' at the windy there, wantin' to overhear the little harmless talk we had." "Come, Traynor," said Brady, seizing him in his turn by the neck, "take your hands off of me, or, bad fate to me, but I'll lave ye a mark."

Shure Oo'm desavin' the crayture. Every toime he 'ears th' door close he thinks wan o' yez is gettin' down ter walk up th' hill, an' that sort o' raises 'is sperrits." Mrs. Higgins was an incurable grumbler. She grumbled at everything and everyone.

His cousin by marriage crawled to the fence and sat up, without replying. "I've the flask in me pouch, Owen." "Kape it there." "But sure if ye foight wid me ye'll dhrink wid me?" "I'll not dhrink a dhrop wid ye." The cobbler panted heavily. "The loikes of you that do be goin' to marry on a Frinch quarther-brade, desavin' her, and the father and the mother and the praste, that you do be a widdy."

An' as all we get's from England, I say, let us stick to England, but nobody agrees wid me. There's the girl, now. Away ye go, me little duck, me daughter, me beauty, me bad luck to ye, will ye go? What are ye standin' there for? Will ye get out o' that, ye lazy brute? Take that, an' that, an' that, ye idle, good-for-nothin', desavin', durty daughter of a pig.

The d d thieves, to make me, me above all men, do the blackest part of the business an' to think o' the way they misled Edward, too who, after all, would be desavin' poor Lady Gourlay, if he had tould her all as he thought, although he did not know that he would be misleadin' her. Yes, faith, I'll start for the country tomorrow, plaise God; but listen, Polly, do you know who's in town?"

"Oh! there agin with your tin days but it's no use; yez understand me well enough, but yez don't want to bring the banes." "He tells you there is no more," said Raoul. "Oh! the desavin' Judas! and five hundred ov thim grazers atin' over beyant there. No more banes! oh, the lie!" "Frijoles no hay," said the Mexican, guessing at the purport of Chane's remarks.

The next instant she had seized him. "For the Lord sakes, Elder Brown, what ails you? As I live, if the man ain't drunk! Elder Brown! Elder Brown! for the life of me can't I make you hear? You crazy old hypocrite! you desavin' old sinner! you black-hearted wretch! where have you ben?" The elder made an effort to wave her off.

But when his past rose up it took entire possession of him. "Why didn't ye tell me this before?" "I've not knowed it the long time meself." "What towken have ye got?" "Towken enough for you and me." "Show it to me." "I will not." "Ye're desavin' me. Ye have no towken." "Thin marry on yer quarther-brade if ye dare!"

"May the most ornamental kind of hard fortune pursue you every day you rise, you desavin' villain, that would have me turn informer, bekase your brother-in-law, rack-rintin' Moore's stables and horses were burnt; and to crown all, make the innocent childre the means of hanging their own fathers or brothers, you rap of the divil! but I'd see you and all your breed in the flames o' hell first."