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Updated: June 22, 2025
You see I must join business and pleasure; so if you are not very much engaged, and could spare a minute or two, why I have a little proposal to make to you acting for Mr. Flannelly you know which I think you'll not be sorry to hear."
Flannelly about this mortgage he holds; but your father doesn't seem quite the thing this morning, and therefore it's as well you came in. Of course what I have to say concerns you as well as him." "Of course, Mr. Keegan; I look after the affairs at Ballycloran mostly, now. Don't you know it's me you look to for the money? and I'm sorry you should have to bother my father about it.
Flannelly, who was determined to have the matter settled at once; that all he wanted was his own, and that he had already waited too long.
And as for Keegan but you don't make your punch, Captain as for Keegan, the ruffian, he was here this blessed morning, wanting me, and Feemy, and Thady too, to walk clane out of the place! but I walked him off. The like of him to be buying Ballycloran; and his father a process-server, and his wife's father that d d bricklayer Flannelly!" "Holloa! Mr.
Flannelly would soon get shut of them: he means to have no whiskey making on the land! Let me alone to eject those fellows. By dad! I'll soon clear off most of them." "What! strip their roofs?" "Yes, if they wouldn't go quietly; but they most of them know me now; and I give you my word of honour indeed, Flannelly said as much you should have any forty acres you please, at a fair rent.
He sometimes blamed his father, having an indefinite feeling that he ought not to have permitted Flannelly to have anything to do with Ballycloran, after building it; but himself he never blamed; people never do; it is so much easier to blame others, and so much more comfortable. Mr.
See that ould robber, Flannelly, who has been living and thriving on it for all them years, and a stone or stick not as good as paid for yet; and he getting two hundred a year off the land from the crayturs of tenants." True enough it was, that Mr.
Thady if you could allow me ten minutes or so just a message from our old friend, Flannelly:" and by this time Keegan had wedged his way into the room, out of which any one who knew him would be very sure he would not stir, until he had said what he had come to say.
But Sally Flannelly was now Sally Keegan, the wife of Hyacinth Keegan, Esq., Attorney; who, if he had not the same advantages as Larry in birth and blood, had compensation for his inferiority in cash and comforts.
"Got Ballycloran again! why Larry, you're to sell it outright; clane away altogether. As for me, I must get a bit of land, I suppose, or 'list, or do something; go to America, perhaps." "And was it Keegan wanted to buy Ballycloran?" "Oh, it's between them, I suppose; but what does it matter Keegan or Flannelly?" "And what did you say, Thady?" "What did I say!
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