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Updated: May 14, 2025


Quinn said, gripping the young man's hand and wringing it heartily. "I like him," he added, turning to Ernest Harper, "an' he'll be good for Henry, an' I daresay I'll be good for him. You've an awful lot of slummage in your skull," he continued, addressing Marsh again, "but begod I'll clear that out!" "Slummage?" Marsh asked questioningly. "Aye. Do you not know what slummage is?"

Then a light appeared in one of the windows, and Hyacinth caught a glimpse of a trim maid-servant pulling the curtains across it. 'We shall be having tea at half-past six, said Mr. Quinn. 'Will you come and join us? By the way, where are you staying? Hyacinth accepted the invitation, and confessed that he had not as yet looked for any place to lay his head. 'Ah!

"I am not sensible at all, Louise," I answered, with some indignation. "I am not sensible where grandpapa is concerned, nor grandmamma, I tremble if grandpapa is a little later on a hunting day than we expect him, or on Wednesday when the petty sessions are on at Quinn.

Quinn might snarl and growl; and Horace Walpole, who seems to have grown alarmed at so much of the incense of praise finding its way to the nostrils of another, might give vent to a few feeble sneers; such as when he said, "I do not mention the things written in his praise because he writes most of them himself." But the battle was won.

Quinn said to him, as he entered the bedroom. "An' what damned nonsense are you up to now, will you tell me?" John smiled at him. "You're to get well at once," he answered. "We can't have you lying ill at a time like this!" "An' aren't you an' the like of you enough to make any man ill? Come here to me, an' let me have a look at you.

'Well, said James Quinn, 'I suppose if all these people are prepared to recommend you, your character must be all right. Now, tell me, do you know what the post is you are applying for? 'No, said Hyacinth. 'And I may as well say that I have had no experience or business training whatever. 'So I should suppose from the way you have come to me.

It takes a big people to bear criticism good-naturedly.... All the same, Gilbert, your damned countrymen are to blame for all this!" "I know that," said Gilbert, "but your damned countrymen seem determined to remain like it!" Mr. Quinn and Henry had talked of Ireland and of John Marsh, after John had returned to Dublin. "Sometimes," said Mr.

Quinn!" said the appreciative "Red," sitting down, and getting busy, "Won't you come to Bisbee with Angela an' me the next time we go to the movies?" She gave him a half-scornful look. "An' what would yez want with an old woman like meself taggin' along with yez now?" Mrs. Quinn exclaimed, her arms akimbo.

"If you were to lead off," she suggested. "Me? But I can't dance!..." "You can't dance!" "No," he continued. "Somehow, I've never learnt to dance!" She looked disappointed. "I thought mebbe you an' me 'ud lead off," she said. "I'm sorry," he replied. "Perhaps Mr. Quinn can dance!..."

'Now, I'd just as soon have asked my sister-in-law to come to Paris with me for a fortnight as Finola. You don't know Mrs. James Quinn, I think. That's a pity. She's the most domesticated and virtuous haus-frau in the world. He paused, and then asked Hyacinth, 'Why are you doing it? Again Hyacinth was reduced by sheer surprise to a futility. 'Doing what? 'Oh, going out to fight for the Boers.

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