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Updated: June 24, 2025
"`Don't lose yersilf! Faix, Master Frank, ye're free an' aisy. Arrah now, Bryan dear, don't lose yersilf; you that's crossed the salt saes, an' followed the Red Injins to the prairie, and hunted in the Rocky Mountains, and found yer way to Ungava not to mintion havin' comed oraginally from ould Ireland which ov itsilf secures ye agin mistakes of every kind whatsumdiver. Lose yersilf!
I bean't agoing to let him be hung for this job. A loife for a loife, saes oi; so tell him to keep up his heart." There was no signature to the paper. Ned looked up with delight in his face. "But won't the letter clear me, Mr. Wakefield? It shows that it was not me, but some one else who did it." "No, Sankey, pray do not cherish any false hopes on that ground.
This word is always employed by Alfred to denote the ocean, while smaller portions are uniformly called sae in the singular, saes in the plural. Barr Called Wenadel sea in the Anglo-Saxon original; probably because it had been crossed by the Vandals or Wends, in going from Spain to the conquest of Africa. In the translation by Barrington, this sentence is quite unintelligible.
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