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"Don't be unaisy, Darby," he said. "We can't give you a lease for about a week or fortnight; but the agent is now here, an' we must first take out new leases ourselves. As soon as we do you shall have yours." "If you only knew, your honor, the scrapin' I had in these hard times, to get together that hundhre "

"Sure, Miss Ruth, I can't read it quickly when my mind is so unaisy. Just read it to me, honey." So Ruth read it over for the twentieth time and was surprised to find Ellen still looking cheerful as she finished.

Better a'most to let 'em have it, than damage a drop or a thread of such goods." "All right, Cappen Brown. Don't you be so wonnerful unaisy. Not the first time we have handled such stuff." "I'm not so sure of that," replied Brown, as he lit a short pipe and began to puff. "I've a-run some afore, but never none so precious."

Don't be unaisy, man alive," he proceeded; "have patience for patience, as everybody knows, is a virtue do, then, have patience, or, maybe oh! ay! here it is here is what you want the very thing, I'll be bound and you must have it, too." And the poor man, in the hurry and alarm of the moment, pulled out one of the baronet's pistols. The robber whipped away the lantern, and instantly disappeared.

Kelly, nice, nice that happy and comfortable and Uncle Joe is that good heavy bag at you to-night, you say? Aw, heavy, yes, heavy love to Grannie and all inquiring friends nothing, Mr. Kelly, nothing just a scribe of a line, thinking a man might be getting unaisy. She needn't, though she needn't. But chut! It's nothing. Writing a letter is nothing to her at all.

The next day I tould them the truth, and he was taken again; but it seems that the gintleman that prosecuted, on hearin' that there was another person so like him, felt unaisy in his mind and got him off for the murdher, in dread he might have sworn against the wrong man.

''Tis an unaisy way you're situated yourself, I'm afeard, observed the man. 'Have the goodness to say, Sir, by what meanth, if any, I can reach either bank of the river, lisped Puddock, with dignity. ''Tis thrue for you, captain, that's the chat how the divil to get you alive out o' the position you're in. Can you swim? 'No, Thir. 'An' how the dickens did you get there?

Ay, an' t' women fowks gat their chaps to join i' t' wark; there were no settin' off for t' public of a neet, an' no threapin' or fratchin' at t' call-hoils. It was wark, wark, wark, through morn to neet, an' all on account o' Throp's wife an' her spinnin'-wheel. "Well, after a time Cohen-eead had getten that sober an' hard-workin', t'owd devil began to grow a bit unaisy.

They parted company where the roads met, an' I heard Sir Shawn trottin' his horse up the road in front o' me, an' Spitfire that was Mr. Comerford's horse was unaisy an' refusin' the dark road under the trees. You couldn't tell what the crathur saw, God help us all! No horse liked that road.

"'Faith, but the villains is intent on my pig, any how, muttered the perplexed but angry Matthew, as he saw the struggles of his favorite when the robber attempted to secure a cord to her hind leg, which he seemed to find a difficult task. "'The curse of Crom'll upon ye for an unaisy brute, any how, Ned! Ned Costigan, I say, come, ye little divil, and help me tie the knot, ye frikened omadhaun.