Popular Irish Readings in Prose and VerseRobert Ford A. Gardner, 1897 - 128 oldal |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 12 találatból.
10. oldal
... half of his face ! And nothing about it to charm the eye But curves the wrong way , and lines all awry . And here the three students so meekly did crave A night's bed and board from the porter so grave ; Who admitted them straight ...
... half of his face ! And nothing about it to charm the eye But curves the wrong way , and lines all awry . And here the three students so meekly did crave A night's bed and board from the porter so grave ; Who admitted them straight ...
17. oldal
... half of Omagh Railway belongs to , coming here after buying a single ticket ! But what need I talk ? A man that'll not buy a pennyworth of soap to wash his own face , will do little for the love of truth or his fellow- man . If ...
... half of Omagh Railway belongs to , coming here after buying a single ticket ! But what need I talk ? A man that'll not buy a pennyworth of soap to wash his own face , will do little for the love of truth or his fellow- man . If ...
54. oldal
... half - holiday to myself— if you will all promise to be in your places to - morrow mornin ' as usual , and continue to be good boys in the future , we will now declare the school dismissed for the day . " ORANGE AND GREEN . BY GERALD ...
... half - holiday to myself— if you will all promise to be in your places to - morrow mornin ' as usual , and continue to be good boys in the future , we will now declare the school dismissed for the day . " ORANGE AND GREEN . BY GERALD ...
58. oldal
... half - thatched and ruinous chapel , by the lone hill- side , that he was one Sunday celebrating mass . The worthy Father intended delivering an address to his flock from the altar , urging them to the necessity of bestirring themselves ...
... half - thatched and ruinous chapel , by the lone hill- side , that he was one Sunday celebrating mass . The worthy Father intended delivering an address to his flock from the altar , urging them to the necessity of bestirring themselves ...
62. oldal
... half a loaf is better than no bread . " " Please your reverence , " says Mick , from the body of the chapel , " sure seven and sixpence is more than the half of ten shillings . " ( A laugh . ) " Oh ! how witty you are . Faith , if you ...
... half a loaf is better than no bread . " " Please your reverence , " says Mick , from the body of the chapel , " sure seven and sixpence is more than the half of ten shillings . " ( A laugh . ) " Oh ! how witty you are . Faith , if you ...
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
afther Andy Andy's Arrah Ballinamuck Bernard O'Dowd Biddy bottle Caoch O'Leary captain Celt CHARLES LEVER Ciudad Rodrigo Cork craythur crowd Darby darlint divil Donegal drame eyes faith Father O'Higgins Father Phil fellow gentleman give goin gridiron hand head heard heart honour Ireland Irish jist ketch LAKOLA land laugh letter look luck Mick Purcell Mickey mighty Miss Dashwood Miss Macan Molchy Molly Molly Malone mornin munseer never night o'er O'Hanlon O'Harman Ohone Orangeman ould woman Paddy Peg of Limavaddy Peggy O'Neal Peggy's Phadrig Crohoore plaze poor postmaster pray priest round saint SAMUEL LOVER says Mick says the widdy scran Shamus O'Brien shout shure shwim squire stood sure tell there's thim thing thought Troth turned twas voice what's Widow Malone word
Népszerű szakaszok
24. oldal - ... ever — and, faith, I began to think that maybe the captain was wrong, and that it was not France at all at all ; and so says I,
98. oldal - O judge ! darlin', don't, oh, don't say the word! The crathur is young, have mercy, my lord ; He was foolish, he didn't know what he was doin' You don't know him, my lord,— oh, don't give him to ruin.
22. oldal - I'm as good a furriner myself as any o' thim.' " ' What do you mane ?' says he. " ' I mane,' says I, ' what I towld you, that I'm as good a furriner myself as any o
27. oldal - O'Leary. Well — twenty summers had gone past, And June's red sun was sinking, When I, a man, sat by my door, Of twenty sad things thinking. A little dog came up the way, His gait was slow and weary, And at his tail a lame man limped — 'Twas "Pinch
44. oldal - Of lovers she had a full score, Or more; And fortunes they all had galore, In store; From the minister down To the Clerk of the Crown, All were courting the Widow Malone, Ohone!
44. oldal - you're my Molly Malone, My own ! Oh," says he, " you're my Molly Malone." And the widow they all thought so shy, My eye ! Ne'er thought of a simper or sigh, For why ? But " Lucius," says she, " Since you've now made so free, You may marry your Mary Malone, Ohone ! You may marry your Mary Malone.
27. oldal - O'Leary ! Old Caoch, but, oh ! how woe-begone ! His form is bowed and bending, His fleshless hands are stiff and wan, Ay — Time is even blending The colours on his threadbare ' bag ' — And ' Pinch ' is twice as hairy And 'thin-spare' as when first I saw Himself and Caoch O'Leary. ' God's blessing here ! ' the wanderer cried, ' Far, far be hell's black viper ; Does anybody hereabouts Remember Caoch the Piper ? ' With swelling heart I grasped his hand ; The old man murmured, 'Deary, Are you the...
78. oldal - Indeed, then, sure enough I was, that's no lie for you, sir. Good morning to you, but it is not rich I am now - but have you another bottle, for I want it now as much as I did long ago; so if you have it, sir, here is the cow for it.' 'And here is the bottle,' said the old man, smiling; 'you know what to do with it.
113. oldal - Yes, sir," said the postmaster, producing one, — " fourpence." The gentleman paid the fourpence postage, and left the shop with his letter. " Here's a letter for the squire," said the postmaster, "you've to pay me elevenpence postage.
21. oldal - Well, with that my heart began to grow light: and when I seen my life was safe I began to grow twice hungrier nor ever; so says I, 'Captain jewel, I wish we had a gridiron.