The Hedge School; The Midnight Mass; The Donagh - Traits And Stories Of The Irish Peasantry, The Works of - William Carleton, Volume Three by William Carleton
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page 16 of 271 (05%)
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considerably above the pavement of the road. What! you ask yourself,
can this be a human habitation?--but ere you have time to answer the question, a confused buzz of voices from within reaches your ear, and the appearance of a little "gorsoon," with a red, close-cropped head and Milesian face, having in his hand a short, white stick, or the thigh-bone of a horse, which you at once recognize as "the pass" of a village school, gives you the full information. He has an ink horn, covered with leather, dangling at the button-hole (for he has long since played away the buttons) of his frieze jacket--his mouth is circumscribed with a streak of ink--his pen is stuck knowingly behind his ear--his shins are dotted over with fire-blisters, black, red, and blue--on each heel a kibe--his "leather crackers," videlicet--breeches shrunk up upon him, and only reaching as far down as the caps of his knees. Having spied you, he places his hand over his brows, to throw back the dazzling light of the sun, and peers at you from under it, till he breaks out into a laugh, exclaiming, half to himself, half to you:-- "You a gintleman!--no, nor one of your breed never was, you procthorin' thief, you!" You are now immediately opposite the door of the seminary, when half a dozen of those seated next it notice you. "Oh, sir, here's a gintleman on a horse!--masther, sir, here's a-gintleman on a horse, wid boots and spurs on him, that's looking in at us." "Silence!" exclaims the master; "back from the door; boys, rehearse; every one of you, rehearse, I say, you Boeotians, till the gintleman goes past!" |
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