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The Black Baronet; or, The Chronicles Of Ballytrain - The Works of William Carleton, Volume One by William Carleton
page 130 of 930 (13%)
pleasant discussion!" We may observe here that they had been already
furnished with a better description of drink--"But with regard to the
youth in question, there is one thing puzzles me, oh, most prophetical
niece, and that is, that you should take it into your head to effect an
impossibility, in other words, to make a gentleman of him; _ex quovis
ligno nonfit Mercurius_, is a good ould proverb."

"That is but natural in her, uncle," replied Corbet, "if you knew
everything; but for the present you can't; nobody knows who he is, and
that is a secret that must be kept."

"Why," replied the pedagogue, "is he not a slip from the Black Baronet,
and are not you, Ginty----?"

"Whether the child you speak of," she replied, "is living or dead is
what nobody knows."

"There is one thing I know," said Corbet, "and that is, that I could
scald the heart and soul in the Black Baronet's body by one word's
speaking, if I wished; only the time is not yet come; but it will come,
and that soon, I hope."

"Take care, Charley," replied the master; "no violation of sacred ties.
Is not the said Baronet your foster-brother?"

"He remembered no such ties when he brought shame and disgrace on our
family," replied Corbet, with a look of such hatred and malignity as
could rarely be seen on a human countenance.

"Then why did you live with him, and remain in his confidence so long,"
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