Peg O' My Heart by J. Hartley Manners
page 64 of 476 (13%)
page 64 of 476 (13%)
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CHAPTER VII THE WOUNDED PATRIOT When Angela entered the sick-room she found Dr. McGinnis, a cheery, bright-eyed, rotund little man of fifty, talking freely to the patient and punctuating each speech with a hearty laugh. His good- humour was infectious. The wounded agitator felt the effect of it and was trying to laugh feebly himself. "Sure it's the fine target ye must have made with yer six feet and one inch. How could the poor soldiers help hittin' ye? Answer me that?" and the jovial doctor laughed again as he dexterously wound a bandage around O'Connell's arm. "Aisy now while I tie the bandage, me fine fellow. Ye'll live to see the inside of an English jail yet." He turned as he heard the door open and greeted Angela. "Good afternoon to ye, Miss Kingsnorth. Faith, it's a blessin' ye brought the boy here. There's no tellin' What the prison-surgeon would have done to him. It is saltpetre, they tell me, the English doctors rub into the Irish wounds, to kape them smartin'. And, by |
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