Wild Wales: Its People, Language and Scenery by George Henry Borrow
page 209 of 922 (22%)
page 209 of 922 (22%)
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accident not being so long as its brother leg, had a patten
attached to it, about five inches high, to enable it to do duty with the other - he was a fellow with red shock hair and very red features, and was dressed in ragged coat and breeches and a hat which had lost part of its crown, and all its rim, so that even without a game leg he would have looked rather a queer figure. In his hand he carried a fiddle. "Good morning to you," said I. "A good morning to your hanner, a merry afternoon and a roaring, joyous evening - that is the worst luck I wish to ye." "Are you a native of these parts?" said I. "Not exactly, your hanner - I am a native of the city of Dublin, or, what's all the same thing, of the village of Donnybrook, which is close by it." "A celebrated place," said I. "Your hanner may say that; all the world has heard of Donnybrook, owing to the humours of its fair. Many is the merry tune I have played to the boys at that fair." "You are a professor of music, I suppose?" "And not a very bad one, as your hanner will say, if you allow me to play you a tune." |
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