Whistling, h?nnm?mg, drinking drumming, Light, tight and airy! All the aweair. faces, &e. The?owb Wept iood, the crowd was great When waddling forth, came widow Leary; Though she Was crippled in her gait, Her brawhey arms clesp'd Paddy ' Oeh, Pat,' she cried, ' go buy the rinw; Here's cash galore, my darling honey;' Says Pat, ' you sowl! I'll do that thing,' And clapt his thumb upon her money*. Gimlet eyu; sausage nose,-- Pat so sly, ogle throws, Learing, tittering, jeering. fritterin?, Sweet widbw Lear?! All the .sweet faees, &c. When Pat ha(i* thus his fortune made He pressed the lips of Mrs. Leary, And mountin? straight a large cockade, �In captain's boots struts Paddy Carey; He, grat-eful, praised her shape, her back, To others like a dromedary; Her eyes, that seem'd their stri.ngs to crack, Were cupid's darts to Captai? Carey! Neat.and sweet, no alloy,-- All complete love and joy: -Ra?ing;' rbarihg, soft adoring, Dear widow Leafy*. All the sweet faces � At L?r?k races, From Mulllnavat to Magherafelt, At Paddy's promotion sigh an(Lmelt; The sowls all cry, As the groom struts by, 0ch! Cushlanmcree, Thou art lost to me*.
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