[Yeast: A Problem by Charles Kingsley]@TWC D-Link bookYeast: A Problem CHAPTER X: 'MURDER WILL OUT,' AND LOVE TOO 38/48
Don't you think, on the whole, it might be better to mind your own business ?' 'Me own business! Poker o' Moses! and ain't it me own business? Haven't ye spilte my tenderest hopes? And good luck to ye in that same, for ye're as pretty a rider as ever kicked coping-stones out of a wall; and poor Paddy loves a sportsman by nature.
Och! but ye've got a hand of trumps this time.
Didn't I mate the vicar the other day, and spake my mind to him ?' 'What do you mean ?' asked Lancelot, with a strong expletive. 'Faix, I told him he might as well Faugh a ballagh--make a rid road, and get out of that, with his bowings and his crossings, and his Popery made asy for small minds, for there was a gun a-field that would wipe his eye,--maning yourself, ye Prathestant.' 'All I can say is, that you had really better mind your own business, and I'll mind my own.' 'Och,' said the good-natured Irishman, 'and it's you must mind my business, and I'll mind yours; and that's all fair and aqual.
Ye've cut me out intirely at the Priory, ye Tory, and so ye're bound to give me a lift somehow.
Couldn't ye look me out a fine fat widow, with an illigant little fortune? For what's England made for except to find poor Paddy a wife and money? Ah, ye may laugh, but I'd buy me a chapel at the West-end: me talents are thrown away here intirely, wasting me swateness on the desert air, as Tom Moore says' (Panurgus used to attribute all quotations whatsoever to Irish geniuses); 'and I flatter meself I'm the boy to shute the Gospel to the aristocracy.' Lancelot burst into a roar of laughter, and escaped over the next gate: but the Irishman's coarse hints stuck by him as they were intended to do.
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