Borító: St. Patrick's Day, or, the scheming lieutenant

St. Patrick's Day, or, the scheming lieutenant

690 Ft


Leírás

1 Sol. I say you are wrong; we should all speak together, each for himself, and all at once, that we may be heard the better.   2 Sol. Right, Jack, we'll argue in platoons.   3 Sol. Ay, ay, let him have our grievances in a volley, and if we be to have a spokesman, there's the corporal is the lieutenant's countryman, and knows his humour.   Flint. Let me alone for that. I served three years, within a bit, under his honour, in the Royal Inniskillions, and I never will see a sweeter tempered gentleman, nor one more free with his purse. I put a great shammock in his hat this morning, and I'll be bound for him he'll wear it, was it as big as Steven's Green.   4 Sol. I say again then you talk like youngsters, like militia striplings: there's a discipline, look'ee in all things, whereof the serjeant must be our guide; he's a gentleman of words; he understands your foreign lingo, your figures, and such like auxiliaries in scoring. Confess now for a reckoning, whether in chalk or writing, ben't he your only man?