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and passionately in love. I don't like it, because there is not the most remote probability of my ever exchanging six syllables with these objects of my devoted affection, not to mention that they are equally beloved by some three or four hundred rivals; but I am powerless to oppose; I can't help it. My life is an everlasting "dream of fair women:" I know it is a dream, but I cannot waken.

Others have roused me, though, and most uncomfortably. I heard a Devonshire girl, whom I met at a wedding breakfast, and with whom I thought I was progressing favourably, whispering to her neighbour, "This tipsy child is becoming a nuisance, and I really must ring for nurse," when I was as sober as Father Matthew, and had whiskers of considerable beauty, if viewed in an advantageous light. Still more sadly and recently, another "daughter of the gods, divinely fair," dissipated Love's young dream, and sent me forth to a foreign land to forget my sorrows, as, indeed, I immediately did.

The catastrophe, which caused our happy days in Ireland, befel as follows.

""Twas in the prime of summer time, an evening calm and cool," that I found myself wandering among the shrubberies of

Castle with a most lovely girl. A large picnic party had been enlivened by archery and aquatics, and I fancy that the

glare of some new targets, and the sheen of the "shining river," had not only dazzled my eyes, but likewise had bewildered my brain. In spite of the cooling beverages, the cobblers and the cups, I was actuated by an extraordinary liveliness. I sang songs for the company, not quite reaching the high notes, but with intense feeling, doing all in my power to indicate to the lovely girl that she was my Annie Laurie, and that for her I should consider it a pleasant gymnastic exercise to expire in a recumbent position. I made felicitous alterations in the words, such as "hazel is her e'e" for "dark-blue;" and in the song of

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Constance," instead of "I lay it as the rose is laid on some immortal shrine," I contrived, with immense difficulty, and by means of a terrific apoggiatura, to substitute the word stephanotis, of which I had that morning given her a bouquet. But "brevis esse laboro;" we were alone, and I resolved to propose. I seized her elbow with both hands, a ridiculous position, but I was very nervous, and was about to ask the momentous question, when she said with such a tone of gentle pity as took away half the pain, "Philip, I am engaged to Lord Evelyn. Shall we go back for coffee?" I seconded the motion, but oh, what an amazing period of time we seemed to occupy in carrying our proposition out! The first idea which presented itself to my mind was suicide, but it met with an unfavourable reception; the second, to enlist immediately, and to

secure the earliest coup-de-soleil possible; the third, to insult Lord Evelyn (the beast was at Christ Church, and I knew him), and subsequently to shoot him in Port-Meadow. "What right had he," I asked myself, "to anticipate me, and win her heart? I hate these accursed aristocrats, who suck the life-blood of the people."

This is the accursed aristocrat who sucks the life-blood of the people!

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At last, we rejoined the party, and found them talking the

silliest rubbish conceivable, and apparently enjoying the nastiest coffee I ever remember to have drunk.

That night, and at the witching hour, when men and women tell each other everything, (in the strictest confidence), they in their dormitories, and we in our smoke-rooms, I revealed my misery to my friend Frank C, who happened happily to be staying with me. Frank has Irish blood in his veins, and his first impulse was to have "a crack at the Viscount," but he ultimately took a less truculent view of the case, and suggested brandy and water. From this source, and "from the cool cisterns of the midnight air," for we were smoking our cigars out of doors, "our spirits drank repose," and we finally resolved "to banish my regret," and to replenish our sketch-books, by a fortnight's tour in Ireland.

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CHAPTER II.

TO DUBLIN.

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ORTHWITH, I put myself into active training, and got into splendid condition for doing "justice to Ireland." I read Moore's Melodies; I played Nora Creina upon the flute, not perhaps with that rapidity which is usual outside the Peepshows, but with much

more expression; I discoursed

with reapers; I tried to pronounce Drogheda, till I was nearly black in the face; I drank whiskey-punch (subsequently discovered to be Hollands); I ate Irish stew (a dish never heard of in that

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