| Harriet Corp - 1829 - 266 pages
...a year, and that on the first day, it is a ditty as old as his dwelling-house, with the chorus— " I care for nobody, no not I; For nobody cares for me." But we have to speak of more interesting characters than that of the squire; and, first, the parish... | |
| Henry Grattan - 1841 - 546 pages
...viceroy look shy, Scarce a friend shall I find in the House. • Fitzgibbon, attorney-general. t Ht. Hon. John Foster. J Henry Grattan. VOL. III. LL FIRST...You've chose a wrong nation for playing your tricks on, So, pack up your alls, and be trudging away. You'd better be quiet, And not breed a riot, Nor keep... | |
| Henry Grattan - 1841 - 546 pages
...the House. • Fitzgibbon, attorney-general. t Bt. Hon. John Foster. J Henry Grattan. FIRST GUTTEK.* Gentle Prince ! ah, tell me why Thus you scorn, and...You've chose a wrong nation for playing your tricks on, So, pack up your alls, and be trudging away. You'd better be quiet, And not breed a riot, Nor keep... | |
| Henry Grattan - 1849 - 546 pages
...Fitzgibbon, atlorney-peneral. t Rt. Hon. John Fo§t«r. J Henry Grattan. VOL. III. LL 1 514 APPENDIX. FIRST GUTTER.* Gentle Prince ! ah, tell me why Thus...You've chose a wrong nation for playing your tricks on, So, pack up your alls, and be trudging away. You'd better be quiet, And not breed a riot, Nor keep... | |
| Edward George E.L. Bulwer- Lytton (1st baron.) - 1851 - 400 pages
...answered the stranger, with a mixture of pride and sadness in his voice. "But, as the song has it — ' I care for nobody — no, not I, For nobody cares for me !'" There was a certain pathos in the 240 34l moekery with whieh he repeated the homely lines, although,... | |
| Emil Kade - 1856 - 280 pages
...play. By. — I have no reason to complain of my lot. By. — She knew nothing about them. Bell. — I care for nobody, no, not I, for nobody cares for me. Song. c. I am not able to write long letters. By. — My prospects are not very pleasant. By. — I... | |
| Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton - 1873 - 532 pages
...answered the stranger, with a mixture of pride and sadness in his voice. "But, as the song has it — ' I care for nobody— no, not I, For nobody cares for me ! ' " he repeated the homely lines, although, as he did, he gathered himself up, as if conscious of... | |
| John C. Salmon - 1877 - 294 pages
...whistled to themselves, in their solitude, the burden of some such ditty as the Jolly Miller's song :— " I care for nobody, no, not I, For nobody cares for me." Mr. Allan Cunningham gays, " The ballads devoted to the exploits of Robin Hood and his whole company... | |
| Francis H. Grundy - 1879 - 410 pages
...passed those weeks right happilyMy chief employment seems now to have been going about -carolling, ' I care for nobody, no, not I, for nobody cares for me,' until I must have been a nuisance to my companions. By the way, we had a care once, for, sending James... | |
| Margaret Wolfe Hungerford - 1879 - 346 pages
...amused. 'I have no experience,' returns she, colouring and smiling ; ' I am like the Miller of the Dee, I care for nobody, no, not I — for nobody cares for me.' 'You forget your cousin.' The words escape him almost without his consent. Miss Chesney starts perceptibly,... | |
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