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the ladies. The lieutenant sang two or

three other songs, at the end of each of which, the captain proposed some appropriate bumper toast; by this time, as he shewed a very bountiful example of hospitality, Mrs. Somerive, fearing he might go too far, proposed retiring to the drawing room; a movement, which it had not occurred to Maria herself to suggest. "Nay, you must not go," said the host, "till we have a chorus of Hearts of Oak; Jack there can sing it to admiration, and I can bear a bob myself." Mrs. Somerive, seeing no wish in the younger part of the company of either sex for early separation, desisted. The song, notwithstanding rather too much vociferation on the side of the captain, was executed to the satisfaction of the company; when the laird of Etterick, turning to his nephew, said, "Willie, you are half a Scotchman, and descended

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