\f. 426 



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LETTER XXXIV. 



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Mac*oo*;<&pf. l^tglS. 



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\T E had to wait in the street this morning 

 a full hour before the ostler could be roused 

 from his bed, and our horses obtained. To 

 what will not habit reconcile us? We had 

 now acquired by experience such knowledge of 

 the want of order and punctuality at Irish inns, 

 that we endured the delay with the most edify- 

 ing patience ; by-the-by, this virtue is no 

 where exposed to severer trials than at Kil- 

 larney. The weather puts it often to comfort- 

 less experiments, while some forbearance is 

 requisite to submit, without loss of temper, to 

 the general conspiracy to rob and plunder. 

 The impositions, though glaring, cannot well be 

 avoided ; and as few visitors are expected to re- 

 turn, they are practised on with impunity. 



*'' 



There is still much oak in the neighbour- 

 hood of Killarney. The devastation, unfor- 

 tunately, has been made on the islands, and the 

 sides of Glena, where it was most ornamental. 



