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831
As
we
came
into
the
yard
one
afternoon
Polly
came
out
.
Jerry
!
I
ve
had
Mr
.
B
here
asking
about
your
vote
,
and
he
wants
to
hire
your
cab
for
the
election
;
he
will
call
for
an
answer
.
832
Well
,
Polly
,
you
may
say
that
my
cab
will
be
otherwise
engaged
.
I
should
not
like
to
have
it
pasted
over
with
their
great
bills
,
and
as
to
making
Jack
and
Captain
race
about
to
the
public
-
houses
to
bring
up
half
-
drunken
voters
,
why
,
I
think
twould
be
an
insult
to
the
horses
.
No
,
I
shan
t
do
it
.
833
I
suppose
you
ll
vote
for
the
gentleman
?
He
said
he
was
of
your
politics
.
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834
So
he
is
in
some
things
,
but
I
shall
not
vote
for
him
,
Polly
;
you
know
what
his
trade
is
?
835
Yes
.
836
Well
,
a
man
who
gets
rich
by
that
trade
may
be
all
very
well
in
some
ways
,
but
he
is
blind
as
to
what
workingmen
want
;
I
could
not
in
my
conscience
send
him
up
to
make
the
laws
.
I
dare
say
they
ll
be
angry
,
but
every
man
must
do
what
he
thinks
to
be
the
best
for
his
country
.
837
On
the
morning
before
the
election
,
Jerry
was
putting
me
into
the
shafts
,
when
Dolly
came
into
the
yard
sobbing
and
crying
,
with
her
little
blue
frock
and
white
pinafore
spattered
all
over
with
mud
.
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838
Why
,
Dolly
,
what
is
the
matter
?
839
Those
naughty
boys
,
she
sobbed
,
have
thrown
the
dirt
all
over
me
,
and
called
me
a
little
raga
raga
840
They
called
her
a
little
blue
ragamuffin
,
father
,
said
Harry
,
who
ran
in
looking
very
angry
;
but
I
have
given
it
to
them
;
they
won
t
insult
my
sister
again
.
I
have
given
them
a
thrashing
they
will
remember
;
a
set
of
cowardly
,
rascally
orange
blackguards