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"
For
the
love
of
God
,
Jack
,
bring
us
a
bit
of
coal
.
There
must
be
some
left
.
"
The
old
man
went
out
of
the
room
.
"
It
's
no
go
,
"
said
Mr.
Henchy
,
shaking
his
head
.
"
I
asked
the
little
shoeboy
,
but
he
said
:
'
Oh
,
now
,
Mr.
Henchy
,
when
I
see
work
going
on
properly
I
wo
n't
forget
you
,
you
may
be
sure
.
'
Mean
little
tinker
!
'
Usha
,
how
could
he
be
anything
else
?
"
"
What
did
I
tell
you
,
Mat
?
"
said
Mr.
Hynes
.
"
Tricky
Dicky
Tierney
.
"
"
0
,
he
's
as
tricky
as
they
make
'em
,
"
said
Mr.
Henchy
.
"
He
has
n't
got
those
little
pigs
'
eyes
for
nothing
.
Blast
his
soul
!
Could
n't
he
pay
up
like
a
man
instead
of
:
'
O
,
now
,
Mr.
Henchy
,
I
must
speak
to
Mr.
Fanning
...
.
I
've
spent
a
lot
of
money
'
?
Mean
little
schoolboy
of
hell
!
I
suppose
he
forgets
the
time
his
little
old
father
kept
the
hand-me-down
shop
in
Mary
's
Lane
.
"
"
But
is
that
a
fact
?
"
asked
Mr.
O'Connor
.
"
God
,
yes
,
"
said
Mr.
Henchy
.
"
Did
you
never
hear
that
?
And
the
men
used
to
go
in
on
Sunday
morning
before
the
houses
were
open
to
buy
a
waistcoat
or
a
trousers
--
moya
!
But
Tricky
Dicky
's
little
old
father
always
had
a
tricky
little
black
bottle
up
in
a
corner
.
Do
you
mind
now
?
That
's
that
.
That
's
where
he
first
saw
the
light
.
"
The
old
man
returned
with
a
few
lumps
of
coal
which
he
placed
here
and
there
on
the
fire
.
"
Thats
a
nice
how-do-you-do
,
"
said
Mr.
O'Connor
.
"
How
does
he
expect
us
to
work
for
him
if
he
wo
n't
stump
up
?
"