Complete Works of James Joyce

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Complete Works of James Joyce Page 211

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  “If this man was alive,” he said, pointing to the leaf, “we’d have no talk of an address of welcome.”

  “That’s true,” said Mr. O’Connor.

  “Musha, God be with them times!” said the old man. “There was some life in it then.”

  The room was silent again. Then a bustling little man with a snuffling nose and very cold ears pushed in the door. He walked over quickly to the fire, rubbing his hands as if he intended to produce a spark from them.

  “No money, boys,” he said.

  “Sit down here, Mr. Henchy,” said the old man, offering him his chair.

  “O, don’t stir, Jack, don’t stir,” said Mr. Henchy

  He nodded curtly to Mr. Hynes and sat down on the chair which the old man vacated.

  “Did you serve Aungier Street?” he asked Mr. O’Connor.

  “Yes,” said Mr. O’Connor, beginning to search his pockets for memoranda.

  “Did you call on Grimes?”

  “I did.”

  “Well? How does he stand?”

  “He wouldn’t promise. He said: ‘I won’t tell anyone what way I’m going to vote.’ But I think he’ll be all right.”

  “Why so?”

  “He asked me who the nominators were; and I told him. I mentioned Father Burke’s name. I think it’ll be all right.”

  Mr. Henchy began to snuffle and to rub his hands over the fire at a terrific speed. Then he said:

  “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 won’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.”

  “O, he’s as tricky as they make ‘em,” said Mr. Henchy. “He hasn’t got those little pigs’ eyes for nothing. Blast his soul! Couldn’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 won’t stump up?”

  “I can’t help it,” said Mr. Henchy. “I expect to find the bailiffs in the hall when I go home.”

  Mr. Hynes laughed and, shoving himself away from the mantelpiece with the aid of his shoulders, made ready to leave.

  “It’ll be all right when King Eddie comes,” he said. “Well boys, I’m off for the present. See you later. ‘Bye, ‘bye.”

  He went out of the room slowly. Neither Mr. Henchy nor the old man said anything, but, just as the door was closing, Mr. O’Connor, who had been staring moodily into the fire, called out suddenly:

  “‘Bye, Joe.”

  Mr. Henchy waited a few moments and then nodded in the direction of the door.

  “Tell me,” he said across the fire, “what brings our friend in here? What does he want?”

  “‘Usha, poor Joe!” said Mr. O’Connor, throwing the end of his cigarette into the fire, “he’s hard up, like the rest of us.”

  Mr. Henchy snuffled vigorously and spat so copiously that he nearly put out the fire, which uttered a hissing protest.

  “To tell you my private and candid opinion,” he said, “I think he’s a man from the other camp. He’s a spy of Colgan’s, if you ask me. Just go round and try and find out how they’re getting on. They won’t suspect you. Do you twig?”

  “Ah, poor Joe is a decent skin,” said Mr. O’Connor.

  “His father was a decent, respectable man,” Mr. Henchy admitted. “Poor old Larry Hynes! Many a good turn he did in his day! But I’m greatly afraid our friend is not nineteen carat. Damn it, I can understand a fellow being hard up, but what I can’t understand is a fellow sponging. Couldn’t he have some spark of manhood about him?”

  “He doesn’t get a warm welcome from me when he comes,” said the old man. “Let him work for his own side and not come spying around here.”

  “I don’t know,” said Mr. O’Connor dubiously, as he took out cigarette-papers and tobacco. “I think Joe Hynes is a straight man. He’s a clever chap, too, with the pen. Do you remember that thing he wrote...?”

  “Some of these hillsiders and fenians are a bit too clever if ask me,” said Mr. Henchy. “Do you know what my private and candid opinion is about some of those little jokers? I believe half of them are in the pay of the Castle.”

  “There’s no knowing,” said the old man.

  “O, but I know it for a fact,” said Mr. Henchy. “They’re Castle hacks.... I don’t say Hynes.... No, damn it, I think he’s a stroke above that.... But there’s a certain little nobleman with a cock-eye — you know the patriot I’m alluding to?”

  Mr. O’Connor nodded.

  “There’s a lineal descendant of Major Sirr for you if you like! O, the heart’s blood of a patriot! That’s a fellow now that’d sell his country for fourpence — ay — and go down on his bended knees and thank the Almighty Christ he had a country to sell.”

  There was a knock at the door.

  “Come in!” said Mr. Henchy.

  A person resembling a poor clergyman or a poor actor appeared in the doorway. His black clothes were tightly buttoned on his short body and it was impossible to say whether he wore a clergyman’s collar or a layman’s, because the collar of his shabby frock-coat, the uncovered buttons of which reflected the candlelight, was turned up about his neck. He wore a round hat of hard black felt. His face, shining with raindrops, had the appearance of damp yellow cheese save where two rosy spots indicated the cheekbones. He opened his very long mouth suddenly to express disappointment and at the same time opened wide his very bright blue eyes to express pleasure and surprise.

  “O Father Keon!” said Mr. Henchy, jumping up from his chair. “Is that you? Come in!”

  “O, no, no, no!” said Father Keon quickly, pursing his lips as if he were addressing a child.

  “Won’t you come in and sit down?”

  “No, no, no!” said Father Keon, speaking in a discreet, indulgent, velvety voice. “Don’t let me disturb you now! I’m just looking for Mr. Fanning....”

  “He’s round at the Black Eagle,” said Mr. Henchy. “But won’t you come in and sit down a minute?”

  “No, no, thank you. It was just a little business matter,” said Father Keon. “Thank you, indeed.”

  He retreated from the doorway and Mr. Henchy, seizing one of the candlesticks, went to the door to light him downstairs.

  “O, don’t trouble, I beg!”

  “No, but the stairs is so dark.”

  “No, no, I can see.... Thank you, indeed.”

  “Are you right now?”

  “All right, thanks.... Thanks.”

  Mr. Henchy returned with the candlestick and put it on the table. He sat down again at the fire. There was silence for a few moments.

  “Tell me, John,” said Mr. O’Connor, lighting his cigarette with another pasteboard card.

  “Hm?”

  “What he is exactly?”

  “Ask me an easier one,” said Mr. Henchy.

  “Fanning and himself seem to me very thick. They’re often in Kavanagh’s together. Is he a priest at all?”

  “Mmmyes, I believe so.... I think h
e’s what you call black sheep. We haven’t many of them, thank God! but we have a few.... He’s an unfortunate man of some kind....”

  “And how does he knock it out?” asked Mr. O’Connor.

  “That’s another mystery.”

  “Is he attached to any chapel or church or institution or — -”

  “No,” said Mr. Henchy, “I think he’s travelling on his own account.... God forgive me,” he added, “I thought he was the dozen of stout.”

  “Is there any chance of a drink itself?” asked Mr. O’Connor.

  “I’m dry too,” said the old man.

  “I asked that little shoeboy three times,” said Mr. Henchy, “would he send up a dozen of stout. I asked him again now, but he was leaning on the counter in his shirt-sleeves having a deep goster with Alderman Cowley.”

  “Why didn’t you remind him?” said Mr. O’Connor.

  “Well, I couldn’t go over while he was talking to Alderman Cowley. I just waited till I caught his eye, and said: ‘About that little matter I was speaking to you about....’ ‘That’ll be all right, Mr. H.,’ he said. Yerra, sure the little hop-o’-my-thumb has forgotten all about it.”

  “There’s some deal on in that quarter,” said Mr. O’Connor thoughtfully. “I saw the three of them hard at it yesterday at Suffolk Street corner.”

  “I think I know the little game they’re at,” said Mr. Henchy. “You must owe the City Fathers money nowadays if you want to be made Lord Mayor. Then they’ll make you Lord Mayor. By God! I’m thinking seriously of becoming a City Father myself. What do you think? Would I do for the job?”

  Mr. O’Connor laughed.

  “So far as owing money goes....”

  “Driving out of the Mansion House,” said Mr. Henchy, “in all my vermin, with Jack here standing up behind me in a powdered wig — eh?”

  “And make me your private secretary, John.”

  “Yes. And I’ll make Father Keon my private chaplain. We’ll have a family party.”

  “Faith, Mr. Henchy,” said the old man, “you’d keep up better style than some of them. I was talking one day to old Keegan, the porter. ‘And how do you like your new master, Pat?’ says I to him. ‘You haven’t much entertaining now,’ says I. ‘Entertaining!’ says he. ‘He’d live on the smell of an oil-rag.’ And do you know what he told me? Now, I declare to God I didn’t believe him.”

  “What?” said Mr. Henchy and Mr. O’Connor.

  “He told me: ‘What do you think of a Lord Mayor of Dublin sending out for a pound of chops for his dinner? How’s that for high living?’ says he. ‘Wisha! wisha,’ says I. ‘A pound of chops,’ says he, ‘coming into the Mansion House.’ ‘Wisha!’ says I, ‘what kind of people is going at all now?”

  At this point there was a knock at the door, and a boy put in his head.

  “What is it?” said the old man.

  “From the Black Eagle,” said the boy, walking in sideways and depositing a basket on the floor with a noise of shaken bottles.

  The old man helped the boy to transfer the bottles from the basket to the table and counted the full tally. After the transfer the boy put his basket on his arm and asked:

  “Any bottles?”

  “What bottles?” said the old man.

  “Won’t you let us drink them first?” said Mr. Henchy.

  “I was told to ask for the bottles.”

  “Come back tomorrow,” said the old man.

  “Here, boy!” said Mr. Henchy, “will you run over to O’Farrell’s and ask him to lend us a corkscrew — for Mr. Henchy, say. Tell him we won’t keep it a minute. Leave the basket there.”

  The boy went out and Mr. Henchy began to rub his hands cheerfully, saying:

  “Ah, well, he’s not so bad after all. He’s as good as his word, anyhow.”

  “There’s no tumblers,” said the old man.

  “O, don’t let that trouble you, Jack,” said Mr. Henchy. “Many’s the good man before now drank out of the bottle.”

  “Anyway, it’s better than nothing,” said Mr. O’Connor.

  “He’s not a bad sort,” said Mr. Henchy, “only Fanning has such a loan of him. He means well, you know, in his own tinpot way.”

  The boy came back with the corkscrew. The old man opened three bottles and was handing back the corkscrew when Mr. Henchy said to the boy:

  “Would you like a drink, boy?”

  “If you please, sir,” said the boy.

  The old man opened another bottle grudgingly, and handed it to the boy.

  “What age are you?” he asked.

  “Seventeen,” said the boy.

  As the old man said nothing further, the boy took the bottle and said: “Here’s my best respects, sir, to Mr. Henchy,” drank the contents, put the bottle back on the table and wiped his mouth with his sleeve. Then he took up the corkscrew and went out of the door sideways, muttering some form of salutation.

  “That’s the way it begins,” said the old man.

  “The thin edge of the wedge,” said Mr. Henchy.

  The old man distributed the three bottles which he had opened and the men drank from them simultaneously. After having drank each placed his bottle on the mantelpiece within hand’s reach and drew in a long breath of satisfaction.

  “Well, I did a good day’s work today,” said Mr. Henchy, after a pause.

  “That so, John?”

  “Yes. I got him one or two sure things in Dawson Street, Crofton and myself. Between ourselves, you know, Crofton (he’s a decent chap, of course), but he’s not worth a damn as a canvasser. He hasn’t a word to throw to a dog. He stands and looks at the people while I do the talking.”

  Here two men entered the room. One of them was a very fat man whose blue serge clothes seemed to be in danger of falling from his sloping figure. He had a big face which resembled a young ox’s face in expression, staring blue eyes and a grizzled moustache. The other man, who was much younger and frailer, had a thin, clean-shaven face. He wore a very high double collar and a wide-brimmed bowler hat.

  “Hello, Crofton!” said Mr. Henchy to the fat man. “Talk of the devil...”

  “Where did the boose come from?” asked the young man. “Did the cow calve?”

  “O, of course, Lyons spots the drink first thing!” said Mr. O’Connor, laughing.

  “Is that the way you chaps canvass,” said Mr. Lyons, “and Crofton and I out in the cold and rain looking for votes?”

  “Why, blast your soul,” said Mr. Henchy, “I’d get more votes in five minutes than you two’d get in a week.”

  “Open two bottles of stout, Jack,” said Mr. O’Connor.

  “How can I?” said the old man, “when there’s no corkscrew?”

  “Wait now, wait now!” said Mr. Henchy, getting up quickly. “Did you ever see this little trick?”

  He took two bottles from the table and, carrying them to the fire, put them on the hob. Then he sat down again by the fire and took another drink from his bottle. Mr. Lyons sat on the edge of the table, pushed his hat towards the nape of his neck and began to swing his legs.

  “Which is my bottle?” he asked.

  “This, lad,” said Mr. Henchy.

  Mr. Crofton sat down on a box and looked fixedly at the other bottle on the hob. He was silent for two reasons. The first reason, sufficient in itself, was that he had nothing to say; the second reason was that he considered his companions beneath him. He had been a canvasser for Wilkins, the Conservative, but when the Conservatives had withdrawn their man and, choosing the lesser of two evils, given their support to the Nationalist candidate, he had been engaged to work for Mr. Tiemey.

  In a few minutes an apologetic “Pok!” was heard as the cork flew out of Mr. Lyons’ bottle. Mr. Lyons jumped off the table, went to the fire, took his bottle and carried it back to the table.

  “I was just telling them, Crofton,” said Mr. Henchy, “that we got a good few votes today.”

  “Who did you get?” asked Mr. Lyons.

  “Well
, I got Parkes for one, and I got Atkinson for two, and got Ward of Dawson Street. Fine old chap he is, too — regular old toff, old Conservative! ‘But isn’t your candidate a Nationalist?’ said he. ‘He’s a respectable man,’ said I. ‘He’s in favour of whatever will benefit this country. He’s a big ratepayer,’ I said. ‘He has extensive house property in the city and three places of business and isn’t it to his own advantage to keep down the rates? He’s a prominent and respected citizen,’ said I, ‘and a Poor Law Guardian, and he doesn’t belong to any party, good, bad, or indifferent.’ That’s the way to talk to ‘em.”

  “And what about the address to the King?” said Mr. Lyons, after drinking and smacking his lips.

  “Listen to me,” said Mr. Henchy. “What we want in thus country, as I said to old Ward, is capital. The King’s coming here will mean an influx of money into this country. The citizens of Dublin will benefit by it. Look at all the factories down by the quays there, idle! Look at all the money there is in the country if we only worked the old industries, the mills, the ship-building yards and factories. It’s capital we want.”

  “But look here, John,” said Mr. O’Connor. “Why should we welcome the King of England? Didn’t Parnell himself...”

  “Parnell,” said Mr. Henchy, “is dead. Now, here’s the way I look at it. Here’s this chap come to the throne after his old mother keeping him out of it till the man was grey. He’s a man of the world, and he means well by us. He’s a jolly fine decent fellow, if you ask me, and no damn nonsense about him. He just says to himself: ‘The old one never went to see these wild Irish. By Christ, I’ll go myself and see what they’re like.’ And are we going to insult the man when he comes over here on a friendly visit? Eh? Isn’t that right, Crofton?”

  Mr. Crofton nodded his head.

  “But after all now,” said Mr. Lyons argumentatively, “King Edward’s life, you know, is not the very...”

  “Let bygones be bygones,” said Mr. Henchy. “I admire the man personally. He’s just an ordinary knockabout like you and me. He’s fond of his glass of grog and he’s a bit of a rake, perhaps, and he’s a good sportsman. Damn it, can’t we Irish play fair?”

  “That’s all very fine,” said Mr. Lyons. “But look at the case of Parnell now.”

 

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