“Onct a week that sanchewary would fill youse to d' chin on chimes; oh, yes! but no buns; not on your life! Chimes is d' limit wit' that choich. An' say! it's got money to boin! Bread at d' bakery! chimes at d' choich! that's how dey line t'ings up at that corner. An' I'm here to say as between d' brace of 'em, when it gets down to d' cold proposition, 'W'ich does d' most good?' d' bakery can lose that temple of worship in a walk. I strings me money on d' bakery. An' don't youse forget it!”
Chucky was quite exhausted after this outburst. He revived, however, with the hot Scotch, which restored him mightily.
“Onct,” resumed Chucky, “about ten years ago, this is, I was where a w'ite choker was takin' up a c'llection. An' what do youse figure he wants it for? I'm a black Republican if he didn't break it off on us that he was out to make up a wad so his congregation could cel'brate d' fortieth birt'-day of gold in Californy. Don't that knock youse silly? D' w'ite choker says as how he comes from Californy an' him an' his push is goin' to toin themselfs loose, see! an whoop it up because dey found gold forty spaces back. It made me tired, honest!
“'Why!' I says to this pulpit t'umper, just like that, 'Why! don't youse preach that gold is d' roots of evil? An' now youse is framin' up a blow-out over findin' it! It looks like a dead gauzy bluff to me.'
“What does d' w'ite choker mark do? Just gives me d' dead face an' ignores me.
“Youse permits yourself to be amazed at me pickin' this guy up about gold bein' d' seeds of evil,” observed Chucky, with a touch of severity. This was in response to some syllable of admiration I'd let fall. “Youse needn't mind. I'll give youse a tip that in me yout' I was d' star peeple of d' Sunday school dey opens long ago at d' Five Points. That's straight goods, see! I was d' soonest kid at me lessons that ever comes down d' pike, an 'd' swiftest ever. I has all d' other kids on d' blink. I win a test'ment onct from d' outstretched mits of d' entire push, bar d' Bible class, for loinin' more verses be heart than anybody. I downs every kid in d' bunch. I made 'em look like a lot of suckers!” and Chucky paused in approving meditation over the victories of boyhood days.
“Still d' choiches does dead lots o' good,” asserted Chucky, coming back to the subject. “There's d' case of Bridgy McGuire. She makes two or t'ree trips to d' Cat'lic joint over on Mott Street, an' all she loins, so it sticks in her frizzes, is: 'Honour dy father an' dy mother,' see! An' Bridgy says herself it's that what brings her back after she's been run away from home for six years. Bridgy shows up just in time to straighten out d' game for d' McGuires at that. D' fam'ly was on d' hog for fair when Bridgy gets there.
“Nixie, d' yarn ain't so long, nor yet so scarce; for that matter, there's lots more like 'em. In d' foist place, this mark, McGuire, Bridgy's dad, ain't so bad. Mac's a bricklayer; but d' loose screw wit' him was that he ain't woikin' in d' winter; an' as durin' d' summer he gen'rally lushes more whiskey than he lays bricks, an' is more apt to hit d' bottle than a job, d' McGuire household's more or less on d' bum, see!
“I remembers Bridgy when she's so little a yard makes a frock for her. She was a long, slim, bony kid, wit' legs on her like she's built to pick hops; an' if Bridgy shows anyt'ing in her breed when young, it's a strong streak of step-ladder.
“In her kid days I wasn't noticin' Bridgy much; d' fact was, then as now, I'm havin' troubles, of me own. Her mommer, who was pretty near an even break wit' Mac himself when it comes to hittin' up d' booze, every now an' then t'run back to d' religious days of her own yout', an' it's durin' one of these Bible fits of d' old woman that she saws Bridgy off on d' choich, where I speaks of her gettin 'd' hunch from d' priest, or somebody, that it's d' fly caper if youse is out to finish wit' d' heavenly squeeze, to honour your father an' mother.