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    Chapter 40 - Page 2

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    the streets, and they were lounging home. But of these he asked his
    way from time to time, and by dint of repeated inquiries, he at
    length reached the dwelling of Newman Noggs.

    All that evening, Newman had been hunting and searching in byways
    and corners for the very person who now knocked at his door, while
    Nicholas had been pursuing the same inquiry in other directions. He
    was sitting, with a melancholy air, at his poor supper, when Smike's
    timorous and uncertain knock reached his ears. Alive to every
    sound, in his anxious and expectant state, Newman hurried
    downstairs, and, uttering a cry of joyful surprise, dragged the
    welcome visitor into the passage and up the stairs, and said not a
    word until he had him safe in his own garret and the door was shut
    behind them, when he mixed a great mug-full of gin-and-water, and
    holding it to Smike's mouth, as one might hold a bowl of medicine to
    the lips of a refractory child, commanded him to drain it to the
    last drop.

    Newman looked uncommonly blank when he found that Smike did little
    more than put his lips to the precious mixture; he was in the act of
    raising the mug to his own mouth with a deep sigh of compassion for
    his poor friend's weakness, when Smike, beginning to relate the
    adventures which had befallen him, arrested him half-way, and he
    stood listening, with the mug in his hand.

    It was odd enough to see the change that came over Newman as Smike
    proceeded. At first he stood, rubbing his lips with the back of his
    hand, as a preparatory ceremony towards composing himself for a
    draught; then, at the mention of Squeers, he took the mug under his
    arm, and opening his eyes very wide, looked on, in the utmost
    astonishment. When Smike came to the assault upon himself in the
    hackney coach, he hastily deposited the mug upon the table, and
    limped up and down the room in a state of the greatest excitement,
    stopping himself with a jerk, every now and then, as if to listen
    more attentively. When John Browdie came to be spoken of, he
    dropped, by slow and gradual degrees, into a chair, and rubbing, his
    hands upon his knees--quicker and quicker as the story reached its
    climax--burst, at last, into a laugh composed of one loud sonorous
    'Ha! ha!' having given vent to which, his countenance immediately
    fell again as he inquired, with the utmost anxiety, whether it was
    probable that John Browdie and Squeers had come to blows.

    'No! I think not,' replied Smike. 'I don't think he could have
    missed me till I had got quite away.'

    Newman scratched his head with a shout of great disappointment, and
    once more lifting up the mug, applied himself to the contents;
    smiling meanwhile, over the rim, with a grim and ghastly smile at
    Smike.

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