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    Book 2 - Chapter 3 - Page 2

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    repugnance to making the first advances.

    Tom began to look oftener and longer at Philip's face, for he could
    see it without noticing the hump, and it was really not a disagreeable
    face,--very old-looking, Tom thought. He wondered how much older
    Philip was than himself. An anatomist--even a mere physiognomist--
    would have seen that the deformity of Philip's spine was not a
    congenital hump, but the result of an accident in infancy; but you
    do not expect from Tom any acquaintance with such distinctions;
    to him, Philip was simply a humpback. He had a vague notion
    that the deformity of Wakem's son had some relation to the lawyer's
    rascality, of which he had so often heard his father talk with hot
    emphasis; and he felt, too, a half-admitted fear of him as probably
    a spiteful fellow, who, not being able to fight you, had cunning
    ways of doing you a mischief by the sly. There was a humpbacked
    tailor in the neighborhood of Mr. Jacobs's academy, who was considered
    a very unamiable character, and was much hooted after by public-spirited
    boys solely on the ground of his unsatisfactory moral qualities; so
    that Tom was not without a basis of fact to go upon. Still, no face
    could be more unlike that ugly tailor's than this melancholy boy's
    face,--the brown hair round it waved and curled at the ends like a
    girl's; Tom thought that truly pitiable. This Wakem was a pale,
    puny fellow, and it was quite clear he would not be able to play at
    anything worth speaking of; but he handled his pencil in an enviable
    manner, and was apparently making one thing after another without
    any trouble. What was he drawing? Tom was quite warm now, and wanted
    something new to be going forward. It was certainly more agreeable
    to have an ill-natured humpback as a companion than to stand looking
    out of the study window at the rain, and kicking his foot against
    the washboard in solitude; something would happen every day,--
    "a quarrel or something"; and Tom thought he should rather like to
    show Philip that he had better not try his spiteful tricks on _him_.
    He suddenly walked across the hearth and looked over Philip's paper.

    "Why, that's a donkey with panniers, and a spaniel, and partridges in
    the corn!" he exclaimed, his tongue being completely loosed by
    surprise and admiration. "Oh my buttons! I wish I could draw like
    that. I'm to learn drawing this half; I wonder if I shall learn to

    make dogs and donkeys!"

    "Oh, you can do them without learning," said Philip; "I never learned
    drawing."

    "Never learned?" said Tom, in amazement. "Why, when I make dogs and
    horses, and those things, the heads and the legs won't come right;
    though I can see how they ought to be very well. I can make houses,
    and all sorts of chimneys,--chimneys
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