[Tom Brown’s Schooldays by Thomas Hughes]@TWC D-Link book
Tom Brown’s Schooldays

CHAPTER VI--FEVER IN THE SCHOOL
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He needn't have troubled himself: it was this very strength and power so different from his own which drew Arthur so to him.
Arthur laid his thin, white hand, on which the blue veins stood out so plainly, on Tom's great brown fist, and smiled at him; and then looked out of the window again, as if he couldn't bear to lose a moment of the sunset, into the tops of the great feathery elms, round which the rooks were circling and clanging, returning in flocks from their evening's foraging parties.

The elms rustled, the sparrows in the ivy just outside the window chirped and fluttered about, quarrelling, and making it up again; the rooks, young and old, talked in chorus, and the merry shouts of the boys and the sweet click of the cricket-bats came up cheerily from below.
"Dear George," said Tom, "I am so glad to be let up to see you at last.
I've tried hard to come so often, but they wouldn't let me before." "Oh, I know, Tom; Mary has told me every day about you, and how she was obliged to make the Doctor speak to you to keep you away.

I'm very glad you didn't get up, for you might have caught it; and you couldn't stand being ill, with all the matches going on.

And you're in the eleven, too, I hear.

I'm so glad." "Yes; ain't it jolly ?" said Tom proudly.


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