[The Divine Fire by May Sinclair]@TWC D-Link book
The Divine Fire

CHAPTER XIII
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And the magnificence of Keith's head had been pointed out to Isaac long before that, when Keith couldn't have been more than ten--why, nine he was; that was the beginning of it.

Isaac could remember how Sir Joseph Harden of Lazarus, the great scholar, who was one of Isaac's best customers, poking round the little dingy shop in Paternoster Row (it was all second-hand in those days), came on the young monkey perched on the step-ladder, reading Homer.

Sir Joseph had made him come down and translate for him then and there.

And Keith went at it, translating for twenty minutes straight on end.

Sir Joseph had said nothing, but he asked him what he was going to be, and the young Turk grinned up at him and said he was going to be a poet, "like 'Omer, that was what he was going to be." Isaac had said that was just like his impudence, but Sir Joseph stood there looking at him and smiling on the side of his face that Keith couldn't see, and he told the little chap to "work hard and mind his rough breathings." Isaac had supposed that was some sort of a joke, for Keith, he tried hard to grin, though his face went red hot all over.


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