CHAPTER 3
y, `do you love your father?
`Yes, said P you love yours?
`O yes... I only ed to knoom, ratable. y in adjusting titude of mind to o if P fact migowards clearing up y.
`S.
`No, said Po give all my time to othings now.
` Latin, and Euclid, and tom.
`Yes, said P off using ing om ion at the donkey.
`And you dont mind t? said tom, rong curiosity.
`No: I like to knoudy w I like by and by.
`I cant tin, said tom. `Its no good.
`Its part of tion of a gentleman, said Plemen learn things.
`, do you ter of tin? said tom, o resemble Sir John Crake.
` it en it.
`O, , tom, not ic intention, but isfaction at t as far as Latin o o remember it o learn ever so many lines of `Speaker Mr Stellings very particular - did you knoimes if you say quot;namquot; for quot;jamquot;... let you go a letter ell you.
`O I dont mind, said Po cory, and everyt to tten tragedies, or else ened to by everybody for my es, and a al superiority.)
` figom, ion. `Is tory? ts I like in tory of the Jews.
`O, tories of t sort about t times s a beautiful Poem - t ttle fello very a red- pine-tree and stuck it into thousand bulls.
`O om, Jumping aable and stamping first ell me all about tories? Because I s learn Greek, you kno trary migleman learn Greek?... ill Mr Stelling make me begin , do you think?
`No, I s - very likely not, said P you may read tories kno them in English.
`O but I d