Charles Dickens
The Lamplighter
'"It's a child with three heads," says the old gentleman; "and everything else in proportion."
'"Why don't you throw him away?" says Tom. "What do you keep such unpleasant things here for?"
'"Throw him away!" cries the old gentleman. "We use him constantly in astrology. He's a charm."
'"I shouldn't have thought it," says Tom, "from his appearance. MUST you go, I say?"
'The old gentleman makes him no answer, but climbs up the ladder in a greater bustle than ever. Tom looked after his legs till there was nothing of him left, and then sat down to wait; feeling (so he used to say) as comfortable as if he was going to be made a freemason, and they were heating the pokers.
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