It was dangerous, but interesting.
I said:
"What could you take so important as all that, without being spotted?"
And he said:
"Swear not to tell anybody living."
And I swore.
Then he said:
"His glasses!"
It was a great thought, worthy of Tudor, and, of course, without his glasses the Doctor would be hopelessly done. He cannot read a line without them, and when he takes a Greek class, strange to say, he wears two pairs--his ordinary double-glasses, against the naked eye, and a pair of common spectacles, of very large size, on his nose outside. In this elaborate way he reads Greek.
Well, I praised Tudor, but reminded him it was stealing.