5. The String Quartet
5. tring Quartet
ell, your eye over t tubes and trams and omnibuses, private carriages not a feure to believe, landaus it, o t I begin to s—
If indeed it’s true, as t Regent Street is up, and treaty signed, and t cold for time of year, and even at t rent not a flat to be of influenza its after effects; if I betten to e about t my glove in train; if ties of blood require me, leaning foro accept cordially tatingly—
“Seven years since !”
“t time in Venice.”
“And where are you living now?”
“ell, te afternoon suits me t, t asking too much—”
“But I kne once!”
“Still, the war made a break—”
If t ttle arro—no sooner is one launc and in addition turned on tric lig a need to improve and revise, stirring besides regrets, pleasures, vanities, and desires—if it’s all ts I mean, and ts, tlemen’s sail coats, and pearl tie–pins t come to t chere?
Of becomes every minute more difficult to say no time it happened.
“Did you see the procession?”
“the King looked cold.”
“No, no, no. But ?”
“S a Malmesbury.”
“o find one!”
On trary, it seems to me pretty sure t s’s all a matter of flats and s and sea gulls, or so it seems to be for a ting e. Not t I can boast, since I too sit passive on a gilt curning t mistaken, t ively seeking somet? t of cloaks; and gloves—ton or unbutton? tc elderly face against t ago urbane and flusaciturn and sad, as if in s tuning in te–room? ruments,