5. The String Quartet
and seat te squares under t; rest tips of tand; aneous movement lift tly poise t te, t violin counts one, three—
Flouris! tree on top of tain. Fountains jet; drops descend. But ters of t and deep, race under trailing er leaves, ed fis ers, no into an eddy tion of fis t te spirals into tepping ligted under arco side, hum, hah!
“t’s an early Mozart, of course—”
“But tune, like all unes, makes one despair—I mean do I mean? t’s t of music! I to dance, laug pink cakes, yello story, no at? You said notleman opposite. . . But suppose—suppose—hush!”
trailing . oven togetricably commingled, bound in pain and strewn in sorrow—crash!
t sinks. Rising, t noapering to a dusky ipped, dras t sings, unseals my sorroes its tenderness but deftly, subtly, until in ttern, tion, t ones unify; soar, sob, sink to rest, sorrow and joy.
? Remain unsatisfied? I say all’s been settled; yes; laid to rest under a coverlet of rose leaves, falling. Falling. A t, like a little parace dropped from an invisible balloon, turns, flutters reach us.
“No, no. I noticed not’s t of music—te, you say?”
“t—blinder eachis slippery floor.”
Eyeless old age, grey–ands on t, beckoning, so sternly, the red omnibus.
“hey play! how—how—how!”
tongue is but a clapper. Simplicity itself. t next me are brigtle. tree flasain. Very strange, very exciting.
“how—how—how!” hush!
the grass.
“If, madam, you ake my hand—”
“Sir, I