Chapter 3
gement exs t tal at a steeplecake t tmoor ;
quot;; grumbled tleman. quot; any?quot;
Lord ;American girls are as clever at concealing ts, as Englis concealing t,quot; o go.
quot;t;
quot;I moors sake. I am told t pork-packing is t lucrative profession in America, after politics.quot;
quot;Is sty?quot;
quot;Siful. Most American is t of t;
quot; tay in try? telling us t it is t;
quot;It is. t is to get out of it,quot; said Lord ;Good-bye, Uncle George. I se for luncop any longer. tion I ed. I alo kno my ne my old ones.quot;
quot;;
quot;At Aunt Agatest protégée.quot;
quot;ell your Aunt Agat to boty appeals. I am sick of t I o do but to e c;
quot;All rigell it . Py. It is tinguiseristic.quot;
tleman gro. Lord o Burlington Street and turned eps in tion of Berkeley Square.
So t ory of Dorian Grays parentage. Crudely as it old to stirred s suggestion of a strange, almost modern romance. A beautiful s by a reacc to solitude and tyranny of an old and loveless man. Yes; it eresting background. It posed t, as it existed, tragic. orlds o be in travail, t t flo before, as artled eyes and lips parted in frig opposite to taining to a ricalking to e violin. o every toucerribly entivity . to project ones soul into some gracious form, and let it tarry t; to ellectual vieo convey ones temperament into anot le fluid or a strange perfume: t--per satisfying joy left to us in an age so limited an