Chapter 4
id. te tore for you. t;
quot;Do you ture so s; cried Dorian Gray angrily.
quot;No; I ture so deep.quot;
quot;;
quot;My dear boy, t ty, and ty, I call eitom or tion. Faito tional life ency is to tellect--simply a confession of failure. Fait analyse it some day. ty is in it. t afraid t ot pick t I dont to interrupt you. Go on ory.quot;
quot;ell, I found myself seated in a tle private box, aring me in t from beain and surveyed t ae talls e empty, and t I suppose t about errible consumption of nuts going on.quot;
quot;It must like tis;
quot;Just like, I so sig do you t;
quot;I s Boy, or Dumb but Innocent. Our fato like t sort of piece, I believe. t ics, les grandpères ont toujours tort.quot;
quot;t . I must admit t I tcill, I felt interested, in a sort of any rate, I determined to for t act. tra, presided over by a young at a cracked piano, t nearly drove me a at last tout elderly gentleman, ragedy voice, and a figure like a beer-barrel. Mercutio as bad. roduced gags of friendly terms . tesque as t looked as if it of a country-boot Juliet! een years of age, tle, flo als of a rose. S to me once t pat you unmoved, but t beauty, mere beauty, could fill your eyes ears. I tell you, of tears t came across me. And first, es t seemed to fall singly upon ones ear. t became a little louder, and sounded like a flute or a distant boy. In t remulous ecstasy t one before das, later on, I s. . I dont knoomb, sucki