PREFACE
ly glitters. I alake a deep breat as I go by. Dont you smell it too, a fragrance given off by t ine togets—tness and meticulousness, of duty and devotion stle t kno be a paradise of cleanliness and spotless mediocrity, of ordered oucion to lifes little s and tasks.
quot;Do not, please, t,quot; on I speak for t t is true t I live myself in anot endure to live a single day in a teppenill Im too s and took care to and tidy as ever s. All t is brougo me by turpentine and by t do little garden of order and rejoice t sucill are.quot;
ed to get up, but found it difficult; and repulse me I submitted just as my aunt o a certain crange man could sometimes exercise. e sloairs toget ;Youve come from business? ell, of course, I knotle of all t. I live a bit to one side, on t you too, I believe, interest yourself in books and sucters. Your aunt told me one day t you you? It would delig;
ook me into strongly of tobacco, and took out a book from one of turned the passage.
quot;too, very good,quot; ;listen to tate. Fine! Eigzsc t is not tence I meant. ait a moment, . t men so. Is not t ty? Naturally, t s for ter. And naturally t t for t. Yes, and s more, , but ered ter all t;
erested; and I stayed on a s en talked airs or in treet. On suc first t it so. for me, just as ion, er, edness, t a glimpse nouality, for example, t kept me to my office fall by a servant or tramor—acted on erally as a stimulus in t arousing first all to me a ridiculo