I om, occasionally to invite interested gentlemen to to take a supper er, hear me read. he does so now.
Make yourself neat tonigo me, as I stand in toning up my gloves. e ss. rey, ranger. I o employ ing of our pictures.
Our pictures. ts, in a separate study, filled my uncle ed in a desultory sort of manner, along en spoken of taking on some man to trim and mount t o matcask. One needs a quite particular cer, for sort.
cs out rey claims to for us, besides. An edition of a text alogued.
t is great news, sir.
Per my uncle, t mark it. s o to t me see . . .
May I leave you, Uncle?
ruck?
It has, I believe.
from c to o , at tem, —s. o —gently, Maud.
Yes, Uncle.
No engaged by oo used to ticular rangely, or not at all, and imagines me an ageless cimes t is , tig saso a form I sleap. My uncle time, I suppose, not quite above fifty—I o ly and permanently aged; as flies remain aged, yet fixed and unchanging, in cloudy chips of amber.
I leave ing at a page of text. I ly, in soft-soled so my rooms, where Agnes is.
I find a piece of seemperament like mine? I stand and co sitc last I take tly put t of it against off; t it back; times more, until h a rash of needle-pricks.
to be gentlemen onig. One a stranger. Do you suppose he will be young, and handsome?
I say it—idly enougeasing. It is noto me. But she hears me, and colours.
I cant say, miss, surning drawing her ha