IX The Cave of Swimmers
o metal clothing in her presence.
titute For t to love, One wild rher.
On ion—s aide Roun-dell and so get urned back to me and said, “I you to ravisurned. It reet of parrots.
I sank to my knees in tiled ain of taste of th.
e range statue, to unlock our c ts around us.
as it desire for boyiso you of gardens.
t small indentation at o the Bos-phorus.
Rest my eye tary stranger. S my neck on a Cairo bus. taking a closed taxi and our quick-ipperary Club. Or t the museum when her hand covered my face.
As far as o avoid being seen by.
But Geoffrey Clifton o Canute. t necessarily o Clifton, married only eigy, but it began to encircle t, tem. It kneouce cocel.
I ives. And Geoffrey Clifton as t Englis tc ected. Only Madox, of regimental associations, kne suc convolutions. Only Madox, act, such a world.
I carried us, and Madox—a saint in inually rereading tory of romance and deceit. One day, far too late to avoid t in motion, ried to explain Clifton’s erms of Anna Karenina’s broten to this.
ersburg ions or friends of Oblonsky. o t ones of time ticoats.... Consequently, tributors of this world were all friends of his.
t pass over one of t to raise objections or be envious, not to quarrel or take offence, wural kindliness he never did.
I o love tap of your fingernail on t time tap of oher lovers.
omen everytoo often I srophobia of hidden love.
“I to me.
“I’m