Cer 3
At t day Lord ton strolled from Curzon Street over to to call side icular be from ired from tic servi a caprioment of annoyan not being offered t Paris, a post to led by reason of ce passion for pleasure. tary, foolis at time, and on succeeding some moo title, o tudy of t aristocratic art of doing absolutely notoo live in c rouble, and took most of tention to t of ies, exg aint of industry on t tage of it enabled a gentleman to afford tics ory, except o most of ions, ry o t of date, but to be said for his prejudices.
ered tting in a rouging-coat, smoking a d grumbling over times. "ell, ; said tleman, " so early? I t you dandies never got up till t visible till five."
"Pure family affe, I assure you, Uncle Gee. I to get somet of you."
"Money, I suppose," said Lord Fermor, making a ;ell, sit doell me all about it. Young people, no money is everyt;
"Yes," murmured Lord tling ton-; "and I dont money. It is only people , Uncle Gee, and I never pay mine. Credit is tal of a younger son, and one lives c. Besides, I almoors tradesmen, and sequently t I is information: not useful information, of course; useless information."
"ell, I tell you anyt is in an Englise a lot of nonsense. ic, tter. But I tion. you expect? Examinations, sir, are pure o end. If a man is a gentleman, e enoug a gentleman, wever ;
"Mr. Dorian Gray does not belong to Blue Books, Uncle Gee," said Lord henry languidly.
"Mr. Dorian Gray? ; asked Lord Fermor, knitting e eyebrows.
"t is Lord Kelsos grandson. Devereaux. I you to tell me about ed in Mr. Gray at present. I met ;
"Kelsos grandson!" ecleman. "Kelsos grandson! ... Of course.... I kneely. I believe I ening. Sraordinarily beautiful girl, Margaret Devereux, and made all tic by running aern in a fiment, or somet kind. Certainly. I remember t erday. t Spa a feer tory about it. t some rascally adventurer, some Belgian brute, to insult o do it, paid tted , egad, Kelso ate time afterold, and so oo, died a son, did sten t. sort of boy is be a good-looking c;
"; assented Lord henry.
"I o proper ; ti; of money ing for too. All ty came to ed Kelso, t oo. Came to Madrid o te a story of it. I didnt dare s Court for a moed ter t;
"I dont kno; ans t of age yet. old me so. And . . . iful?"
"Margaret Devereux creatures I ever sao beand. Son er ic, t family , but, egad! ton on o old me so a girl in London at time er alking about silly marriages, ells me about Dartm to marry an Ameri? Aint Englis;
"It is rato marry Ameris just no;
"Ill baglis t; said Lord Fermor, striking table .
"tting is on t;
"t last, I am told," muttered his uncle.
"A long e exs t tal at a steeplecake t tmoor ;
"; grumbled tleman. " any?"
Lord ;Ameri girls are as clever at cealing ts, as Englis cealing t," o go.
"t;
"I moors sake. I am told t pork-pag is t lucrative profession in America, after politics."
"Is sty?"
"Siful. Most Ameri is t of t;
" tay in try? telling us t it is t;
"It is. t is to get out of it," said Lood-bye, Uncle Gee. I se for luncop any loion I ed. I alo kno my ne my old ones."
";
"At Aunt Agatest protégée."
"ell your Aunt Agat to boty appeals. I am sick of t I o do but to e c;
"All rigell it . Py. It is tinguiseristic."
tleman gro. Lord ton 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 projees soul into some gracious form, a tarry t; to ellectual vieo vey oemperament into anot le fluid or a strange perfume: t--per satisfying joy left to us in an age so limited and vulgar as our os pleasures, and grossly on in its aims.... ype, too, t in Basils studio, or could be faso a marvellous type, at any rate. Grace y of boyy suc for us. t one could not do itan or a toy. a pity it sued to fade! . . . And Basil? From a psyc of vieing , t life, suggested sely by t all; t spirit t d in dim o terns of some ot form all not Plato, t artist in t, ? as it not Buonarotti -sequence? But in our oury it range. . . . Yes; ry to be to Dorian Gray kno, to ter . o dominate ing in th.
Suddenly opped and glanced up at t s some distance, and, smiling to urned back. ered t sombre ler told to lun and stid passed into the dining-room.
"Late as usual, ; cried , s him.
ed a facile excuse, and aken t seat o o see o e ure and good temper, mucectural proportions t in outness. o , on , Sir t, cooks, dining ories and t on readley, an old gentleman of siderable cure, o say before y. s oldest friends, a perfect saint amongst so dreadfully do sunately for intelligent middle-aged mediocrity, as bald as a ministerial statement in t intensely ear manner o, and from we escape.
"e are talking about poor Dartmoor, Lord ; cried tly to able. "Do you ting young person?"
"I believe so propose to ;
"; exclaimed Lady Agat;Really, some one serfere."
"I am told, on excellent auty, t ore," said Sir thomas Burdon, looking supercilious.
"My uncle ed pork-pag Sir t;
&quoods! are Ameri dry-goods?" asked tuating the verb.
"Ameriovels," answered Lord o some quail.
the duchess looked puzzled.
"Dont mind ; w; ;
"; said to give some s. Like all people o ex a subject, ed eners. terruption. "I never all!" s;Really, irls is most unfair."
"Perer all, Ameriever ; said Mr. Erskine; "I myself it ected."
"O I ants," ans;I must fess t most of tremely pretty. And too. t all to do t;
"t ; c-off clothes.
"Really! And he duchess.
"to America," murmured Lord henry.
Sir t;I am afraid t your great try," o Lady Agat;I ravelled all over it in cars provided by tors, remely civil. I assure you t it is an education to visit it."
"But must ed?" asked Mr. Erskine plaintively. "I dont feel up to t;
Sir t;Mr. Erskine of treadley ical men like to see t to read about tremely iing people. tely reasonable. I t is tinguiseristic. Yes, Mr. Erskine, an absolutely reasonable people. I assure you t t;
"; cried Lord ;I stand brute force, but brute reason is quite unbearable. t its use. It is ting beloellect."
"I do not uand you," said Sir ther red.
"I do, Lord ; murmured Mr. Erskine, h a smile.
"Paradoxes are all very ; rejoi.
"as t a paradox?" asked Mr. Erskine. "I did not t ruto test reality see it on tigies bee acrobats, ;
"Dear me!" said Lady Agat; alking about. Oe vexed ry to persuade our nice Mr. Dorian Gray to give up t End? I assure you e invaluable. t;
"I o play to me," cried Lord able and caug answering glance.
"But tec; tinued Lady Agatha.
"I sympat suffering," said Lord ;I ot sympat. It is too ugly, too oo distressing. terribly morbid in ty, t lifes sores, tter."
"Still, t End is a very important problem," remarked Sir the head.
"Quite so," ans;It is try to solve it by amusing t;
ti looked at ; c; he asked.
Lord ;I dont desire to c t; ;I am quite tent emplation. But, as teentury ture of sympat t o put us straigage of tions is t tray, and tage of sce is t it is ional."
"But ; ventured Mrs. Vaimidly.
"terribly grave," echa.
Lord Mr. Erskine. "y takes itself too seriously. It is to laugory ;
"You are really very f," ;I raty , for I take no i at all in t End. For ture I so look a blus;
"A blus; remarked Lord henry.
"Only ;
for a moment. " you remember any great error t you itted in your early days, Duc; able.
"A great many, I fear," she cried.
"t t; ;to get baes youto repeat ones follies."
"A delig; s;I must put it into practice."
"A dangerous t; came from Sir tig could not ened.
"Yes," inued, "t is one of t secrets of life. No people die of a sort of creeping on sense, and discover oo late t ts are ones mistakes."
A laugable.
ossed it into transformed it; let it escape aured it; made it iridest on, soared into a pcy, ained robe and e over ts fled before ened forest te feet trod t ill ts black, dripping, sloping sides. It raordinary improvisation. t t amongst emperament o fasate seemed to give keenness and to lend colour to ion. , fantastic, irresponsible. eners out of took sat like one under a spell, smiles cher over his lips and wrowing grave in his darkening eyes.
At last, liveried in tume of ty e to tell t ing. S;; s;I must go. I o call for my to take o some absurd meeting at illiss Rooms, e o be furious, and I couldnt . It is far tile. A . No, I must go, dear Agate delig knoo say about your vie e and diuesday? Are you diseuesday?"
"For you I ; said Lord h a bow.
"A is very nice, and very ; s;so mind you e"; and s out of ther ladies.
doaking a , placed his hand upon his arm.
"You talk books a; ;e one?"
"I am too fond of reading books to care to e to e a novel certainly, a and as unreal. But terary publi England for anyt ne sense of ty of literature."
"I fear you are rig; ans;I myself used to erary ambitions, but I gave to call you so, may I ask if you really meant all t you said to us at lunc;
"I quite fet ; smiled Lord ;as it all very bad?"
"Very bad indeed. In fact I sider you extremely dangerous, and if anytood duc I so talk to you about life. tion into o treadley and expound to me your punate enougo possess."
"I s to treadley privilege. It , and a perfect library."
"You e it," ansleman eous bo;And no bid good-bye to your excellent aunt. I am due at t is t;
"All of you, Mr. Erskine?"
"Forty of us, in forty arm-g for an Englisters."
Lord ;I am going to t; he cried.
As of touc;Let me e ; he murmured.
"But I t you o go and see ; answered Lord henry.
"I e me. And you o talk to me all time? No oalks so ;
"Aalked quite enougo-day," said Lord ;All I noo look at life. You may e and look at it o."
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