[The Awkward Age by Henry James]@TWC D-Link bookThe Awkward Age BOOK SECOND 77/123
"Does Edward imagine-- ?" "My dear man, Edward never 'imagined' anything in life." She still had her eyes on him.
"Therefore if he SEES a thing, don't you know? it must exist." Mitchy for a little fixed the person mentioned as he sat with his other guest, but whatever this person saw he failed just then to see his wife's companion, whose eyes he never met.
His face only offered itself after the fashion of a clean domestic vessel, a receptacle with the peculiar property of constantly serving yet never filling, to Lord Petherton's talkative splash.
"Well, only don't let him take it up. Let it be only between you and me," Mr.Mitchett pleaded; "keep him quiet--don't let him speak to me." He appeared to convey with his pleasant extravagance that Edward looked dangerous, and he went on with a rigour of levity: "It must be OUR little quarrel." There were different ways of meeting such a tone, but Mrs.Brookenham's choice was remarkably prompt.
"I don't think I quite understand what dreadful joke you may be making, but I dare say if you HAD let Harold borrow you'd have another manner, and I was at any rate determined to have the question out with you." "Let us always have everything out--that's quite my own idea.
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