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531
"
It
's
a
man
--
do
n't
you
know
?
"
532
"
Oh
,
surely
.
"
A
faint
chord
was
struck
in
Amory
's
memory
.
"
Was
n't
the
comic
opera
,
'
Patience
,
'
written
about
him
?
"
533
"
Yes
,
that
's
the
fella
.
I
've
just
finished
a
book
of
his
,
'
The
Picture
of
Dorian
Gray
,
'
and
I
certainly
wish
you
'd
read
it
.
You
'd
like
it
.
You
can
borrow
it
if
you
want
to
.
"
Отключить рекламу
534
"
Why
,
I
'd
like
it
a
lot
--
thanks
.
"
535
"
Do
n't
you
want
to
come
up
to
the
room
?
I
've
got
a
few
other
books
.
"
536
Amory
hesitated
,
glanced
at
the
St.
Paul
's
group
--
one
of
them
was
the
magnificent
,
exquisite
Humbird
--
and
he
considered
how
determinate
the
addition
of
this
friend
would
be
.
He
never
got
to
the
stage
of
making
them
and
getting
rid
of
them
--
he
was
not
hard
enough
for
that
--
so
he
measured
Thomas
Parke
D'Invilliers
'
undoubted
attractions
and
value
against
the
menace
of
cold
eyes
behind
tortoise-rimmed
spectacles
that
he
fancied
glared
from
the
next
table
.
537
"
Yes
,
I
'll
go
.
"
Отключить рекламу
538
So
he
found
"
Dorian
Gray
"
and
the
"
Mystic
and
Somber
Dolores
"
and
the
"
Belle
Dame
sans
Merci
"
;
for
a
month
was
keen
on
naught
else
.
The
world
became
pale
and
interesting
,
and
he
tried
hard
to
look
at
Princeton
through
the
satiated
eyes
of
Oscar
Wilde
and
Swinburne
--
or
"
Fingal
O'Flaherty
"
and
"
Algernon
Charles
,
"
as
he
called
them
in
precieuse
jest
.
He
read
enormously
every
night
--
Shaw
,
Chesterton
,
Barrie
,
Pinero
,
Yeats
,
Synge
,
Ernest
Dowson
,
Arthur
Symons
,
Keats
,
Sudermann
,
Robert
Hugh
Benson
,
the
Savoy
Operas
--
just
a
heterogeneous
mixture
,
for
he
suddenly
discovered
that
he
had
read
nothing
for
years
.
539
Tom
D'Invilliers
became
at
first
an
occasion
rather
than
a
friend
.
Amory
saw
him
about
once
a
week
,
and
together
they
gilded
the
ceiling
of
Tom
's
room
and
decorated
the
walls
with
imitation
tapestry
,
bought
at
an
auction
,
tall
candlesticks
and
figured
curtains
.
Amory
liked
him
for
being
clever
and
literary
without
effeminacy
or
affectation
.
In
fact
,
Amory
did
most
of
the
strutting
and
tried
painfully
to
make
every
remark
an
epigram
,
than
which
,
if
one
is
content
with
ostensible
epigrams
,
there
are
many
feats
harder
.
12
Univee
was
amused
.
Kerry
read
"
Dorian
Gray
"
and
simulated
Lord
Henry
,
following
Amory
about
,
addressing
him
as
"
Dorian
"
and
pretending
to
encourage
in
him
wicked
fancies
and
attenuated
tendencies
to
ennui
.
When
he
carried
it
into
Commons
,
to
the
amazement
of
the
others
at
table
,
Amory
became
furiously
embarrassed
,
and
after
that
made
epigrams
only
before
D'Invilliers
or
a
convenient
mirror
.
540
One
day
Tom
and
Amory
tried
reciting
their
own
and
Lord
Dunsany
's
poems
to
the
music
of
Kerry
's
graphophone
.