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311
At
last
,
liveried
in
the
costume
of
the
age
,
Reality
entered
the
room
in
the
shape
of
a
servant
to
tell
the
Duchess
that
her
carriage
was
waiting
.
312
She
wrung
her
hands
in
mock
despair
.
"
How
annoying
!
"
she
cried
.
"
I
must
go
.
I
have
to
call
for
my
husband
at
the
club
,
to
take
him
to
some
absurd
meeting
at
Willis
's
Rooms
,
where
he
is
going
to
be
in
the
chair
.
If
I
am
late
,
he
is
sure
to
be
furious
,
and
I
could
n't
have
a
scene
in
this
bonnet
.
It
is
far
too
fragile
.
A
harsh
word
would
ruin
it
.
No
,
I
must
go
,
dear
Agatha
.
Good-bye
,
Lord
Henry
,
you
are
quite
delightful
,
and
dreadfully
demoralising
.
I
am
sure
I
do
n't
know
what
to
say
about
your
views
.
You
must
come
and
dine
with
us
some
night
.
Tuesday
?
Are
you
disengaged
Tuesday
?
"
313
"
For
you
I
would
throw
over
anybody
,
Duchess
,
"
said
Lord
Henry
,
with
a
bow
.
Отключить рекламу
314
"
Ah
!
that
is
very
nice
,
and
very
wrong
of
you
,
"
she
cried
;
"
so
mind
you
come
;
"
and
she
swept
out
of
the
room
,
followed
by
Lady
Agatha
and
the
other
ladies
.
315
When
Lord
Henry
had
sat
down
again
,
Mr.
Erskine
moved
round
,
and
taking
a
chair
close
to
him
,
placed
his
hand
upon
his
arm
.
316
"
You
talk
books
away
,
"
he
said
;
"
why
do
n't
you
write
one
?
"
317
"
I
am
too
fond
of
reading
books
to
care
to
write
them
,
Mr.
Erskine
.
I
should
like
to
write
a
novel
certainly
;
a
novel
that
would
be
as
lovely
as
a
Persian
carpet
,
and
as
unreal
.
But
there
is
no
literary
public
in
England
for
anything
except
newspapers
,
primers
,
and
encyclopædias
.
Of
all
people
in
the
world
the
English
have
the
least
sense
of
the
beauty
of
literature
.
"
Отключить рекламу
318
"
I
fear
you
are
right
,
"
answered
Mr.
Erskine
.
"
I
myself
used
to
have
literary
ambitions
,
but
I
gave
them
up
long
ago
.
And
now
,
my
dear
young
friend
,
if
you
will
allow
me
to
call
you
so
,
may
I
ask
if
you
really
meant
all
that
you
said
to
us
at
lunch
?
"
319
"
I
quite
forget
what
I
said
,
"
smiled
Lord
Henry
.
"
Was
it
all
very
bad
?
"
320
"
Very
bad
indeed
.
In
fact
I
consider
you
extremely
dangerous
,
and
if
anything
happens
to
our
good
Duchess
we
shall
all
look
on
you
as
being
primarily
responsible
.
But
I
should
like
to
talk
to
you
about
life
.
The
generation
into
which
I
was
born
was
tedious
.
Some
day
,
when
you
are
tired
of
London
,
come
down
to
Treadley
,
and
expound
to
me
your
philosophy
of
pleasure
over
some
admirable
Burgundy
I
am
fortunate
enough
to
possess
.
"