The Pretty Lady by Arnold Bennett
page 30 of 323 (09%)
page 30 of 323 (09%)
|
heads of bronze lions, stood the lacquered table consecrated to
his breakfast tray; and his breakfast tray, with newspaper and correspondence, had been magically placed thereon as though by invisible hands. And on one arm of the easy-chair lay the rug which, because a dressing-gown does not button all the way down, he put over his knees while breakfasting in winter. Yes, he admitted with pleasure that he was "well served". Before eating he opened the piano--a modern instrument concealed in an ingeniously confected Regency case--and played with taste a Bach prelude and fugue. His was not the standardised and habituated kind of musical culture which takes a Bach prelude and fugue every morning before breakfast with or without a glass of Lithia water or fizzy saline. He did, however, customarily begin the day at the piano, and on this particular morning he happened to play a Bach prelude and fugue. And as he played he congratulated himself on not having gone to seek Christine in the Promenade on the previous night, as impatience had tempted him to do. Such a procedure would have been an error in worldliness and bad from every point of view. He had wisely rejected the temptation. In the deep blue arm-chair, with the rug over his knees and one hand on a lion's head, he glanced first at the opened _Times_, because of the war. Among the few letters was one with the heading of the Reveille Motor Horn Company Ltd. G.J. like his father, had been a solicitor. When he was twenty-five his father, a widower, had died and left him a respectable fortune and a very good practice. He sold half the practice to an incoming |
|