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The Lesson of the Master by Henry James
page 20 of 88 (22%)
Fancourt was charming what was she after all but an immature girl
encountered at a country-house? Yet precisely this was part of the
sentiment he himself had just expressed: he would make way completely for
the poor peccable great man not because he didn't read him clear, but
altogether because he did. His consideration was half composed of
tenderness for superficialities which he was sure their perpetrator
judged privately, judged more ferociously than any one, and which
represented some tragic intellectual secret. He would have his reasons
for his psychology a fleur de peau, and these reasons could only be cruel
ones, such as would make him dearer to those who already were fond of
him. "You excite my envy. I have my reserves, I discriminate--but I
love him," Paul said in a moment. "And seeing him for the first time
this way is a great event for me."

"How momentous--how magnificent!" cried the girl. "How delicious to
bring you together!"

"Your doing it--that makes it perfect," our friend returned.

"He's as eager as you," she went on. "But it's so odd you shouldn't have
met."

"It's not really so odd as it strikes you. I've been out of England so
much--made repeated absences all these last years."

She took this in with interest. "And yet you write of it as well as if
you were always here."

"It's just the being away perhaps. At any rate the best bits, I suspect,
are those that were done in dreary places abroad."
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