[Confidence by Henry James]@TWC D-Link book
Confidence

CHAPTER XXX
1/15


Some three evenings after he received this last report of the progress of affairs in Paris, Bernard, upon whom the burden of exile sat none the more lightly as the days went on, turned out of the Strand into one of the theatres.

He had been gloomily pushing his way through the various London densities--the November fog, the nocturnal darkness, the jostling crowd.

He was too restless to do anything but walk, and he had been saying to himself, for the thousandth time, that if he had been guilty of a misdemeanor in succumbing to the attractions of the admirable girl who showed to such advantage in letters of twelve pages, his fault was richly expiated by these days of impatience and bereavement.

He gave little heed to the play; his thoughts were elsewhere, and, while they rambled, his eyes wandered round the house.

Suddenly, on the other side of it, he beheld Captain Lovelock, seated squarely in his orchestra-stall, but, if Bernard was not mistaken, paying as little attention to the stage as he himself had done.


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