[The Quest of the Golden Girl by Richard le Gallienne]@TWC D-Link book
The Quest of the Golden Girl

CHAPTER XII
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They are, so to say, public poetry, the public property of the emotions, and no longer touch the private heart or stir the private imagination.

Our fathers felt so much about them that there is nothing left for us to feel.

They are as a rose whose fragrance has been exhausted by greedy and indiscriminate smelling.

I would rather find a little Surrey common for myself and idle about it a summer day, with the other geese and donkeys, than climb the tallest Alp.
Most gipsies are merely tenth-rate provincial companies, travelling with and villainously travestying Borrow's great pieces of "Lavengro" and "Romany Rye." Dirty, ill-looking, scowling men; dirty, slovenly, and wickedly ugly women; children to match, snarling, filthy little curs, with a ready beggar's whine on occasion.

A gipsy encampment to-day is little more than a moving slum, a scab of squalor on the fair face of the countryside.
But there was one little trifle of an incident that touched me as I passed this particular caravan.


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