[The Light That Failed by Rudyard Kipling]@TWC D-Link book
The Light That Failed

CHAPTER X
3/27

It is not pleasant to live in the company of a notion that will not work out, a fox-terrier that cannot talk, and a woman who talks too much.

He would have answered, but at that moment there unrolled itself from one corner of the studio a veil, as it were, of the flimsiest gauze.

He rubbed his eyes, but the gray haze would not go.
'This is disgraceful indigestion.

Binkie, we will go to a medicine-man.
We can't have our eyes interfered with, for by these we get our bread; also mutton-chop bones for little dogs.' The doctor was an affable local practitioner with white hair, and he said nothing till Dick began to describe the gray film in the studio.
'We all want a little patching and repairing from time to time,' he chirped.

'Like a ship, my dear sir,--exactly like a ship.


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