Page 113 (1/2)
Instead of resuation of South's brain, which perhaps
was not so interesting under the ht have been expected
froan in life, Fitzpiers reclined and
ruminated on the interview Grace's curious susceptibility to his
presence, though it was as if the currents of her life were disturbed
rather than attracted by hieneral
char ready and
zealous to interrogate all physical manifestations, but primarily he
was an idealist He believed that behind the is were to be discovered amid a bulk of
coht be different
from those in other cases where the conditions had been precisely
si his own personality as one of unbounded
possibilities, because it was his own--notwithstanding that the factors
of his life had worked out a sorry product for thousands--he saw
nothing but as regular in his discovery at Hintock of an
altogether exceptional being of the other sex, who for nobody else
would have had any existence
One habit of Fitzpiers's--coe