Mr. Prohack by Arnold Bennett
page 205 of 489 (41%)
page 205 of 489 (41%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
city of hard work and limited meal-hours. He saw that he had a great
deal to learn before he could hope to be as skilled in idleness as the lowest of these experts in the lounge. He tapped his foot warningly. No effect on his women. He tapped more loudly, as the hatred of being in a hurry took possession of him. Eve looked round with a delightful placatory smile which conjured an answering smile into the face of her husband. He tried to be irritated after smiling, and advancing said in a would-be fierce tone: "If this lunch lasts much longer I shall barely have time to dress for dinner." But the effort was a failure--so complete that Sissie laughed at him. He had expected that in the car his women would relate to him the sayings and doings of Ozzie Morfey in relation to the United League of all the Arts. But they said not a syllable on the matter. He knew they were hiding something formidable from him. He might have put a question, but he was too proud to do so. Further, he despised them because they essayed to discuss Lady Massulam impartially, as though she was just a plain body, or nobody at all. A nauseating pretence on their part. Crossing a street, the car was held up by a procession of unemployed, with guardian policemen, a band consisting chiefly of drums, and a number of collarless powerful young men who shook white boxes of coppers menacingly in the faces of passers-by. "Instead of encouraging them, the police ought to forbid these |
|