The Guest of Quesnay
The Guest of Quesnay
Book Excerpt
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and the "left bank" of the Seine; she calls them the "right bank" and
the "wrong bank." And yet, though she removed George (her word is
"rescued") from many of his old associations with Montparnasse, she
warmly encouraged my friendship with him--yea, in spite of my living so
deep in the wrong bank that the first time he brought her to my studio,
she declared she hadn't seen anything so like Bring-the-child-to-the-
old-hag's-cellar-at-midnight since her childhood. She is a handsome
woman, large, and of a fine, high colour; her manner is gaily
dictatorial, and she and I got along very well together.
Probably she appreciated my going to some pains with the clothes I wore when I went to their house. My visits there were infrequent, not because I had any fear of wearing out a welcome, but on account of Miss Elizabeth's "day," when I could see nothing of George for the crowd of lionising women and time-wasters about him. Her "day" was a dread of mine; I could seldom remember which day it was, and when I did
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