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Overlooked

Chapter 6 No.6

Word Count: 1918    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

riously ill. She wanted to see me. I started at once for London and found matters better than I expected, but still rather serious. I st

ce: Mrs. Summer, who had just come back from the Lakes. I know little about her. I can only guess at her appearance. I know that s

he is a friend of Miss Brandon's.

as done her suc

tter than she did when she arrived," but

t tired of coming he

Miss Brandon hated L

have known he

er life. Ever si

t her fathe

in an old house in the south of Ireland. He was not really Irish. He had been a soldier. He played picquet with Jean every evening. He went up to London two mo

ouse in Bedford Square. I think there were illegitimate children. In Ireland he entertaine

as not a Radica

d Miss Brandon c

money-the want of it-made the marriage imposs

f the fath

have left him. She c

her like the

him as quite impossible, quite

have thought anyone else

said. "It was p

ad happened to

was too expensive. He went out to the Colon

married?"

never looked at anyone else. He was supposed, at one time,

did not b

faithful; faithful and constant. You see, Jean isn't an ordinary girl. If one once loved her i

pt yo

autiful now, at le

one told

ught so. Telling wou

s someo

nlikely she would ever meet anyone

was arranged beforehand, and the momentous entrance and the scèn

ht to myself: "She knows about Krani

" she said. "Jean is-well-there is no one like

hought she would n

he will be right for the wrong reasons. Sometimes the peopl

he thought Rudd

t of all about Netty Lennox. Perhaps his instincts as an artist are right. I think people's books are sometimes written by someone else,

her she like

they were written by a familiar spiri

out Miss Brandon, however wrong he might be a

ght turn out to be right in some ways about Jean Brandon, and in some ways about a h

"he is imaginative

at he writes by instinc

there. He explained to the actress what he wanted done. She said: "Yes, I see this, and this, and this." Everything she said was terribly wide of the mark, the oppos

aid, "that Mr. R

ummer if she k

e said. "What do yo

I lik

and easy to get o

all Ru

he's quite like all Russians, at lea

the Russians on

It's a pity they have such

Kranitski did n

had just recovered than

ion that he was capable of being very ha

nerally very happy, too," she said

I sug

ag

saw often enough. He gave me the impression of a person capable of solid happin

e said, "only one doesn't know qu

that his life had not been one

gre

little about

is miserable. He ought to mar

n are so far stronger and braver than men; and that those who don't marry are sometimes those who are strong enough to face life

t Kranitski would be strong

said, "but then, I

?" I asked. "Are there some women who

to do either. In either case lif

ss Brandon would be happi

e married the right person, the m

d to marry," I said, "neces

or her, whatever the draw

they were marrying the right person, and y

vented, all the same," she said, "and if

better,

hen turn out so ve

present Miss Brandon's life

ht be a tragedy. Supposing she married s

ld mind,

ld mind

d in the long run. If she wanted a marriage of a d

nted in the long run, it often came either too late or not quite at the moment when one wan

u think it is no us

e said, "no

e a pes

ugh to have n

ther people to

rld, and that when you see someone who might be happy

I s

er people to

she said. "Quite dr

rs. Lennox came

Casino. I can't think what has happened to Jean. I have been looki

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Overlooked
Overlooked
“Anthony Kay, a blind man, meets a gathering of people and quickly becomes involved in their lives. One of them is novelist James Rudd, who decides to study and write about the characters around him. The story he ends up with is very different to the one Kay would have told .... Maurice Baring skillfully blends the objective and subjective, questioning the concept of sight in a portrait of characters whose lives are destined to be intertwined. As with crime incidents in the modern era, witnesses may see the same things, but their interpretation and recall can be very different.”
1 Chapter 1 No.12 Chapter 2 No.23 Chapter 3 No.34 Chapter 4 No.45 Chapter 5 No.56 Chapter 6 No.67 Chapter 7 No.78 Chapter 8 No.8