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Updated: June 23, 2025


There's one about a poor little girl who could look out of her window into the house of a rich girl and " "Feist, her mother just hates that child!" "Say, old man, I don't see any medals on you for hating her." "He's worse than I am, Mr. Feist; only, he hides it behind making fun of me.

Didn't I promise you, Lester, that if you came up to dinner I'd drive you back to the club myself?" "She sure did, Mrs. Pelz." "Bleema, you stay right here and finish your supper. There's two chauffeurs on the place to drive Spencer around to his club." "But, dad, I promised." "Why, Bleema, ain't you ashamed? Mr. Feist here for dinner and you to run off like that. Shame on you!"

At his first visit Feist flew into a rage and accused the Greek of having kidnapped him and shut him up in a prison, where he was treated like a lunatic; but to this Logotheti was quite indifferent; he only shook his head rather sadly, and offered Feist a very excellent cigarette, such as it was quite impossible to buy, even in London.

'By all means! And Logotheti prepared to hear and remember accurately the falsehood which would probably follow immediately on such a statement. But he was disappointed. 'The truth is, said Feist, 'I don't care much to talk about this affair at present. I can't explain now, but you'll understand one of these days, and you'll say I was right. 'Oh, I see!

Logotheti was too wise to watch his intended victim, and leaned back in a careless attitude, gazing out of the window at the bright creeper on the opposite wall. 'I've heard it suggested, said Mr. Feist rather thickly, out of a perfect storm of drugged smoke. It came out of his ugly nostrils, it blew out of his mouth, it seemed to issue even from his ears and eyes.

Honest, I said to Roody, when I picked up the paper this morning, it gives me the blues before I open it." "Nobody can tell me that this country is going to sit back much longer and see autocracy grind its heel into the face of the world." "You're right, Feist! I think if there is one thing worse than being too proud to fight, it is not being proud enough to fight."

Lady Maud's eyes now turned to Margaret, but the latter still seemed perfectly indifferent, though she was wishing that some one else would speak. Griggs turned to Mr. Feist, who was next to him. 'You mean that he is a wonderful man of business, perhaps, he said. 'Well, we all know he's that, anyway, returned his neighbour.

Mamma, do you think your little Bleema would marry a man who doesn't just love you, and dad, too? It isn't like Lester is a nobody a high-salaried fellow like him with a future. Why, the best will be none too good! He loves you both told me so to-day. The one aim in his life is to do big things, to make you both proud, to make his name the biggest " "Feist Feist can't you talk to her?

The spectacled peer took in Lady Maud, and the men straggled in. At table Lady Maud sat opposite the Pasha, with the peer on her right and the barrister on her left. Margaret was on the right of the Ambassador, on whose other side Griggs was placed, and Logotheti was Margaret's other neighbour. Feist and the young playwright were together, between Griggs and the nobleman.

Feist may have friends or relations in America, and they may come and claim him; but as there seems to be nobody in London who cares what becomes of him, it pleases me to keep him in confinement, because I mean to prevent any further mention of your name in connection with the Van Torp scandals.

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