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Dubrovnik seemed a second home, and you, in a street cafe, sat drinking coffee, with that book on Schopenhauer open on the table, a cigarette smoking in an ashtray unattended, thinking of the girl in the hotel restaurant the night before, the waitress who smiled at you as she served and went by your table, and your brother said, I don’t fancy yours much, indicating with a nod of head, another waitress over by a nearby table, plump and spotted, wearing a scowl instead of a smile, and all the while, he eyeing, as young men do the beauty that had caught your eye going by, but all is fair in love, so men have said, so picking up the book on Schopenhauer, and further reading, holding the cigarette between the fingers of the hand not turning pages, you inhaled with deep concentration the smoke and words spread across the page, written by a philosopher of a foreign tongue and different age.
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Jun 8, 2012
Jun 8, 2012 at 1:54 AM UTC
DUBROVNIK 1972.
Dubrovnik seemed a second home, and you, in a street cafe, sat drinking coffee, with that book on Schopenhauer open on the table, a cigarette smoking in an ashtray unattended, thinking of the girl in the hotel restaurant the night before, the waitress who smiled at you as she served and went by your table, and your brother said, I don’t fancy yours much, indicating with a nod of head, another waitress over by a nearby table, plump and spotted, wearing a scowl instead of a smile, and all the while, he eyeing, as young men do the beauty that had caught your eye going by, but all is fair in love, so men have said, so picking up the book on Schopenhauer, and further reading, holding the cigarette between the fingers of the hand not turning pages, you inhaled with deep concentration the smoke and words spread across the page, written by a philosopher of a foreign tongue and different age.
terry-collett
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Jun 8, 2012
Jun 8, 2012 at 1:54 AM UTC
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