The Forsyte Saga - Volume 2 - Page 110/238

The first news of the war was being called in the streets, but he paid

no attention. What could he do to help her? If only his father were

alive! He could have done so much! But why could he not do all that his

father could have done? Was he not old enough?--turned fifty and twice

married, with grown-up daughters and a son. 'Queer,' he thought. 'If she

were plain I shouldn't be thinking twice about it. Beauty is the devil,

when you're sensitive to it!' And into the Club reading-room he went

with a disturbed heart. In that very room he and Bosinney had talked one

summer afternoon; he well remembered even now the disguised and secret

lecture he had given that young man in the interests of June, the

diagnosis of the Forsytes he had hazarded; and how he had wondered what

sort of woman it was he was warning him against. And now! He was almost

in want of a warning himself. 'It's deuced funny!' he thought, 'really

deuced funny!'