The Family
he had brought back from his customary summer
in London, with a bowler hat of unusual block and
a horn-handled walking-stick. In twenty years the
two men had scarcely had speech with each other
beyond a stiff “good morning.” When Langtry
first came to the university he looked hardly more
than a boy, with curly brown hair and such a fresh
complexion that the students called him Lily Lang¬
try. His round pink cheeks and round eyes and
round chin made him look rather like a baby grown
big. All these years had made little difference,
except that his curls were now quite grey, his rosy cheeks even rosier, and his mouth dropped a little
at the corners, so that he looked like a baby suddenly grown old and rather cross about it.
Seeing St. Peter, the younger man turned abruptly into a side alley, but the Professor overtook him.
“Good morning, Langtry. These elms are becoming real trees at last. They’ve changed a good deal since we first came here.”
Doctor Langtry moved his rosy chin sidewise over his high double collar. “Good morning, Doctor St. Peter. I really don’t remember much about the trees. They seem to be doing well now.”
St. Peter stepped abreast of him. “There have been many changes, Langtry, and not all of them are good. Don’t you notice a great difference in the student body as a whole, in the new crop that
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