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app9151 APP04897 APP06595 APP24192 APP3260(补肾壮阳)

2018-04-23 13:22   浏览次数:

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app9151 APP04897 APP06595 APP24192 APP3260(补肾壮阳)

app9151 APP04897 APP06595 APP24192 APP3260(补肾壮阳)

app9151 APP04897 APP06595 APP24192 APP3260(补肾壮阳)

app9151 APP04897 APP06595 APP24192 APP3260(补肾壮阳)

app9151 APP04897 APP06595 APP24192 APP3260(补肾壮阳)

app9151 APP04897 APP06595 APP24192 APP3260(补肾壮阳)

app9151 APP04897 APP06595 APP24192 APP3260(补肾壮阳)

app9151 APP04897 APP06595 APP24192 APP3260(补肾壮阳)

app9151 APP04897 APP06595 APP24192 APP3260(补肾壮阳)

app9151 APP04897 APP06595 APP24192 APP3260(补肾壮阳)






eorgie stepped into his father’s shoes, and continued his own blameless career. He had an income of some three thousand a year, and a small place in Sussex, and at the conclusion of his Oxford days, turned over the place in Sussex to his step-mother and his three plain sisters, reserving there a couple of rooms for himself, and took a small neat house in Curzon Street. He was both generous and careful about money, made his sisters ample allowances, and proceeded to spend the rest of his income thoughtfully and methodically. He had an excellent{35} taste in furniture and decorations, though an essentially feminine one, and the house in Curzon Street became a comfortable and charming little nest, with Chippendale furniture in the drawing-room and bottles of pink bath-salts with glass spoons in the bath-room. He had a private den of his own (though anything less like a den was never seen), with a looking-glass over the fire-place into which he stuck invitation-cards, a Chesterfield sofa, on the arm of which there often reposed a piece of embroidery, a writing-table with all sorts of dainty contrivances, such as a smelling-bottle, and a little piece of soft sponge in a dish, over the damp surface of which he drew postage-stamps instead of licking them with his tongue, and by degrees he got together a collection of carved jade, which was displayed in a vitrine (vulgarly, a glass case) lined with velvet and lit inside by electric light. He had a brougham motor-car, driven by a handsome young chauffeur, whom, if he took the wrong turning, he called a ‘naughty boy’ through the tube, and was personally attended by a very smart young parlour-maid, for though he did not care for girls in any proper manly way, he liked, when he was sleepy in the morning, to hear the rustle of skirts. His cook, whom he saw every{36} day after breakfast in his den, was an artiste, and he had a good cellar of light wines. After lunch and dinner he always made coffee himself, in Turkish fashion, for his guests, and passed round with it odd, syrupy liqueurs. His bedroom was merely a woman’s bedroom, with a blue quilt on the bed, a long cheval-glass on the floor, silver-backed brushes on the toilet-table and no razors, for a neighbouring barber came to shave him every morning. In cold weather, when his mauve silk pyjamas were hung out to warm in front of the fire, the parlour-maid inserted into his bed a hot-water bottle, jacketed in the same tone of blue as his quilt. On

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