![]() ![]() She puts it away and they walk out, with Franny making most of the small talk. ![]() After she clarifies which letter, he answers yes, and asks her about the pea-green clothbound book she is carrying. She hugs and kisses him, and asks if he received her letter. Lane spots Franny, noticing especially her coat. With cigarettes in hand, the boys watch the arriving train. She concludes by admitting she feels "unintelligent" when she writes to him, and asks if they can have a nice weekend without his analyzing everything and her.Ī classmate, Roy Sorenson, interrupts Lane and asks if he understood their reading assignment of the German poet Rilke. In a postscript, she says her father's "growth" is benign, and that Lane need not worry about what happened over a recent Friday night - she doesn't think her parents even heard them come in. She writes that she is reading and loving the Greek poet Sappho, and makes several more declarations of love to him. In it, she describes loving his letter and her anticipation of the weekend. ![]() He rereads a letter from his girlfriend, Franny. The big football game against Yale is this weekend. ![]() Lane Coutell waits with several other upper-crust college boys for their dates to arrive by train on a cold Saturday morning. ![]()
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