Excerpt: ... the still and watching sea. The Sarn-Porth Neigr Loop was constructed in 1886-7, and opened in the May of the last-named year. One of its earlier trains brought, in a first-class compartment, Philip and Mrs. Lacey and the Misses June and Wygelia, fresh from Paris; and in a third-class compartment it brought a family called Topham. Mr. Topham was head-clerk in a Liverpool Irish-bacon-importing concern, and Philip Lacey, meeting him once or twice at Philharmonic Promenade Concerts, had forgotten the golden rule that it is easier to get into conversation with a man than it is to shake him off again, and had fallen into the habit of nodding to him. In fact, a sort of acquaintanceship had been struck up. He had learned Topham''s name, and Topham his. All this had been in Liverpool. But it was one thing to strike up an acquaintanceship in Liverpool, and quite another to continue that acquaintanceship elsewhere. Philip Lacey, seeing Barry Topham get into the train, had not doubted that the bacon-importer''s clerk would be dropping off again after a few stations. But at Stockport, where Philip had descended to stretch his legs, Topham had met him on the platform and had informed him that he was going to Llanyglo. Now when Philip went away for a few weeks'' change he liked that change to be a change. He didn''t come to Llanyglo to meet casuals from Liverpool. He began to wonder whether Llanyglo was quite what it had been. And so did Mr. Morrell, who brought his daughter Hilda from Brighton that year. And so did Val Clayton, who also came that year, merely in order to see what sort of vermouth they sold at the other hotels. For soon there were three hotels, the original Cambrian, the Cardigan, and the Montgomery. All these were on what by and by became the front, and between the Cambrian and the Cardigan was a space of perhaps a couple of hundred yards. Thence to the Montgomery, however, was quite a walk for Val of a morning
Mushroom Town
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