Summary “Unforgettable”


Denis is a poet, and in England, during the war, he published a book of poetry, which was a great success.

Young people begin to meet, and in a month and a half they deal with betrothal. Mr. Joyboi, representing the embodiment of the most perfect professional manners and enjoying romantic success among the girls working in the “Rustling Dale”, is also not indifferent to Aime. He never told her openly about his sympathy, but expresses his feelings through the dead. To Eme from his hands, they always come with a blissful and childish smile on their lips, which makes the other beauticians jealous. One day he informs her that she is likely to be promoted and transferred to the work of an embalmer. On this occasion, Mr. Joyboi invites Aimee to dinner at his house, where he lives with “Mamuli” and her old shabby parrot. The reception does not seem to Eme too welcoming, and she takes the first opportunity to escape from there.

After Mr. Joyboi learns of

the betrothal of Eme, all the dead who fall into her hands acquire a tragically-sad expression. Knowing that the girl’s fiancé writes poetry to her every day, Mr. Joyboi, with her permission, shows them to one writer and finds out that they all belong to the pen of classical English poets, as Eme reports. In addition, soon a parrot dies at Mr. Joyboe’s mother. Arriving in the “World’s Best Land,” he meets there Denis, who hid from Aime the place of his work and assured him that he was preparing to become a priest of the Free Church. He did this because his office stands several orders below the “Rustling Dale” and about her Eme repeatedly spoke with disdain.

Faced with deception, Aime decides to break with Denis and set a date for the wedding with Mr. Joyboe. About all his experiences and difficulties in his personal life, Aime regularly writes to the editorial office of one of the newspapers, to some popular spiritual mentor, who in the newspaper has a daily rubric called “The Wisdom of Guru Brahmin.” Guru Brahmin is the two men who respond to letters from correspondents. One of them, Mr. Junk, answers them not on the newspaper page, but in personal correspondence.


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Summary “Unforgettable”