The
old French soldier’s words on travel and toleration remind
Yorick of Polonius’s speech to his son in
Hamlet, so on the way home from the Opera, he visits a bookseller intending to buy Shakespeare’s complete works. The bookseller denies that he has Shakespeare’s complete works. When Yorick points to a copy on the counter, the bookseller tells him that it belongs to
Count de B****, who only sent it to the shop to be bound. The bookseller goes on to say that Count de B**** adores both English literature and English people. Yorick says the bookseller’s courtesy makes him want to spend money in his store.