Coffee Break
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- Feb 13, 2022
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Hello everyone. I encountered this expression, "Meet people", but am struggling to understand it. Could you please let me know what it means in the following sentences:
In my pocket I also felt the folded oversized invitation card on which the address of the party was printed in spirited filigree. I vaguely recalled, while talking to Clara at the party, that I’d frequently encounter this card in my pocket and would absentmindedly twiddle its corners, experiencing a sudden burst of joy when I put two and two together, and, in the fog of distracted thoughts, remembered that if the card was still damp from the storm, this could only mean I’d just come in from the snow, that the party was still young, that we were hours away from parting, and that there’d be plenty of time for anything to happen. And yet, even if behind these bursts of joy lingered something like light resentment for being dragged to this party, only to be stood up by my father’s friend, still, it may not have been resentment at all but yet another cunning way of allowing my thoughts to stray from where they wished to linger, only to be pulled right back to Clara and to the uncanny suspicion that Pooh might even have orchestrated a bit of what had happened tonight. Father died. I promised to look out for him. Lonely. Doesn’t know what to do with himself. Meet people.
- André Aciman, Eight White Nights, First Night
This is a novel published in the United States of America in 2010. This novel is narrated by the nameless male protagonist. The protagonist meets Clara at a Christmas party in Manhattan. Here, the protagonist came out of the party and is on the street. In his pocket, he finds an invitation card for the party. (He was invited by his late father's friend named Pooh and promised to meet him at the party, but Pooh had stood him up.)
Here, I wonder what the underlined expression means.
The italicized part appears to be what the protagonist had thought right after the death of his father, but would that mean that his father does not know how to meet people...?
I wonder how it is connected to the previous sentence, or whether it is an imperative sentence directed to his father (or the protagonist himself...?) perhaps.
I would very much appreciate your help.
In my pocket I also felt the folded oversized invitation card on which the address of the party was printed in spirited filigree. I vaguely recalled, while talking to Clara at the party, that I’d frequently encounter this card in my pocket and would absentmindedly twiddle its corners, experiencing a sudden burst of joy when I put two and two together, and, in the fog of distracted thoughts, remembered that if the card was still damp from the storm, this could only mean I’d just come in from the snow, that the party was still young, that we were hours away from parting, and that there’d be plenty of time for anything to happen. And yet, even if behind these bursts of joy lingered something like light resentment for being dragged to this party, only to be stood up by my father’s friend, still, it may not have been resentment at all but yet another cunning way of allowing my thoughts to stray from where they wished to linger, only to be pulled right back to Clara and to the uncanny suspicion that Pooh might even have orchestrated a bit of what had happened tonight. Father died. I promised to look out for him. Lonely. Doesn’t know what to do with himself. Meet people.
- André Aciman, Eight White Nights, First Night
This is a novel published in the United States of America in 2010. This novel is narrated by the nameless male protagonist. The protagonist meets Clara at a Christmas party in Manhattan. Here, the protagonist came out of the party and is on the street. In his pocket, he finds an invitation card for the party. (He was invited by his late father's friend named Pooh and promised to meet him at the party, but Pooh had stood him up.)
Here, I wonder what the underlined expression means.
The italicized part appears to be what the protagonist had thought right after the death of his father, but would that mean that his father does not know how to meet people...?
I wonder how it is connected to the previous sentence, or whether it is an imperative sentence directed to his father (or the protagonist himself...?) perhaps.
I would very much appreciate your help.