(a) Sebastian's bout of nostalgia in
Roquebrune, Monte Carlo, before he learns that his English mother had died
in another city, namely, Roquebrune, Var. (cf.p.20);
(b) The narrator, SK's all Russian
half-brother, assuming that, in SK's book "Lost Property",
he is describing his feelings towards Russia - whereas the
reference seems to be to exiled R. Brooke's longing for
England.
[ Cp. Rupert Brooke's poem, written
in 1912 in Berlin, titled "The Old Vicarage, Granchester"*
and (on p.27) a quote from SK's Lost
Property: "that one of the purest emotions is that
of the banished man pining after the land of his birth[...]the blue remembered
hills and the happy highways, the hedge with its unofficial
rose and the field with its rabbits, the distant
spire...". if we keep in mind that this passage was
selected to confirm that " the romantic - and let me add, somewhat artificial - passion for
his mother's land, could not, I am sure, exclude the real affection for the
country where he had born and bred".]