The narrator, awaiting a transatlantic voyage, spends weeks in England lodging at an antique inn and records precise impressions of its coffee-room, furnishings, and atmosphere. Seated near other lodgers, he observes and reconstructs a tense exchange between two guests, one melancholic and ailing, the other brisk and pragmatic, revealing strains of homesickness, cultural adjustment, and differing attitudes toward exile and belonging. Through close sensory description and wry social observation, the narrative contrasts memory and reality, old-world surfaces and private anxieties, and tracks how place, manners, and companionship reshape identity and expectation during a brief sojourn.