Night and Day by Virginia Woolf
page 104 of 605 (17%)
page 104 of 605 (17%)
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She may have been conscious that there was some exaggeration in this fancy of hers, for she certainly did not wish to share it with Ralph. To him, she supposed, Mary Datchet, composing leaflets for Cabinet Ministers among her typewriters, represented all that was interesting and genuine; and, accordingly, she shut them both out from all share in the crowded street, with its pendant necklace of lamps, its lighted windows, and its throng of men and women, which exhilarated her to such an extent that she very nearly forgot her companion. She walked very fast, and the effect of people passing in the opposite direction was to produce a queer dizziness both in her head and in Ralph's, which set their bodies far apart. But she did her duty by her companion almost unconsciously. "Mary Datchet does that sort of work very well. . . . She's responsible for it, I suppose?" "Yes. The others don't help at all. . . . Has she made a convert of you?" "Oh no. That is, I'm a convert already." "But she hasn't persuaded you to work for them?" "Oh dear no--that wouldn't do at all." So they walked on down the Tottenham Court Road, parting and coming together again, and Ralph felt much as though he were addressing the summit of a poplar in a high gale of wind. |
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