Red Lily, the — Volume 03 by Anatole France
page 101 of 103 (98%)
page 101 of 103 (98%)
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She looked at him without force and without courage.
"It is true that you do not believe me." She added softly: "If I killed myself would you believe me?" "No, I would not believe you." She wiped her cheeks with her handkerchief; then, lifting her eyes, shining through her tears, she said: "Then, all is at an end!" She rose, saw again in the room the thousand things with which she had lived in laughing intimacy, which she had regarded as hers, now suddenly become nothing to her, and confronting her as a stranger and an enemy. She saw again the nude woman who made, while running, the gesture which had not been explained to her; the Florentine models which recalled to her Fiesole and the enchanted hours of Italy; the profile sketch by Dechartre of the girl who laughed in her pretty pathetic thinness. She stopped a moment sympathetically in front of that little newspaper girl who had come there too, and had disappeared, carried away in the irresistible current of life and of events. She repeated: "Then all is at an end?" |
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