In the Wilderness by Robert Smythe Hichens
page 10 of 944 (01%)
page 10 of 944 (01%)
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"But you don't hate the idea?" His voice was almost violent. "No; if--if I were living in a certain way." "What way?" But she did not answer his question. "I dare say I might dislike living alone. I've never done such a thing, therefore I can't tell." "You're an enigma," he exclaimed. "And you seem so--so--you have this extraordinary, this abnormal power of attracting people to you. You are friends with everybody." "Indeed I'm not." "I mean you're so cordial, so friendly with everybody. Don't you care for anybody?" "I care very much for some people." "And yet you could live alone! Shut in here for days with a book"--at that moment he was positively jealous of old Dante, gone to his rest five hundred and seventy-four years ago--"you're perfectly happy." "The 'Paradiso' isn't an ordinary book," she said, very gently, |
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