"The Sea" [.]
Feb. 22nd, 2007 08:56 pmI was pleased to recognize the significance of 'genuine aspidistra'. This novel should therefore be filed under 'lodger fiction'.
- There was an old man with one leg gone below the knee, a thick line of sutures like the prototype of a zip fasterner traversing the shiny stump.
- Miss Vavasour clears the tale in a few broad fanciful passes.
- Bun insisted on addressing me in tones of warm concern, muted awe, and try as I might I could modulate no tone in response that did not sound brave and bashful. Miss Vavasour... made repeated attempts to foster a less soulful, brisker atmosphere at the table, without success.
- The afternoon train... blundering toward us through the fields like a big mad toy, huffing bulbous links of thick white smoke.
- Rain earlier had left puddles on the road that were paler than the sky, as if the last of day were dying in them.
- (a restaurant): this glassed-in box of wearied air
- an obscurely furtive pleasure; wallow with small, mistrustful pleasure
- my rapturously lovesick grief; a frugal smile
- a bright, wind-worried day; the weather was mild, hardly weather at all
__ Nothing in the human visage bears prolonged scrutiny.
__ Hotel rooms are always impatient for us to be gone; hospital rooms, on the contrary, and without anybody's effort, are there to make us stay, to wan to stay, and be content.
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