[The Voyage Out by Virginia Woolf]@TWC D-Link book
The Voyage Out

CHAPTER XX
15/32

He settled himself still more comfortably under the shade of the fallen tree and Helen's figure.
As they went, Mr.Flushing called after them, "We must start in an hour.
Hewet, please remember that.

An hour." Whether made by man, or for some reason preserved by nature, there was a wide pathway striking through the forest at right angles to the river.
It resembled a drive in an English forest, save that tropical bushes with their sword-like leaves grew at the side, and the ground was covered with an unmarked springy moss instead of grass, starred with little yellow flowers.

As they passed into the depths of the forest the light grew dimmer, and the noises of the ordinary world were replaced by those creaking and sighing sounds which suggest to the traveller in a forest that he is walking at the bottom of the sea.

The path narrowed and turned; it was hedged in by dense creepers which knotted tree to tree, and burst here and there into star-shaped crimson blossoms.

The sighing and creaking up above were broken every now and then by the jarring cry of some startled animal.


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