[The March Family Trilogy by William Dean Howells]@TWC D-Link bookThe March Family Trilogy PART SECOND 146/206
She was a slender girl, whose semi-aesthetic dress flowed about her with an accentuation of her long forms, and redeemed them from censure by the very frankness with which it confessed them; nobody could have said that Margaret Vance was too tall.
Her pretty little head, which she had an effect of choosing to have little in the same spirit of judicious defiance, had a good deal of reading in it; she was proud to know literary and artistic fashions as well as society fashions.
She liked being singled out by an exterior distinction so obvious as Beaton's, and she listened with sympathetic interest to his account of those people.
He gave their natural history reality by drawing upon his own; he reconstructed their plebeian past from the experiences of his childhood and his youth of the pre-Parisian period; and he had a pang of suicidal joy in insulting their ignorance of the world. "What different kinds of people you meet!" said the girl at last, with an envious sigh.
Her reading had enlarged the bounds of her imagination, if not her knowledge; the novels nowadays dealt so much with very common people, and made them seem so very much more worth while than the people one met. She said something like this to Beaton.
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