[The Golden Bowl by Henry James]@TWC D-Link book
The Golden Bowl

PART FIFTH
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They were husband and wife--oh, so immensely!--as regards other persons; but after they had dropped again on their old bench, conscious that the party on the terrace, augmented, as in the past, by neighbours, would do beautifully without them, it was wonderfully like their having got together into some boat and paddled off from the shore where husbands and wives, luxuriant complications, made the air too tropical.

In the boat they were father and daughter, and poor Dotty and Kitty supplied abundantly, for their situation, the oars or the sail.

Why, into the bargain, for that matter--this came to Maggie--couldn't they always live, so far as they lived together, in a boat?
She felt in her face, with the question, the breath of a possibility that soothed her; they needed only KNOW each other, henceforth, in the unmarried relation.

That other sweet evening, in the same place, he had been as unmarried as possible--which had kept down, so to speak, the quantity of change in their state.

Well then, that other sweet evening was what the present sweet evening would resemble; with the quite calculable effect of an exquisite inward refreshment.


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