[This Side of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald]@TWC D-Link bookThis Side of Paradise CHAPTER 1 6/57
They talk as an English butler might after several years in a Chicago grand-opera company." She became almost incoherent--"Suppose--time in every Western woman's life--she feels her husband is prosperous enough for her to have--accent--they try to impress _me_, my dear--" Though she thought of her body as a mass of frailties, she considered her soul quite as ill, and therefore important in her life.
She had once been a Catholic, but discovering that priests were infinitely more attentive when she was in process of losing or regaining faith in Mother Church, she maintained an enchantingly wavering attitude.
Often she deplored the bourgeois quality of the American Catholic clergy, and was quite sure that had she lived in the shadow of the great Continental cathedrals her soul would still be a thin flame on the mighty altar of Rome.
Still, next to doctors, priests were her favorite sport. "Ah, Bishop Wiston," she would declare, "I do not want to talk of myself.
I can imagine the stream of hysterical women fluttering at your doors, beseeching you to be simpatico"-- then after an interlude filled by the clergyman--"but my mood--is--oddly dissimilar." Only to bishops and above did she divulge her clerical romance.
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