[This Side of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald]@TWC D-Link book
This Side of Paradise

CHAPTER 4
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She did it constantly, with such a serious enthusiasm that he grew fond of watching her golden hair bent over a book, brow wrinkled ever so little at hunting her sentence.
Through early March he took to going to Philadelphia for week-ends.
Almost always there was some one else there and she seemed not anxious to see him alone, for many occasions presented themselves when a word from her would have given him another delicious half-hour of adoration.
But he fell gradually in love and began to speculate wildly on marriage.
Though this design flowed through his brain even to his lips, still he knew afterward that the desire had not been deeply rooted.

Once he dreamt that it had come true and woke up in a cold panic, for in his dream she had been a silly, flaxen Clara, with the gold gone out of her hair and platitudes falling insipidly from her changeling tongue.

But she was the first fine woman he ever knew and one of the few good people who ever interested him.

She made her goodness such an asset.

Amory had decided that most good people either dragged theirs after them as a liability, or else distorted it to artificial geniality, and of course there were the ever-present prig and Pharisee--( but Amory never included _them_ as being among the saved).
***** ST.


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