[Night and Day by Virginia Woolf]@TWC D-Link book
Night and Day

CHAPTER XII
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He stood watching her come towards him, and thought her more beautiful and strange than his dream of her; for the real Katharine could speak the words which seemed to crowd behind the forehead and in the depths of the eyes, and the commonest sentence would be flashed on by this immortal light.

And she overflowed the edges of the dream; he remarked that her softness was like that of some vast snowy owl; she wore a ruby on her finger.
"My mother wants me to tell you," she said, "that she hopes you have begun your poem.

She says every one ought to write poetry....

All my relations write poetry," she went on.

"I can't bear to think of it sometimes--because, of course, it's none of it any good.


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