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

CHAPTER XXIV
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It was all very well to dress oneself carefully, compose one's face, and start off punctually at half-past four to a tea-party in Cheyne Walk, but Heaven only knew what would come of it all, and when Katharine, after sitting silent with her usual immobility, wantonly drew from her pocket and slapped down on the table beneath his eyes a letter addressed to Cassandra herself, his composure deserted him.

What did she mean by her behavior?
He looked up sharply from his row of little pictures.

Katharine was disposing of the American lady in far too arbitrary a fashion.

Surely the victim herself must see how foolish her enthusiasms appeared in the eyes of the poet's granddaughter.

Katharine never made any attempt to spare people's feelings, he reflected; and, being himself very sensitive to all shades of comfort and discomfort, he cut short the auctioneer's catalog, which Katharine was reeling off more and more absent-mindedly, and took Mrs.Vermont Bankes, with a queer sense of fellowship in suffering, under his own protection.
But within a few minutes the American lady had completed her inspection, and inclining her head in a little nod of reverential farewell to the poet and his shoes, she was escorted downstairs by Rodney.


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