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

CHAPTER XXVI
12/46

"But I must confess that I knew that before, so it isn't fair.

I've got your manuscript with me," she went on, disregarding Mr.Peyton in a shameless way.

"I've got all sorts of things I want to ask you about it." William inclined his head and tried to conceal the pleasure that her remark gave him.

But the pleasure was not unalloyed.

However susceptible to flattery William might be, he would never tolerate it from people who showed a gross or emotional taste in literature, and if Cassandra erred even slightly from what he considered essential in this respect he would express his discomfort by flinging out his hands and wrinkling his forehead; he would find no pleasure in her flattery after that.
"First of all," she proceeded, "I want to know why you chose to write a play ?" "Ah! You mean it's not dramatic ?" "I mean that I don't see what it would gain by being acted.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books