[Night and Day by Virginia Woolf]@TWC D-Link bookNight and Day CHAPTER IV 7/26
He described the scene with certain additions and exaggerations which interested Mary very much. "But, in spite of what you say, I do admire her," she said.
"I've only seen her once or twice, but she seems to me to be what one calls a 'personality.'" "I didn't mean to abuse her.
I only felt that she wasn't very sympathetic to me." "They say she's going to marry that queer creature Rodney." "Marry Rodney? Then she must be more deluded than I thought her." "Now that's my door, all right," Mary exclaimed, carefully putting her wools away, as a succession of knocks reverberated unnecessarily, accompanied by a sound of people stamping their feet and laughing.
A moment later the room was full of young men and women, who came in with a peculiar look of expectation, exclaimed "Oh!" when they saw Denham, and then stood still, gaping rather foolishly. The room very soon contained between twenty and thirty people, who found seats for the most part upon the floor, occupying the mattresses, and hunching themselves together into triangular shapes.
They were all young and some of them seemed to make a protest by their hair and dress, and something somber and truculent in the expression of their faces, against the more normal type, who would have passed unnoticed in an omnibus or an underground railway.
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