[An Unsocial Socialist by George Bernard Shaw]@TWC D-Link bookAn Unsocial Socialist CHAPTER III 16/45
And mind, Agatha Wylie," she continued, as if goaded by some unbearable reminiscence, "if you are really going, I don't care whether we part friends or not.
I have not forgotten the day when you called me a spiteful cat." "I have repented," said Agatha, unmoved.
"One day I sat down and watched Bacchus seated on the hearthrug, with his moony eyes looking into space so thoughtfully and patiently that I apologized for comparing you to him.
If I were to call him a spiteful cat he would only not believe me." "Because he is a cat," said Jane, with the giggle which was seldom far behind her tears. "No; but because he is not spiteful.
Gertrude keeps a recording angel inside her little head, and it is so full of other people's faults, written in large hand and read through a magnifying glass, that there is no room to enter her own." "You are very poetic," said Gertrude; "but I understand what you mean, and shall not forget it." "You ungrateful wretch," exclaimed Agatha, turning upon her so suddenly and imperiously that she involuntarily shrank aside: "how often, when you have tried to be insolent and false with me, have I not driven away your bad angel--by tickling you? Had you a friend in the college, except half-a-dozen toadies, until I came? And now, because I have sometimes, for your own good, shown you your faults, you bear malice against me, and say that you don't care whether we part friends or not!" "I didn't say so." "Oh, Gertrude, you know you did," said Jane. "You seem to think that I have no conscience," said Gertrude querulously. "I wish you hadn't," said Agatha.
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