[Fraternity by John Galsworthy]@TWC D-Link book
Fraternity

CHAPTER IV
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THE LITTLE MODEL When in the preceding autumn Bianca began her picture called "The Shadow," nobody was more surprised than Hilary that she asked him to find her a model for the figure.

Not knowing the nature of the picture, nor having been for many years--perhaps never--admitted into the workings of his wife's spirit, he said: "Why don't you ask Thyme to sit for you ?" Blanca answered: "She's not the type at all--too matter-of-fact.
Besides, I don't want a lady; the figure's to be half draped." Hilary smiled.
Blanca knew quite well that he was smiling at this distinction between ladies and other women, and understood that he was smiling, not so much at her, but at himself, for secretly agreeing with the distinction she had made.
And suddenly she smiled too.
There was the whole history of their married life in those two smiles.
They meant so much: so many thousand hours of suppressed irritation, so many baffled longings and earnest efforts to bring their natures together.

They were the supreme, quiet evidence of the divergence of two lives--that slow divergence which had been far from being wilful, and was the more hopeless in that it had been so gradual and so gentle.

They had never really had a quarrel, having enlightened views of marriage; but they had smiled.

They had smiled so often through so many years that no two people in the world could very well be further from each other.
Their smiles had banned the revelation even to themselves of the tragedy of their wedded state.


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