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From: | Addie Grove |
Subject: | [Gcl-commits] Re: hello |
Date: | Mon, 25 Dec 2006 20:15:56 -0900 |
"That was the question I had to ask myself, and
as much as I may have wanted to pull the wool over my eyes, I knew the answer
to that - I knew even before I saw the marks on the door over there. At first he thought he was dreaming about his own book, that the dark was the dream-dark of the caves behind the huge stone head of the Bourka Bee-Goddess and the sting was that of a bee - "Paul? Sitting by the bedroom window and looking out at the ice-glittery morning world on that second full day alone, Paul could hear Misery the pig squealing in the barn and one of the cows bellowing. Soames ran shrieking from the cemetery, ran all the way into Storpings high street - a run of nearly a mile and a quarter - and reported her news to the barber, who was also the local constable. Not that there was much to look at - the furnace, the
remains of a coal-pile, a table with a bunch of shadowy cans and implements
lying on it and to his right, up a way from where be was propped. "That was the question I had to ask myself, and as much as I may have wanted to pull the wool over my eyes, I knew the answer to that - I knew even before I saw the marks on the door over there. Sitting
by the bedroom window and looking out at the ice-glittery morning world on that
second full day alone, Paul could hear Misery the pig squealing in the barn and
one of the cows bellowing. Soames ran shrieking from the cemetery, ran all the way into Storpings high street - a run of nearly a mile and a quarter - and reported her news to the barber, who was also the local constable. "That was the question I
had to ask myself, and as much as I may have wanted to pull the wool over my
eyes, I knew the answer to that - I knew even before I saw the marks on the
door over there.
At first he thought he was dreaming about his own book, that the dark was the dream-dark of the caves behind the huge stone head of the Bourka Bee-Goddess and the sting was that of a bee - "Paul? Sitting by the bedroom window and looking out at the ice-glittery morning world on that second full day alone, Paul could hear Misery the pig squealing in the barn and one of the cows bellowing. Soames ran shrieking from the cemetery, ran all the way into Storpings high street - a run of nearly a mile and a quarter - and reported her news to the barber, who was also the local constable. |
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