read a good book?
here's an excerpt of a book i recently read:
"But there's Violet (it'll be Harriet next, I thought, with dread and fascination) in sudden hot tears because on a crowded and sullen Northern Line she's just bought a stupid keyring from a deaf-and-dumb woman every other passenger in the carriage has stonily ignored. The tears because when the deaf-and-dumb woman (sixties, watery blue eyes, a furred mole above her top lip, the anorak and old butter smell of the poor) has smiled and said something incomprehensible, Violet, not wanting to engage beyond mechanical charity, has responded with a look of puzzlement and okay-I've-bought-your-shit-now-please-go-away-and-leave-me-alone. Then, the woman turning away with a look of threadbare weariness, Violet's realisation that the garbled phrase was 'God bless you'. It holds her for a moment, this translation, poised on the brink of a shocking grief. The woman's last look: You can't understand me because I can't talk properly; you don't want me to talk to you because you're afraid that I'm going to want something from you - money, love, time, your life; you just want me to leave you alone; that's all right, I know, but I was just saying thank you. All Vi's childhood rushes up into her heart - the kids they made fun of, the tiny cruelties, the horrible guilt - all her adult excesses too, and thus with her heart full she looks down at the mute's keyring. Its gimmick is a little sign language chart in clear plastic. On the reverse it says: Learn my language and we can be friends! And this, this more than anything hitherto pitches her over the edge and she finds herself in tears, publicly - not discreet weeping, either, but audible boo-hooing and visible, body-shaking sobs..."
- Lucifer, 'I, Lucifer', Glen Duncan
had a similar experience once. makes you feel really small.
"But there's Violet (it'll be Harriet next, I thought, with dread and fascination) in sudden hot tears because on a crowded and sullen Northern Line she's just bought a stupid keyring from a deaf-and-dumb woman every other passenger in the carriage has stonily ignored. The tears because when the deaf-and-dumb woman (sixties, watery blue eyes, a furred mole above her top lip, the anorak and old butter smell of the poor) has smiled and said something incomprehensible, Violet, not wanting to engage beyond mechanical charity, has responded with a look of puzzlement and okay-I've-bought-your-shit-now-please-go-away-and-leave-me-alone. Then, the woman turning away with a look of threadbare weariness, Violet's realisation that the garbled phrase was 'God bless you'. It holds her for a moment, this translation, poised on the brink of a shocking grief. The woman's last look: You can't understand me because I can't talk properly; you don't want me to talk to you because you're afraid that I'm going to want something from you - money, love, time, your life; you just want me to leave you alone; that's all right, I know, but I was just saying thank you. All Vi's childhood rushes up into her heart - the kids they made fun of, the tiny cruelties, the horrible guilt - all her adult excesses too, and thus with her heart full she looks down at the mute's keyring. Its gimmick is a little sign language chart in clear plastic. On the reverse it says: Learn my language and we can be friends! And this, this more than anything hitherto pitches her over the edge and she finds herself in tears, publicly - not discreet weeping, either, but audible boo-hooing and visible, body-shaking sobs..."
- Lucifer, 'I, Lucifer', Glen Duncan
had a similar experience once. makes you feel really small.
