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Dogeared
From Virginia Woolf's 
Jacob's Room
:
     Had he, then, been nothing? An unanswerable question, since even if it  weren’t the habit of the undertaker to close the eyes, the light so soon  goes out of them. At first, part of herself; now one of a company, he  had merged in the grass, the sloping hillside, the thousand white  stones, some slanting, others upright, the decayed wreaths, the crosses  of green tin, the narrow yellow paths, and the lilacs that drooped in  April, with a scent like that of an invalid’s bedroom, over the  churchyard wall. Seabrook was now all that; and when, with her skirt  hitched up, feeding the chickens, she heard the bell for service or  funeral, that was Seabrook’s voice—the voice of the dead. 
*
     Mrs. Jarvis walked on the moor when she was unhappy, going as far as a  certain saucer–shaped hollow, though she always meant to go to a more  distant ridge; and there she sat down, and took out the little book  hidden beneath her cloak and read a few lines of poetry, and looked  about her. She was not very unhappy, and, seeing that she was  forty–five, never perhaps would be very unhappy, desperately unhappy  that is, and leave her husband, and ruin a good man’s career, as she  sometimes threatened.
     Still there is no need to say what risks a  clergyman’s wife runs when she walks on the moor. Short, dark, with  kindling eyes, a pheasant’s feather in her hat, Mrs. Jarvis was just the  sort of woman to lose her faith upon the moors—to confound her God with  the universal that is—but she did not lose her faith, did not leave her  husband, never read her poem through, and went on walking the moors,  looking at the moon behind the elm trees, and feeling as she sat on the  grass high above Scarborough... 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
  
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