[The Golden Bowl by Henry James]@TWC D-Link book
The Golden Bowl

PART FOURTH
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"There's always the question of what one considers--!" "What one considers intimate?
Well, I know what I consider intimate now.
Too intimate," said Maggie, "to let me know anything about it." It was quiet--yes; but not too quiet for Fanny Assingham's capacity to wince.

"Only compatible with letting ME, you mean ?" She had asked it after a pause, but turning again to the new ornament of the chimney and wondering, even while she took relief from it, at this gap in her experience.

"But here are things, my dear, of which my ignorance is perfect." "They went about together--they're known to have done it.

And I don't mean only before--I mean after." "After ?" said Fanny Assingham.
"Before we were married--yes; but after we were engaged." "Ah, I've known nothing about that!" And she said it with a braver assurance--clutching, with comfort, at something that was apparently new to her.
"That bowl," Maggie went on, "is, so strangely--too strangely, almost, to believe at this time of day--the proof.

They were together all the while--up to the very eve of our marriage.


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