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Nella Larsen

The Complete Fiction of Nella Larsen

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  • Kate Egorovahar citeratför 4 år sedan
    The Wrong Man
  • Cristy Gomezhar citeratför 7 år sedan
    Mrs. Hayes-Rore proved to be a plump lemon-colored woman with badly straightened hair and dirty fingernails. Her direct, penetrating gaze was somewhat formidable. Notebook in hand, she gave Helga the impression of having risen early for consultation with other harassed authorities on the race problem, and having been in conference on the subject all day. Evidently she had had little time or thought for the careful donning of the five-years-behind-the-mode garments which covered her, and which even in their youth could hardly have fitted or suited her.
  • Cristy Gomezhar citeratför 7 år sedan
    She saw herself for an obscene sore in all their lives, at all costs to be hidden. She understood, even while she resented. It would have been easier if she had not.
  • Cristy Gomezhar citeratför 7 år sedan
    between this freedom and the cage which Naxos had been to her.
  • Cristy Gomezhar citeratför 7 år sedan
    She had been happier, but still horribly lonely.
  • Cristy Gomezhar citeratför 7 år sedan
    where for the first time she could breathe freely, where she discovered that because one was dark one was not necessarily loathsome, and could, therefore, consider oneself without repulsion.
  • Cristy Gomezhar citeratför 7 år sedan
    She visualized her now, sad, cold, and—yes, remote. The tragic cruelties of the years had left her a little pathetic, a little hard, and a little unapproachable.
  • Cristy Gomezhar citeratför 7 år sedan
    happy, happy beyond most human creatures, in the little time it had lasted, the little time before that gay suave scoundrel, Helga’s father, had left her. But Helga Crane doubted it. How could she have
  • Cristy Gomezhar citeratför 7 år sedan
    Twenty-three. I see. Someday you’ll learn that lies, injustice, and hypocrisy are a part of every ordinary community. Most people achieve a sort of protective immunity, a kind of callousness, toward them. If they didn’t, they couldn’t endure. I think there’s less of these evils here than in most places, but because we’re trying to do such a big thing, to aim so high, the ugly things show more, they irk some of us more. Service is like clean white linen, even the tiniest speck shows.” He went on, explaining, amplifying, pleading.
  • Cristy Gomezhar citeratför 7 år sedan
    Well, for one thing, I hate hypocrisy. I hate cruelty to students, and to teachers who can’t fight back. I hate backbiting, and sneaking, and petty jealousy. Naxos? It’s hardly a place at all. It’s more like some loathsome, venomous disease. Ugh! Everybody spending his time in a malicious hunting for the weaknesses of others, spying, grudging, scratching.”
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