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Uncorrected proofs, 1910

Page 13 (2 of 33)

D. H. Lawrence's 'Odour of Chrysanthemums'


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past, lifting their blackened faces to call something to the
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driver. Then they passed on, loudly talking, their shapeless
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grey-black figures seeming of a piece with the raw November
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afternoon, the tea-bottles rolling in their pockets, while the
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stumbling of their great boots across the sleepers resounded
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from afar.

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The train slowed down as it drew near a small cottage squat*
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beside the great bay of railway-lines. Four black steps, old
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sleepers, led down from the cinder-track to the threshold of the
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house, which was small and grimy, a large bony vine scrambling
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over it, as if trying to claw down the tiled roof. Round the
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small bricked yard was a rim of sooty garden with a few chill
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primroses. Beyond, a long garden sloped down to a tree-hidden
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brook course. There were twiggy apple-trees and winter-crack
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trees*, forlorn and black, and a number of ragged cabbages.
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Beside the path there hung torn and scattered groups of dis-
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hevelled pink chrysanthemums. A woman came bending out of
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the felt-covered fowl-house half-way down the garden. She
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closed and padlocked the door, then drew herself erect, having
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brushed some bits from her white apron.

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She was a tall woman of imperious mien, handsome, with
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definite black eyebrows. Her smooth black hair was parted
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exactly. For a few moments she stood steadily watching the
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miners as they passed along the railway: then she turned
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towards the brook-course. There was no quickness, no lightness,
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in her movements. Her face was calm and proud with defiance,
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her mouth was closed with disillusionment. After a moment
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she called:

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"John!" There was no answer. She waited, and then
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said distinctly:

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"Where are you?"

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"Here!" replied a child's sulky voice from among the
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bushes that crowded darkly on the bank of the brook. The
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woman looked piercingly through the dusk.

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