The FountainThe text is a novel set in Holland during the first World War. The main characters are a British officer, a Dutch aristocrat and his British stepdaughter who is married to a German officer. It was a winner of the 1932 Hawthornden Prize. |
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Page 44
... heard often the twang of wire on the stakes , heard it until its shrill vibration and the slow lash of the risen wind became an unperceived accompaniment to silence . On a little table at his bedside he had built , as was his custom , a ...
... heard often the twang of wire on the stakes , heard it until its shrill vibration and the slow lash of the risen wind became an unperceived accompaniment to silence . On a little table at his bedside he had built , as was his custom , a ...
Page 72
... heard as he had heard , the outward sense being still present and unchanged , he was yet aware of other eyes seeing through his eyes , of another individuality moving behind the reasoned movement of his brain . Into this individuality ...
... heard as he had heard , the outward sense being still present and unchanged , he was yet aware of other eyes seeing through his eyes , of another individuality moving behind the reasoned movement of his brain . Into this individuality ...
Page 149
... heard their voices and sometimes their words ; if they were on the upper lake , it was the cluck of their rollocks he heard ; if they were on the tennis courts , nothing came to him but their flickering move- ment , thrown up by a ...
... heard their voices and sometimes their words ; if they were on the upper lake , it was the cluck of their rollocks he heard ; if they were on the tennis courts , nothing came to him but their flickering move- ment , thrown up by a ...
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Common terms and phrases
added Alison Allard asked Ballater Ballater's Baron Baroness beautiful began believe body Castle chair cheeks child clavichord cottage cried dark dear delight Descartes door dream Dutch edge embrasure England English Enkendaal exclaimed eyes face feel Ferrard fingers German gone Goof Hague hand Harbury head hear heard Herriot imagination Jedwell Julie Julie's Kerstholt knew lake laugh leave letter Lewis answered Lewis thought Lewis's Leyden light lips listen live looked marriage Mauritshuis Mevrouw mind morning mother moved Narwitz never night passed peace perhaps Plato play Prussia Quillan ramparts Ramsdell remember replied ROBERT GRANJON Rupert Rynwyk seemed Sezley shoulders silence sleep smile Socrates soon Sophie Sophie's speak spoke stood suddenly suppose talk tell tennis There's thing told touch trees turned Uncle Pieter van Leyden voice walked wife window wish woman wonder words