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Choosing love and finding strength

Nicholas: "What a terrible idea! I'm seriously considering both, not just to pass the time, remember."

"That is all darlings are for, then, at that point, Nina?" "Quit worrying about your thought process; there is not a glaringly obvious explanation to affront me," I used to think.

"Nothing was farther from my desire."

As it had been unsettlingly obscured, Nina's face cleared.

"Will you send for Jim once more?" "How will you respond if, having met Rochester, you think of yourself as exhausted?"

"Not; that would be a disaster. If I make a mistake, well, I'll have to stick to it, so I won't jump in until I'm pretty sure I'll find water that's just right.

"By Jove, what a scholar!" and I chuckled. She poured out a second cup of tea, and subsequently, she looked at me,

like focusing on me one more time.

Nicholas: "Tom Green isn't any worse off than you are, and he hasn't taken your money. In any case, Tom is essentially as blissful as anybody, and everybody loves him, although he is a challenged person with no expectations and couldn't look good, as you will see in a little while. There is no point in having this impression about the legends of war who make us set up with their fury and criticism! Ladies and gentlemen, we are all in pretty much the same predicament: we run the risk of being harmed by bombs, and we are losing our good looks at sad work. For God's sake, stop being so depressed.

I laughed endlessly out loud—it was all so self-evident.

Friday: Maurice conveys people to play length every noontime now. Nina has returned to England as a result of her decision to take Jim!

This is how it worked out: The night before she left for Havre, she flew in to tell me. She was exhausted from running up the steps because the lift had gone wrong.

"Jim and I are secured!"

"1,000 well done!"

"On Wednesday night, Rochester provided me with dinner. All of the jolliest people in Paris—a part of those dear French who

have been so great to us all along, and a part of the Contention Board and the Ravens, and so on—and, do you know, Nicholas—II heard Rochester teaching Madame de Clerté a comparative story concerning his bon saying when a shell broke at Avicourt—as I had

As of now, I've heard him tell Boss Maritime official Short and Daisy Ryven! —that picked me— That unobtrusive story contained self-glorification and a man who might tell it multiple times isn't so appealing to me! In a decade, I should form into the

crowd loss—II couldn't face it! So I bid goodbye to him in the section before going up to my room, and I called to

Jim, who was in his room on the Cambon side, came round in the initial segment of the day!"

"Was Rochester vexed?"

"Rather! But I didn't worry because a 42-year-old man who can tell a three-part self-story will soon be cured."

Additionally, what did Jim say?

"He was enchanted; he said he understood it would end like that—give a man of 42 rope enough and he'll make certain to

Hang himself, he said, and Charitable! Nicholas: — Jim is a darling; he is getting extremely shocked. I love him!"

"Nina is winning with her senses! Women are very much like real specialists."

She became splendid. Never has she seemed, by all accounts, to be so appealing. "Nicholas, I don't mind a whit! Because a woman my age can't have everything, I know that having senses is the best thing in the world. Jim is my legend! We will be hitched to the

The first second he can get leave again—and I will 'wangle' him into being a 'red tab, he has adequate combat."

"Additionally, if in the meantime he should get crippled like me—what, Nina?"

She was pale.

"Do whatever it takes not to be so terrible. Nicholas—JJim — Goodness! I can't bear it!" She crossed herself as a severe Protestant to stay away from misfortune!

"We won't consider everything except bliss and satisfaction, Nina; however, it's obvious to me that you should spend a fortnight at the ocean," he said.

She had neglected to recall the induction and turned confounded, gritty, shaded eyes upon me.

"You know—to balance yourself when you feel like falling in love," I reminded her.

"Oh! All of it is just gibberish! She embraced me as a sister, mother, and family companion before returning down the steps. "I know now that I revere Jim," she said.

I took a sip of the light gin and seltzer that Burton had given me, which was sitting on a tray near me. After contemplating internally, "Here is to the Faculties —cheerful, beneficial things," I called Suzette to come to eat with me.

There is a mole on the left cheek of Suzette, high up near her eye; there are three dim hairs in it. I had never seen

them until around the start of today—cc'est fini—Je ne puis notwithstanding!

We all have moles with three dark hairs on them, and the worst part is when we don't expect to see them. That's the awfulness of life; it still baffles me.

Because Burton, if I let myself go to him, would look at me with fond, watery eyes of reproach and disapproval, I rush to this journal immediately. I can't resist the urge to be reflective; Maurice would concur with anything I said, so there is no point in conversing with him.

May 16: It has been more than two months since I opened this book, so I haven't had time to even consider writing. Nevertheless, it can't be.

It can't be that we will be beaten—generous! God, why am I, not a man again to fight? The attacks are continuous. Almost everybody left Paris during the turbulent long stretches of Spring and April. Many of them have returned now that their worries have somewhat subsided. To pass the time, they rush to movie theaters and jump in the few taxis that are available to travel to the sites where the raid bombs or Bertha shells exploded. There, they watch as houses burn and victims' crushed bodies are dragged out. I'm nauseated by this spoiled group. In any case, this isn't all of France—extraordinary, dear, valiant France—it's only one fragment of a pointless society. Today the Duchesse de Courville-Hautevine came to call upon me—mounted all of the means

without even a wheeze—the lift gave out again recently! What an individual! How I respect her! She has

worked splendidly since the contention began; her crisis facility is a supernatural occurrence; her primary kid was killed engaging gloriously at Verdun.

She told me, "You look as miserable as a wiped-out feline."

She takes advantage of the opportunity to speak English: "Of what great Jeune homme! We are not yet wrapped up; I have marked a portion of my family members who escaped Paris as boneheads! Bertha is our current focus, and the assaults in the evening are bright and boisterous!" As she isolated her scissors, which were hidden in the purple woolen shirt she was wearing over her Red Cross uniform, she laughed. This grand dame of a bygone era has absolutely no interest in lust!

"My blessings celebrate in them—Que voulez vous? War can't avoid being war, and there is no use in looking blue. cheer into, energetic

man!"

From that point on, we talked about different subjects. She is amusing and fair, and she treats everybody with graciousness in all that she does. My mother was her closest companion, and I adore the Duchesse.

Right when she had stayed twenty minutes, she approached my seat.

"I understood you would be unforgiving for not being in the fight, my kid," she said, tapping me with her once exquisite hand, now red.

Moreover, cemented with work, "So I snatched the minutes to come to see you. If the time comes, you'll be on one leg protecting yourself, but it won't! Also, you—you harmed ones, you saved ones—can keep the psychological grit up. Tiens! You can ask at any time; you have the opportunity, not mine; Mais le Bon Dieu receives it.

In addition, she left me at that point, stopping to arrange her tightly twisted periphery—she adheres to every old style—at the lac reflect by the entryway. I felt altogether more developed after she had gone—to be sure, that is the thing it is—GGod — why could I ever fight?

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