Fraternity
In the afternoon of the last day of April, 190-, a billowy sea of little broken clouds crowned the thin air above High Street, Kensington. This soft tumult of vapours, covering nearly all the firmament, was in onslaught round a patch of blue sky, shaped somewhat like a star, which still gleamed—a single gentian flower amongst innumerable grass. Each of these small clouds seemed fitted with a pair of unseen wings, and, as insects flight on their too constant journeys, they were setting forth all ways round this starry blossom which burned so clear with the colour of its far fixity. On one side they were massed in fleecy congeries, so crowding each other that no edge or outline was preserved; on the other, higher, stronger, emergent from their fellow-clouds, they seemed leading the attack on that surviving gleam of the ineffable. Infinite was the variety of those million separate vapours, infinite the unchanging unity of that fixed blue star.
Down in the street beneath this eternal warring of the various soft-winged clouds on the unmisted ether, men, women, children, and their familiars—horses, dogs, and cats—were pursuing their occupations with the sweet zest of the Spring. They streamed along, and the noise of their frequenting rose in an unbroken roar: “I, I—I, I!”
The crowd was perhaps thickest outside the premises of Messrs. Rose and Thorn. Every kind of being, from the highest to the lowest, passed in front of the hundred doors of this establishment; and before the costume window a rather tall, slight, graceful woman stood thinking: “It really is gentian blue! But I don't know whether I ought to buy it, with all this distress about!”
Her eyes, which were greenish-grey, and often ironical lest they should reveal her soul, seemed probing a blue gown displayed in that window, to the very heart of its desirability.
“And suppose Stephen doesn't like me in it!” This doubt set her gloved fingers pleating the bosom of her frock. Into that little pleat she folded the essence of herself, the wish to have and the fear of having, the wish to be and the fear of being, and her veil, falling from the edge of her hat, three inches from her face, shrouded with its tissue her half-decided little features, her rather too high cheek-bones, her cheeks which were slightly hollowed, as though Time had kissed them just too much.
John Galsworthy
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FRATERNITY
CHAPTER I
THE SHADOW
CHAPTER II
A FAMILY DISCUSSION
CHAPTER III
HILARY'S BROWN STUDY
CHAPTER IV
THE LITTLE MODEL
CHAPTER V
THE COMEDY BEGINS
CHAPTER VI
FIRST PILGRIMAGE TO HOUND STREET
CHAPTER VII
CECILIA'S SCATTERED THOUGHTS
CHAPTER VIII
THE SINGLE MIND OF MR. STONE
CHAPTER IX
HILARY GIVES CHASE
CHAPTER X
THE TROUSSEAU
CHAPTER XI
PEAR BLOSSOM
CHAPTER XII
SHIPS IN SAIL
CHAPTER XIII
SOUND IN THE NIGHT
CHAPTER XIV
A WALK ABROAD
CHAPTER XV
SECOND PILGRIMAGE TO HOUND STREET
CHAPTER XVI
BENEATH THE ELMS
CHAPTER XVII
TWO BROTHERS
CHAPTER XVIII
THE PERFECT DOG
CHAPTER XIX
BIANCA
CHAPTER XX
THE HUSBAND AND THE WIFE
CHAPTER XXI
A DAY OF REST
CHAPTER XXII
HILARY PUTS AN END TO IT
CHAPTER XXIII
THE “BOOK OF UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD”
CHAPTER XXIV
SHADOWLAND
CHAPTER XXV
MR. STONE IN WAITING
CHAPTER XXVI
THIRD PILGRIMAGE TO HOUND STREET
CHAPTER XXVII
STEPHEN'S PRIVATE LIFE
CHAPTER XXVIII
HILARY HEARS THE CUCKOO SING
CHAPTER XXIX
RETURN OF THE LITTLE MODEL
CHAPTER XXX
FUNERAL OF A BABY
CHAPTER XXXI
SWAN SONG
CHAPTER XXXII
BEHIND BIANCA'S VEIL
CHAPTER XXXIII
HILARY DEALS WITH THE SITUATION
CHAPTER XXXIV
THYME'S ADVENTURE
CHAPTER XXXV
A YOUNG GIRL'S MIND
CHAPTER XXXVI
STEPHEN SIGNS CHEQUES
CHAPTER XXXVII
THE FLOWERING OF THE ALOE
CHAPTER XXXVIII
THE HOME-COMING OF HUGHS
CHAPTER XXXIX
THE DUEL
CHAPTER XL
FINISH OF THE COMEDY
CHAPTER XLI
THE HOUSE OF HARMONY