Ann Veronica. H. G. Wells

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Ann Veronica - H. G. Wells

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Part 2

       Part 3

       Part 4

       Part 5

       Part 6

       CHAPTER THE FOURTEENTH

       THE COLLAPSE OF THE PENITENT

       Part 1

       Part 2

       Part 3

       Part 4

       Part 5

       Part 6

       Part 7

       CHAPTER THE FIFTEENTH

       THE LAST DAYS AT HOME

       Part 1

       Part 2

       Part 3

       CHAPTER THE SIXTEENTH

       IN THE MOUNTAINS

       Part 1

       Part 2

       Part 3

       Part 4

       Part 5

       Part 6

       Part 7

       Part 8

       Part 9

       Part 10

       Part 11

       CHAPTER THE SEVENTEENTH

       IN PERSPECTIVE

       Part 1

       Part 2

       Part 3

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      One Wednesday afternoon in late September, Ann Veronica Stanley came down from London in a state of solemn excitement and quite resolved to have things out with her father that very evening. She had trembled on the verge of such a resolution before, but this time quite definitely she made it. A crisis had been reached, and she was almost glad it had been reached. She made up her mind in the train home that it should be a decisive crisis. It is for that reason that this novel begins with her there, and neither earlier nor later, for it is the history of this crisis and its consequences that this novel has to tell.

      She had a compartment to herself in the train from London to Morningside Park, and she sat with both her feet on the seat in an attitude that would certainly have distressed her mother to see, and horrified her grandmother beyond measure; she sat with her knees up to her chin and her hands clasped before them, and she was so lost in thought that she discovered with a start, from a lettered lamp, that she was at Morningside Park, and thought she was moving out of the station, whereas she was only moving in. “Lord!” she said. She jumped up at once, caught up a leather clutch containing notebooks, a fat text-book, and a chocolate-and-yellow-covered pamphlet, and leaped neatly from the carriage, only to discover that the train was slowing down and that she had to traverse the full length of the platform past it again as the result of her precipitation. “Sold again,” she remarked. “Idiot!” She raged inwardly while she walked along with that air of self-contained serenity that is proper to a young lady of nearly two-and-twenty under the eye of the world.

      She walked down the station approach, past the neat, obtrusive offices of the coal merchant and the house agent, and so to the wicket-gate by the butcher’s shop that led to the field path to her home.

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