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George Orwell

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Is there anything in the world more graceless, more dishonouring, than to desire a woman whom you will never have?
--
Ch XX

 
George Orwell

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Desire, even the basest, kind, required the notion of futurity if it was ever to come off. A man without a future, a dying man, was no longer desirable. And however stupid such a reaction might have seemed, Paul knew that if the situation was ever reversed, he would feel the same way about the woman. Desire would have turned into compassion. Which is tantamount to saying that desire would vanish into thin air.

 
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A fine world in which man reproaches woman with fulfilling his heart's desire!

 
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What mighty ills have not been done by woman!
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The man's desire is for the woman; but the woman's desire is rarely other than for the desire of the man.

 
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I went out on the street like an exile, I who am an everyday man, who resemble everybody else so much, too much. I went through the streets and crossed the squares with my eyes fixed upon things without seeing them. I was walking, but I seemed to be falling from dream to dream, from desire to desire. A door ajar, an open window gave me a pang. A woman passing by grazed against me, a woman who told me nothing of what she might have told me. I dreamed of her tragedy and of mine. She entered a house, she disappeared, she was dead.

 
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