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Wharton, Edith, 1862-1937

"The Hermit and the Wild Woman"

She had found out long ago that, on certain lines,
it paid in London to be American, and she had manufactured for
herself a personality independent of geographical or social
demarcations, and presenting that remarkable blend of plantation
dialect, Bowery slang and hyperbolic statement, which is the British
nobility's favorite idea of an unadulterated Americanism. Mrs.
Newell, for all her talents, was not naturally either humorous or
hyperbolic, and there were times when it would doubtless have been a
relief to her to be as monumentally stolid as some of the persons
whose dulness it was her fate to enliven. It was perhaps the need of
relaxing which had drawn her into her odd intimacy with Garnett,
with whom she did not have to be either scrupulously English or
artificially American, since the impression she made on him was of
no more consequence than that which she produced on her footman.
Garnett was perfectly aware that he owed his success to his
insignificance, but the fact affected him only as adding one more
element to his knowledge of Mrs.


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print 'noclegi białystok 1171501877' . "\n"; print 'pośrednictwo pracy 1171501878' . "\n"; print 'Szorowarki 1171501745' . "\n"; print 'Szkolenia sprzeda 1171501641' . "\n"; print 'oleje silnikowe 1171501598' . "\n";