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is not only one man;〃 said Ursula。
She was thinking of Skrebensky。 Her heart was hollow with the
knowledge of Winifred Inger。
〃But you must distinguish between love and passion;〃 said
Maggie; adding; with a touch of contempt: 〃Men will easily have
a passion for you; but they won't love you。〃
〃Yes;〃 said Ursula; vehemently; the look of suffering; almost
of fanaticism; on her face。 〃Passion is only part of love。 And
it seems so much because it can't last。 That is why passion is
never happy。〃
She was staunch for joy; for happiness; and permanency; in
contrast with Maggie; who was for sadness; and the inevitable
passing…away of things。 Ursula suffered bitterly at the hands of
life; Maggie was always single; always withheld; so she went in
a heavy brooding sadness that was almost meat to her。 In
Ursula's last winter at St。 Philip's the friendship of the two
girls came to a climax。 It was during this winter that Ursula
suffered and enjoyed most keenly Maggie's fundamental sadness of
enclosedness。 Maggie enjoyed and suffered Ursula's struggles
against the confines of her life。 And then the two girls began
to drift apart; as Ursula broke from that form of life wherein
Maggie must remain enclosed。
CHAPTER XIV
THE WIDENING CIRCLE
Maggie's people; the Schofields; lived in the large
gardener's cottage; that was hal
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