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so that he was forced to admit things he did not in the least

believe。 And having admitted them; he did not know whether he

believed them or not; he rather thought he did。

But he loved anyone who could convey enlightenment to him

through feeling。 He sat betrayed with emotion when the teacher

of literature read; in a moving fashion; Tennyson's 〃Ulysses〃;

or Shelley's 〃Ode to the West Wind〃。 His lips parted; his eyes

filled with a strained; almost suffering light。 And the teacher

read on; fired by his power over the boy。 Tom Brangwen was moved

by this experience beyond all calculation; he almost dreaded it;

it was so deep。 But when; almost secretly and shamefully; he

came to take the book himself; and began the words 〃Oh wild west

wind; thou breath of autumn's being;〃 the very fact of the print

caused a prickly sensation of repulsion to go over his skin; the

blood came to his face; his heart filled with a bursting passion

of rage and inpetence。 He threw the book down and walked over

it and went out to the cricket field。 And he hated books as if

they were his enemies。 He hated them worse than ever he hated

any person。

He could not voluntarily control his attention。 His mind had

no fixed habits to go by; he had nothing to get hold of; nowhere

to start from。 For him there was nothing palpable; nothing known

in himself; that h

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