
The narrator drifts through a languid London spring, the city shedding its winter soot for the fresh green of Kew Gardens. The air is warm, the sky pale blue, and families stroll among blooming apple trees while tea is sipped under white‑topped tables. As the narrator wanders the garden, a striking stranger in a dark coat asks to share his seat, and the two men begin a quiet, observant conversation.
Their dialogue drifts from the simple pleasure of a fine day to deeper questions of belonging, faith, and the pull of a distant homeland. The stranger, unmistakably Jewish, hints at a lingering connection to Palestine while both men confess a skeptical stance toward religion. The scene captures the tension between the tranquil English setting and the inner restless yearning that will drive the story forward.
Language
en
Duration
~38 minutes (36K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Laura Natal Rodrigues at Free Literature (Images generously made available by British Library.)
Release date
2020-09-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1882–1941
A central voice of literary modernism, this English novelist and essayist is known for turning everyday thought and feeling into something vivid, intimate, and new. Her work, including Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, and A Room of One's Own, still speaks powerfully to readers interested in art, memory, and women's lives.
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1880–1969
A sharp observer of politics and empire, he moved from colonial service in Ceylon to a long writing life in Britain. He is also remembered as Virginia Woolf’s husband and collaborator in the Hogarth Press they ran together.
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