1 She felt weak and utterly forlorn.
2 She was utterly incapable of resisting it.
3 She had never been so utterly soft and still.
4 They were so intimate, and utterly out of touch.
5 She thought she was utterly subservient and living for others.
6 But her heart sank, she saw how utterly he disliked her, when she went against him.
7 In the little yard two paces beyond her, the man was washing himself, utterly unaware.
8 Things he had learned before the war, and seemed utterly to have forgotten, now came back to him.
9 No, and because they were so utterly out of touch, he tortured her with his declaration of idolatry.
10 So she sat in the doorway of the hut in a dream, utterly unaware of time and of particular circumstances.
11 She was so drifted away that he glanced up at her quickly, and saw the utterly still, waiting look on her face.
12 In the wood all was utterly inert and motionless, only great drops fell from the bare boughs, with a hollow little crash.
13 And as it subsided, he subsided too and lay utterly still, unknowing, while her grip on him slowly relaxed, and she lay inert.
14 So cut off he was, so divorced from the England that was really England, so utterly incapable, that he even thought well of Horatio Bottomley.
15 Their marriage, their integrated life based on a habit of intimacy, that he talked about: there were days when it all became utterly blank and nothing.
16 He was a network of nerves, and when he was not braced up to work, and so full of energy: or when he was not listening-in, and so utterly neuter: then he was haunted by anxiety and a sense of dangerous impending void.
17 And his white slim back was curved over a big bowl of soapy water, in which he ducked his head, shaking his head with a queer, quick little motion, lifting his slender white arms, and pressing the soapy water from his ears, quick, subtle as a weasel playing with water, and utterly alone.
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