- IT WAS the
middle of the morning, and Winston had left the cubicle
to go to the lavatory.
- A solitary figure was coming towards him from the other
end of the long, brightly-lit corridor. It was the girl
with dark hair. Four days had gone past since the evening
when he had run into her outside the junk-shop. As she
came nearer he saw that her right arm was in a sling, not
noticeable at a distance because it was of the same
colour as her overalls. Probably she had crushed her hand
while swinging round one of the big kaleidoscopes on
which the plots of novels were 'roughed in'. It was a
common accident in the Fiction Department.
- They were perhaps four metres apart when the girl
stumbled and fell almost flat on her face. A sharp cry of
pain was wrung out of her. She must have fallen right on
the injured arm. Winston stopped short. The girl had
risen to her knees. Her face had turned a milky yellow
colour against which her mouth stood out redder than
ever. Her eyes were fixed on his, with an appealing
expression that looked more like fear than pain.
- A curious emotion stirred in Winston's heart. In front of
him was an enemy who was trying to kill him: in front of
him, also, was a human creature, in pain and perhaps with
a broken bone. Already he had instinctively started
forward to help her. In the moment when he had seen her
fall on the bandaged arm, it had been as though he felt
the pain in his own body.
- 'You're hurt?' he said.
- 'It's nothing. My arm. It'll be all right in a second.'
- She spoke as though her heart were fluttering. She had
certainly turned very pale.
- 'You haven't broken anything?'
- 'No, I'm all right. It hurt for a moment, that's all.'
- She held out her free hand to him, and he helped her up.
She had regained some of her colour, and appeared very
much better.
- 'It's nothing,' she repeated shortly. 'I only gave my
wrist a bit of a bang. Thanks, comrade!'
- And with that she walked on in the direction in which she
had been going, as briskly as though it had really been
nothing. The whole incident could not have taken as much
as half a minute. Not to let one's feelings appear in
one's face was a habit that had acquired the status of an
instinct, and in any case they had been standing straight
in front of a telescreen when the thing happened.
Nevertheless it had been very difficult not to betray a
momentary surprise, for in the two or three seconds while
he was helping her up the girl had slipped something into
his hand. There was no question that she had done it
intentionally. It was something small and flat. As he
passed through the lavatory door he transferred it to his
pocket and felt it with the tips of his fingers. It was a
scrap of paper folded into a square.
- While he stood at the urinal he managed, with a little
more fingering, to get it unfolded. Obviously there must
be a message of some kind written on it. For a moment he
was tempted to take it into one of the water-closets and
read it at once. But that would be shocking folly, as he
well knew. There was no place where you could be more
certain that the telescreens were watched continuously.
- He went back to his cubicle, sat down, threw the fragment
of paper casually among the other papers on the desk, put
on his spectacles and hitched the speakwrite towards him.
'five minutes,' he told himself, 'five minutes at the
very least!' His heart bumped in his breast with
frightening loudness. Fortunately the piece of work he
was engaged on was mere routine, the rectification of a
long list of figures, not needing close attention.
- Whatever was written on the paper, it must have some kind
of political meaning. So far as he could see there were
two possibilities. One, much the more likely, was that
the girl was an agent of the Thought Police, just as he
had feared. He did not know why the Thought Police should
choose to deliver their messages in such a fashion, but
perhaps they had their reasons. The thing that was
written on the paper might be a threat, a summons, an
order to commit suicide, a trap of some description. But
there was another, wilder possibility that kept raising
its head, though he tried vainly to suppress it. This
was, that the message did not come from the Thought
Police at all, but from some kind of underground
organization. Perhaps the Brotherhood existed after all!
Perhaps the girl was part of it! No doubt the idea was
absurd, but it had sprung into his mind in the very
instant of feeling the scrap of paper in his hand. It was
not till a couple of minutes later that the other, more
probable explanation had occurred to him. And even now,
though his intellect told him that the message probably
meant death -- still, that was not what he believed, and
the unreasonable hope persisted, and his heart banged,
and it was with difficulty that he kept his voice from
trembling as he murmured his figures into the speakwrite.
- He rolled up the completed bundle of work and slid it
into the pneumatic tube. Eight minutes had gone by. He
re- adjusted his spectacles on his nose, sighed, and drew
the next batch of work towards him, with the scrap of
paper on top of it. He flattened it out. On it was
written, in a large unformed handwriting:
- I love you.
- For several seconds he was too stunned even to throw the
incriminating thing into the memory hole. When he did so,
although he knew very well the danger of showing too much
interest, he could not resist reading it once again, just
to make sure that the words were really there.
- For the rest of the morning it was very difficult to
work. What was even worse than having to focus his mind
on a series of niggling jobs was the need to conceal his
agitation from the telescreen. He felt as though a fire
were burning in his belly. Lunch in the hot, crowded,
noise- filled canteen was torment. He had hoped to be
alone for a little while during the lunch hour, but as
bad luck would have it the imbecile Parsons flopped down
beside him, the tang of his sweat almost defeating the
tinny smell of stew, and kept up a stream of talk about
the preparations for Hate Week. He was particularly
enthusiastic about a papier- ma^che/ model of Big
Brother's head, two metres wide, which was being made for
the occasion by his daughter's troop of Spies. The
irritating thing was that in the racket of voices Winston
could hardly hear what Parsons was saying, and was
constantly having to ask for some fatuous remark to be
repeated. Just once he caught a glimpse of the girl, at a
table with two other girls at the far end of the room.
She appeared not to have seen him, and he did not look in
that direction again.
- The afternoon was more bearable. Immediately after lunch
there arrived a delicate, difficult piece of work which
would take several hours and necessitated putting
everything else aside. It consisted in falsifying a
series of production reports of two years ago, in such a
way as to cast discredit on a prominent member of the
Inner Party, who was now under a cloud. This was the kind
of thing that Winston was good at, and for more than two
hours he succeeded in shutting the girl out of his mind
altogether. Then the memory of her face came back, and
with it a raging, intolerable desire to be alone. Until
he could be alone it was impossible to think this new
development out. Tonight was one of his nights at the
Community Centre. He wolfed another tasteless meal in the
canteen, hurried off to the Centre, took part in the
solemn foolery of a 'discussion group', played two games
of table tennis, swallowed several glasses of gin, and
sat for half an hour through a lecture entitled 'Ingsoc
in relation to chess'. His soul writhed with boredom, but
for once he had had no impulse to shirk his evening at
the Centre. At the sight of the words I love you
the desire to stay alive had welled up in him, and the
taking of minor risks suddenly seemed stupid. It was not
till twenty-three hours, when he was home and in bed --
in the darkness, where you were safe even from the
telescreen so long as you kept silent -- that he was able
to think continuously.
- It was a physical problem that had to be solved: how to
get in touch with the girl and arrange a meeting. He did
not consider any longer the possibility that she might be
laying some kind of trap for him. He knew that it was not
so, because of her unmistakable agitation when she handed
him the note. Obviously she had been frightened out of
her wits, as well she might be. Nor did the idea of
refusing her advances even cross his mind. Only five
nights ago he had contemplated smashing her skull in with
a cobblestone, but that was of no importance. He thought
of her naked, youthful body, as he had seen it in his
dream. He had imagined her a fool like all the rest of
them, her head stuffed with lies and hatred, her belly
full of ice. A kind of fever seized him at the thought
that he might lose her, the white youthful body might
slip away from him! What he feared more than anything
else was that she would simply change her mind if he did
not get in touch with her quickly. But the physical
difficulty of meeting was enormous. It was like trying to
make a move at chess when you were already mated.
Whichever way you turned, the telescreen faced you.
Actually, all the possible ways of communicating with her
had occurred to him within five minutes of reading the
note; but now, with time to think, he went over them one
by one, as though laying out a row of instruments on a
table.
- Obviously the kind of encounter that had happened this
morning could not be repeated. If she had worked in the
Records Department it might have been comparatively
simple, but he had only a very dim idea whereabouts in
the building the Fiction Departrnent lay, and he had no
pretext for going there. If he had known where she lived,
and at what time she left work, he could have contrived
to meet her somewhere on her way home; but to try to
follow her home was not safe, because it would mean
loitering about outside the Ministry, which was bound to
be noticed. As for sending a letter through the mails, it
was out of the question. By a routine that was not even
secret, all letters were opened in transit. Actually, few
people ever wrote letters. For the messages that it was
occasionally necessary to send, there were printed
postcards with long lists of phrases, and you struck out
the ones that were inapplicable. In any case he did not
know the girl's name, let alone her address. Finally he
decided that the safest place was the canteen. If he
could get her at a table by herself, somewhere in the
middle of the room, not too near the telescreens, and
with a sufficient buzz of conversation all round -- if
these conditions endured for, say, thirty seconds, it
might be possible to exchange a few words.
- For a week after this, life was like a restless dream. On
the next day she did not appear in the canteen until he
was leaving it, the whistle having already blown.
Presumably she had been changed on to a later shift. They
passed each other without a glance. On the day after that
she was in the canteen at the usual time, but with three
other girls and immediately under a telescreen. Then for
three dreadful days she did not appear at all. His whole
mind and body seemed to be afflicted with an unbearable
sensitivity, a sort of transparency, which made every
movement, every sound, every contact, every word that he
had to speak or listen to, an agony. Even in sleep he
could not altogether escape from her image. He did not
touch the diary during those days. If there was any
relief, it was in his work, in which he could sometimes
forget himself for ten minutes at a stretch. He had
absolutely no clue as to what had happened to her. There
was no enquiry he could make. She might have been
vaporized, she might have committed suicide, she might
have been transferred to the other end of Oceania: worst
and likeliest of all, she might simply have changed her
mind and decided to avoid him.
- The next day she reappeared. Her arm was out of the sling
and she had a band of sticking-plaster round her wrist.
The relief of seeing her was so great that he could not
resist staring directly at her for several seconds. On
the following day he very nearly succeeded in speaking to
her. When he came into the canteen she was sitting at a
table well out from the wall, and was quite alone. It was
early, and the place was not very full. The queue edged
forward till Winston was almost at the counter, then was
held up for two minutes because someone in front was
complaining that he had not received his tablet of
saccharine. But the girl was still alone when Winston
secured his tray and began to make for her table. He
walked casually towards her, his eyes searching for a
place at some table beyond her. She was perhaps three
metres away from him. Another two seconds would do it.
Then a voice behind him called, 'Smith!' He pretended not
to hear. 'Smith !' repeated the voice, more loudly. It
was no use. He turned round. A blond-headed, silly-faced
young man named Wilsher, whom he barely knew, was
inviting him with a smile to a vacant place at his table.
It was not safe to refuse. After having been recognized,
he could not go and sit at a table with an unattended
girl. It was too noticeable. He sat down with a friendly
smile. The silly blond face beamed into his. Winston had
a hallucination of himself smashing a pick-axe right into
the middle of it. The girl's table filled up a few
minutes later.
- But she must have seen him coming towards her, and
perhaps she would take the hint. Next day he took care to
arrive early. Surely enough, she was at a table in about
the same place, and again alone. The person immediately
ahead of him in the queue was a small, swiftly-moving,
beetle-like man with a flat face and tiny, suspicious
eyes. As Winston turned away from the counter with his
tray, he saw that the little man was making straight for
the girl's table. His hopes sank again. There was a
vacant place at a table further away, but something in
the little man's appearance suggested that he would be
sufficiently attentive to his own comfort to choose the
emptiest table. With ice at his heart Winston followed.
It was no use unless he could get the girl alone. At this
moment there was a tremendous crash. The little man was
sprawling on all fours, his tray had gone flying, two
streams of soup and coffee were flowing across the floor.
He started to his feet with a malignant glance at
Winston, whom he evidently suspected of having tripped
him up. But it was all right. Five seconds later, with a
thundering heart, Winston was sitting at the girl's
table.
- He did not look at her. He unpacked his tray and promptly
began eating. It was all-important to speak at once,
before anyone else came, but now a terrible fear had
taken possession of him. A week had gone by since she had
first approached him. She would have changed her mind,
she must have changed her mind! It was impossible that
this affair should end successfully; such things did not
happen in real life. He might have flinched altogether
from speaking if at this moment he had not seen
Ampleforth, the hairy-eared poet, wandering limply round
the room with a tray, looking for a place to sit down. In
his vague way Ampleforth was attached to Winston, and
would certainly sit down at his table if he caught sight
of him. There was perhaps a minute in which to act. Both
Winston and the girl were eating steadily. The stuff they
were eating was a thin stew, actually a soup, of haricot
beans. In a low murmur Winston began speaking. Neither of
them looked up; steadily they spooned the watery stuff
into their mouths, and between spoonfuls exchanged the
few necessary words in low expressionless voices.
- 'What time do you leave work?'
- 'Eighteen-thirty.'
- 'Where can we meet?'
- 'Victory Square, near the monument.
- 'It's full of telescreens.'
- 'It doesn't matter if there's a crowd.'
- 'Any signal?'
- 'No. Don't come up to me until you see me among a lot of
people. And don't look at me. Just keep somewhere near
me.'
- 'What time?'
- 'Nineteen hours.'
- 'All right.'
- Ampleforth failed to see Winston and sat down at another
table. They did not speak again, and, so far as it was
possible for two people sitting on opposite sides of the
same table, they did not look at one another. The girl
finished her lunch quickly and made off, while Winston
stayed to smoke a cigarette.
- Winston was in Victory Square before the appointed time.
He wandered round the base of the enormous fluted column,
at the top of which Big Brother's statue gazed southward
towards the skies where he had vanquished the Eurasian
aeroplanes (the Eastasian aeroplanes, it had been, a few
years ago) in the Battle of Airstrip One. In the street
in front of it there was a statue of a man on horseback
which was supposed to represent Oliver Cromwell. At five
minutes past the hour the girl had still not appeared.
Again the terrible fear seized upon Winston. She was not
coming, she had changed her mind! He walked slowly up to
the north side of the square and got a sort of
pale-coloured pleasure from identifying St Martin's
Church, whose bells, when it had bells, had chimed 'You
owe me three farthings.' Then he saw the girl standing at
the base of the monument, reading or pretending to read a
poster which ran spirally up the column. It was not safe
to go near her until some more people had accumulated.
There were telescreens all round the pediment. But at
this moment there was a din of shouting and a zoom of
heavy vehicles from somewhere to the left. Suddenly
everyone seemed to be running across the square. The girl
nipped nimbly round the lions at the base of the monument
and joined in the rush. Winston followed. As he ran, he
gathered from some shouted remarks that a convoy of
Eurasian prisoners was passing.
- Already a dense mass of people was blocking the south
side of the square. Winston, at normal times the kind of
person who gravitates to the outer edge of any kind of
scrimmage, shoved, butted, squirmed his way forward into
the heart of the crowd. Soon he was within arm's length
of the girl, but the way was blocked by an enormous prole
and an almost equally enormous woman, presumably his
wife, who seemed to form an impenetrable wall of flesh.
Winston wriggled himself sideways, and with a violent
lunge managed to drive his shoulder between them. For a
moment it felt as though his entrails were being ground
to pulp between the two muscular hips, then he had broken
through, sweating a little. He was next to the girl. They
were shoulder to shoulder, both staring fixedly in front
of them.
- A long line of trucks, with wooden-faced guards armed
with sub-machine guns standing upright in each corner,
was passing slowly down the street. In the trucks little
yellow men in shabby greenish uniforms were squatting,
jammed close together. Their sad, Mongolian faces gazed
out over the sides of the trucks utterly incurious.
Occasionally when a truck jolted there was a clankclank
of metal: all the prisoners were wearing leg-irons.
Truckload after truck-load of the sad faces passed.
Winston knew they were there but he saw them only
intermittently. The girl's shoulder, and her arm right
down to the elbow, were pressed against his. Her cheek
was almost near enough for him to feel its warmth. She
had immediately taken charge of the situation, just as
she had done in the canteen. She began speaking in the
same expressionless voice as before, with lips barely
moving, a mere murmur easily drowned by the din of voices
and the rumbling of the trucks.
- 'Can you hear me?'
- 'Yes.'
- 'Can you get Sunday afternoon off?'
- 'Yes.'
- 'Then listen carefully. You'll have to remember this. Go
to Paddington Station-'
- With a sort of military precision that astonished him,
she outlined the route that he was to follow. A half-hour
railway journey; turn left outside the station; two
kilometres along the road: a gate with the top bar
missing; a path across a field; a grass-grown lane; a
track between bushes; a dead tree with moss on it. It was
as though she had a map inside her head. 'Can you
remember all that?' she murmured finally.
- 'Yes.'
- 'You turn left, then right, then left again. And the
gate's got no top bar.'
- 'Yes. What time?'
- 'About fifteen. You may have to wait. I'll get there by
another way. Are you sure you remember everything?'
- 'Yes.'
- 'Then get away from me as quick as you can.'
- She need not have told him that. But for the moment they
could not extricate themselves from the crowd. The trucks
were still filing post, the people still insatiably
gaping. At the start there had been a few boos and
hisses, but it came only from the Party members among the
crowd, and had soon stopped. The prevailing emotion was
simply curiosity. Foreigners, whether from Eurasia or
from Eastasia, were a kind of strange animal. One
literally never saw them except in the guise of
prisoners, and even as prisoners one never got more than
a momentary glimpse of them. Nor did one know what became
of them, apart from the few who were hanged as
war-criminals: te others simply vanished, presumably into
forced-labour camps. The round Mogol faces had given way
to faces of a more European type, dirty, bearded and
exhausted. From over scrubby cheekbones eyes looked into
Winston's, sometimes with strange intensity, and flashed
away again. The convoy was drawing to an end. In the last
truck he could see an aged man, his face a mass of
grizzled hair, standing upright with wrists crossed in
front of him, as though he were used to having them bound
together. It was almost time for Winston and the girl to
part. But at the last moment, while the crowd still
hemmed them in, her hand felt for his and gave it a
fleeting squeeze.
- It could not have been ten seconds, and yet it seemed a
long time that their hands were clasped together. He had
time to learn every detail of her hand. He explored the
long fingers, the shapely nails, the work-hardened palm
with its row of callouses, the smooth flesh under the
wrist. Merely from feeling it he would have known it by
sight. In the same instant it occurred to him that he did
not know what colour the girl's eyes were. They were
probably brown, but people with dark hair sometimes had
blue eyes. To turn his head and look at her would have
been inconceivable folly. With hands locked together,
invisible among the press of bodies, they stared steadily
in front of them, and instead of the eyes of the girl,
the eyes of the aged prisoner gazed mournfully at Winston
out of nests of hair.
x x x
- WINSTON
picked his way up the lane through dappled light and
shade, stepping out into pools of gold wherever the
boughs parted. Under the trees to the left of him the
ground was misty with bluebells. The air seemed to kiss
one's skin. It was the second of May. From somewhere
deeper in the heart of the wood came the droning of ring
doves.
- He was a bit early. There had been no difficulties about
the journey, and the girl was so evidently experienced
that he was less frightened than he would normally have
been. Presumably she could be trusted to find a safe
place. In general you could not assume that you were much
safer in the country than in London. There were no
telescreens, of course, but there was always the danger
of concealed microphones by which your voice might be
picked up and recognized; besides, it was not easy to
make a journey by yourself without attracting attention.
For distances of less than 100 kilometres it was not
necessary to get your passport endorsed, but sometimes
there were patrols hanging about the railway stations,
who examined the papers of any Party member they found
there and asked awkward questions. However, no patrols
had appeared, and on the walk from the station he had
made sure by cautious backward glances that he was not
being followed. The train was full of proles, in holiday
mood because of the summery weather. The wooden- seated
carriage in which he travelled was filled to overflowing
by a single enormous family. ranging from a toothless
great-grandmother to a month-old baby, going out to spend
an afternoon with 'in-laws' in the country, and, as they
freely explained to Winston, to get hold of a little
blackmarket butter.
- The lane widened, and in a minute he came to the footpath
she had told him of, a mere cattle-track which plunged
between the bushes. He had no watch, but it could not be
fifteen yet. The bluebells were so thick underfoot that
it was impossible not to tread on them. He knelt down and
began picking some partly to pass the time away, but also
from a vague idea that he would like to have a bunch of
flowers to offer to the girl when they met. He had got
together a big bunch and was smelling their faint sickly
scent when a sound at his back froze him, the
unmistakable crackle of a foot on twigs. He went on
picking bluebells. It was the best thing to do. It might
be the girl, or he might have been followed after all. To
look round was to show guilt. He picked another and
another. A hand fell lightly on his shoulder.
- He looked up. It was the girl. She shook her head,
evidently as a warning that he must keep silent, then
parted the bushes and quickly led the way along the
narrow track into the wood. Obviously she had been that
way before, for she dodged the boggy bits as though by
habit. Winston followed, still clasping his bunch of
flowers. His first feeling was relief, but as he watched
the strong slender body moving in front of him, with the
scarlet sash that was just tight enough to bring out the
curve of her hips, the sense of his own inferiority was
heavy upon him. Even now it seemed quite likely that when
she turned round and looked at him she would draw back
after all. The sweetness of the air and the greenness of
the leaves daunted him. Already on the walk from the
station the May sunshine had made him feel dirty and
etiolated, a creature of indoors, with the sooty dust of
London in the pores of his skin. It occurred to him that
till now she had probably never seen him in broad
daylight in the open. They came to the fallen tree that
she had spoken of. The girl hopped over and forced apart
the bushes, in which there did not seem to be an opening.
When Winston followed her, he found that they were in a
natural clearing, a tiny grassy knoll surrounded by tall
saplings that shut it in completely. The girl stopped and
turned.
- 'Here we are,' she said.
- He was facing her at several paces' distance. As yet he
did not dare move nearer to her.
- 'I didn't want to say anything in the lane,' she went on,
'in case there's a mike hidden there. I don't suppose
there is, but there could be. There's always the chance
of one of those swine recognizing your voice. We're all
right here.'
- He still had not the courage to approach her. 'We're all
right here?' he repeated stupidly.
- 'Yes. Look at the trees.' They were small ashes, which at
some time had been cut down and had sprouted up again
into a forest of poles, none of them thicker than one's
wrist. 'There's nothing big enough to hide a mike in.
Besides, I've been here before.'
- They were only making conversation. He had managed to
move closer to her now. She stood before him very
upright, with a smile on her face that looked faintly
ironical, as though she were wondering why he was so slow
to act. The bluebells had cascaded on to the ground. They
seemed to have fallen of their own accord. He took her
hand.
- 'Would you believe,' he said, 'that till this moment I
didn't know what colour your eyes were?' They were brown,
he noted, a rather light shade of brown, with dark
lashes. 'Now that you've seen what I'm really like, can
you still bear to look at me?'
- 'Yes, easily.'
- 'I'm thirty-nine years old. I've got a wife that I can't
get rid of. I've got varicose veins. I've got five false
teeth.'
- 'I couldn't care less,' said the girl.
- The next moment, it was hard to say by whose act, she was
in his his arms. At the beginning he had no feeling
except sheer incredulity. The youthful body was strained
against his own, the mass of dark hair was against his
face, and yes ! actually she had turned her face up and
he was kissing the wide red mouth. She had clasped her
arms about his neck, she was calling him darling,
precious one, loved one. He had pulled her down on to the
ground, she was utterly unresisting, he could do what he
liked with her. But the truth was that he had no physical
sensation, except that of mere contact. All he felt was
incredulity and pride. He was glad that this was
happening, but he had no physical desire. It was too
soon, her youth and prettiness had frightened him, he was
too much used to living without women -- he did not know
the reason. The girl picked herself up and pulled a
bluebell out of her hair. She sat against him, putting
her arm round his waist.
- 'Never mind, dear. There's no hurry. We've got the whole
afternoon. Isn't this a splendid hide-out? I found it
when I got lost once on a community hike. If anyone was
coming you could hear them a hundred metres away.'
- 'What is your name?' said Winston.
- 'Julia. I know yours. It's Winston -- Winston Smith.'
- 'How did you find that out?'
- 'I expect I'm better at finding things out than you are,
dear. Tell me, what did you think of me before that day I
gave you the note?'
- He did not feel any temptation to tell lies to her. It
was even a sort of love-offering to start off by telling
the worst.
- 'I hated the sight of you,' he said. 'I wanted to rape
you and then murder you afterwards. Two weeks ago I
thought seriously of smashing your head in with a
cobblestone. If you really want to know, I imagined that
you had something to do with the Thought Police.'
- The girl laughed delightedly, evidently taking this as a
tribute to the excellence of her disguise.
- 'Not the Thought Police! You didn't honestly think that?'
- 'Well, perhaps not exactly that. But from your general
appearance -- merely because you're young and fresh and
healthy, you understand -- I thought that probably-'
- 'You thought I was a good Party member. Pure in word and
deed. Banners, processions, slogans, games, community
hikes all that stuff. And you thought that if I had a
quarter of a chance I'd denounce you as a
thought-criminal and get you killed off?'
- 'Yes, something of that kind. A great many young girls
are like that, you know.'
- 'It's this bloody thing that does it,' she said, ripping
off the scarlet sash of the Junior Anti-Sex League and
flinging it on to a bough. Then, as though touching her
waist had reminded her of something, she felt in the
pocket of her overalls and produced a small slab of
chocolate. She broke it in half and gave one of the
pieces to Winston. Even before he had taken it he knew by
the smell that it was very unusual chocolate. It was dark
and shiny, and was wrapped in silver paper. Chocolate
normally was dullbrown crumbly stuff that tasted, as
nearly as one could describe it, like the smoke of a
rubbish fire. But at some time or another he had tasted
chocolate like the piece she had given him. The first
whiff of its scent had stirred up some memory which he
could not pin down, but which was powerful and troubling.
- 'Where did you get this stuff?' he said.
- 'Black market,' she said indifferently. 'Actually I am
that sort of girl, to look at. I'm good at games. I was a
troop-leader in the Spies. I do voluntary work three
evenings a week for the Junior Anti-Sex League. Hours and
hours I've spent pasting their bloody rot all over
London. I always carry one end of a banner in the
processions. I always Iook cheerful and I never shirk
anything. Always yell with the crowd, that's what I say.
It's the only way to be safe.'
- The first fragment of chocolate had meIted on Winston's
tongue. The taste was delightful. But there was still
that memory moving round the edges of his consciousness,
something strongly felt but not reducible to definite
shape, like an object seen out of the corner of one's
eye. He pushed it away from him, aware only that it was
the memory of some action which he would have liked to
undo but could not.
- 'You are very young,' he said. 'You are ten or fifteen
years younger than I am. What could you see to attract
you in a man like me?'
- 'It was something in your face. I thought I'd take a
chance. I'm good at spotting people who don't belong. As
soon as I saw you I knew you were against them.'
- Them, it appeared, meant the Party, and above all
the Inner Party, about whom she talked with an open
jeering hatred which made Winston feel uneasy, although
he knew that they were safe here if they could be safe
anywhere. A thing that astonished him about her was the
coarseness of her language. Party members were supposed
not to swear, and Winston himself very seldom did swear,
aloud, at any rate. Julia, however, seemed unable to
mention the Party, and especially the Inner Party,
without using the kind of words that you saw chalked up
in dripping alley-ways. He did not dislike it. It was
merely one symptom of her revolt against the Party and
all its ways, and somehow it seemed natural and healthy,
like the sneeze of a horse that smells bad hay. They had
left the clearing and were wandering again through the
chequered shade, with their arms round each other's
waists whenever it was wide enough to walk two abreast.
He noticed how much softer her waist seemed to feel now
that the sash was gone. They did not speak above a
whisper. Outside the clearing, Julia said, it was better
to go quietly. Presently they had reached the edge of the
little wood. She stopped him.
- 'Don't go out into the open. There might be someone
watching. We're all right if we keep behind the boughs.'
- They were standing in the shade of hazel bushes. The
sunlight, filtering through innumerable leaves, was still
hot on their faces. Winston looked out into the field
beyond, and underwent a curious, slow shock of
recognition. He knew it by sight. An old, closebitten
pasture, with a footpath wandering across it and a
molehill here and there. In the ragged hedge on the
opposite side the boughs of the elm trees swayed just
perceptibly in the breeze, and their leaves stirred
faintly in dense masses like women's hair. Surely
somewhere nearby, but out of sight, there must be a
stream with green pools where dace were swimming?
- 'Isn't there a stream somewhere near here?' he whispered.
- 'That's right, there is a stream. It's at the edge of the
next field, actually. There are fish in it, great big
ones. You can watch them lying in the pools under the
willow trees, waving their tails.'
- 'It's the Golden Country -- almost,' he murmured.
- 'The Golden Country?'
- 'It's nothing, really. A landscape I've seen sometimes in
a dream.'
- 'Look!' whispered Julia.
- A thrush had alighted on a bough not five metres away,
almost at the level of their faces. Perhaps it had not
seen them. It was in the sun, they in the shade. It
spread out its wings, fitted them carefully into place
again, ducked its head for a moment, as though making a
sort of obeisance to the sun, and then began to pour
forth a torrent of song. In the afternoon hush the volume
of sound was startling. Winston and Julia clung together,
fascinated. The music went on and on, minute after
minute, with astonishing variations, never once repeating
itself, almost as though the bird were deliberately
showing off its virtuosity. Sometimes it stopped for a
few seconds, spread out and resettled its wings, then
swelled its speckled breast and again burst into song.
Winston watched it with a sort of vague reverence. For
whom, for what, was that bird singing? No mate, no rival
was watching it. What made it sit at the edge of the
lonely wood and pour its music into nothingness? He
wondered whether after all there was a microphone hidden
somewhere near. He and Julia had spoken only in low
whispers, and it would not pick up what they had said,
but it would pick up the thrush. Perhaps at the other end
of the instrument some small, beetle-like man was
listening intently -- listening to that. But by
degrees the flood of music drove all speculations out of
his mind. It was as though it were a kind of liquid stuff
that poured all over him and got mixed up with the
sunlight that filtered through the leaves. He stopped
thinking and merely felt. The girl's waist in the bend of
his arm was soft and warm. He pulled her round so that
they were breast to breast; her body seemed to melt into
his. Wherever his hands moved it was all as yielding as
water. Their mouths clung together; it was quite
different from the hard kisses they had exchanged
earlier. When they moved their faces apart again both of
them sighed deeply. The bird took fright and fled with a
clatter of wings.
- Winston put his lips against her ear. 'Now,' he
whispered.
- 'Not here,' she whispered back. 'Come back to the hide-
out. It's safer.'
- Quickly, with an occasional crackle of twigs, they
threaded their way back to the clearing. When they were
once inside the ring of saplings she turned and faced
him. They were both breathing fast. but the smile had
reappeared round the corners of her mouth. She stood
looking at him for an instant, then felt at the zipper of
her overalls. And, yes! it was almost as in his dream.
Almost as swiftly as he had imagined it, she had torn her
clothes off, and when she flung them aside it was with
that same magnificent gesture by which a whole
civilization seemed to be annihilated. Her body gleamed
white in the sun. But for a moment he did not look at her
body; his eyes were anchored by the freckled face with
its faint, bold smile. He knelt down before her and took
her hands in his
- 'Have you done this before?'
- 'Of course. Hundreds of times -- well scores of times
anyway
- 'With Party members.'
- 'Yes, always with Party members.'
- 'With members of the Inner Party?'
- 'Not with those swine, no. But there's plenty that would
if they got half a chance. They're not so holy as they
make out.'
- His heart leapt. Scores of times she had done it: he
wished it had been hundreds -- thousands. Anything that
hinted at corruption always filled him with a wild hope.
Who knew, perhaps the Party was rotten under the surface,
its cult of strenuousness and selfdenial simply a sham
concealing iniquity. If he could have infected the whole
lot of them with leprosy or syphilis, how gladly he would
have done so! Anything to rot, to weaken, to undermine!
He pulled her down so that they were kneeling face to
face.
- 'Listen. The more men you've had, the more I love you. Do
you understand that?'
- 'Yes, perfectly.'
- 'I hate purity, I hate goodness! I don't want any virtue
to exist anywhere. I want everyone to be corrupt to the
bones.
- 'Well then, I ought to suit you, dear. I'm corrupt to the
bones.'
- 'You like doing this? I don't mean simply me: I mean the
thing in itself?'
- 'I adore it.'
- That was above all what he wanted to hear. Not merely the
love of one person but the animal instinct, the simple
undifferentiated desire: that was the force that would
tear the Party to pieces. He pressed her down upon the
grass, among the fallen bluebells. This time there was no
difficulty. Presently the rising and falling of their
breasts slowed to normal speed, and in a sort of pleasant
helplessness they fell apart. The sun seemed to have
grown hotter. They were both sleepy. He reached out for
the discarded overalls and pulled them partly over her.
Almost immediately they fell asleep and slept for about
half an hour.
- Winston woke first. He sat up and watched the freckled
face, still peacefully asleep, pillowed on the palm of
her hand. Except for her mouth, you could not call her
beautiful. There was a line or two round the eyes, if you
looked closely. The short dark hair was extraordinarily
thick and soft. It occurred to him that he still did not
know her surname or where she lived.
- The young, strong body, now helpless in sleep, awoke in
him a pitying, protecting feeling. But the mindless
tenderness that he had felt under the hazel tree, while
the thrush was singing, had not quite come back. He
pulled the overalls aside and studied her smooth white
flank. In the old days, he thought, a man looked at a
girl's body and saw that it was desirable, and that was
the end of the story. But you could not have pure love or
pure lust nowadays. No emotion was pure, because
everything was mixed up with fear and hatred. Their
embrace had been a battle, the climax a victory. It was a
blow struck against the Party. It was a political act.