Tales of Space and Time-1


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His taste would have seemed extreme to a man of the nineteenth century.  
But slowly and inevitably in the intervening years a gulf had opened  
between the wearers of the blue canvas and the classes above, a  
difference not simply of circumstances and habits of life, but of habits  
of thought--even of language. The underways had developed a dialect of  
their own: above, too, had arisen a dialect, a code of thought, a  
language of "culture," which aimed by a sedulous search after fresh  
distinction to widen perpetually the space between itself and  
"vulgarity." The bond of a common faith, moreover, no longer held the  
race together. The last years of the nineteenth century were  
distinguished by the rapid development among the prosperous idle of  
esoteric perversions of the popular religion: glosses and  
interpretations that reduced the broad teachings of the carpenter of  
Nazareth to the exquisite narrowness of their lives. And, spite of their  
inclination towards the ancient fashion of living, neither Elizabeth nor  
Denton had been sufficiently original to escape the suggestion of their  
surroundings. In matters of common behaviour they had followed the ways  
of their class, and so when they fell at last to be Labour Serfs it  
seemed to them almost as though they were falling among offensive  
inferior animals; they felt as a nineteenth-century duke and duchess  
might have felt who were forced to take rooms in the Jago.  
Their natural impulse was to maintain a "distance." But Denton's first  
idea of a dignified isolation from his new surroundings was soon rudely  
dispelled. He had imagined that his fall to the position of a Labour  
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Quick Jump
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