Women in Love by D H Lawrence Chapter 18 Page 16

rear. They stopped before some veined salpiglossis flowers.

‘Aren’t they wonderful?’ she cried, looking at them absorbedly. Strange how her reverential, almost ecstatic admiration of the flowers caressed his nerves. She stooped down, and touched the trumpets, with infinitely fine and delicate-touching finger-tips. It filled him with ease to see her. When she rose, her eyes, hot with the beauty of the flowers, looked into his.

‘What are they?’ she asked.

‘Sort of petunia, I suppose,’ he answered. ‘I don’t really know them.’

‘They are quite strangers to me,’ she said.

They stood together in a false intimacy, a nervous contact. And he was in love with her.