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e。 Had he been mocked; had anyone spoken; orlaughed; or called? He could not remember。 He had been walking in a storm。

Now the storm was over。 And the avenue; like any landscape that has endured a storm; laychanged under Heaven; exhausted and clean; and new。 Not again; for ever; could it return to theavenue it once had been。 Fire; or lightening; or the latter rain; ing down from these skies whichmoved with such pale secrecy above him now; had laid yesterday’s avenue waste; had changed itin a moment; in the twinkling of an eye; as all would be changed on the last day; when the skieswould open up once more to gather up the saints。

Yet the houses were there; as they had been; the windows; like a thousand; blinded eyes;stared outward at the morning—at the morning that was the same for them as the mornings ofJohn’s innocence; and the mornings before his birth。 The water run in the gutters with a small;discontented sound; on the water traveled paper; burnt matches; sodden cigarette…ends; gobs ofspittle; green…yellow; brown; and pearly; the leaving of a dog; the vomit of a drunken man; thedead sperm; trapped in rubber; of one abandoned to his lust。 All moved slowly to the black gratingwhere down it rushed; to be carried to the river; which would hurl it into the sea。

Where houses were; where windows stared; where gutters ran; were people—sleeping now;invisible; private; in the heavy darkness of these houses; while the Lord’s day broke outside。 WhenJohn should walk these streets again; they would be shouting here again; the roar of children’sroller skates would bear down on him from behind; little girls in pigtails; skipping rope; wouldestablish on the pavement a barricade through which he must stumble as best he might。 Boyswould be throwing ball in the

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