Page 108 - 1984
P. 108

proles  applied  to  rocket  bombs.  Winston  promptly  flung
       himself  on  his  face.  The  proles  were  nearly  always  right
       when they gave you a warning of this kind. They seemed
       to possess some kind of instinct which told them several
       seconds in advance when a rocket was coming, although
       the  rockets  supposedly  travelled  faster  than  sound.  Win-
       ston clasped his forearms above his head. There was a roar
       that seemed to make the pavement heave; a shower of light
       objects pattered on to his back. When he stood up he found
       that he was covered with fragments of glass from the near-
       est window.
          He  walked  on.  The  bomb  had  demolished  a  group  of
       houses 200 metres up the street. A black plume of smoke
       hung in the sky, and below it a cloud of plaster dust in which
       a crowd was already forming around the ruins. There was a
       little pile of plaster lying on the pavement ahead of him, and
       in the middle of it he could see a bright red streak. When he
       got up to it he saw that it was a human hand severed at the
       wrist. Apart from the bloody stump, the hand was so com-
       pletely whitened as to resemble a plaster cast.
          He kicked the thing into the gutter, and then, to avoid
       the  crowd,  turned  down  a  side-street  to  the  right.  With-
       in three or four minutes he was out of the area which the
       bomb  had  affected,  and  the  sordid  swarming  life  of  the
       streets was going on as though nothing had happened. It
       was nearly twenty hours, and the drinking-shops which the
       proles  frequented  (’pubs’,  they  called  them)  were  choked
       with customers. From their grimy swing doors, endlessly
       opening  and  shutting,  there  came  forth  a  smell  of  urine,

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