Page 204 - 1984
P. 204

In the dream he had remembered his last glimpse of his
       mother, and within a few moments of waking the cluster
       of small events surrounding it had all come back. It was a
       memory that he must have deliberately pushed out of his
       consciousness over many years. He was not certain of the
       date, but he could not have been less than ten years old, pos-
       sibly twelve, when it had happened.
          His father had disappeared some time earlier, how much
       earlier he could not remember. He remembered better the
       rackety, uneasy circumstances of the time: the periodical
       panics about air-raids and the sheltering in Tube stations,
       the  piles  of  rubble  everywhere,  the  unintelligible  proc-
       lamations posted at street corners, the gangs of youths in
       shirts  all  the  same  colour,  the  enormous  queues  outside
       the bakeries, the intermittent machine-gun fire in the dis-
       tance—above all, the fact that there was never enough to
       eat. He remembered long afternoons spent with other boys
       in scrounging round dustbins and rubbish heaps, picking
       out the ribs of cabbage leaves, potato peelings, sometimes
       even scraps of stale breadcrust from which they carefully
       scraped away the cinders; and also in waiting for the pass-
       ing of trucks which travelled over a certain route and were
       known  to  carry  cattle  feed,  and  which,  when  they  jolted
       over the bad patches in the road, sometimes spilt a few frag-
       ments of oil-cake.
          When his father disappeared, his mother did not show
       any surprise or any violent grief, but a sudden change came
       over her. She seemed to have become completely spiritless.
       It  was  evident  even  to  Winston  that  she  was  waiting  for

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