Page 98 - 1984
P. 98

ject articles in ‘The Times’, analysing the reasons for their
       defection and promising to make amends.
          Some time after their release Winston had actually seen
       all three of them in the Chestnut Tree Cafe. He remembered
       the sort of terrified fascination with which he had watched
       them out of the corner of his eye. They were men far old-
       er than himself, relics of the ancient world, almost the last
       great figures left over from the heroic days of the Party. The
       glamour of the underground struggle and the civil war still
       faintly clung to them. He had the feeling, though already at
       that time facts and dates were growing blurry, that he had
       known their names years earlier than he had known that of
       Big Brother. But also they were outlaws, enemies, untouch-
       ables, doomed with absolute certainty to extinction within
       a year or two. No one who had once fallen into the hands
       of the Thought Police ever escaped in the end. They were
       corpses waiting to be sent back to the grave.
         There was no one at any of the tables nearest to them. It
       was not wise even to be seen in the neighbourhood of such
       people. They were sitting in silence before glasses of the gin
       flavoured with cloves which was the speciality of the cafe.
       Of the three, it was Rutherford whose appearance had most
       impressed  Winston.  Rutherford  had  once  been  a  famous
       caricaturist, whose brutal cartoons had helped to inflame
       popular  opinion  before  and  during  the  Revolution.  Even
       now, at long intervals, his cartoons were appearing in The
       Times. They were simply an imitation of his earlier manner,
       and curiously lifeless and unconvincing. Always they were
       a rehashing of the ancient themes—slum tenements, starv-

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