The first step for her was to attend ABC, but the local wasn’t open yet, so she changed her mind and went to Kig and Kadgit’s, but it wasn’t open either: she had forgotten that it was Saturday. So finally she thought about going to Beit and Bithems, a lively place where there were plenty of people she knew, waiting for someone who may give them news about jobs. In the end, a man appeared and told them to come again on Monday, because today wasn’t a good day for jobs.
At the North-East Film Company there was a crowd all the way up the stairs; they had been there waiting for hours. It has been a call for attractive girls, but when the typist appears, she tells everybody that the call is over.
She set off for the Bitter Orange Company, where they gave her a form with plenty of requests she could not answer. All is over, she thought while sitting in one of the benches of the Square Gardens, from where she saw the “Café de Madrid” and made the decision to go there that night.
There was little light in the café; a stout gentleman approached her, and five minutes later they were leaving the café together.
QUESTIONS
-Give us some information about the Bloomsbury Group.
-Have you ever known a bankrupt person? How can they
recover from their situation?
-Why didn't Ada Moss go to the police when the landlady took her letter? (Secrecy of correspondence is a fundamental legal principle.)
-What are the most difficult jobs where to find a
vacancy?
-What jobs would you do as a last resource, and what
jobs you will never do?
-According to your opinion, why isn’t there a pause
between offices in the narration?
-Why do you think the narrator says "typist" and not "secretary", or "clerk", for example?
-What happened at the end of the story?
-Don't you think it isn't the first time she did it?
-Debate: Sex workers. Has prostitution to be illegal?
Is it a good idea to penalize the costumers? What do you think of legal
prostitution, like in Amsterdam? What do you know about sexual services for
invalid people?
VOCABULARY
pageant, Stout, popped, eddication, Yours to hand, pounced,
slit, safety-pin, crabs, sinking, charwoman, char, preened, part, sand-dancing,
mite
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