Muriel Spark: "Aiding and Abetting" (k2008)

Muriel Spark, Aiding and Abetting (10 p.)

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The receptionist looked tinier than ever as she showed 1. (pitkä englantilaismies) into the studio of Dr Hildegard Wolf, the psychiatrist who had come from Bavaria, Prague, Dresden, Avila, Marseilles, then London, and noe settled in Paris.

Dr Wolf's therapeutic methods had been perfected by herself. They had made her virtually the most successful psychiatrist in Paris, or at least the most sought-after. 2. (Samaan aikaan) she was tentatively copied; 3. (ne, jotka) tried to do so generally failed. The method alone did not suffice, her personality 4. (need) as well. 5. (pronomini) she did for the most part was talk about herself throughout the first three sessions, 6. (turn) only casually on the problems of her patients; then, 7. (vähitellen), in an offhand way she would induce them to begin 8. (puhumaan itsestään). Some patients, angered, did not return 9. (prepositio) the first or at least the second session, conducted on these lines. Others remonstrated, ‘Don’t you want to hear about my problem?“
‘No, quite frankly, I ( ___ ) very much.‘

Muriel Spark, Aiding and Abetting, 2000

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