Coffee Break
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- Joined
- Feb 13, 2022
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- Student or Learner
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- Korean
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- South Korea
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- South Korea
Hello everyone. I encountered this expression, "and even then . . . ?", but am struggling to understand it. Could you please let me know what it means in the following sentences:
[Clara speaking] “Tell!”
[The protagonist speaking] “Tell . . .” I repeated her command, trying to make light of it. “Tell what?”
[Clara speaking] “Well, for one thing, tell why there’s so little to say.”
I didn’t know why there was so little to say. Because there’s so little about me I care to talk about before knowing it’s quite safe to—and even then . . . ? Because the person I am and the person I wish I were at this very moment in the bar aren’t always on speaking terms? Because I feel like a shadow right now and can’t fathom why you can’t see this? What was she really asking me to say?
- André Aciman, Eight White Nights, Second Night
This is a novel published in the United States of America in 2010. This novel is narrated by the nameless male protagonist. The protagonist meets Clara at a Christmas party in Manhattan. The night after the party, the protagonist meets Clara again at a bar. They start talking, and Clara asks him to talk about himself.
Here, I wonder what the underlined expression means.
My only guess is that it might mean "even when I knew it is safe to talk about myself", but I am not sure what is hidden in those "..." and the question mark.
I would very much appreciate your help.
[Clara speaking] “Tell!”
[The protagonist speaking] “Tell . . .” I repeated her command, trying to make light of it. “Tell what?”
[Clara speaking] “Well, for one thing, tell why there’s so little to say.”
I didn’t know why there was so little to say. Because there’s so little about me I care to talk about before knowing it’s quite safe to—and even then . . . ? Because the person I am and the person I wish I were at this very moment in the bar aren’t always on speaking terms? Because I feel like a shadow right now and can’t fathom why you can’t see this? What was she really asking me to say?
- André Aciman, Eight White Nights, Second Night
This is a novel published in the United States of America in 2010. This novel is narrated by the nameless male protagonist. The protagonist meets Clara at a Christmas party in Manhattan. The night after the party, the protagonist meets Clara again at a bar. They start talking, and Clara asks him to talk about himself.
Here, I wonder what the underlined expression means.
My only guess is that it might mean "even when I knew it is safe to talk about myself", but I am not sure what is hidden in those "..." and the question mark.
I would very much appreciate your help.