Miss Brill

[2] Miss Brill is an English teacher living near the Public Gardens in a French town.

Miss Brill believes they are nicely dressed and warmly pictures them as the "hero and heroine" of the play.

However, she overhears the boy make a rude remark about Miss Brill being a "stupid old thing", and the girl agrees, "It's her fu-fur which is so funny.

"[3] On a typical Sunday, Miss Brill would stop by the bakery, but on this particular day, she goes straight home to a dark room.

The text is written in the modernist mode, third-person limited point of view, without a set structure.