Chapter 16

Chapter 163,390 wordsCompleted

Julia tells Winston that the wood clearing they used cannot be revisited for months; she gives him a new, longer route that ends at a different railway station and warns him never to return the same way. She schedules a street meeting in a crowded poor‑quarter market, describing a signal – a blown nose – and the need to stay hidden. After a brief, violent kiss, Julia disappears into the trees. Their subsequent encounters are reduced to brief street conversations that flash on and off like a lighthouse, interrupted by Party patrols and telescreens. Only once in the month do they manage a second lovemaking episode, this time in the belfry of a bomb‑ruined church, a dangerous journey but a safe hide‑out. Their street “talking by instalments” becomes their primary contact method; they never stay together long enough for another kiss.

Julia’s personal history is disclosed: she is twenty‑six, lives in a hostel with thirty other women, works in the Fiction Department on the novel‑writing machines, describing the process from Party directive to final rewrite. She is not interested in the finished books, considers them commodities, and admits she spent a year in Pornosec, producing cheap pornographic booklets for clandestine prole consumption. She explains that only women work in that sub‑section because men are deemed too vulnerable to the filth. Julia is a fervent participant in the Junior Anti‑Sex League, distributing leaflets, making banners for Hate Week, collecting savings, and attending lectures; she calls this “camouflage,” noting that obeying minor rules lets one break major ones. She reveals her hatred of the Party in blunt language but never articulates an organized rebellion, trusting only personal rule‑breaking.

The conversation turns to Winston’s former wife, Katharine. Julia probes the “goodthinkful” quality of a Party wife and Winston describes the cold ritual of their nightly ceremony. He recounts a memory of a hiking accident where they were stranded on a chalk cliff; he wonders why he did not push Katharine off, and Julia challenges his moral calculus, leading to a philosophical debate about death, inevitability, and the futility of resistance. Both conclude that humans are “the dead” but cling to life nonetheless, debating whether they would rather sleep with a living person or a skeleton.

The chapter concludes with Julia insisting they return to the woods for a future meeting, insisting on a different approach this time. She draws a crude map on the floor using a dust‑filled square and a pigeon‑nest twig, outlining the new route to the hide‑out, thereby setting the stage for their next secret encounter.