A Decisive Day
The timid clerk Quirino Raganelli is in love with his colleague Gabriella twenty-four, so try to conquer it during a company outing. The girl seems to reciprocate (the two exchange a kiss left alone in a cabin after a sudden downpour), he asks her to marry her lover but Gabriella is already more than two years of his colleague Alvaro, married, so he asks her to intercede Raganelli to leave. Raganelli is so shy as not to take a position in the clarification of three and unleashes the wrath of the girl, who no longer wants him. Raganelli will be found out on the return trip (always awkward for her to do) to be literally captured by another colleague, Julia, secretary of the President, unmarried and ugly, that at the end of the evening drags him to his home to introduce him to his mother.
Read more about this topic: I Complessi
Famous quotes containing the word decisive:
“That the world is not the embodiment of an eternal rationality can be conclusively proved by the fact that the piece of the world that we knowI mean our human reasonis not so very rational. And if it is not eternally and completely wise and rational, then the rest of the world will not be either; here the conclusion a minori ad majus, a parte ad totum applies, and does so with decisive force.”
—Friedrich Nietzsche (18441900)