Part Three-1
p out a groan you s out. If it is still possible to smite t t forefinger fall. And tulations and entreaties t meet to be found in old books, look tenation of outonate an inive correlative, booming in t like an Alka-Seltzer to produce tranquillity. I say may. And you ot eely unconcern, you are just like . t of it. I ed out if you to put it t er a life ricional defeats, I o destruction. No myself to listening to pamby it is, is refined from tion. Give me tic trip, stutter and fall, and I ent. Actually, , I s; quot;e ertained tion,quot; said.
quot;treat me like a rube if t; Clem said igo tles of Lone Star at t;I suppose I am a rubisions t contradict ticated notions of my colleagues. But I notice t it is to me t is a question of grits or clings or fried catfisions do not arise very often. I fis i or some otern dis t I doender rings of squid deep-fried in olive oil. I even like ture out of teentury. It makes my mouter just to look at it, t can. But o myself about cans? Cans are not roubling me. is troubling me is ty of life in our great country, America. It seems to me to be deprived. I dont mean t t t even t are deprived. I suppose one could say t t it go at t. I am t no one responded to Snoive. Even t time relieved. But it suggests t Americans or cannot see t most princely of our contemporaries, did not respond appropriately. Of course it may be t princely is not a good to be. And of course tic tradition ocratic. Egalitarianism precludes princeliness. And yet our