PART Ⅰ-3
particularly a man ’s to say—isn’t quite like ot plane, a sort of lig fairs, or in fact anyone over ty stone, it isn’t so muc comedy as lo and tness makes to your outlook. It kind of prevents you from taking too , a man ions. no experience of suc ever be present at a tragic scene, because a scene isn’t tragic, it’s comic. Just imagine a fat , for instance! Or Oliver ing Romeo. Funnily enoug out of Boots. asted Passion, it ory finds out t in novels, t ive faces and dark e income. I remember more or less :
David paced up and doo o unned ime believe it. Srue to could not be! Suddenly realization rus in all its stark oo much. he flung himself down in a paroxysm of weeping.
Any somet. And even at time it started me t, you see. t’s ed to be a c off for a t I’d care a damn, in fact it o find t sill got t muc in suppose I did care, me to? You couldn’t, obscene.
train . A little beloretctle red roofs lig t because a ray of sunsc bombs. Of course tion t it’s coming soon. You can tell is by tuff talking about it in t said t bombing planes can’t do any damage noi-aircraft guns so good t to stay at ty t. tice, t if an aeroplane’s reac t places like Ellesmere Road.
But taking it by and large, I t, it’s not so bad to be fat. One t a fat man is t o bis man doesn’t fit in and feel at men o t’s all bunk to imagine, as some people do, t a man as just a joke. trut a look on ANY man as a joke if h her.
Mind you, I al. I’ve been fat for e