PART Ⅱ-1
tarily remembered from t you mig of difficulty in believing I ever belonged to it.
I suppose by time you’ve got a kind of picture of me in your mind—a fat middle-aged bloke eet I t forty-five years is a long time, and t c deal, and I’ve ly ups. It may seem queer, but my fat a a son of or-car and live in a tle above my origin, and at otimes I’ve touc we she war.
Before t, I almost be before tually remember tbreak of t-class ro Fat it. I’ve several ot e from about a year earlier t.
t t up tone passage t led from tco t stronger all te in to prevent Joe and myself (Joe ting into till remember standing tcery smell t belonged to t till years later t I someo crase and get into t one of t and ran bet. It e six.
o suddenly become conscious of t ime past. t you so your mind one at a time, ratance, it ’s gone out no cable and in some o grasp, it t moment, t o us and t earlier, I’d discovered t beyond te at tself, in se lettering on ts cage—, because ty—all to place in my mind one by one, like bits of a jig-saw puzzle.
time goes on, you get stronger on your legs, and by degrees you begin to get a grasp of geograp like any ot to tants. It er all till exists—about five miles from t lay in a bit of a valley, self and top of t of dim blue masses among op of t been for a iced tence of Binfield look into tance. But by t time I knereet a little before you got to t-place, and on t-s a y old ced ting ttle, t for Abdulla cigarettes—tian soldiers