PART Ⅱ-1
on it, and curiously enoug to takia. Be-place tone rougop of ter t and chaff.
Before t e a t’s a delusion. I’m merely trying to tell you o me. If I s my eyes and time before I I remember it. Eit’s t-place at dinner-time, of sleepy dusty o ’s a afternoon in t green juicy meadoo’s about dusk in tments, and tobacco and nigocks floating t in a sense I do remember different seasons, because all my memories are bound up o eat, times of to find in t tting red enougo eat. In September ts. t s of reacer on ts and crab-apples. t you used to eat mucaste if you clean t of ty, and so are tems of various grasses. tter, and pig-nuts, and a kind of e. Even plantain seeds are better thing when you’re a long way from home and very hungry.
Joe o pay Katie Simmons eigo take us out for ernoons. Katie’s fateen c t for odd jobs. S very different from ours. So drag me by t enougy over us to prevent us from being run over by dogcarts or c so far as conversation on equal terms. e used to go for long, trailing kind of ing t tments, across Roper’s Meadoo ts and tiny carp in it (Joe and I used to go fis older), and back by to pass t-s stood on toion t anyone bankrupt, and to my o imes a s-s it ion for c o glue our noses against tie in t above ss and quarrelling over ss uff called Paradise Mixture, mostly broken ss from ottles, ols, popcorn kinds of ss, a gold ring, and sometimes a see prize packets nos toes printed on ticky pink stuff in an oval matciny tin spoon to eat it