PART Ⅱ-2
r by taking all t and co tly) tears actually came into her eyes.
But of tter of fact it still exists, t’s been a bit cro by treamlined a copy only t’s c less t till tories t go on for six mont all comes rigo follos, and t’s c and trations t o look like an egg-timer and noting of ting in t on ttle pot of strong tea steeadily from cover to cover, rigories, ts, to correspondents. ed , and some imes t of ttles on summer afternoons, about a quarter to six sremendous start, glance at telpiece, and t into a steea o be late. But tea e.
In till 1909, to be exact—Fatill afford an errand boy, and o leave to o tea op cutting slices of bread for a moment and say, ‘If you’ll give us grace, Fat our s, ly, ‘F to receive—Lord make us truly ter on, oday, Joe’, and Joe out. Mot o be someone of the male sex.
ttles buzzing on summer afternoons. Ours a sanitary o ained five ainly can’t en y bins. And all s in tles in ting and crickets someo object to in blackbeetles. t of tc ts and insects. treet beie Simmons lived, it o say t you didn’t even kno.
t blue flies used to come sailing into t longingly on t. ‘Drat to say, but t of God and apart from meat-covers and fly-papers you couldn’t do muc ttle t tbins is also a pretty early memory. cone floor and tle-traps and teel fender and to tles buzzing and smell tbin, and also old Nailer, en to, a bluebottle or a bombing plane?