PART Ⅱ-4
r all of t one afternoon, putting ub and telling o lift it one really lived.
to do in ter o borros—Mot Joe and me keep t y smelly to do a bit of ratting. Sometimes t us, sometimes told us to and said rouble ts. Later in er s er, 1908 it must ing for er squirrels er on birdnesting. e birds can’t count and it’s all rig tle beasts and sometimes knock t dorample on toads o catcoads, ram till t. t’s kno tangled in t ttom, and black.
But fis many a time to old Breook tiny carp and tenc of it, and once a urday afternoons. But after bicycles arted fis seemed more groo catch one.
It’s queer, till call myself a fis a fis long, and it’s ty years noo fifteen seems to fisail uck clear in my memory. I can remember individual days and individual fis a coer t I can’t see a picture of if I s my eyes and te a book on tec ackle, it cost too muc of our t- money in t on ss and Lardy Busters. Very small kids generally fis pin, to be muc you can make a pretty good ’s got no barb) by bending a needle in a candle flame o plait it as good as gut, and you can take a small fiser to o allace’s ols didn’t tackle. And talogue t I picked up some ails about gut-substitute and gimp and Limerick s and disgorgers and Nottingecies.
t o use. In our sy of meal very good. Gentles ter. You o beg tt, tco dras or do enamena-mina-mo to decide usually too pleasant about it. iff, and eels on y treacle-tin in your ill any customers hen say very humbly:
‘Please, Mr Gravitt