PART Ⅱ-7
ore timental about it. So are you if you remember it. It’s quite true t if you look back on any special period of time you tend to remember t bits. t’s true even of t it’s also true t people t now.
? It t ture as someto be terrified of. It isn’t t life er tually it ful een s cripples able’ poverty le atson, a small draper at treet, ‘failed’ after years of struggling, s ely of ric trouble’, but tor let it out t it arvation. Yet o to t. Old Crimp, tcant, a skilled y years, got cataract and o go into treet ce efforts managed to send -money. You saimes. Small businesses sliding doradesmen turning gradually into broken-dos, people dying by inc every Saturday, girls ruined for life by an illegitimate baby. ter mornings, treets stank like t o you never a day remembering to end. And yet t people y, even ly, it inuity. All of t to die, and I suppose a feo go bankrupt, but kno tever migo t believe it made very muc ill prevalent in t’s true t nearly everyone to c any rate in try—Elsie and I still to cter of course, even er deat t I’ve never met anyone , at most, people believe in t kind of tmas. But it’s precisely in a settled period, a period o stand on its four legs like an elep, t sucure life don’t matter. It’s easy enougo die if t are going to survive. You’ve ting tired, it’s time to go underground—t’s o see it. Individually t tinue. t feel tood on sing under t.
Fat kno. It times rade seemed to d. t ually bankrupt, because turned into pneumonia) at to t