PART Ⅱ-10
I of my memory. I y rigues for t of in tty satisfied - alk. Pep, punc, sand. Get on or get out. ty of room at top. You can’t keep a good man do t tive es o so and so’s correspondence course. It’s funny , even blokes like me to application. Because I’m neitter nor a do, and I’m by nature incapable of being eit it of time. Get on! Make good! If you see a man doies, yet arrived to knock tuffing out of us.
I ion at Boots and to o a local tennis club. You knoennis clubs in teel suburbs—little ing enclosures een forty!’ and ‘Vantage all!’ in voices ation of t. I’d learned to play tennis, didn’t dance too badly, and got on nearly ty I a bad-looking cter-coloured ill a point in your favour to in t any otime, succeeded in looking like a gentleman, but on t aken me for try toy of a place like Ealing, tennis club t I first met hilda.
At t time y-four. Simid girl, iful movements, and—because of inct resemblance to a remain on tion t’s going on, and give t tening. If s all, it . At tennis s very gracefully, and didn’t play badly, but some.
If you’re married, times often enoug it across fifteen years, why DID I marry hilda?
Partly, of course, because sty. Beyond t I can only say t because sotally different origins from myself it for me to get any grasp of about erricken officer class. For generations past kind of t on t I s you , if you belong as I do to tea class. It make any impression on me no it did t mistake mean t I married o ter, ion