PART Ⅱ-10
d probably be lending money to t if er eric or somets are dead too.
ell, from tart it ts of killing ice one never does tasy t one enjoys t. Besides, c copped. ly it’s you on to you some suspect— marriage.
One gets used to everytime. After a year or topped ing to kill arted ernoons or in t my s , seems to be a most frigo pieces after t’s as if trung up to do just t one tant t t’s set its seed. really gets me dotitude to it implies. If marriage an open srapped you into it and turned round and said, ‘Noard, I’ve caugo mind so muc not a bit of it. t to ime, t to slump into middle age as quickly as possible. After tful battle of getting o tar, t vanis. It ty, delicate girl, ttled doo a depressed, lifeless, middle-aged frump. I’m not denying t I of t w would he same.
a er erest in tand. It I first got a notion of ial fact about t all tality , ies— t’s to say on incomes smaller—ty, more crust- sixpence, t alone a family like mine. en told me t almost t tly feeling t t kind of family, t its ly t only t one al it’s one’s duty to be miserable about it.
At ttle maisonette and o get by on my er, o t Bletcter, but titude didn’t c gly glooming about money! t! togeto tune of ‘Next ’s not t ill less t so be a bit of spare cas I can o buy clot s t you OUGo be perpetually o a ste lack of money. Just mospy. I’m not like t. I’ve got more ttitude too be in t I refuse to . ‘But, George! You don’t seem to REALIZE! e’ve simply got no money at all! It