PART Ⅳ-2
s in tanding about, t’s covered e and one stuck some in. I didn’t really any tea, but I o see the inside.
tly turned bot used to be to tea-rooms. As for t tbin used to stand and Fattle patco gro all over and dolled it up ic tables and to ts! texts on t on opposite sides of ternoons! t tique style teleg tables and a er plates -not. Do you notice o make it in ty tea-rooms? It’s part of tiqueness, I suppose. And instead of an ordinary ress t ea, and sen minutes getting it. You knoea— Cea, so you could t’s er till you put tting almost exactly and. I could almost a ‘piece’, as o call it, from t t gave me a most peculiar feeling t I ences and t if t simultaneously I o tell somebody t I’d been born I belonged to t I really felt) t to me. tea. t if I been teet into one of t me. titute. But in to speak. I said:
‘have you been in Lower Binfield long?’
Sarted, looked surprised, and didn’t ansried again:
‘I used to live in Lower Binfleld myself, a good while ago.’
Again no ans I couldn’t of t oo muco go in for back-c omers. Besides, s I rying to get off elling , it interest . I paid t.
I o t I’d been o, o kno I needn’t a face I knes. It seemed as if toion.
to to ery. to t I didn’t kno to find. I on scytt tcre-ser and ete one anot as if till singing at eac got er all. Born in ‘43 and ‘departed en Ser, as usual. Ser died in ‘26. a time old et t t under a , and in tctle crosses. All gone to dust. Old obacco-coloured teetiger