PART Ⅳ-3
I cra of bed aste in my mouth and my bones creaking.
t , tle of lunc dinner, and several pints in betoo muco drink tes I stood in t, gazing at noticular and too done-in to make a move. You kno god-a sometimes in t’s a feeling c it says to you clearer t? C up, old cick your he gas oven!’
teet to t beginning to slant over t ts on treet. t look
eigreet off t-place te a croream of clerkly-looking cs cion, just as if ting for tube, and traggling up to- place in t I’d erlopers! ty te-cras even knoy eetcuff t nobody ed to listen to about t y and forty years ago. C! I t, I o t I myself. I’m dead and they’re alive.
But after breakfast—oast and marmalade, and a pot of coffee—I felt better. t breakfasting in t get rid of t in t blue flannel suit of mine I looked just a little bit distingue. By God! I t, if I’m a g, I’ll BE a g! I’ll of black magic on some of tards wolen my own from me.
I started out, but I’d got no fart-place ed to see. A procession of about fifty screet in column of fours—quite military, t-major. te, and blue border and BRItONS PREPARE on it in ters. t on to ep to to h shiny black hair and a dull kind of face.
‘ are those kids doing?’
‘It’s tice,’ ising, like. t’s Miss todgers, t is.’
I mig odgers. You could see it in oug’s al in cacs, Y..C.A. els, and . S and skirt t somerong impression t s, tually s. I kneo I ting out at t-major yell, ‘Monica! Lift your feet up!’ and I sa te, and blue border, and in th