THE SUPERANNUATED MAN
e in Eternity.
to dissipate to go among to visit my old desk-fello I beloate militant. Not all te restore to me t pleasant familiarity, met t off but faintly. My old desk; t, ed to anot must be, but I could not take it kindly. D----l take me, if I could not feel some remorse -- beast, if I , -- at quitting my old compeers, tners of my toils for six and ty years, t smoot been so rugged ter all? or is too late to repent; and I also kno tions are a common fallacy of t my smote me. I ly broken t us. It least not courteous. I sime before I get quite reconciled to tion. Fare not for long, for again and again I o move, and gentlemanly! Pl----, officious to do, and to volunteer, good services ! -- and t mansion for a Grestington of old, stately s; -excluding, pent-up offices, or to my ern fosterer of my living, fare in tion of some ;; t t, as I do from my labours, piled on t, and full as useful! My mantle I bequeath among ye.
A fortnige of my first communication. At t period I ranquillity, but reac. I boasted of a calm indeed, but it ive only. Somet flutter ; an unsettling sense of novelty; to omed lig of my apparel. I rict cellular discipline suddenly by some revolution returned upon ter. It is natural to me to go eleven oclock in treet, and it seems to me t I ering t t very . I digress into Soo explore a book-stall. Mety years a collector. trange nor ne. I find myself before a fine picture in a morning. as it ever ot is become of Fisreet reet? Stones of old Min