PART Ⅱ-10
’s very SERIOUS!’ Sting into a panic because somete s t trick, . If you made a list of ted toget top—‘e can’t afford it’, ‘It’s a great saving’, and ‘I don’t kno t o save butter and eggs. is to o tures sime ion about ts. in t a snob. S a gentleman. On trary, from of vieress too muc’s a curious t in t felook and even in appearance, to anyt never does. e live just about as ting ste tter and ts and sc’s a kind of game h hilda.
e moved to est Bletcarted buying t year, a little before Billy er I or I ies say all time, but as often as I got ttle t kind of to ed o mind. And like all jealous imes t me out t sen been equally suspicious y. I’m more or less permanently under suspicion, t fe five years, any enougo be, w as I am.
taking it by and large, I suppose get on imes ion or divorce, but in our do t afford to. And time goes on, and you kind of give up struggling. een years, it’s difficult to imagine life of t find to object to in t do you really to cie’. Not to say a ball and fetter.
Of late years friends called Mrs very bitter ideas about to ttle s-colour, but s tly different form. it takes t you can ime paying for it. S bargains and amusements t don’t cost money. it it doesn’t matter a damn , it’s merely a question of on t sales Mrs t’s est pride, after a day’s ing round ter, to come out anyte a different sort. Sall t ty-eigent-leatrusting kind of face. Siny fixed income, an annuity or somet- over from ty of est Bletc tle country to’s