PART Ⅳ-1
I’d ed at top of tually a bit out of breat t of seeing Lo used to t Loies of Peru. I braced up and faced it. After all, ? too groo live someill existed, t instead of fields. In a fees I’d be seeing it again, troug-place. I got to ttom of took t-urning, and a minute later I .
I could remember not even remember too begin. All I kne in treet existed. For —a ratreet, raig and tle pub—and o. Finally I pulled up beside a y apron and no uck my of the window.
‘Beg pardon—can you tell me to t-place?’
S tell’. Ans you could cut s of tressed areas. tools coming along and tried again. time I got t o t.
‘Market-place? Market-place? Lessee, now. O?’
I supposed I did mean t.
‘Oake t ‘and turning—’
It seemed to me, t a mile. ball grounds—nely c even boto knoo I grasped presently o call t-place . t properly call it a square, because it icular soraffic-ligatue of a lion o fes. It like t. But suddenly I so a street reet!
After all my memory played tricks on me. I kne-place. treet. I’d go ter lunco put up at tuff t in ly codd’s! And a big dark so be Lilyo t’s! Still a grocer’s apparently. Noroug-place. t see.
It turned aside as into t-place. trough was gone.
traffic-duty o stand. t it t to salute.
I turned to troug to sucent t I even looked to see anding. tered too, all except t ill it looked like one of tels, and t. It altill t moment I t of it once in ty years, I suddenly found t I could remember every