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[Bug-gnuts] swatch


From: Antony Couch
Subject: [Bug-gnuts] swatch
Date: Fri, 8 Sep 2006 02:10:26 +0200

Nevertheless, somewhere at the back of the courta bored reporter had pricked up his ears. He loathed books and had not yet grasped thatthere was money to be made out of them. The pay, headded with a measuring, sidelong glance, was thirty shillings aweek. Already he had thatunmistakable, seedy, lounging look of a man who is out of work. He looked up at Gordon with a kind of nosy malice.
It had dragged him downward with strange suddenness.
Gordon swore and rolled sluggishly off the bed.
He seemed to know with perfect certainty thathis job was lost.
Between whilesthere was nothing to do except read.
Mrs Beaver, the charwoman,had also seen through Gordon.
She had come here swearing toherself that she would not cry. How easy it ought to be, since there are so fewcompetitors! He compromised: Where are you going to live, anyway?
He never shaved more than three times a week nowadays, and onlywashed the parts that showed.
Mrs Beaver brought the Telegraph and the Herald. In less than a week hisappearance had deteriorated strangely. It had dragged him downward with strange suddenness. It was only toplease Ravelston that he had even been pretending to look for work. The bare floorboards hadnever been stained but were dark with dirt.
You will pay five pounds or go to prison for fourteen days. He still made some pretence ofsearching for work, but he only did it to save his face.
And chiefly he was anxious to get it overwith as little fuss and effort as possible. Down a neighbouringstreet the cry of the coal-man echoed mournfully.
It wasnt the kind of thing you could keep dark. Gordon had never been sofamous before and never would be again. Flaxmans wife had forgiven him,and he was back at Peckham, in aspidistral bliss. The children of theneighbourhood used to shout Blackie! Gordon saw that his drunkenness was going to be used as a weaponagainst him.
There was no TROUBLEabout a job like this; no room for ambition, no effort, no hope.
I likes all my lodgers tofeel comfortable-like. When he got to theother room he found that the visitor was Rosemary.
But in the end he let himself be persuaded.
WithRosemary it didnt matter so much, but Julia would be ashamed andmiserable.
Heknew by profound instinct that Mr McKechnie would have heard abouthis arrest.
Mrs Beaver brought the Telegraph and the Herald.
Even Flaxmanhad sent a line to wish him luck. It was all bound up in his mind with the thought of beingUNDER GROUND.

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