Volume V Part 47 (1/2)
”Na here What ant to know about a ot? Besides; what's in a naive me a proper receipt, and you can do it under the name of Socrates or Attila, for all I care You will pay alt; that is all”
”But how about signing bills of exchange?”
”That's another thing; I ives me”
”I don't understand that”
”Well, you see, you are not English, nor are you a businesshie a twenty-pound note before going in I went to a fat merchant, an epicure whose acquaintance I had ing hiain in an hour,” said he, ”I have no ain when I coive it to me when I hand you the money”
”Never mind; keep it I don't doubt your honesty”
”Don't be so foolish If you left me the note I should certainly decline to hand over theyou a lesson”
”I don't believe you are capable of such dishonesty”
”Nor a a bank note in your pocket, thesuch a thing in his possession without having paid the ht lead to a dispute in which you would infallibly couments, especially in a tohere so ot into the park Iratulatedlady of whom I had been the happy possessor and no doubt the slave
”My Lord Pe”
”What? Where could he have seen her?”
”In a carriage with you driving fast along the Rochester road It is three or four days ago”
”Then Iher to Calais; I shall never see her face again”
”Will you let the rooh the God of love has been propitious to lad to see you at my house whenever you like to come”
”Shall I send you a note to warn you?”
”Not at all”
We walked on talking about literature, manners, and so forth, in an aiha nature a the passers-by I thought this a disgusting piece of indecency, and said as ht at least turn their faces towards the path
”Not at all,” he exclai their posteriors they run no such risk; besides the sight ht, but you will confess that the whole thing strikes a stranger as very revolting”