If Winter Comes
A. S. M. Hutchinson
Paperback
(CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Jan. 31, 2008)
IF WINTER COMES - 1922 - CONTENTS - PART ONE PAGE I PART TWO . 77 PART THREE . . 187 PART FOUR MABEL - EFFIE - NONA PART ONE MABEL IF WINTER COMES CHAPTER I To take Mark Sabre at the age of thirty-four, and in the year 1912, and at the place Penny Green is to necessitate looking back a little towards the time of his marriage in 1904, but happens to find him in good light for observation. Encountering him hereabouts, one who had shared school days with him at his preparatory school so much as twenty-four years back would have found matter for recognition. A usefully garrulous person, one Hapgood, a solicitor, found much. Whom do you think I met yesterday Old Sabre You remember old Sabre at old Wickamotes . . . Yes, that S the chap. Used to call him Puzzlehead, remember Because he used to screw up his forehead over things old Wickamote or any of the other masters said and sort of drawl out, Well, I dont see that, sir. . . . Yes, rather . . . And then that other expression of his. Just the opposite. When old Wickamote or some one had landed him, or all of us, with some dashed punishment, and we were gassing about it, used to screw up his nut in the same way and say, Yes, but I see what he means. And some one would say, Well, what does he mean, you ass and he d start gassing some rot till some one said, Good . L 1b WINTER COMES - . . I - L .. l5 a, fi11i.. . . t . i ng up for a master And old Puzzlehead would say, you sickening fool, I m not sticking up for him. I m only saying he S right from how he looks at it and it S no good saying he S wrong. . . . Ha Funny days. . . . Jolly nice chap, though, old Puzzlehead was. . . . Yes, I met him. . . . Fact, I run into him occasionally. We do a mild amount of business with his firm. I buzz down there about once a year. Tidborough. He S changed, of course. So have you, you know. That Vandyke beard, what Ha Old Sabre S not done anything outrageous like that. Real thing I seemed to notice about him when I bumped into him yesterday was that he did n7t look very cheery. Looked to me rather as though he cl lost something and was wondering where it was. Ha But - dashed funny - I mentioned something about that appalling speech that chap made in that blasphemy case yesterday. . . . Eh yes, absolutely frightful, wasnt it - well, I m dashed if old Sabre didnt puzzle up his nut in exactly the same old way and say, Yes, but I see what he means. I reminded him and ragged him about it no end. Absolutely the same words and expression. Funny chap . . . nice chap. . . . What did he say the blasphemy man meant Oh, I dont know some bilge, just as he used to about the masters. You know the man talked some rubbish about how the State could n7t have it both ways - couldnt blaspheme against God by flatly denying that all men were equal and basing all its legislation on keeping one class up and the other class down couldnt do that and at the same time prosecute him because he said that religion was - well, you know what he said I m dashed if I like to repeat it. Joke of it was that I found myself using exactly the same expression to old Sabre as we used to use at school...