This chapter's epigraph is from a famous poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. It's a quote from a poem in which a character is described as having a "highness" . This is a reference to the highness of a person's position in society, and it's important to note that the poem is about a person who has a high status, not a person with a low status. In this case, the high status refers to the status of the person in question, and not to the position of the poem itself. In other words, the poem's subject is about highness and low status, and the speaker is referring to the speaker's own highness. The speaker asks the poet if he knows why he eats so much. The poet replies that he doesn't, because he can't afford to eat good food. He's obsessed with food because he grew up in a poor family, and he wants to die rather than eat
This chapter's epigraph is from a famous poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. It's a quote from a poem in which a character is described as having a "highness" . This is a reference to the highness of a person's position in society, and it's important to note that the poem is about a person who has a high status, not a person with a low status. In this case, the high status refers to the status of the person in question, and not to the position of the poem itself. In other words, the poem's subject is about highness and low status, and the speaker is referring to the speaker's own highness. The speaker asks the poet if he knows why he eats so much. The poet replies that he doesn't, because he can't afford to eat good food. He's obsessed with food because he grew up in a poor family, and he wants to die rather than eat