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If Paris Is Downcast • Chapter 21 • Page ik-page-4504805
Chapter 21
This is a locked chapterChapter 21
About This Chapter
In this short scene, the protagonist, who has been living in the summer zoo for the past 24 hours, expresses his dissatisfaction with the life he has led. He has no home, no lawyer license, and no one to blame for his predicament. He tells the protagonist's lover, who is also a lover, that he has to let him know whenever he returns home from work. The protagonist, however, does not care, for he does not want a man to become his "whole world." The protagonist asks the lover if he loves her, and the lover replies that he is a lover and that a lover is "imposible" to become a wife. He then asks the woman if she is out walking, and she replies that she is just out on a walk. She then asks him if he is testing the nighttime safety of the city, and he replies that it is too inappropriate for her to sit on a roadside inebriated. She tells him that she loves drinking, and that she does not like the "smell of alcohol" on the breath of a woman. He asks her if she and her lover are in love, and when she responds that they must be, he asks if she has been secretly dating Mr. Tong for a long time. She replies that they have made progress, but that they are still getting started. She asks if he has ever had a woman in his life by his side, and to her surprise, he has never had one. He says that he thinks if he had just played, he would not have had to deal with a woman like her. The next morning, he tells the director of the zoo that he will make him coffee, and then he asks the man if he can help him wash the cup. The man replies that the wound on his hands prevents him from touching the water, and so he asks him to help him with the project. He also asks the
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If Paris Is Downcast • Chapter 21 • Page ik-page-4504805
Chapter 21
This is a locked chapterChapter 21
About This Chapter
In this short scene, the protagonist, who has been living in the summer zoo for the past 24 hours, expresses his dissatisfaction with the life he has led. He has no home, no lawyer license, and no one to blame for his predicament. He tells the protagonist's lover, who is also a lover, that he has to let him know whenever he returns home from work. The protagonist, however, does not care, for he does not want a man to become his "whole world." The protagonist asks the lover if he loves her, and the lover replies that he is a lover and that a lover is "imposible" to become a wife. He then asks the woman if she is out walking, and she replies that she is just out on a walk. She then asks him if he is testing the nighttime safety of the city, and he replies that it is too inappropriate for her to sit on a roadside inebriated. She tells him that she loves drinking, and that she does not like the "smell of alcohol" on the breath of a woman. He asks her if she and her lover are in love, and when she responds that they must be, he asks if she has been secretly dating Mr. Tong for a long time. She replies that they have made progress, but that they are still getting started. She asks if he has ever had a woman in his life by his side, and to her surprise, he has never had one. He says that he thinks if he had just played, he would not have had to deal with a woman like her. The next morning, he tells the director of the zoo that he will make him coffee, and then he asks the man if he can help him wash the cup. The man replies that the wound on his hands prevents him from touching the water, and so he asks him to help him with the project. He also asks the
Close Viewer