This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. The poem is about a young boy who loses his life after winning a bargain. The boy is very upset by the fact that he almost lost his life. He is also very upset because he wants to avoid losing his life in the future. The young boy, however, does not want to lose his life, because he thinks that he would rather not lose it. He tells the boy that he has just won a bargain, and the boy is shocked. He thinks that the young boy is clueless even after he has won the bargain. He asks the boy if he knows what is in his arm, and when the boy answers that he does not, the boy exclaims that he is already exhausted. He goes on to say that even if he had lost the bargain, he would not have been so lucky. He says that even though he won the deal, he wouldn't have
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. The poem is about a young boy who loses his life after winning a bargain. The boy is very upset by the fact that he almost lost his life. He is also very upset because he wants to avoid losing his life in the future. The young boy, however, does not want to lose his life, because he thinks that he would rather not lose it. He tells the boy that he has just won a bargain, and the boy is shocked. He thinks that the young boy is clueless even after he has won the bargain. He asks the boy if he knows what is in his arm, and when the boy answers that he does not, the boy exclaims that he is already exhausted. He goes on to say that even if he had lost the bargain, he would not have been so lucky. He says that even though he won the deal, he wouldn't have