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In the end, what are the narrator and his friends to do?
The narrator has come to believe he is too good for such people.
The narrator is a man who has lost the love of his life.
He also seems to be the narrator of the story.
The narrator later questions whether what he saw was real.
Three years later, the narrator is a student at the college.
Its narrator is a man who has done something wrong in his relationship with a woman.
For over a year the narrator never went with any of the girls.
To live after that point would be a living death to the narrator.
The narrator goes on to tell a story about the daughter's good nature.
Not for a moment do you believe that the narrator thought any such thing.
The narrator says he is running down the road with seven women on his mind.
Perhaps it will be better to make him the narrator of his own story.
He's more concerned with what his narrator is running away from.
The narrator for most of the piece is a 6-year-old girl.
The narrator says, "The children who need the most are given the least."
Since the narrator is within the story, he or she may not have knowledge of all the events.
Along the way he will spend the night at the home of the narrator and his wife.
But as the narrator says, "We need something to say yes to."
And then he is the narrator of his own condition.
The teacher can act as a narrator, telling the story thus far.
The narrator wants some order and structure in his life.
Time goes on and the narrator moves back to the city, where she came from.
It seems that the narrator could better understand his brother now.