{"id":"01KG6FVJ74B4QDFXC8G219GPDJ","cid":"bafkreia7oypgbzrlpxdfs3gapnq2k2fdylqdq75nnuw3kkwt7dao4ukczm","type":"chunk","properties":{"end_line":2797,"extracted_at":"2026-01-30T03:41:20.744Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"Chunk 4","source_file":"01KG6FT59BXAZ3C5HRJ6SW8F58","start_line":2746,"text":"a small contribution. You could keep the money for when you do take up a collection.\"\n\"Oh, how very kind of you,\" she said, and the other one, her friend, looked over at\nme. The other one was reading a little black book while she drank her coffee. It looked\nlike a Bible, but it was too skinny. It was a Bible-type book, though. All the two of them\nwere eating for breakfast was toast and coffee. That depressed me. I hate it if I'm eating\nbacon and eggs or something and somebody else is only eating toast and coffee.\nThey let me give them ten bucks as a contribution. They kept asking me if I was\nsure I could afford it and all. I told them I had quite a bit of money with me, but they\ndidn't seem to believe me. They took it, though, finally. The both of them kept thanking\nme so much it was embarrassing. I swung the conversation around to general topics and\nasked them where they were going. They said they were schoolteachers and that they'd\njust come from Chicago and that they were going to start teaching at some convent on\n168th Street or 186th Street or one of those streets way the hell uptown. The one next to\nme, with the iron glasses, said she taught English and her friend taught history and\n\n<!-- [Page 60](arke:01KG6FHT8BH8804M5S8T9GRDQA) -->\nAmerican government. Then I started wondering like a bastard what the one sitting next\nto me, that taught English, thought about, being a nun and all, when she read certain\nbooks for English. Books not necessarily with a lot of sexy stuff in them, but books with\nlovers and all in them. Take old Eustacia Vye, in The Return of the Native by Thomas\nHardy. She wasn't too sexy or anything, but even so you can't help wondering what a nun\nmaybe thinks about when she reads about old Eustacia. I didn't say anything, though,\nnaturally. All I said was English was my best subject.\n\"Oh, really? Oh, I'm so glad!\" the one with the glasses, that taught English, said.\n\"What have you read this year? I'd be very interested to know.\" She was really nice.\n\"Well, most of the time we were on the Anglo-Saxons. Beowulf, and old Grendel,\nand Lord Randal My Son, and all those things. But we had to read outside books for extra\ncredit once in a while. I read The Return of the Native by Thomas Hardy, and Romeo and\nJuliet and Julius--\"\n\"Oh, Romeo and Juliet! Lovely! Didn't you just love it?\" She certainly didn't\nsound much like a nun.\n\"Yes. I did. I liked it a lot. There were a few things I didn't like about it, but it was\nquite moving, on the whole.\"\n\"What didn't you like about it? Can you remember?\" To tell you the truth, it was\nsort of embarrassing, in a way, to be talking about Romeo and Juliet with her. I mean that\nplay gets pretty sexy in some parts, and she was a nun and all, but she asked me, so I\ndiscussed it with her for a while. \"Well, I'm not too crazy about Romeo and Juliet,\" I said.\n\"I mean I like them, but--I don't know. They get pretty annoying sometimes. I mean I felt\nmuch sorrier when old Mercutio got killed than when Romeo and Juliet did. The think is,\nI never liked Romeo too much after Mercutio gets stabbed by that other man--Juliet's\ncousin--what's his name?\"\n\"Tybalt.\"\n\"That's right. Tybalt,\" I said--I always forget that guy's name. \"It was Romeo's\nfault. I mean I liked him the best in the play, old Mercutio. I don't know. All those\nMontagues and Capulets, they're all right--especially Juliet--but Mercutio, he was--it's\nhard to explain. He was very smart and entertaining and all. The thing is, it drives me\ncrazy if somebody gets killed-- especially somebody very smart and entertaining and all--\nand it's somebody else's fault. Romeo and Juliet, at least it was their own fault.\"\n\"What school do you go to?\" she asked me. She probably wanted to get off the\nsubject of Romeo and Juliet.\nI told her Pencey, and she'd heard of it. She said it was a very good school. I let it\npass, though. Then the other one, the one that taught history and government, said they'd","title":"Chunk 4"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG6FV1MQBQ4XVF8SXRB85SZ2","peer_type":"chapter","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KG6FT59BXAZ3C5HRJ6SW8F58","peer_type":"file","predicate":"extractedFrom"},{"peer":"01KFF1K6A8V452X8SQKY55DD16","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG6FVJ747Z081AHZ03NZ222A","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"prev"},{"peer":"01KG6FVJ74FBSM56WSZXXD0340","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"next"}],"ver":2,"created_at":"2026-01-30T03:41:24.580Z","ts":"2026-01-30T03:41:30.312Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF0H3YRP9ZSM033AM0QJ47H"}}