It is not the pride or incivility on either side that keeps us remote from each other. It is
simply our London way. People are so plentiful that they lose their identity. In London
men are as lonely as oysters. Each live in his own shell. We go out in the country to find
neighbours. If the man next door took a cottage a mile away from me in the country,
I should probably know all about him, his affairs, his family, his calling and his habits.
This is not always as idyllic as it seems. Village life can be poisoned by neighbours
until the victim pines for the solitude of a London street, where neighbours are so
plentiful that you are no more conscious of their individual existence than if they were
black berries on a hedge row.
Questions
i. What keeps people in London remote from each other?
ii. How are men described? Why?
iii. Why do we seek country life?
iv. What is the disadvantage of village life?
v. What can you say in this context about our interaction with our neighbour?
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