How Shall I Know You? 
Hilary Mantel
One summer at the fag-end of the 1990s, I had to go out of London to talk to a literary society, of the sort that must have been old-fashioned when the previous century closed. When the day came, I wondered why I’d agreed to it; but yes is easier than no, and of course when you make a promise you think the time will never arrive: that there will be a nuclear holocaust, or some other diversion. Besides, I had a sentimental yearning for the days of self-improvement: they were founded, these reading clubs, by master drapers and their shop-girl wives; by poetasting engineers, and uxorious physicians with long winter evenings to pass. Who keeps them going these days?
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Other articles by this contributor:
If you’d seen his green eyes · The People’s Robespierre
The Shape of Absence · The Bondwoman’s Narrative
That Wilting Flower · The Lure of the Unexplained
Some girls want out · spectacular saintliness
Is the particle there? · Schrödinger in Clontarf
Frocks and Shocks · Jane Boleyn
The Real Price of Everything · The Many Lives of Elizabeth Marsh
Giving up the Ghost · My Life as a Boy