Lewis believes that, though their income goes under, love will keep them afloat. This is definitely not the case, as the problem of his spending worsens until he's reached financial ruin. This displays the idealistic way that Lewis envisioned life with his new wife. The narrator in Ta-Fu's story displays opposite traits. His love for the woman who shares the apartment adjacent to his is strong enough to base marriage off of (at least he believes) but dismisses the thought when he takes into account his abject poverty. There's no way that he could provide for a wife, where Lewis decides that love will keep him and his wife together and happy, even after the money is
Lewis believes that, though their income goes under, love will keep them afloat. This is definitely not the case, as the problem of his spending worsens until he's reached financial ruin. This displays the idealistic way that Lewis envisioned life with his new wife. The narrator in Ta-Fu's story displays opposite traits. His love for the woman who shares the apartment adjacent to his is strong enough to base marriage off of (at least he believes) but dismisses the thought when he takes into account his abject poverty. There's no way that he could provide for a wife, where Lewis decides that love will keep him and his wife together and happy, even after the money is