I'm sure he would have, had his wife not asked him to sell the clothes.
[It said something about Bedivere, though, that this was his first thought.
As it was, Dazai was content to leave Bedivere with the illusion that this was all there was to the story: the wife had disappeared at the end, after the farmer broke his promise to not look into her room for a period of time and discovered that she was the crane, and Dazai wasn't in the mood to mention farewells.
Instead, he guided Bedivere further down the path - they'd get to pass by cranes on the way to the penguins.]
no subject
[It said something about Bedivere, though, that this was his first thought.
As it was, Dazai was content to leave Bedivere with the illusion that this was all there was to the story: the wife had disappeared at the end, after the farmer broke his promise to not look into her room for a period of time and discovered that she was the crane, and Dazai wasn't in the mood to mention farewells.
Instead, he guided Bedivere further down the path - they'd get to pass by cranes on the way to the penguins.]