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- Александр Дюма
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- Граф Монте-Кристо
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- Стр. 179/1279
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"
And
when
,
"
asked
Dantes
,
"
may
I
see
all
this
?
"
"
Whenever
you
please
,
"
replied
the
abbe
.
"
Oh
,
then
let
it
be
directly
!
"
exclaimed
the
young
man
.
"
Follow
me
,
then
,
"
said
the
abbe
,
as
he
re-entered
the
subterranean
passage
,
in
which
he
soon
disappeared
,
followed
by
Dantes
.
After
having
passed
with
tolerable
ease
through
the
subterranean
passage
,
which
,
however
,
did
not
admit
of
their
holding
themselves
erect
,
the
two
friends
reached
the
further
end
of
the
corridor
,
into
which
the
abbe
's
cell
opened
;
from
that
point
the
passage
became
much
narrower
,
and
barely
permitted
one
to
creep
through
on
hands
and
knees
.
The
floor
of
the
abbe
's
cell
was
paved
,
and
it
had
been
by
raising
one
of
the
stones
in
the
most
obscure
corner
that
Faria
had
to
been
able
to
commence
the
laborious
task
of
which
Dantes
had
witnessed
the
completion
.
As
he
entered
the
chamber
of
his
friend
,
Dantes
cast
around
one
eager
and
searching
glance
in
quest
of
the
expected
marvels
,
but
nothing
more
than
common
met
his
view
.
"
It
is
well
,
"
said
the
abbe
;
"
we
have
some
hours
before
us
--
it
is
now
just
a
quarter
past
twelve
o'clock
.
"
Instinctively
Dantes
turned
round
to
observe
by
what
watch
or
clock
the
abbe
had
been
able
so
accurately
to
specify
the
hour
.
"
Look
at
this
ray
of
light
which
enters
by
my
window
,
"
said
the
abbe
,
"
and
then
observe
the
lines
traced
on
the
wall
.
Well
,
by
means
of
these
lines
,
which
are
in
accordance
with
the
double
motion
of
the
earth
,
and
the
ellipse
it
describes
round
the
sun
,
I
am
enabled
to
ascertain
the
precise
hour
with
more
minuteness
than
if
I
possessed
a
watch
;
for
that
might
be
broken
or
deranged
in
its
movements
,
while
the
sun
and
earth
never
vary
in
their
appointed
paths
.
"
This
last
explanation
was
wholly
lost
upon
Dantes
,
who
had
always
imagined
,
from
seeing
the
sun
rise
from
behind
the
mountains
and
set
in
the
Mediterranean
,
that
it
moved
,
and
not
the
earth
.
A
double
movement
of
the
globe
he
inhabited
,
and
of
which
he
could
feel
nothing
,
appeared
to
him
perfectly
impossible
.
Each
word
that
fell
from
his
companion
's
lips
seemed
fraught
with
the
mysteries
of
science
,
as
worthy
of
digging
out
as
the
gold
and
diamonds
in
the
mines
of
Guzerat
and
Golconda
,
which
he
could
just
recollect
having
visited
during
a
voyage
made
in
his
earliest
youth
.