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- Александр Дюма
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- Граф Монте-Кристо
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- Стр. 184/1279
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"
It
has
been
long
enough
to
inflict
on
me
a
great
and
undeserved
misfortune
.
I
would
fain
fix
the
source
of
it
on
man
that
I
may
no
longer
vent
reproaches
upon
heaven
.
"
"
Then
you
profess
ignorance
of
the
crime
with
which
you
are
charged
?
"
"
I
do
,
indeed
;
and
this
I
swear
by
the
two
beings
most
dear
to
me
upon
earth
--
my
father
and
Mercedes
.
"
"
Come
,
"
said
the
abbe
,
closing
his
hiding-place
,
and
pushing
the
bed
back
to
its
original
situation
,
"
let
me
hear
your
story
.
"
Dantes
obeyed
,
and
commenced
what
he
called
his
history
,
but
which
consisted
only
of
the
account
of
a
voyage
to
India
,
and
two
or
three
voyages
to
the
Levant
until
he
arrived
at
the
recital
of
his
last
cruise
,
with
the
death
of
Captain
Leclere
,
and
the
receipt
of
a
packet
to
be
delivered
by
himself
to
the
grand
marshal
;
his
interview
with
that
personage
,
and
his
receiving
,
in
place
of
the
packet
brought
,
a
letter
addressed
to
a
Monsieur
Noirtier
--
his
arrival
at
Marseilles
,
and
interview
with
his
father
--
his
affection
for
Mercedes
,
and
their
nuptual
feast
--
his
arrest
and
subsequent
examination
,
his
temporary
detention
at
the
Palais
de
Justice
,
and
his
final
imprisonment
in
the
Chateau
d'If
.
From
this
point
everything
was
a
blank
to
Dantes
--
he
knew
nothing
more
,
not
even
the
length
of
time
he
had
been
imprisoned
.
His
recital
finished
,
the
abbe
reflected
long
and
earnestly
.
"
There
is
,
"
said
he
,
at
the
end
of
his
meditations
,
"
a
clever
maxim
,
which
bears
upon
what
I
was
saying
to
you
some
little
while
ago
,
and
that
is
,
that
unless
wicked
ideas
take
root
in
a
naturally
depraved
mind
,
human
nature
,
in
a
right
and
wholesome
state
,
revolts
at
crime
.
Still
,
from
an
artificial
civilization
have
originated
wants
,
vices
,
and
false
tastes
,
which
occasionally
become
so
powerful
as
to
stifle
within
us
all
good
feelings
,
and
ultimately
to
lead
us
into
guilt
and
wickedness
.
From
this
view
of
things
,
then
,
comes
the
axiom
that
if
you
visit
to
discover
the
author
of
any
bad
action
,
seek
first
to
discover
the
person
to
whom
the
perpetration
of
that
bad
action
could
be
in
any
way
advantageous
.
Now
,
to
apply
it
in
your
case
--
to
whom
could
your
disappearance
have
been
serviceable
?
"
"
To
no
one
,
by
heaven
!
I
was
a
very
insignificant
person
.
"
"
Do
not
speak
thus
,
for
your
reply
evinces
neither
logic
nor
philosophy
;
everything
is
relative
,
my
dear
young
friend
,
from
the
king
who
stands
in
the
way
of
his
successor
,
to
the
employee
who
keeps
his
rival
out
of
a
place
.
Now
,
in
the
event
of
the
king
's
death
,
his
successor
inherits
a
crown
--
when
the
employee
dies
,
the
supernumerary
steps
into
his
shoes
,
and
receives
his
salary
of
twelve
thousand
livres
.
Well
,
these
twelve
thousand
livres
are
his
civil
list
,
and
are
as
essential
to
him
as
the
twelve
millions
of
a
king
.
Every
one
,
from
the
highest
to
the
lowest
degree
,
has
his
place
on
the
social
ladder
,
and
is
beset
by
stormy
passions
and
conflicting
interests
,
as
in
Descartes
'
theory
of
pressure
and
impulsion
.
But
these
forces
increase
as
we
go
higher
,
so
that
we
have
a
spiral
which
in
defiance
of
reason
rests
upon
the
apex
and
not
on
the
base
.
Now
let
us
return
to
your
particular
world
.