Понятно
Понятно
Для того чтобы воспользоваться закладками, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Отмена
"
"
That
is
what
I
mean
,
"
said
my
guardian
.
"
You
may
observe
,
Mr
.
Bucket
,
that
I
abstain
from
examining
this
paper
myself
.
The
plain
truth
is
,
I
have
forsworn
and
abjured
the
whole
business
these
many
years
,
and
my
soul
is
sick
of
it
.
But
Miss
Summerson
and
I
will
immediately
place
the
paper
in
the
hands
of
my
solicitor
in
the
cause
,
and
its
existence
shall
be
made
known
without
delay
to
all
other
parties
interested
.
"
"
Mr
.
Jarndyce
can
t
say
fairer
than
that
,
you
understand
,
"
observed
Mr
.
Bucket
to
his
fellow
-
visitor
.
"
And
it
being
now
made
clear
to
you
that
nobody
s
a
-
going
to
be
wronged
which
must
be
a
great
relief
to
YOUR
mind
we
may
proceed
with
the
ceremony
of
chairing
you
home
again
.
"
He
unbolted
the
door
,
called
in
the
bearers
,
wished
us
good
morning
,
and
with
a
look
full
of
meaning
and
a
crook
of
his
finger
at
parting
went
his
way
.
We
went
our
way
too
,
which
was
to
Lincoln
s
Inn
,
as
quickly
as
possible
.
Mr
.
Kenge
was
disengaged
,
and
we
found
him
at
his
table
in
his
dusty
room
with
the
inexpressive
-
looking
books
and
the
piles
of
papers
.
Chairs
having
been
placed
for
us
by
Mr
.
Guppy
,
Mr
.
Kenge
expressed
the
surprise
and
gratification
he
felt
at
the
unusual
sight
of
Mr
.
Jarndyce
in
his
office
.
He
turned
over
his
double
eye
-
glass
as
he
spoke
and
was
more
Conversation
Kenge
than
ever
.
"
I
hope
,
"
said
Mr
.
Kenge
,
"
that
the
genial
influence
of
Miss
Summerson
,
"
he
bowed
to
me
,
"
may
have
induced
Mr
.
Jarndyce
,
"
he
bowed
to
him
,
"
to
forego
some
little
of
his
animosity
towards
a
cause
and
towards
a
court
which
are
shall
I
say
,
which
take
their
place
in
the
stately
vista
of
the
pillars
of
our
profession
?
"
"
I
am
inclined
to
think
,
"
returned
my
guardian
,
"
that
Miss
Summerson
has
seen
too
much
of
the
effects
of
the
court
and
the
cause
to
exert
any
influence
in
their
favour
.
Nevertheless
,
they
are
a
part
of
the
occasion
of
my
being
here
.
Mr
.
Kenge
,
before
I
lay
this
paper
on
your
desk
and
have
done
with
it
,
let
me
tell
you
how
it
has
come
into
my
hands
.
"
He
did
so
shortly
and
distinctly
.
"
It
could
not
,
sir
,
"
said
Mr
.
Kenge
,
"
have
been
stated
more
plainly
and
to
the
purpose
if
it
had
been
a
case
at
law
.
"
"
Did
you
ever
know
English
law
,
or
equity
either
,
plain
and
to
the
purpose
?
"
said
my
guardian
.
"
Oh
,
fie
!
"
said
Mr
.
Kenge
.
At
first
he
had
not
seemed
to
attach
much
importance
to
the
paper
,
but
when
he
saw
it
he
appeared
more
interested
,
and
when
he
had
opened
and
read
a
little
of
it
through
his
eye
-
glass
,
he
became
amazed
.
"
Mr
.
Jarndyce
,
"
he
said
,
looking
off
it
,
"
you
have
perused
this
?
"
"
Not
I
!
"
returned
my
guardian
.
"
But
,
my
dear
sir
,
"
said
Mr
.
Kenge
,
"
it
is
a
will
of
later
date
than
any
in
the
suit
.
It
appears
to
be
all
in
the
testator
s
handwriting
.
It
is
duly
executed
and
attested
.
And
even
if
intended
to
be
cancelled
,
as
might
possibly
be
supposed
to
be
denoted
by
these
marks
of
fire
,
it
is
NOT
cancelled
.
Here
it
is
,
a
perfect
instrument
!
"
"
Well
!
"
said
my
guardian
.
"
What
is
that
to
me
?
"
"
Mr
.
Guppy
!
"
cried
Mr
.
Kenge
,
raising
his
voice
.
"
I
beg
your
pardon
,
Mr
.
Jarndyce
.
"
"
Sir
.
"
"
Mr
.
Vholes
of
Symond
s
Inn
.
My
compliments
.
Jarndyce
and
Jarndyce
.
Glad
to
speak
with
him
.
"
Mr
.
Guppy
disappeared
.
"
You
ask
me
what
is
this
to
you
,
Mr
.
Jarndyce
.
If
you
had
perused
this
document
,
you
would
have
seen
that
it
reduces
your
interest
considerably
,
though
still
leaving
it
a
very
handsome
one
,
still
leaving
it
a
very
handsome
one
,
"
said
Mr
.
Kenge
,
waving
his
hand
persuasively
and
blandly
.
"
You
would
further
have
seen
that
the
interests
of
Mr
.
Richard
Carstone
and
of
Miss
Ada
Clare
,
now
Mrs
.
Richard
Carstone
,
are
very
materially
advanced
by
it
.
"
"
Kenge
,
"
said
my
guardian
,
"
if
all
the
flourishing
wealth
that
the
suit
brought
into
this
vile
court
of
Chancery
could
fall
to
my
two
young
cousins
,
I
should
be
well
contented
.
But
do
you
ask
ME
to
believe
that
any
good
is
to
come
of
Jarndyce
and
Jarndyce
?
"
"
Oh
,
really
,
Mr
.
Jarndyce
!
Prejudice
,
prejudice
.
My
dear
sir
,
this
is
a
very
great
country
,
a
very
great
country
.
Its
system
of
equity
is
a
very
great
system
,
a
very
great
system
.
Really
,
really
!
"
My
guardian
said
no
more
,
and
Mr
.
Vholes
arrived
.
He
was
modestly
impressed
by
Mr
.
Kenge
s
professional
eminence
.
"
How
do
you
do
,
Mr
.
Vholes
?
Will
you
be
so
good
as
to
take
a
chair
here
by
me
and
look
over
this
paper
?
"
Mr
.
Vholes
did
as
he
was
asked
and
seemed
to
read
it
every
word
.
He
was
not
excited
by
it
,
but
he
was
not
excited
by
anything
.
When
he
had
well
examined
it
,
he
retired
with
Mr
.
Kenge
into
a
window
,
and
shading
his
mouth
with
his
black
glove
,
spoke
to
him
at
some
length
.
I
was
not
surprised
to
observe
Mr
.
Отключить рекламу
Kenge
inclined
to
dispute
what
he
said
before
he
had
said
much
,
for
I
knew
that
no
two
people
ever
did
agree
about
anything
in
Jarndyce
and
Jarndyce
.
But
he
seemed
to
get
the
better
of
Mr
.
Kenge
too
in
a
conversation
that
sounded
as
if
it
were
almost
composed
of
the
words
"
Receiver
-
General
,
"
"
Accountant
-
General
,
"
"
report
,
"
"
estate
,
"
and
"
costs
.
"
When
they
had
finished
,
they
came
back
to
Mr
.
Kenge
s
table
and
spoke
aloud
.
"
Well
!
But
this
is
a
very
remarkable
document
,
Mr
.
Vholes
,
"
said
Mr
.
Kenge
.
Mr
.
Vholes
said
,
"
Very
much
so
.
"
"
And
a
very
important
document
,
Mr
.
Vholes
,
"
said
Mr
.
Kenge
.
Again
Mr
.
Vholes
said
,
"
Very
much
so
.
"
"
And
as
you
say
,
Mr
.
Vholes
,
when
the
cause
is
in
the
paper
next
term
,
this
document
will
be
an
unexpected
and
interesting
feature
in
it
,
"
said
Mr
.
Kenge
,
looking
loftily
at
my
guardian
.
Mr
.
Vholes
was
gratified
,
as
a
smaller
practitioner
striving
to
keep
respectable
,
to
be
confirmed
in
any
opinion
of
his
own
by
such
an
authority
.
"
And
when
,
"
asked
my
guardian
,
rising
after
a
pause
,
during
which
Mr
.
Kenge
had
rattled
his
money
and
Mr
.
Vholes
had
picked
his
pimples
,
"
when
is
next
term
?
"
"
Next
term
,
Mr
.
Jarndyce
,
will
be
next
month
,
"
said
Mr
.
Kenge
.
"
Of
course
we
shall
at
once
proceed
to
do
what
is
necessary
with
this
document
and
to
collect
the
necessary
evidence
concerning
it
;
and
of
course
you
will
receive
our
usual
notification
of
the
cause
being
in
the
paper
.
"
"
To
which
I
shall
pay
,
of
course
,
my
usual
attention
.
"
"
Still
bent
,
my
dear
sir
,
"
said
Mr
Kenge
,
showing
us
through
the
outer
office
to
the
door
,
"
still
bent
,
even
with
your
enlarged
mind
,
on
echoing
a
popular
prejudice
?
We
are
a
prosperous
community
,
Mr
.
Jarndyce
,
a
very
prosperous
community
.
We
are
a
great
country
,
Mr
.
Jarndyce
,
we
are
a
very
great
country
.
This
is
a
great
system
,
Mr
.
Jarndyce
,
and
would
you
wish
a
great
country
to
have
a
little
system
?
Now
,
really
,
really
!
"
He
said
this
at
the
stair
-
head
,
gently
moving
his
right
hand
as
if
it
were
a
silver
trowel
with
which
to
spread
the
cement
of
his
words
on
the
structure
of
the
system
and
consolidate
it
for
a
thousand
ages
.
George
s
Shooting
Gallery
is
to
let
,
and
the
stock
is
sold
off
,
and
George
himself
is
at
Chesney
Wold
attending
on
Sir
Leicester
in
his
rides
and
riding
very
near
his
bridle
-
rein
because
of
the
uncertain
hand
with
which
he
guides
his
horse
.
But
not
to
-
day
is
George
so
occupied
.
He
is
journeying
to
-
day
into
the
iron
country
farther
north
to
look
about
him
.
As
he
comes
into
the
iron
country
farther
north
,
such
fresh
green
woods
as
those
of
Chesney
Wold
are
left
behind
;
and
coal
pits
and
ashes
,
high
chimneys
and
red
bricks
,
blighted
verdure
,
scorching
fires
,
and
a
heavy
never
-
lightening
cloud
of
smoke
become
the
features
of
the
scenery
.
Among
such
objects
rides
the
trooper
,
looking
about
him
and
always
looking
for
something
he
has
come
to
find
.
At
last
,
on
the
black
canal
bridge
of
a
busy
town
,
with
a
clang
of
iron
in
it
,
and
more
fires
and
more
smoke
than
he
has
seen
yet
,
the
trooper
,
swart
with
the
dust
of
the
coal
roads
,
checks
his
horse
and
asks
a
workman
does
he
know
the
name
of
Rouncewell
thereabouts
.
"
Why
,
master
,
"
quoth
the
workman
,
"
do
I
know
my
own
name
?
"
"
Tis
so
well
known
here
,
is
it
,
comrade
?
"
asks
the
trooper
.
"
Rouncewell
s
?
Ah
!
You
re
right
.
"
"
And
where
might
it
be
now
?
"
asks
the
trooper
with
a
glance
before
him
.
"
The
bank
,
the
factory
,
or
the
house
?
"
the
workman
wants
to
know
.
"
Hum
!
Rouncewell
s
is
so
great
apparently
,
"
mutters
the
trooper
,
stroking
his
chin
,
"
that
I
have
as
good
as
half
a
mind
to
go
back
again
.
Why
,
I
don
t
know
which
I
want
.
Should
I
find
Mr
.
Rouncewell
at
the
factory
,
do
you
think
?
"
"
Tain
t
easy
to
say
where
you
d
find
him
at
this
time
of
the
day
you
might
find
either
him
or
his
son
there
,
if
he
s
in
town
;
but
his
contracts
take
him
away
.
"
And
which
is
the
factory
?
Why
,
he
sees
those
chimneys
the
tallest
ones
!
Yes
,
he
sees
THEM
.
Well
!
Let
him
keep
his
eye
on
those
chimneys
,
going
on
as
straight
as
ever
he
can
,
and
presently
he
ll
see
em
down
a
turning
on
the
left
,
shut
in
by
a
great
brick
wall
which
forms
one
side
of
the
street
.
That
s
Rouncewell
s
.
The
trooper
thanks
his
informant
and
rides
slowly
on
,
looking
about
him
.
He
does
not
turn
back
,
but
puts
up
his
horse
(
and
is
much
disposed
to
groom
him
too
)
at
a
public
-
house
where
some
of
Rouncewell
s
hands
are
dining
,
as
the
ostler
tells
him
.
Some
of
Rouncewell
s
hands
have
just
knocked
off
for
dinner
-
time
and
seem
to
be
invading
the
whole
town
.
They
are
very
sinewy
and
strong
,
are
Rouncewell
s
hands
a
little
sooty
too
.
He
comes
to
a
gateway
in
the
brick
wall
,
looks
in
,
and
sees
a
great
perplexity
of
iron
lying
about
in
every
stage
and
in
a
vast
variety
of
shapes
in
bars
,
in
wedges
,
in
sheets
;
in
tanks
,
in
boilers
,
in
axles
,
in
wheels
,
in
cogs
,
in
cranks
,
in
rails
;
twisted
and
wrenched
into
eccentric
and
perverse
forms
as
separate
parts
of
machinery
;
mountains
of
it
broken
up
,
and
rusty
in
its
age
;
distant
furnaces
of
it
glowing
and
bubbling
in
its
youth
;
bright
fireworks
of
it
showering
about
under
the
blows
of
the
steam
-
hammer
;
red
-
hot
iron
,
white
-
hot
iron
,
cold
-
black
iron
;
an
iron
taste
,
an
iron
smell
,
and
a
Babel
of
iron
sounds
.
Отключить рекламу
"
This
is
a
place
to
make
a
man
s
head
ache
too
!
"
says
the
trooper
,
looking
about
him
for
a
counting
-
house
.
"
Who
comes
here
?
This
is
very
like
me
before
I
was
set
up
.
This
ought
to
be
my
nephew
,
if
likenesses
run
in
families
.
Your
servant
,
sir
.
"
"
Yours
,
sir
.
Are
you
looking
for
any
one
?
"
"
Excuse
me
.
Young
Mr
.
Rouncewell
,
I
believe
?
"
"
Yes
.
"
"
I
was
looking
for
your
father
,
sir
.
I
wish
to
have
a
word
with
him
.
"
The
young
man
,
telling
him
he
is
fortunate
in
his
choice
of
a
time
,
for
his
father
is
there
,
leads
the
way
to
the
office
where
he
is
to
be
found
.
"
Very
like
me
before
I
was
set
up
devilish
like
me
!
"
thinks
the
trooper
as
he
follows
.
They
come
to
a
building
in
the
yard
with
an
office
on
an
upper
floor
.
At
sight
of
the
gentleman
in
the
office
,
Mr
.
George
turns
very
red
.
"
What
name
shall
I
say
to
my
father
?
"
asks
the
young
man
.
George
,
full
of
the
idea
of
iron
,
in
desperation
answers
"
Steel
,
"
and
is
so
presented
.
He
is
left
alone
with
the
gentleman
in
the
office
,
who
sits
at
a
table
with
account
-
books
before
him
and
some
sheets
of
paper
blotted
with
hosts
of
figures
and
drawings
of
cunning
shapes
.
It
is
a
bare
office
,
with
bare
windows
,
looking
on
the
iron
view
below
.
Tumbled
together
on
the
table
are
some
pieces
of
iron
,
purposely
broken
to
be
tested
at
various
periods
of
their
service
,
in
various
capacities
.
There
is
iron
-
dust
on
everything
;
and
the
smoke
is
seen
through
the
windows
rolling
heavily
out
of
the
tall
chimneys
to
mingle
with
the
smoke
from
a
vaporous
Babylon
of
other
chimneys
.
"
I
am
at
your
service
,
Mr
.
Steel
,
"
says
the
gentleman
when
his
visitor
has
taken
a
rusty
chair
.
"
Well
,
Mr
.
Rouncewell
,
"
George
replies
,
leaning
forward
with
his
left
arm
on
his
knee
and
his
hat
in
his
hand
,
and
very
chary
of
meeting
his
brother
s
eye
,
"
I
am
not
without
my
expectations
that
in
the
present
visit
I
may
prove
to
be
more
free
than
welcome
.
I
have
served
as
a
dragoon
in
my
day
,
and
a
comrade
of
mine
that
I
was
once
rather
partial
to
was
,
if
I
don
t
deceive
myself
,
a
brother
of
yours
.
I
believe
you
had
a
brother
who
gave
his
family
some
trouble
,
and
ran
away
,
and
never
did
any
good
but
in
keeping
away
?
"
"
Are
you
quite
sure
,
"
returns
the
ironmaster
in
an
altered
voice
,
"
that
your
name
is
Steel
?
"
The
trooper
falters
and
looks
at
him
.
His
brother
starts
up
,
calls
him
by
his
name
,
and
grasps
him
by
both
hands
.
"
You
are
too
quick
for
me
!
"
cries
the
trooper
with
the
tears
springing
out
of
his
eyes
.
"
How
do
you
do
,
my
dear
old
fellow
?
I
never
could
have
thought
you
would
have
been
half
so
glad
to
see
me
as
all
this
.
How
do
you
do
,
my
dear
old
fellow
,
how
do
you
do
!
"
They
shake
hands
and
embrace
each
other
over
and
over
again
,
the
trooper
still
coupling
his
"
How
do
you
do
,
my
dear
old
fellow
!
"
with
his
protestation
that
he
never
thought
his
brother
would
have
been
half
so
glad
to
see
him
as
all
this
!
"
So
far
from
it
,
"
he
declares
at
the
end
of
a
full
account
of
what
has
preceded
his
arrival
there
,
"
I
had
very
little
idea
of
making
myself
known
.
I
thought
if
you
took
by
any
means
forgivingly
to
my
name
I
might
gradually
get
myself
up
to
the
point
of
writing
a
letter
.
But
I
should
not
have
been
surprised
,
brother
,
if
you
had
considered
it
anything
but
welcome
news
to
hear
of
me
.
"
"
We
will
show
you
at
home
what
kind
of
news
we
think
it
,
George
,
"
returns
his
brother
.
"
This
is
a
great
day
at
home
,
and
you
could
not
have
arrived
,
you
bronzed
old
soldier
,
on
a
better
.
I
make
an
agreement
with
my
son
Watt
to
-
day
that
on
this
day
twelvemonth
he
shall
marry
as
pretty
and
as
good
a
girl
as
you
have
seen
in
all
your
travels
.
She
goes
to
Germany
to
-
morrow
with
one
of
your
nieces
for
a
little
polishing
up
in
her
education
.
We
make
a
feast
of
the
event
,
and
you
will
be
made
the
hero
of
it
.
"
Mr
.
George
is
so
entirely
overcome
at
first
by
this
prospect
that
he
resists
the
proposed
honour
with
great
earnestness
.
Being
overborne
,
however
,
by
his
brother
and
his
nephew
concerning
whom
he
renews
his
protestations
that
he
never
could
have
thought
they
would
have
been
half
so
glad
to
see
him
he
is
taken
home
to
an
elegant
house
in
all
the
arrangements
of
which
there
is
to
be
observed
a
pleasant
mixture
of
the
originally
simple
habits
of
the
father
and
mother
with
such
as
are
suited
to
their
altered
station
and
the
higher
fortunes
of
their
children
.
Here
Mr
.
George
is
much
dismayed
by
the
graces
and
accomplishments
of
his
nieces
that
are
and
by
the
beauty
of
Rosa
,
his
niece
that
is
to
be
,
and
by
the
affectionate
salutations
of
these
young
ladies
,
which
he
receives
in
a
sort
of
dream
.
He
is
sorely
taken
aback
,
too
,
by
the
dutiful
behaviour
of
his
nephew
and
has
a
woeful
consciousness
upon
him
of
being
a
scapegrace
.
However
,
there
is
great
rejoicing
and
a
very
hearty
company
and
infinite
enjoyment
,
and
Mr
.