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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Дэвид Копперфильд
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- Стр. 428/820
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Reminding
him
of
the
fact
,
that
Mr
.
Peggotty
derived
a
steady
,
though
certainly
a
very
moderate
income
from
the
bequest
of
his
late
brother
-
in
-
law
,
I
promised
to
do
so
.
We
then
took
leave
of
each
other
.
I
cannot
leave
him
even
now
,
without
remembering
with
a
pang
,
at
once
his
modest
fortitude
and
his
great
sorrow
.
As
to
Mrs
.
Gummidge
,
if
I
were
to
endeavour
to
describe
how
she
ran
down
the
street
by
the
side
of
the
coach
,
seeing
nothing
but
Mr
.
Peggotty
on
the
roof
,
through
the
tears
she
tried
to
repress
,
and
dashing
herself
against
the
people
who
were
coming
in
the
opposite
direction
,
I
should
enter
on
a
task
of
some
difficulty
.
Therefore
I
had
better
leave
her
sitting
on
a
baker
’
s
door
-
step
,
out
of
breath
,
with
no
shape
at
all
remaining
in
her
bonnet
,
and
one
of
her
shoes
off
,
lying
on
the
pavement
at
a
considerable
distance
.
When
we
got
to
our
journey
’
s
end
,
our
first
pursuit
was
to
look
about
for
a
little
lodging
for
Peggotty
,
where
her
brother
could
have
a
bed
.
We
were
so
fortunate
as
to
find
one
,
of
a
very
clean
and
cheap
description
,
over
a
chandler
’
s
shop
,
only
two
streets
removed
from
me
.
When
we
had
engaged
this
domicile
,
I
bought
some
cold
meat
at
an
eating
-
house
,
and
took
my
fellow
-
travellers
home
to
tea
;
a
proceeding
,
I
regret
to
state
,
which
did
not
meet
with
Mrs
.
Crupp
’
s
approval
,
but
quite
the
contrary
.
I
ought
to
observe
,
however
,
in
explanation
of
that
lady
’
s
state
of
mind
,
that
she
was
much
offended
by
Peggotty
’
s
tucking
up
her
widow
’
s
gown
before
she
had
been
ten
minutes
in
the
place
,
and
setting
to
work
to
dust
my
bedroom
.
This
Mrs
.
Crupp
regarded
in
the
light
of
a
liberty
,
and
a
liberty
,
she
said
,
was
a
thing
she
never
allowed
.
Mr
.
Peggotty
had
made
a
communication
to
me
on
the
way
to
London
for
which
I
was
not
unprepared
.
It
was
,
that
he
purposed
first
seeing
Mrs
.
Steerforth
.
As
I
felt
bound
to
assist
him
in
this
,
and
also
to
mediate
between
them
;
with
the
view
of
sparing
the
mother
’
s
feelings
as
much
as
possible
,
I
wrote
to
her
that
night
.
I
told
her
as
mildly
as
I
could
what
his
wrong
was
,
and
what
my
own
share
in
his
injury
.
I
said
he
was
a
man
in
very
common
life
,
but
of
a
most
gentle
and
upright
character
;
and
that
I
ventured
to
express
a
hope
that
she
would
not
refuse
to
see
him
in
his
heavy
trouble
.
I
mentioned
two
o
’
clock
in
the
afternoon
as
the
hour
of
our
coming
,
and
I
sent
the
letter
myself
by
the
first
coach
in
the
morning
.
At
the
appointed
time
,
we
stood
at
the
door
—
the
door
of
that
house
where
I
had
been
,
a
few
days
since
,
so
happy
:
where
my
youthful
confidence
and
warmth
of
heart
had
been
yielded
up
so
freely
:
which
was
closed
against
me
henceforth
:
which
was
now
a
waste
,
a
ruin
.
No
Littimer
appeared
.
The
pleasanter
face
which
had
replaced
his
,
on
the
occasion
of
my
last
visit
,
answered
to
our
summons
,
and
went
before
us
to
the
drawing
-
room
.
Mrs
.
Steerforth
was
sitting
there
.
Rosa
Dartle
glided
,
as
we
went
in
,
from
another
part
of
the
room
and
stood
behind
her
chair
.
I
saw
,
directly
,
in
his
mother
’
s
face
,
that
she
knew
from
himself
what
he
had
done
.
It
was
very
pale
;
and
bore
the
traces
of
deeper
emotion
than
my
letter
alone
,
weakened
by
the
doubts
her
fondness
would
have
raised
upon
it
,
would
have
been
likely
to
create
.
I
thought
her
more
like
him
than
ever
I
had
thought
her
;
and
I
felt
,
rather
than
saw
,
that
the
resemblance
was
not
lost
on
my
companion
.
She
sat
upright
in
her
arm
-
chair
,
with
a
stately
,
immovable
,
passionless
air
,
that
it
seemed
as
if
nothing
could
disturb
.
She
looked
very
steadfastly
at
Mr
.
Peggotty
when
he
stood
before
her
;
and
he
looked
quite
as
steadfastly
at
her
.
Rosa
Dartle
’
s
keen
glance
comprehended
all
of
us
.
For
some
moments
not
a
word
was
spoken
.
She
motioned
to
Mr
.
Peggotty
to
be
seated
.