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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Дэвид Копперфильд
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- Стр. 514/820
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Arrived
at
Mr
.
Wickfield
’
s
house
,
I
found
,
in
the
little
lower
room
on
the
ground
floor
,
where
Uriah
Heep
had
been
of
old
accustomed
to
sit
,
Mr
.
Micawber
plying
his
pen
with
great
assiduity
.
He
was
dressed
in
a
legal
-
looking
suit
of
black
,
and
loomed
,
burly
and
large
,
in
that
small
office
.
Mr
.
Micawber
was
extremely
glad
to
see
me
,
but
a
little
confused
too
.
He
would
have
conducted
me
immediately
into
the
presence
of
Uriah
,
but
I
declined
.
‘
I
know
the
house
of
old
,
you
recollect
,
’
said
I
,
‘
and
will
find
my
way
upstairs
.
How
do
you
like
the
law
,
Mr
.
Micawber
?
’
‘
My
dear
Copperfield
,
’
he
replied
.
‘
To
a
man
possessed
of
the
higher
imaginative
powers
,
the
objection
to
legal
studies
is
the
amount
of
detail
which
they
involve
.
Even
in
our
professional
correspondence
,
’
said
Mr
.
Micawber
,
glancing
at
some
letters
he
was
writing
,
‘
the
mind
is
not
at
liberty
to
soar
to
any
exalted
form
of
expression
.
Still
,
it
is
a
great
pursuit
.
A
great
pursuit
!
’
He
then
told
me
that
he
had
become
the
tenant
of
Uriah
Heep
’
s
old
house
;
and
that
Mrs
.
Micawber
would
be
delighted
to
receive
me
,
once
more
,
under
her
own
roof
.
‘
It
is
humble
,
’
said
Mr
.
Micawber
,
‘
-
to
quote
a
favourite
expression
of
my
friend
Heep
;
but
it
may
prove
the
stepping
-
stone
to
more
ambitious
domiciliary
accommodation
.
’
I
asked
him
whether
he
had
reason
,
so
far
,
to
be
satisfied
with
his
friend
Heep
’
s
treatment
of
him
?
He
got
up
to
ascertain
if
the
door
were
close
shut
,
before
he
replied
,
in
a
lower
voice
:
‘
My
dear
Copperfield
,
a
man
who
labours
under
the
pressure
of
pecuniary
embarrassments
,
is
,
with
the
generality
of
people
,
at
a
disadvantage
.
That
disadvantage
is
not
diminished
,
when
that
pressure
necessitates
the
drawing
of
stipendiary
emoluments
,
before
those
emoluments
are
strictly
due
and
payable
.
All
I
can
say
is
,
that
my
friend
Heep
has
responded
to
appeals
to
which
I
need
not
more
particularly
refer
,
in
a
manner
calculated
to
redound
equally
to
the
honour
of
his
head
,
and
of
his
heart
.
’