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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Дэвид Копперфильд
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- Стр. 652/820
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‘
I
entreat
Mr
.
Traddles
to
bear
with
me
in
entering
into
these
details
.
Without
them
,
Mr
.
T
.
would
indeed
find
it
difficult
to
form
the
faintest
conception
of
my
heart
-
rending
situation
.
‘
May
I
now
venture
to
confide
to
Mr
.
T
.
the
purport
of
my
letter
?
Will
he
now
allow
me
to
throw
myself
on
his
friendly
consideration
?
Oh
yes
,
for
I
know
his
heart
!
‘
The
quick
eye
of
affection
is
not
easily
blinded
,
when
of
the
female
sex
.
Mr
.
Micawber
is
going
to
London
.
Though
he
studiously
concealed
his
hand
,
this
morning
before
breakfast
,
in
writing
the
direction
-
card
which
he
attached
to
the
little
brown
valise
of
happier
days
,
the
eagle
-
glance
of
matrimonial
anxiety
detected
,
d
,
o
,
n
,
distinctly
traced
.
The
West
-
End
destination
of
the
coach
,
is
the
Golden
Cross
.
Dare
I
fervently
implore
Mr
.
T
.
to
see
my
misguided
husband
,
and
to
reason
with
him
?
Dare
I
ask
Mr
.
T
.
to
endeavour
to
step
in
between
Mr
.
Micawber
and
his
agonized
family
?
Oh
no
,
for
that
would
be
too
much
!
‘
If
Mr
.
Copperfield
should
yet
remember
one
unknown
to
fame
,
will
Mr
.
T
.
take
charge
of
my
unalterable
regards
and
similar
entreaties
?
In
any
case
,
he
will
have
the
benevolence
to
consider
this
communication
strictly
private
,
and
on
no
account
whatever
to
be
alluded
to
,
however
distantly
,
in
the
presence
of
Mr
.
Micawber
.
If
Mr
.
T
.
should
ever
reply
to
it
(
which
I
cannot
but
feel
to
be
most
improbable
)
,
a
letter
addressed
to
M
.
E
.
,
Post
Office
,
Canterbury
,
will
be
fraught
with
less
painful
consequences
than
any
addressed
immediately
to
one
,
who
subscribes
herself
,
in
extreme
distress
,
‘
Mr
.
Thomas
Traddles
’
s
respectful
friend
and
suppliant
,
‘
EMMA
MICAWBER
.
’
‘
What
do
you
think
of
that
letter
?
’
said
Traddles
,
casting
his
eyes
upon
me
,
when
I
had
read
it
twice
.
‘
What
do
you
think
of
the
other
?
’
said
I
.
For
he
was
still
reading
it
with
knitted
brows
.
‘
I
think
that
the
two
together
,
Copperfield
,
’
replied
Traddles
,
‘
mean
more
than
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
Micawber
usually
mean
in
their
correspondence
—
but
I
don
’
t
know
what
.
They
are
both
written
in
good
faith
,
I
have
no
doubt
,
and
without
any
collusion
.
Poor
thing
!
’
he
was
now
alluding
to
Mrs
.
Micawber
’
s
letter
,
and
we
were
standing
side
by
side
comparing
the
two
;
‘
it
will
be
a
charity
to
write
to
her
,
at
all
events
,
and
tell
her
that
we
will
not
fail
to
see
Mr
.
Micawber
.