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- Авторы
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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Дэвид Копперфильд
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- Стр. 719/820
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My
aunt
,
very
pale
,
and
with
deep
lines
in
her
face
,
sat
immovable
until
I
had
finished
;
when
some
stray
tears
found
their
way
to
her
cheeks
,
and
she
put
her
hand
on
mine
.
‘
It
’
s
nothing
,
Trot
;
it
’
s
nothing
.
There
will
be
no
more
of
it
.
You
shall
know
by
and
by
.
Now
Agnes
,
my
dear
,
let
us
attend
to
these
affairs
.
’
‘
I
must
do
Mr
.
Micawber
the
justice
to
say
,
’
Traddles
began
,
‘
that
although
he
would
appear
not
to
have
worked
to
any
good
account
for
himself
,
he
is
a
most
untiring
man
when
he
works
for
other
people
.
I
never
saw
such
a
fellow
.
If
he
always
goes
on
in
the
same
way
,
he
must
be
,
virtually
,
about
two
hundred
years
old
,
at
present
.
The
heat
into
which
he
has
been
continually
putting
himself
;
and
the
distracted
and
impetuous
manner
in
which
he
has
been
diving
,
day
and
night
,
among
papers
and
books
;
to
say
nothing
of
the
immense
number
of
letters
he
has
written
me
between
this
house
and
Mr
.
Wickfield
’
s
,
and
often
across
the
table
when
he
has
been
sitting
opposite
,
and
might
much
more
easily
have
spoken
;
is
quite
extraordinary
.
’
‘
Letters
!
’
cried
my
aunt
.
‘
I
believe
he
dreams
in
letters
!
’
‘
There
’
s
Mr
.
Dick
,
too
,
’
said
Traddles
,
‘
has
been
doing
wonders
!
As
soon
as
he
was
released
from
overlooking
Uriah
Heep
,
whom
he
kept
in
such
charge
as
I
never
saw
exceeded
,
he
began
to
devote
himself
to
Mr
.
Wickfield
.
And
really
his
anxiety
to
be
of
use
in
the
investigations
we
have
been
making
,
and
his
real
usefulness
in
extracting
,
and
copying
,
and
fetching
,
and
carrying
,
have
been
quite
stimulating
to
us
.
’
‘
Dick
is
a
very
remarkable
man
,
’
exclaimed
my
aunt
;
‘
and
I
always
said
he
was
.
Trot
,
you
know
it
.
’
‘
I
am
happy
to
say
,
Miss
Wickfield
,
’
pursued
Traddles
,
at
once
with
great
delicacy
and
with
great
earnestness
,
‘
that
in
your
absence
Mr
.
Wickfield
has
considerably
improved
.
Relieved
of
the
incubus
that
had
fastened
upon
him
for
so
long
a
time
,
and
of
the
dreadful
apprehensions
under
which
he
had
lived
,
he
is
hardly
the
same
person
.
At
times
,
even
his
impaired
power
of
concentrating
his
memory
and
attention
on
particular
points
of
business
,
has
recovered
itself
very
much
;
and
he
has
been
able
to
assist
us
in
making
some
things
clear
,
that
we
should
have
found
very
difficult
indeed
,
if
not
hopeless
,
without
him
.
But
what
I
have
to
do
is
to
come
to
results
;
which
are
short
enough
;
not
to
gossip
on
all
the
hopeful
circumstances
I
have
observed
,
or
I
shall
never
have
done
.
’
His
natural
manner
and
agreeable
simplicity
made
it
transparent
that
he
said
this
to
put
us
in
good
heart
,
and
to
enable
Agnes
to
hear
her
father
mentioned
with
greater
confidence
;
but
it
was
not
the
less
pleasant
for
that
.
‘
Now
,
let
me
see
,
’
said
Traddles
,
looking
among
the
papers
on
the
table
.
‘
Having
counted
our
funds
,
and
reduced
to
order
a
great
mass
of
unintentional
confusion
in
the
first
place
,
and
of
wilful
confusion
and
falsification
in
the
second
,
we
take
it
to
be
clear
that
Mr
.
Wickfield
might
now
wind
up
his
business
,
and
his
agency
-
trust
,
and
exhibit
no
deficiency
or
defalcation
whatever
.
’