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- Чарльз Диккенс
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Childers
politely
betook
himself
,
with
his
equestrian
walk
,
to
the
landing
outside
the
door
,
and
there
stood
stroking
his
face
,
and
softly
whistling
.
While
thus
engaged
,
he
overheard
such
phrases
in
Mr.
Bounderby
's
voice
as
'
No
.
I
say
no
.
I
advise
you
not
.
I
say
by
no
means
.
'
While
,
from
Mr.
Gradgrind
,
he
heard
in
his
much
lower
tone
the
words
,
'
But
even
as
an
example
to
Louisa
,
of
what
this
pursuit
which
has
been
the
subject
of
a
vulgar
curiosity
,
leads
to
and
ends
in
.
Think
of
it
,
Bounderby
,
in
that
point
of
view
.
'
Meanwhile
,
the
various
members
of
Sleary
's
company
gradually
gathered
together
from
the
upper
regions
,
where
they
were
quartered
,
and
,
from
standing
about
,
talking
in
low
voices
to
one
another
and
to
Mr.
Childers
,
gradually
insinuated
themselves
and
him
into
the
room
.
There
were
two
or
three
handsome
young
women
among
them
,
with
their
two
or
three
husbands
,
and
their
two
or
three
mothers
,
and
their
eight
or
nine
little
children
,
who
did
the
fairy
business
when
required
.
The
father
of
one
of
the
families
was
in
the
habit
of
balancing
the
father
of
another
of
the
families
on
the
top
of
a
great
pole
;
the
father
of
a
third
family
often
made
a
pyramid
of
both
those
fathers
,
with
Master
Kidderminster
for
the
apex
,
and
himself
for
the
base
;
all
the
fathers
could
dance
upon
rolling
casks
,
stand
upon
bottles
,
catch
knives
and
balls
,
twirl
hand-basins
,
ride
upon
anything
,
jump
over
everything
,
and
stick
at
nothing
.
All
the
mothers
could
(
and
did
)
dance
,
upon
the
slack
wire
and
the
tight-rope
,
and
perform
rapid
acts
on
bare-backed
steeds
;
none
of
them
were
at
all
particular
in
respect
of
showing
their
legs
;
and
one
of
them
,
alone
in
a
Greek
chariot
,
drove
six
in
hand
into
every
town
they
came
to
.
They
all
assumed
to
be
mighty
rakish
and
knowing
,
they
were
not
very
tidy
in
their
private
dresses
,
they
were
not
at
all
orderly
in
their
domestic
arrangements
,
and
the
combined
literature
of
the
whole
company
would
have
produced
but
a
poor
letter
on
any
subject
.
Yet
there
was
a
remarkable
gentleness
and
childishness
about
these
people
,
a
special
inaptitude
for
any
kind
of
sharp
practice
,
and
an
untiring
readiness
to
help
and
pity
one
another
,
deserving
often
of
as
much
respect
,
and
always
of
as
much
generous
construction
,
as
the
every-day
virtues
of
any
class
of
people
in
the
world
.
Last
of
all
appeared
Mr.
Sleary
:
a
stout
man
as
already
mentioned
,
with
one
fixed
eye
,
and
one
loose
eye
,
a
voice
(
if
it
can
be
called
so
)
like
the
efforts
of
a
broken
old
pair
of
bellows
,
a
flabby
surface
,
and
a
muddled
head
which
was
never
sober
and
never
drunk
.
'
Thquire
!
'
said
Mr.
Sleary
,
who
was
troubled
with
asthma
,
and
whose
breath
came
far
too
thick
and
heavy
for
the
letter
s
,
'
Your
thervant
!
Thith
ith
a
bad
piethe
of
bithnith
,
thith
ith
.
You
've
heard
of
my
Clown
and
hith
dog
being
thuppothed
to
have
morrithed
?
'
He
addressed
Mr.
Gradgrind
,
who
answered
'
Yes
.
'
'
Well
,
Thquire
,
'
he
returned
,
taking
off
his
hat
,
and
rubbing
the
lining
with
his
pocket-handkerchief
,
which
he
kept
inside
for
the
purpose
.
'
Ith
it
your
intenthion
to
do
anything
for
the
poor
girl
,
Thquire
?
'
'
I
shall
have
something
to
propose
to
her
when
she
comes
back
,
'
said
Mr.
Gradgrind
.
'
Glad
to
hear
it
,
Thquire
.
Not
that
I
want
to
get
rid
of
the
child
,
any
more
than
I
want
to
thtand
in
her
way
.
I
'm
willing
to
take
her
prentith
,
though
at
her
age
ith
late
.
My
voithe
ith
a
little
huthky
,
Thquire
,
and
not
eathy
heard
by
them
ath
do
n't
know
me
;
but
if
you
'd
been
chilled
and
heated
,
heated
and
chilled
,
chilled
and
heated
in
the
ring
when
you
wath
young
,
ath
often
ath
I
have
been
,
your
voithe
would
n't
have
lathted
out
,
Thquire
,
no
more
than
mine
.
'