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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Крошка Доррит
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- Стр. 467/761
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’
‘
Upon
my
word
,
my
dear
,
’
rejoined
that
young
lady
with
exceeding
indifference
,
‘
I
wouldn
’
t
positively
answer
even
for
that
.
There
’
s
no
knowing
what
might
happen
.
Especially
as
I
should
have
many
opportunities
,
afterwards
,
of
treating
that
woman
,
his
mother
,
in
her
own
style
.
Which
I
most
decidedly
should
not
be
slow
to
avail
myself
of
,
Amy
.
’
No
more
passed
between
the
sisters
then
;
but
what
had
passed
gave
the
two
subjects
of
Mrs
General
and
Mr
Sparkler
great
prominence
in
Little
Dorrit
’
s
mind
,
and
thenceforth
she
thought
very
much
of
both
.
Mrs
General
,
having
long
ago
formed
her
own
surface
to
such
perfection
that
it
hid
whatever
was
below
it
(
if
anything
)
,
no
observation
was
to
be
made
in
that
quarter
.
Mr
Dorrit
was
undeniably
very
polite
to
her
and
had
a
high
opinion
of
her
;
but
Fanny
,
impetuous
at
most
times
,
might
easily
be
wrong
for
all
that
.
Whereas
,
the
Sparkler
question
was
on
the
different
footing
that
any
one
could
see
what
was
going
on
there
,
and
Little
Dorrit
saw
it
and
pondered
on
it
with
many
doubts
and
wonderings
.
The
devotion
of
Mr
Sparkler
was
only
to
be
equalled
by
the
caprice
and
cruelty
of
his
enslaver
.
Sometimes
she
would
prefer
him
to
such
distinction
of
notice
,
that
he
would
chuckle
aloud
with
joy
;
next
day
,
or
next
hour
,
she
would
overlook
him
so
completely
,
and
drop
him
into
such
an
abyss
of
obscurity
,
that
he
would
groan
under
a
weak
pretence
of
coughing
.
The
constancy
of
his
attendance
never
touched
Fanny
:
though
he
was
so
inseparable
from
Edward
,
that
,
when
that
gentleman
wished
for
a
change
of
society
,
he
was
under
the
irksome
necessity
of
gliding
out
like
a
conspirator
in
disguised
boats
and
by
secret
doors
and
back
ways
;
though
he
was
so
solicitous
to
know
how
Mr
Dorrit
was
,
that
he
called
every
other
day
to
inquire
,
as
if
Mr
Dorrit
were
the
prey
of
an
intermittent
fever
;
though
he
was
so
constantly
being
paddled
up
and
down
before
the
principal
windows
,
that
he
might
have
been
supposed
to
have
made
a
wager
for
a
large
stake
to
be
paddled
a
thousand
miles
in
a
thousand
hours
;
though
whenever
the
gondola
of
his
mistress
left
the
gate
,
the
gondola
of
Mr
Sparkler
shot
out
from
some
watery
ambush
and
gave
chase
,
as
if
she
were
a
fair
smuggler
and
he
a
custom
-
house
officer
.
It
was
probably
owing
to
this
fortification
of
the
natural
strength
of
his
constitution
with
so
much
exposure
to
the
air
,
and
the
salt
sea
,
that
Mr
Sparkler
did
not
pine
outwardly
;
but
,
whatever
the
cause
,
he
was
so
far
from
having
any
prospect
of
moving
his
mistress
by
a
languishing
state
of
health
,
that
he
grew
bluffer
every
day
,
and
that
peculiarity
in
his
appearance
of
seeming
rather
a
swelled
boy
than
a
young
man
,
became
developed
to
an
extraordinary
degree
of
ruddy
puffiness
.
Blandois
calling
to
pay
his
respects
,
Mr
Dorrit
received
him
with
affability
as
the
friend
of
Mr
Gowan
,
and
mentioned
to
him
his
idea
of
commissioning
Mr
Gowan
to
transmit
him
to
posterity
.
Blandois
highly
extolling
it
,
it
occurred
to
Mr
Dorrit
that
it
might
be
agreeable
to
Blandois
to
communicate
to
his
friend
the
great
opportunity
reserved
for
him
.
Blandois
accepted
the
commission
with
his
own
free
elegance
of
manner
,
and
swore
he
would
discharge
it
before
he
was
an
hour
older
.
On
his
imparting
the
news
to
Gowan
,
that
Master
gave
Mr
Dorrit
to
the
Devil
with
great
liberality
some
round
dozen
of
times
(
for
he
resented
patronage
almost
as
much
as
he
resented
the
want
of
it
)
,
and
was
inclined
to
quarrel
with
his
friend
for
bringing
him
the
message
.
‘
It
may
be
a
defect
in
my
mental
vision
,
Blandois
,
’
said
he
,
‘
but
may
I
die
if
I
see
what
you
have
to
do
with
this
.
’
‘
Death
of
my
life
,
’
replied
Blandois
,
‘
nor
I
neither
,
except
that
I
thought
I
was
serving
my
friend
.
’