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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Стр. 469/761
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‘
You
are
very
good
,
’
said
Gowan
.
‘
I
have
not
forsworn
society
since
I
joined
the
brotherhood
of
the
brush
(
the
most
delightful
fellows
on
the
face
of
the
earth
)
,
and
am
glad
enough
to
smell
the
old
fine
gunpowder
now
and
then
,
though
it
did
blow
me
into
mid
-
air
and
my
present
calling
.
You
’
ll
not
think
,
Mr
Dorrit
,
’
and
here
he
laughed
again
in
the
easiest
way
,
‘
that
I
am
lapsing
into
the
freemasonry
of
the
craft
—
for
it
’
s
not
so
;
upon
my
life
I
can
’
t
help
betraying
it
wherever
I
go
,
though
,
by
Jupiter
,
I
love
and
honour
the
craft
with
all
my
might
—
if
I
propose
a
stipulation
as
to
time
and
place
?
’
Ha
!
Mr
Dorrit
could
erect
no
—
hum
—
suspicion
of
that
kind
on
Mr
Gowan
’
s
frankness
.
‘
Again
you
are
very
good
,
’
said
Gowan
.
‘
Mr
Dorrit
,
I
hear
you
are
going
to
Rome
.
I
am
going
to
Rome
,
having
friends
there
.
Let
me
begin
to
do
you
the
injustice
I
have
conspired
to
do
you
,
there
—
not
here
.
We
shall
all
be
hurried
during
the
rest
of
our
stay
here
;
and
though
there
’
s
not
a
poorer
man
with
whole
elbows
in
Venice
,
than
myself
,
I
have
not
quite
got
all
the
Amateur
out
of
me
yet
—
comprising
the
trade
again
,
you
see
!
—
and
can
’
t
fall
on
to
order
,
in
a
hurry
,
for
the
mere
sake
of
the
sixpences
.
’
These
remarks
were
not
less
favourably
received
by
Mr
Dorrit
than
their
predecessors
.
They
were
the
prelude
to
the
first
reception
of
Mr
and
Mrs
Gowan
at
dinner
,
and
they
skilfully
placed
Gowan
on
his
usual
ground
in
the
new
family
.
His
wife
,
too
,
they
placed
on
her
usual
ground
.
Miss
Fanny
understood
,
with
particular
distinctness
,
that
Mrs
Gowan
’
s
good
looks
had
cost
her
husband
very
dear
;
that
there
had
been
a
great
disturbance
about
her
in
the
Barnacle
family
;
and
that
the
Dowager
Mrs
Gowan
,
nearly
heart
-
broken
,
had
resolutely
set
her
face
against
the
marriage
until
overpowered
by
her
maternal
feelings
.
Mrs
General
likewise
clearly
understood
that
the
attachment
had
occasioned
much
family
grief
and
dissension
.
Of
honest
Mr
Meagles
no
mention
was
made
;
except
that
it
was
natural
enough
that
a
person
of
that
sort
should
wish
to
raise
his
daughter
out
of
his
own
obscurity
,
and
that
no
one
could
blame
him
for
trying
his
best
to
do
so
.
Little
Dorrit
’
s
interest
in
the
fair
subject
of
this
easily
accepted
belief
was
too
earnest
and
watchful
to
fail
in
accurate
observation
.
She
could
see
that
it
had
its
part
in
throwing
upon
Mrs
Gowan
the
touch
of
a
shadow
under
which
she
lived
,
and
she
even
had
an
instinctive
knowledge
that
there
was
not
the
least
truth
in
it
.
But
it
had
an
influence
in
placing
obstacles
in
the
way
of
her
association
with
Mrs
Gowan
by
making
the
Prunes
and
Prism
school
excessively
polite
to
her
,
but
not
very
intimate
with
her
;
and
Little
Dorrit
,
as
an
enforced
sizar
of
that
college
,
was
obliged
to
submit
herself
humbly
to
its
ordinances
.
Nevertheless
,
there
was
a
sympathetic
understanding
already
established
between
the
two
,
which
would
have
carried
them
over
greater
difficulties
,
and
made
a
friendship
out
of
a
more
restricted
intercourse
.
As
though
accidents
were
determined
to
be
favourable
to
it
,
they
had
a
new
assurance
of
congeniality
in
the
aversion
which
each
perceived
that
the
other
felt
towards
Blandois
of
Paris
;
an
aversion
amounting
to
the
repugnance
and
horror
of
a
natural
antipathy
towards
an
odious
creature
of
the
reptile
kind
.
And
there
was
a
passive
congeniality
between
them
,
besides
this
active
one
.
To
both
of
them
,
Blandois
behaved
in
exactly
the
same
manner
;
and
to
both
of
them
his
manner
had
uniformly
something
in
it
,
which
they
both
knew
to
be
different
from
his
bearing
towards
others
.
The
difference
was
too
minute
in
its
expression
to
be
perceived
by
others
,
but
they
knew
it
to
be
there
.
A
mere
trick
of
his
evil
eyes
,
a
mere
turn
of
his
smooth
white
hand
,
a
mere
hair
’
s
-
breadth
of
addition
to
the
fall
of
his
nose
and
the
rise
of
the
moustache
in
the
most
frequent
movement
of
his
face
,
conveyed
to
both
of
them
,
equally
,
a
swagger
personal
to
themselves
.
It
was
as
if
he
had
said
,
‘
I
have
a
secret
power
in
this
quarter
.
I
know
what
I
know
.
’
This
had
never
been
felt
by
them
both
in
so
great
a
degree
,
and
never
by
each
so
perfectly
to
the
knowledge
of
the
other
,
as
on
a
day
when
he
came
to
Mr
Dorrit
’
s
to
take
his
leave
before
quitting
Venice
.
Mrs
Gowan
was
herself
there
for
the
same
purpose
,
and
he
came
upon
the
two
together
;
the
rest
of
the
family
being
out
.