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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Крошка Доррит
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- Стр. 475/761
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‘
A
totally
uneducated
one
,
I
am
sorry
to
add
,
’
said
Clennam
.
‘
I
don
’
t
know
that
,
’
returned
Doyce
,
‘
and
I
wouldn
’
t
have
you
say
that
.
No
man
of
sense
who
has
been
generally
improved
,
and
has
improved
himself
,
can
be
called
quite
uneducated
as
to
anything
.
I
don
’
t
particularly
favour
mysteries
.
I
would
as
soon
,
on
a
fair
and
clear
explanation
,
be
judged
by
one
class
of
man
as
another
,
provided
he
had
the
qualification
I
have
named
.
’
‘
At
all
events
,
’
said
Clennam
—
‘
this
sounds
as
if
we
were
exchanging
compliments
,
but
we
know
we
are
not
—
I
shall
have
the
advantage
of
as
plain
an
explanation
as
can
be
given
.
’
‘
Well
!
’
said
Daniel
,
in
his
steady
even
way
,
‘
I
’
ll
try
to
make
it
so
.
’
He
had
the
power
,
often
to
be
found
in
union
with
such
a
character
,
of
explaining
what
he
himself
perceived
,
and
meant
,
with
the
direct
force
and
distinctness
with
which
it
struck
his
own
mind
.
His
manner
of
demonstration
was
so
orderly
and
neat
and
simple
,
that
it
was
not
easy
to
mistake
him
.
There
was
something
almost
ludicrous
in
the
complete
irreconcilability
of
a
vague
conventional
notion
that
he
must
be
a
visionary
man
,
with
the
precise
,
sagacious
travelling
of
his
eye
and
thumb
over
the
plans
,
their
patient
stoppages
at
particular
points
,
their
careful
returns
to
other
points
whence
little
channels
of
explanation
had
to
be
traced
up
,
and
his
steady
manner
of
making
everything
good
and
everything
sound
at
each
important
stage
,
before
taking
his
hearer
on
a
line
’
s
-
breadth
further
.
His
dismissal
of
himself
from
his
description
,
was
hardly
less
remarkable
.
He
never
said
,
I
discovered
this
adaptation
or
invented
that
combination
;
but
showed
the
whole
thing
as
if
the
Divine
artificer
had
made
it
,
and
he
had
happened
to
find
it
;
so
modest
he
was
about
it
,
such
a
pleasant
touch
of
respect
was
mingled
with
his
quiet
admiration
of
it
,
and
so
calmly
convinced
he
was
that
it
was
established
on
irrefragable
laws
.
Not
only
that
evening
,
but
for
several
succeeding
evenings
,
Clennam
was
quite
charmed
by
this
investigation
.
The
more
he
pursued
it
,
and
the
oftener
he
glanced
at
the
grey
head
bending
over
it
,
and
the
shrewd
eye
kindling
with
pleasure
in
it
and
love
of
it
—
instrument
for
probing
his
heart
though
it
had
been
made
for
twelve
long
years
—
the
less
he
could
reconcile
it
to
his
younger
energy
to
let
it
go
without
one
effort
more
.
At
length
he
said
:
‘
Doyce
,
it
came
to
this
at
last
—
that
the
business
was
to
be
sunk
with
Heaven
knows
how
many
more
wrecks
,
or
begun
all
over
again
?
’
‘
Yes
,
’
returned
Doyce
,
‘
that
’
s
what
the
noblemen
and
gentlemen
made
of
it
after
a
dozen
years
.
’
‘
And
pretty
fellows
too
!
’
said
Clennam
,
bitterly
.