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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Крошка Доррит
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- Стр. 488/761
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‘
You
find
it
so
yourself
,
sir
,
I
’
ll
be
bold
to
say
,
’
said
Mrs
Tickit
,
‘
and
we
all
find
it
so
.
It
an
’
t
our
stations
in
life
that
changes
us
,
Mr
Clennam
;
thoughts
is
free
!
—
As
I
was
saying
,
I
was
thinking
of
one
thing
and
thinking
of
another
,
and
thinking
very
much
of
the
family
.
Not
of
the
family
in
the
present
times
only
,
but
in
the
past
times
too
.
For
when
a
person
does
begin
thinking
of
one
thing
and
thinking
of
another
in
that
manner
,
as
it
’
s
getting
dark
,
what
I
say
is
,
that
all
times
seem
to
be
present
,
and
a
person
must
get
out
of
that
state
and
consider
before
they
can
say
which
is
which
.
’
He
nodded
again
;
afraid
to
utter
a
word
,
lest
it
should
present
any
new
opening
to
Mrs
Tickit
’
s
conversational
powers
.
‘
In
consequence
of
which
,
’
said
Mrs
Tickit
,
‘
when
I
quivered
my
eyes
and
saw
her
actual
form
and
figure
looking
in
at
the
gate
,
I
let
them
close
again
without
so
much
as
starting
,
for
that
actual
form
and
figure
came
so
pat
to
the
time
when
it
belonged
to
the
house
as
much
as
mine
or
your
own
,
that
I
never
thought
at
the
moment
of
its
having
gone
away
.
But
,
sir
,
when
I
quivered
my
eyes
again
,
and
saw
that
it
wasn
’
t
there
,
then
it
all
flooded
upon
me
with
a
fright
,
and
I
jumped
up
.
’
‘
You
ran
out
directly
?
’
said
Clennam
.
‘
I
ran
out
,
’
assented
Mrs
Tickit
,
‘
as
fast
as
ever
my
feet
would
carry
me
;
and
if
you
’
ll
credit
it
,
Mr
Clennam
,
there
wasn
’
t
in
the
whole
shining
Heavens
,
no
not
so
much
as
a
finger
of
that
young
woman
.
’
Passing
over
the
absence
from
the
firmament
of
this
novel
constellation
,
Arthur
inquired
of
Mrs
Tickit
if
she
herself
went
beyond
the
gate
?
‘
Went
to
and
fro
,
and
high
and
low
,
’
said
Mrs
Tickit
,
‘
and
saw
no
sign
of
her
!
’
He
then
asked
Mrs
Tickit
how
long
a
space
of
time
she
supposed
there
might
have
been
between
the
two
sets
of
ocular
quiverings
she
had
experienced
?
Mrs
Tickit
,
though
minutely
circumstantial
in
her
reply
,
had
no
settled
opinion
between
five
seconds
and
ten
minutes
.
She
was
so
plainly
at
sea
on
this
part
of
the
case
,
and
had
so
clearly
been
startled
out
of
slumber
,
that
Clennam
was
much
disposed
to
regard
the
appearance
as
a
dream
.
Without
hurting
Mrs
Tickit
’
s
feelings
with
that
infidel
solution
of
her
mystery
,
he
took
it
away
from
the
cottage
with
him
;
and
probably
would
have
retained
it
ever
afterwards
if
a
circumstance
had
not
soon
happened
to
change
his
opinion
.
He
was
passing
at
nightfall
along
the
Strand
,
and
the
lamp
-
lighter
was
going
on
before
him
,
under
whose
hand
the
street
-
lamps
,
blurred
by
the
foggy
air
,
burst
out
one
after
another
,
like
so
many
blazing
sunflowers
coming
into
full
-
blow
all
at
once
,
—
when
a
stoppage
on
the
pavement
,
caused
by
a
train
of
coal
-
waggons
toiling
up
from
the
wharves
at
the
river
-
side
,
brought
him
to
a
stand
-
still
.
He
had
been
walking
quickly
,
and
going
with
some
current
of
thought
,
and
the
sudden
check
given
to
both
operations
caused
him
to
look
freshly
about
him
,
as
people
under
such
circumstances
usually
do
.