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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Крошка Доррит
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- Стр. 534/761
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‘
Well
,
well
,
well
!
’
returned
Arthur
.
‘
Enough
for
to
-
night
.
’
‘
One
word
more
,
Mr
Clennam
,
’
retorted
Pancks
,
‘
and
then
enough
for
to
-
night
.
Why
should
you
leave
all
the
gains
to
the
gluttons
,
knaves
,
and
impostors
?
Why
should
you
leave
all
the
gains
that
are
to
be
got
to
my
proprietor
and
the
like
of
him
?
Yet
you
’
re
always
doing
it
.
When
I
say
you
,
I
mean
such
men
as
you
.
You
know
you
are
.
Why
,
I
see
it
every
day
of
my
life
.
I
see
nothing
else
.
It
’
s
my
business
to
see
it
.
Therefore
I
say
,
’
urged
Pancks
,
‘
Go
in
and
win
!
’
‘
But
what
of
Go
in
and
lose
?
’
said
Arthur
.
‘
Can
’
t
be
done
,
sir
,
’
returned
Pancks
.
‘
I
have
looked
into
it
.
Name
up
everywhere
—
immense
resources
—
enormous
capital
—
great
position
—
high
connection
—
government
influence
.
Can
’
t
be
done
!
’
Gradually
,
after
this
closing
exposition
,
Mr
Pancks
subsided
;
allowed
his
hair
to
droop
as
much
as
it
ever
would
droop
on
the
utmost
persuasion
;
reclaimed
the
pipe
from
the
fire
-
irons
,
filled
it
anew
,
and
smoked
it
out
.
They
said
little
more
;
but
were
company
to
one
another
in
silently
pursuing
the
same
subjects
,
and
did
not
part
until
midnight
.
On
taking
his
leave
,
Mr
Pancks
,
when
he
had
shaken
hands
with
Clennam
,
worked
completely
round
him
before
he
steamed
out
at
the
door
.
This
,
Arthur
received
as
an
assurance
that
he
might
implicitly
rely
on
Pancks
,
if
he
ever
should
come
to
need
assistance
;
either
in
any
of
the
matters
of
which
they
had
spoken
that
night
,
or
any
other
subject
that
could
in
any
way
affect
himself
.
At
intervals
all
next
day
,
and
even
while
his
attention
was
fixed
on
other
things
,
he
thought
of
Mr
Pancks
’
s
investment
of
his
thousand
pounds
,
and
of
his
having
‘
looked
into
it
.
’
He
thought
of
Mr
Pancks
’
s
being
so
sanguine
in
this
matter
,
and
of
his
not
being
usually
of
a
sanguine
character
.
He
thought
of
the
great
National
Department
,
and
of
the
delight
it
would
be
to
him
to
see
Doyce
better
off
.
He
thought
of
the
darkly
threatening
place
that
went
by
the
name
of
Home
in
his
remembrance
,
and
of
the
gathering
shadows
which
made
it
yet
more
darkly
threatening
than
of
old
.
He
observed
anew
that
wherever
he
went
,
he
saw
,
or
heard
,
or
touched
,
the
celebrated
name
of
Merdle
;
he
found
it
difficult
even
to
remain
at
his
desk
a
couple
of
hours
,
without
having
it
presented
to
one
of
his
bodily
senses
through
some
agency
or
other
.
He
began
to
think
it
was
curious
too
that
it
should
be
everywhere
,
and
that
nobody
but
he
should
seem
to
have
any
mistrust
of
it
.
Though
indeed
he
began
to
remember
,
when
he
got
to
this
,
even
he
did
not
mistrust
it
;
he
had
only
happened
to
keep
aloof
from
it
Such
symptoms
,
when
a
disease
of
the
kind
is
rife
,
are
usually
the
signs
of
sickening
.
When
it
became
known
to
the
Britons
on
the
shore
of
the
yellow
Tiber
that
their
intelligent
compatriot
,
Mr
Sparkler
,
was
made
one
of
the
Lords
of
their
Circumlocution
Office
,
they
took
it
as
a
piece
of
news
with
which
they
had
no
nearer
concern
than
with
any
other
piece
of
news
—
any
other
Accident
or
Offence
—
in
the
English
papers
.
Some
laughed
;
some
said
,
by
way
of
complete
excuse
,
that
the
post
was
virtually
a
sinecure
,
and
any
fool
who
could
spell
his
name
was
good
enough
for
it
;
some
,
and
these
the
more
solemn
political
oracles
,
said
that
Decimus
did
wisely
to
strengthen
himself
,
and
that
the
sole
constitutional
purpose
of
all
places
within
the
gift
of
Decimus
,
was
,
that
Decimus
should
strengthen
himself
.
A
few
bilious
Britons
there
were
who
would
not
subscribe
to
this
article
of
faith
;
but
their
objection
was
purely
theoretical
.
In
a
practical
point
of
view
,
they
listlessly
abandoned
the
matter
,
as
being
the
business
of
some
other
Britons
unknown
,
somewhere
,
or
nowhere
.
In
like
manner
,
at
home
,
great
numbers
of
Britons
maintained
,
for
as
long
as
four
-
and
-
twenty
consecutive
hours
,
that
those
invisible
and
anonymous
Britons
‘
ought
to
take
it
up
;
’
and
that
if
they
quietly
acquiesced
in
it
,
they
deserved
it
.
But
of
what
class
the
remiss
Britons
were
composed
,
and
where
the
unlucky
creatures
hid
themselves
,
and
why
they
hid
themselves
,
and
how
it
constantly
happened
that
they
neglected
their
interests
,
when
so
many
other
Britons
were
quite
at
a
loss
to
account
for
their
not
looking
after
those
interests
,
was
not
,
either
upon
the
shore
of
the
yellow
Tiber
or
the
shore
of
the
black
Thames
,
made
apparent
to
men
.
Mrs
Merdle
circulated
the
news
,
as
she
received
congratulations
on
it
,
with
a
careless
grace
that
displayed
it
to
advantage
,
as
the
setting
displays
the
jewel
.
Yes
,
she
said
,
Edmund
had
taken
the
place
.
Mr
Merdle
wished
him
to
take
it
,
and
he
had
taken
it
.
She
hoped
Edmund
might
like
it
,
but
really
she
didn
’
t
know
.
It
would
keep
him
in
town
a
good
deal
,
and
he
preferred
the
country
.
Still
,
it
was
not
a
disagreeable
position
—
and
it
was
a
position
.
There
was
no
denying
that
the
thing
was
a
compliment
to
Mr
Merdle
,
and
was
not
a
bad
thing
for
Edmund
if
he
liked
it
.
It
was
just
as
well
that
he
should
have
something
to
do
,
and
it
was
just
as
well
that
he
should
have
something
for
doing
it
.
Whether
it
would
be
more
agreeable
to
Edmund
than
the
army
,
remained
to
be
seen
.