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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Крошка Доррит
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- Стр. 601/761
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‘
To
be
sure
it
was
in
the
open
street
,
’
she
observed
,
after
a
few
moments
of
less
and
less
angry
reflection
.
‘
Fifty
people
might
have
seen
it
.
It
would
have
signified
nothing
if
they
had
.
’
‘
Nor
do
I
make
my
having
seen
it
of
any
moment
,
nor
(
otherwise
than
as
an
explanation
of
my
coming
here
)
do
I
connect
my
visit
with
it
or
the
favour
that
I
have
to
ask
.
’
‘
Oh
!
You
have
to
ask
a
favour
!
It
occurred
to
me
,
’
and
the
handsome
face
looked
bitterly
at
him
,
‘
that
your
manner
was
softened
,
Mr
Clennam
.
’
He
was
content
to
protest
against
this
by
a
slight
action
without
contesting
it
in
words
.
He
then
referred
to
Blandois
’
disappearance
,
of
which
it
was
probable
she
had
heard
?
However
probable
it
was
to
him
,
she
had
heard
of
no
such
thing
.
Let
him
look
round
him
(
she
said
)
and
judge
for
himself
what
general
intelligence
was
likely
to
reach
the
ears
of
a
woman
who
had
been
shut
up
there
while
it
was
rife
,
devouring
her
own
heart
.
When
she
had
uttered
this
denial
,
which
he
believed
to
be
true
,
she
asked
him
what
he
meant
by
disappearance
?
That
led
to
his
narrating
the
circumstances
in
detail
,
and
expressing
something
of
his
anxiety
to
discover
what
had
really
become
of
the
man
,
and
to
repel
the
dark
suspicions
that
clouded
about
his
mother
’
s
house
.
She
heard
him
with
evident
surprise
,
and
with
more
marks
of
suppressed
interest
than
he
had
seen
in
her
;
still
they
did
not
overcome
her
distant
,
proud
,
and
self
-
secluded
manner
.
When
he
had
finished
,
she
said
nothing
but
these
words
:
‘
You
have
not
yet
told
me
,
sir
,
what
I
have
to
do
with
it
,
or
what
the
favour
is
?
Will
you
be
so
good
as
come
to
that
?
’
‘
I
assume
,
’
said
Arthur
,
persevering
,
in
his
endeavour
to
soften
her
scornful
demeanour
,
‘
that
being
in
communication
—
may
I
say
,
confidential
communication
?
—
with
this
person
—
’
‘
You
may
say
,
of
course
,
whatever
you
like
,
’
she
remarked
;
‘
but
I
do
not
subscribe
to
your
assumptions
,
Mr
Clennam
,
or
to
any
one
’
s
.
’
‘
—
that
being
,
at
least
in
personal
communication
with
him
,
’
said
Clennam
,
changing
the
form
of
his
position
in
the
hope
of
making
it
unobjectionable
,
‘
you
can
tell
me
something
of
his
antecedents
,
pursuits
,
habits
,
usual
place
of
residence
.
Can
give
me
some
little
clue
by
which
to
seek
him
out
in
the
likeliest
manner
,
and
either
produce
him
,
or
establish
what
has
become
of
him
.
This
is
the
favour
I
ask
,
and
I
ask
it
in
a
distress
of
mind
for
which
I
hope
you
will
feel
some
consideration
.
If
you
should
have
any
reason
for
imposing
conditions
upon
me
,
I
will
respect
it
without
asking
what
it
is
.
’
‘
You
chanced
to
see
me
in
the
street
with
the
man
,
’
she
observed
,
after
being
,
to
his
mortification
,
evidently
more
occupied
with
her
own
reflections
on
the
matter
than
with
his
appeal
.
‘
Then
you
knew
the
man
before
?
’