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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Оливер Твист
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'
Well
,
Oliver
,
'
said
Sowerberry
,
as
they
walked
home
,
'
how
do
you
like
it
?
'
'
Pretty
well
,
thank
you
,
sir
'
replied
Oliver
,
with
considerable
hesitation
.
'
Not
very
much
,
sir
.
'
'
Ah
,
you
'll
get
used
to
it
in
time
,
Oliver
,
'
said
Sowerberry
.
'
Nothing
when
you
ARE
used
to
it
,
my
boy
.
'
Oliver
wondered
,
in
his
own
mind
,
whether
it
had
taken
a
very
long
time
to
get
Mr.
Sowerberry
used
to
it
.
But
he
thought
it
better
not
to
ask
the
question
;
and
walked
back
to
the
shop
:
thinking
over
all
he
had
seen
and
heard
.
The
month
's
trial
over
,
Oliver
was
formally
apprenticed
.
It
was
a
nice
sickly
season
just
at
this
time
.
In
commercial
phrase
,
coffins
were
looking
up
;
and
,
in
the
course
of
a
few
weeks
,
Oliver
acquired
a
great
deal
of
experience
.
The
success
of
Mr.
Sowerberry
's
ingenious
speculation
,
exceeded
even
his
most
sanguine
hopes
.
The
oldest
inhabitants
recollected
no
period
at
which
measles
had
been
so
prevalent
,
or
so
fatal
to
infant
existence
;
and
many
were
the
mournful
processions
which
little
Oliver
headed
,
in
a
hat-band
reaching
down
to
his
knees
,
to
the
indescribable
admiration
and
emotion
of
all
the
mothers
in
the
town
.
As
Oliver
accompanied
his
master
in
most
of
his
adult
expeditions
too
,
in
order
that
he
might
acquire
that
equanimity
of
demeanour
and
full
command
of
nerve
which
was
essential
to
a
finished
undertaker
,
he
had
many
opportunities
of
observing
the
beautiful
resignation
and
fortitude
with
which
some
strong-minded
people
bear
their
trials
and
losses
.
For
instance
;
when
Sowerberry
had
an
order
for
the
burial
of
some
rich
old
lady
or
gentleman
,
who
was
surrounded
by
a
great
number
of
nephews
and
nieces
,
who
had
been
perfectly
inconsolable
during
the
previous
illness
,
and
whose
grief
had
been
wholly
irrepressible
even
on
the
most
public
occasions
,
they
would
be
as
happy
among
themselves
as
need
be
--
quite
cheerful
and
contented
--
conversing
together
with
as
much
freedom
and
gaiety
,
as
if
nothing
whatever
had
happened
to
disturb
them
.
Husbands
,
too
,
bore
the
loss
of
their
wives
with
the
most
heroic
calmness
.
Wives
,
again
,
put
on
weeds
for
their
husbands
,
as
if
,
so
far
from
grieving
in
the
garb
of
sorrow
,
they
had
made
up
their
minds
to
render
it
as
becoming
and
attractive
as
possible
.
It
was
observable
,
too
,
that
ladies
and
gentlemen
who
were
in
passions
of
anguish
during
the
ceremony
of
interment
,
recovered
almost
as
soon
as
they
reached
home
,
and
became
quite
composed
before
the
tea-drinking
was
over
.
All
this
was
very
pleasant
and
improving
to
see
;
and
Oliver
beheld
it
with
great
admiration
.
That
Oliver
Twist
was
moved
to
resignation
by
the
example
of
these
good
people
,
I
can
not
,
although
I
am
his
biographer
,
undertake
to
affirm
with
any
degree
of
confidence
;
but
I
can
most
distinctly
say
,
that
for
many
months
he
continued
meekly
to
submit
to
the
domination
and
ill-treatment
of
Noah
Claypole
:
who
used
him
far
worse
than
before
,
now
that
his
jealousy
was
roused
by
seeing
the
new
boy
promoted
to
the
black
stick
and
hatband
,
while
he
,
the
old
one
,
remained
stationary
in
the
muffin-cap
and
leathers
.
Charlotte
treated
him
ill
,
because
Noah
did
;
and
Mrs.
Sowerberry
was
his
decided
enemy
,
because
Mr.
Sowerberry
was
disposed
to
be
his
friend
;
so
,
between
these
three
on
one
side
,
and
a
glut
of
funerals
on
the
other
,
Oliver
was
not
altogether
as
comfortable
as
the
hungry
pig
was
,
when
he
was
shut
up
,
by
mistake
,
in
the
grain
department
of
a
brewery
.
And
now
,
I
come
to
a
very
important
passage
in
Oliver
's
history
;
for
I
have
to
record
an
act
,
slight
and
unimportant
perhaps
in
appearance
,
but
which
indirectly
produced
a
material
change
in
all
his
future
prospects
and
proceedings
.
One
day
,
Oliver
and
Noah
had
descended
into
the
kitchen
at
the
usual
dinner-hour
,
to
banquet
upon
a
small
joint
of
mutton
--
a
pound
and
a
half
of
the
worst
end
of
the
neck
--
when
Charlotte
being
called
out
of
the
way
,
there
ensued
a
brief
interval
of
time
,
which
Noah
Claypole
,
being
hungry
and
vicious
,
considered
he
could
not
possibly
devote
to
a
worthier
purpose
than
aggravating
and
tantalising
young
Oliver
Twist
.
Intent
upon
this
innocent
amusement
,
Noah
put
his
feet
on
the
table-cloth
;
and
pulled
Oliver
's
hair
;
and
twitched
his
ears
;
and
expressed
his
opinion
that
he
was
a
'
sneak
'
;
and
furthermore
announced
his
intention
of
coming
to
see
him
hanged
,
whenever
that
desirable
event
should
take
place
;
and
entered
upon
various
topics
of
petty
annoyance
,
like
a
malicious
and
ill-conditioned
charity-boy
as
he
was
.