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- Чарльз Диккенс
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- Лавка древностей
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- Стр. 261/459
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‘
I
don
’
t
think
I
know
one
,
sir
,
’
returned
Nell
.
‘
You
know
forty
-
seven
songs
,
’
said
the
man
,
with
a
gravity
which
admitted
of
no
altercation
on
the
subject
.
‘
Forty
-
seven
’
s
your
number
.
Let
me
hear
one
of
‘
em
—
the
best
.
Give
me
a
song
this
minute
.
’
Not
knowing
what
might
be
the
consequences
of
irritating
her
friend
,
and
trembling
with
the
fear
of
doing
so
,
poor
Nell
sang
him
some
little
ditty
which
she
had
learned
in
happier
times
,
and
which
was
so
agreeable
to
his
ear
,
that
on
its
conclusion
he
in
the
same
peremptory
manner
requested
to
be
favoured
with
another
,
to
which
he
was
so
obliging
as
to
roar
a
chorus
to
no
particular
tune
,
and
with
no
words
at
all
,
but
which
amply
made
up
in
its
amazing
energy
for
its
deficiency
in
other
respects
.
The
noise
of
this
vocal
performance
awakened
the
other
man
,
who
,
staggering
upon
deck
and
shaking
his
late
opponent
by
the
hand
,
swore
that
singing
was
his
pride
and
joy
and
chief
delight
,
and
that
he
desired
no
better
entertainment
.
With
a
third
call
,
more
imperative
than
either
of
the
two
former
,
Nell
felt
obliged
to
comply
,
and
this
time
a
chorus
was
maintained
not
only
by
the
two
men
together
,
but
also
by
the
third
man
on
horseback
,
who
being
by
his
position
debarred
from
a
nearer
participation
in
the
revels
of
the
night
,
roared
when
his
companions
roared
,
and
rent
the
very
air
.
In
this
way
,
with
little
cessation
,
and
singing
the
same
songs
again
and
again
,
the
tired
and
exhausted
child
kept
them
in
good
humour
all
that
night
;
and
many
a
cottager
,
who
was
roused
from
his
soundest
sleep
by
the
discordant
chorus
as
it
floated
away
upon
the
wind
,
hid
his
head
beneath
the
bed
-
clothes
and
trembled
at
the
sounds
.
At
length
the
morning
dawned
.
It
was
no
sooner
light
than
it
began
to
rain
heavily
.
As
the
child
could
not
endure
the
intolerable
vapours
of
the
cabin
,
they
covered
her
,
in
return
for
her
exertions
,
with
some
pieces
of
sail
-
cloth
and
ends
of
tarpaulin
,
which
sufficed
to
keep
her
tolerably
dry
and
to
shelter
her
grandfather
besides
.
As
the
day
advanced
the
rain
increased
.
At
noon
it
poured
down
more
hopelessly
and
heavily
than
ever
without
the
faintest
promise
of
abatement
.
They
had
,
for
some
time
,
been
gradually
approaching
the
place
for
which
they
were
bound
.
The
water
had
become
thicker
and
dirtier
;
other
barges
,
coming
from
it
,
passed
them
frequently
;
the
paths
of
coal
-
ash
and
huts
of
staring
brick
,
marked
the
vicinity
of
some
great
manufacturing
town
;
while
scattered
streets
and
houses
,
and
smoke
from
distant
furnaces
,
indicated
that
they
were
already
in
the
outskirts
.
Now
,
the
clustered
roofs
,
and
piles
of
buildings
,
trembling
with
the
working
of
engines
,
and
dimly
resounding
with
their
shrieks
and
throbbings
;
the
tall
chimneys
vomiting
forth
a
black
vapour
,
which
hung
in
a
dense
ill
-
favoured
cloud
above
the
housetops
and
filled
the
air
with
gloom
;
the
clank
of
hammers
beating
upon
iron
,
the
roar
of
busy
streets
and
noisy
crowds
,
gradually
augmenting
until
all
the
various
sounds
blended
into
one
and
none
was
distinguishable
for
itself
,
announced
the
termination
of
their
journey
.
The
boat
floated
into
the
wharf
to
which
it
belonged
.
The
men
were
occupied
directly
The
child
and
her
grandfather
,
after
waiting
in
vain
to
thank
them
or
ask
them
whither
they
should
go
,
passed
through
a
dirty
lane
into
a
crowded
street
,
and
stood
,
amid
its
din
and
tumult
,
and
in
the
pouring
rain
,
as
strange
,
bewildered
,
and
confused
,
as
if
they
had
lived
a
thousand
years
before
,
and
were
raised
from
the
dead
and
placed
there
by
a
miracle
.
The
throng
of
people
hurried
by
,
in
two
opposite
streams
,
with
no
symptom
of
cessation
or
exhaustion
;
intent
upon
their
own
affairs
;
and
undisturbed
in
their
business
speculations
,
by
the
roar
of
carts
and
waggons
laden
with
clashing
wares
,
the
slipping
of
horses
’
feet
upon
the
wet
and
greasy
pavement
,
the
rattling
of
the
rain
on
windows
and
umbrella
-
tops
,
the
jostling
of
the
more
impatient
passengers
,
and
all
the
noise
and
tumult
of
a
crowded
street
in
the
high
tide
of
its
occupation
:
while
the
two
poor
strangers
,
stunned
and
bewildered
by
the
hurry
they
beheld
but
had
no
part
in
,
looked
mournfully
on
;
feeling
,
amidst
the
crowd
,
a
solitude
which
has
no
parallel
but
in
the
thirst
of
the
shipwrecked
mariner
,
who
,
tost
to
and
fro
upon
the
billows
of
a
mighty
ocean
,
his
red
eyes
blinded
by
looking
on
the
water
which
hems
him
in
on
every
side
,
has
not
one
drop
to
cool
his
burning
tongue
.