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- Джеймс Джойс
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- Стр. 168/192
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"
Well
,
I
hope
,
Miss
Morkan
,
"
said
Mr.
Browne
,
"
that
I
'm
brown
enough
for
you
because
,
you
know
,
I
'm
all
brown
.
"
All
the
gentlemen
,
except
Gabriel
,
ate
some
of
the
pudding
out
of
compliment
to
Aunt
Julia
.
As
Gabriel
never
ate
sweets
the
celery
had
been
left
for
him
.
Freddy
Malins
also
took
a
stalk
of
celery
and
ate
it
with
his
pudding
.
He
had
been
told
that
celery
was
a
capital
thing
for
the
blood
and
he
was
just
then
under
doctor
's
care
.
Mrs.
Malins
,
who
had
been
silent
all
through
the
supper
,
said
that
her
son
was
going
down
to
Mount
Melleray
in
a
week
or
so
.
The
table
then
spoke
of
Mount
Melleray
,
how
bracing
the
air
was
down
there
,
how
hospitable
the
monks
were
and
how
they
never
asked
for
a
penny-piece
from
their
guests
.
"
And
do
you
mean
to
say
,
"
asked
Mr.
Browne
incredulously
,
"
that
a
chap
can
go
down
there
and
put
up
there
as
if
it
were
a
hotel
and
live
on
the
fat
of
the
land
and
then
come
away
without
paying
anything
?
"
"
O
,
most
people
give
some
donation
to
the
monastery
when
they
leave
.
"
said
Mary
Jane
.
"
I
wish
we
had
an
institution
like
that
in
our
Church
,
"
said
Mr.
Browne
candidly
.
He
was
astonished
to
hear
that
the
monks
never
spoke
,
got
up
at
two
in
the
morning
and
slept
in
their
coffins
.
He
asked
what
they
did
it
for
.
"
That
's
the
rule
of
the
order
,
"
said
Aunt
Kate
firmly
.
"
Yes
,
but
why
?
"
asked
Mr.
Browne
.
Aunt
Kate
repeated
that
it
was
the
rule
,
that
was
all
.
Mr.
Browne
still
seemed
not
to
understand
.
Freddy
Malins
explained
to
him
,
as
best
he
could
,
that
the
monks
were
trying
to
make
up
for
the
sins
committed
by
all
the
sinners
in
the
outside
world
.
The
explanation
was
not
very
clear
for
Mr.
Browne
grinned
and
said
: