-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Джейн Остен
-
- Эмма
-
- Стр. 273/287
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
"
I
am
sure
you
were
of
use
to
me
,
"
cried
Emma
.
"
I
was
very
often
influenced
rightly
by
you
--
oftener
than
I
would
own
at
the
time
.
I
am
very
sure
you
did
me
good
.
And
if
poor
little
Anna
Weston
is
to
be
spoiled
,
it
will
be
the
greatest
humanity
in
you
to
do
as
much
for
her
as
you
have
done
for
me
,
except
falling
in
love
with
her
when
she
is
thirteen
.
"
"
How
often
,
when
you
were
a
girl
,
have
you
said
to
me
,
with
one
of
your
saucy
looks
--
'
Mr.
Knightley
,
I
am
going
to
do
so-and-so
;
papa
says
I
may
,
or
I
have
Miss
Taylor
's
leave
'
--
something
which
,
you
knew
,
I
did
not
approve
.
In
such
cases
my
interference
was
giving
you
two
bad
feelings
instead
of
one
.
"
"
What
an
amiable
creature
I
was
!
--
No
wonder
you
should
hold
my
speeches
in
such
affectionate
remembrance
.
"
"
'
Mr.
Knightley
.
'
--
You
always
called
me
,
'
Mr.
Knightley
;
'
and
,
from
habit
,
it
has
not
so
very
formal
a
sound
.
--
And
yet
it
is
formal
.
I
want
you
to
call
me
something
else
,
but
I
do
not
know
what
.
"
"
I
remember
once
calling
you
'
George
,
'
in
one
of
my
amiable
fits
,
about
ten
years
ago
.
I
did
it
because
I
thought
it
would
offend
you
;
but
,
as
you
made
no
objection
,
I
never
did
it
again
.
"
"
And
can
not
you
call
me
'
George
'
now
?
"
"
Impossible
!
--
I
never
can
call
you
any
thing
but
'
Mr.
Knightley
.
'
I
will
not
promise
even
to
equal
the
elegant
terseness
of
Mrs.
Elton
,
by
calling
you
Mr.
K.
--
But
I
will
promise
,
"
she
added
presently
,
laughing
and
blushing
--
"
I
will
promise
to
call
you
once
by
your
Christian
name
.
I
do
not
say
when
,
but
perhaps
you
may
guess
where
--
in
the
building
in
which
N.
takes
M.
for
better
,
for
worse
.
"
Emma
grieved
that
she
could
not
be
more
openly
just
to
one
important
service
which
his
better
sense
would
have
rendered
her
,
to
the
advice
which
would
have
saved
her
from
the
worst
of
all
her
womanly
follies
--
her
wilful
intimacy
with
Harriet
Smith
;
but
it
was
too
tender
a
subject
.
--
She
could
not
enter
on
it
.
--
Harriet
was
very
seldom
mentioned
between
them
.
This
,
on
his
side
,
might
merely
proceed
from
her
not
being
thought
of
;
but
Emma
was
rather
inclined
to
attribute
it
to
delicacy
,
and
a
suspicion
,
from
some
appearances
,
that
their
friendship
were
declining
.
She
was
aware
herself
,
that
,
parting
under
any
other
circumstances
,
they
certainly
should
have
corresponded
more
,
and
that
her
intelligence
would
not
have
rested
,
as
it
now
almost
wholly
did
,
on
Isabella
's
letters
.
He
might
observe
that
it
was
so
.
The
pain
of
being
obliged
to
practise
concealment
towards
him
,
was
very
little
inferior
to
the
pain
of
having
made
Harriet
unhappy
.