-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Джордж Элиот
-
- Мидлмарч
-
- Стр. 248/572
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Lydgate
relied
much
on
the
psychological
difference
between
what
for
the
sake
of
variety
I
will
call
goose
and
gander
:
especially
on
the
innate
submissiveness
of
the
goose
as
beautifully
corresponding
to
the
strength
of
the
gander
.
"
Thrice
happy
she
that
is
so
well
assuredUnto
herself
and
settled
so
in
heartThat
neither
will
for
better
be
alluredNe
fears
to
worse
with
any
chance
to
start
,
But
like
a
steddy
ship
doth
strongly
partThe
raging
waves
and
keeps
her
course
aright
;
Ne
aught
for
tempest
doth
from
it
depart
,
Ne
aught
for
fairer
weather
’
s
false
delight
.
Such
self
-
assurance
need
not
fear
the
spightOf
grudging
foes
;
ne
favour
seek
of
friends
;
But
in
the
stay
of
her
own
stedfast
mightNeither
to
one
herself
nor
other
bends
.
Most
happy
she
that
most
assured
doth
rest
,
But
he
most
happy
who
such
one
loves
best
.
"
—
SPENSER
.
The
doubt
hinted
by
Mr
.
Vincy
whether
it
were
only
the
general
election
or
the
end
of
the
world
that
was
coming
on
,
now
that
George
the
Fourth
was
dead
,
Parliament
dissolved
,
Wellington
and
Peel
generally
depreciated
and
the
new
King
apologetic
,
was
a
feeble
type
of
the
uncertainties
in
provincial
opinion
at
that
time
.
With
the
glow
-
worm
lights
of
country
places
,
how
could
men
see
which
were
their
own
thoughts
in
the
confusion
of
a
Tory
Ministry
passing
Liberal
measures
,
of
Tory
nobles
and
electors
being
anxious
to
return
Liberals
rather
than
friends
of
the
recreant
Ministers
,
and
of
outcries
for
remedies
which
seemed
to
have
a
mysteriously
remote
bearing
on
private
interest
,
and
were
made
suspicious
by
the
advocacy
of
disagreeable
neighbors
?
Buyers
of
the
Middlemarch
newspapers
found
themselves
in
an
anomalous
position
:
during
the
agitation
on
the
Catholic
Question
many
had
given
up
the
"
Pioneer
"
—
which
had
a
motto
from
Charles
James
Fox
and
was
in
the
van
of
progress
—
because
it
had
taken
Peel
’
s
side
about
the
Papists
,
and
had
thus
blotted
its
Liberalism
with
a
toleration
of
Jesuitry
and
Baal
;
but
they
were
illsatisfied
with
the
"
Trumpet
,
"
which
—
since
its
blasts
against
Rome
,
and
in
the
general
flaccidity
of
the
public
mind
(
nobody
knowing
who
would
support
whom
)
—
had
become
feeble
in
its
blowing
.
It
was
a
time
,
according
to
a
noticeable
article
in
the
"
Pioneer
,
"
when
the
crying
needs
of
the
country
might
well
counteract
a
reluctance
to
public
action
on
the
part
of
men
whose
minds
had
from
long
experience
acquired
breadth
as
well
as
concentration
,
decision
of
judgment
as
well
as
tolerance
,
dispassionateness
as
well
as
energy
—
in
fact
,
all
those
qualities
which
in
the
melancholy
experience
of
mankind
have
been
the
least
disposed
to
share
lodgings
.
Mr
.
Hackbutt
,
whose
fluent
speech
was
at
that
time
floating
more
widely
than
usual
,
and
leaving
much
uncertainty
as
to
its
ultimate
channel
,
was
heard
to
say
in
Mr
.
Hawley
’
s
office
that
the
article
in
question
"
emanated
"
from
Brooke
of
Tipton
,
and
that
Brooke
had
secretly
bought
the
"
Pioneer
"
some
months
ago
.
"
That
means
mischief
,
eh
?
"
said
Mr
.
Hawley
.
"
He
’
s
got
the
freak
of
being
a
popular
man
now
,
after
dangling
about
like
a
stray
tortoise
.
So
much
the
worse
for
him
.
I
’
ve
had
my
eye
on
him
for
some
time
.
He
shall
be
prettily
pumped
upon
.
He
’
s
a
damned
bad
landlord
.
What
business
has
an
old
county
man
to
come
currying
favor
with
a
low
set
of
dark
-
blue
freemen
?
As
to
his
paper
,
I
only
hope
he
may
do
the
writing
himself
.
It
would
be
worth
our
paying
for
.
"
"
I
understand
he
has
got
a
very
brilliant
young
fellow
to
edit
it
,
who
can
write
the
highest
style
of
leading
article
,
quite
equal
to
anything
in
the
London
papers
.
And
he
means
to
take
very
high
ground
on
Reform
.
"
"
Let
Brooke
reform
his
rent
-
roll
.
He
’
s
a
cursed
old
screw
,
and
the
buildings
all
over
his
estate
are
going
to
rack
.
I
sup
pose
this
young
fellow
is
some
loose
fish
from
London
.
"