-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Джордж Элиот
-
- Мидлмарч
-
- Стр. 343/572
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
"
I
have
no
doubt
he
would
leave
it
off
,
if
he
were
transplanted
into
plenty
:
he
would
be
glad
of
the
time
for
other
things
.
"
"
My
uncle
says
that
Mr
.
Tyke
is
spoken
of
as
an
apostolic
man
,
"
said
Dorothea
,
meditatively
.
She
was
wishing
it
were
possible
to
restore
the
times
of
primitive
zeal
,
and
yet
thinking
of
Mr
.
Farebrother
with
a
strong
desire
to
rescue
him
from
his
chance
-
gotten
money
.
"
I
don
’
t
pretend
to
say
that
Farebrother
is
apostolic
,
"
said
Lydgate
.
"
His
position
is
not
quite
like
that
of
the
Apostles
:
he
is
only
a
parson
among
parishioners
whose
lives
he
has
to
try
and
make
better
.
Practically
I
find
that
what
is
called
being
apostolic
now
,
is
an
impatience
of
everything
in
which
the
parson
doesn
’
t
cut
the
principal
figure
.
I
see
something
of
that
in
Mr
.
Tyke
at
the
Hospital
:
a
good
deal
of
his
doctrine
is
a
sort
of
pinching
hard
to
make
people
uncomfortably
—
aware
of
him
.
Besides
,
an
apostolic
man
at
Lowick
!
—
he
ought
to
think
,
as
St
.
Francis
did
,
that
it
is
needful
to
preach
to
the
birds
.
"
"
True
,
"
said
Dorothea
.
"
It
is
hard
to
imagine
what
sort
of
notions
our
farmers
and
laborers
get
from
their
teaching
.
I
have
been
looking
into
a
volume
of
sermons
by
Mr
.
Tyke
:
such
sermons
would
be
of
no
use
at
Lowick
—
I
mean
,
about
imputed
righteousness
and
the
prophecies
in
the
Apocalypse
.
I
have
always
been
thinking
of
the
different
ways
in
which
Christianity
is
taught
,
and
whenever
I
find
one
way
that
makes
it
a
wider
blessing
than
any
other
,
I
cling
to
that
as
the
truest
—
I
mean
that
which
takes
in
the
most
good
of
all
kinds
,
and
brings
in
the
most
people
as
sharers
in
it
.
It
is
surely
better
to
pardon
too
much
,
than
to
condemn
too
much
.
But
I
should
like
to
see
Mr
.
Farebrother
and
hear
him
preach
.
"
"
Do
,
"
said
Lydgate
;
"
I
trust
to
the
effect
of
that
.
He
is
very
much
beloved
,
but
he
has
his
enemies
too
:
there
are
always
people
who
can
’
t
forgive
an
able
man
for
differing
from
them
.
And
that
money
-
winning
business
is
really
a
blot
.
You
don
’
t
,
of
course
,
see
many
Middlemarch
people
:
but
Mr
.
Ladislaw
,
who
is
constantly
seeing
Mr
.
Brooke
,
is
a
great
friend
of
Mr
.
Farebrother
’
s
old
ladies
,
and
would
be
glad
to
sing
the
Vicar
’
s
praises
.
One
of
the
old
ladies
—
Miss
Noble
,
the
aunt
—
is
a
wonderfully
quaint
picture
of
self
-
forgetful
goodness
,
and
Ladislaw
gallants
her
about
sometimes
.
I
met
them
one
day
in
a
back
street
:
you
know
Ladislaw
’
s
look
—
a
sort
of
Daphnis
in
coat
and
waistcoat
;
and
this
little
old
maid
reaching
up
to
his
arm
—
they
looked
like
a
couple
dropped
out
of
a
romantic
comedy
.
But
the
best
evidence
about
Farebrother
is
to
see
him
and
hear
him
.
"
Happily
Dorothea
was
in
her
private
sitting
-
room
when
this
conversation
occurred
,
and
there
was
no
one
present
to
make
Lydgate
’
s
innocent
introduction
of
Ladislaw
painful
to
her
.
As
was
usual
with
him
in
matters
of
personal
gossip
,
Lydgate
had
quite
forgotten
Rosamond
’
s
remark
that
she
thought
Will
adored
Mrs
.
Casaubon
.
At
that
moment
he
was
only
caring
for
what
would
recommend
the
Farebrother
family
;
and
he
had
purposely
given
emphasis
to
the
worst
that
could
be
said
about
the
Vicar
,
in
order
to
forestall
objections
.
In
the
weeks
.
since
Mr
.
Casaubon
’
s
death
he
had
hardly
seen
Ladislaw
,
and
he
had
heard
no
rumor
to
warn
him
that
Mr
.
Brooke
’
s
confidential
secretary
was
a
dangerous
subject
with
Mrs
.
Casaubon
.
When
he
was
gone
,
his
picture
of
Ladislaw
lingered
in
her
mind
and
disputed
the
ground
with
that
question
of
the
Lowick
living
What
was
Will
Ladislaw
thinking
about
her
?
Would
he
hear
of
that
fact
which
made
her
cheeks
burn
as
they
never
used
to
do
?
And
how
would
he
feel
when
he
heard
it
?
—
But
she
could
see
as
well
as
possible
how
he
smiled
down
at
the
little
old
maid
.
An
Italian
with
white
mice
!
—
on
the
contrary
,
he
was
a
creature
who
entered
into
every
one
’
s
feelings
,
and
could
take
the
pressure
of
their
thought
instead
of
urging
his
own
with
iron
resistance
.
Party
is
Nature
too
,
and
you
shall
seeBy
force
of
Logic
how
they
both
agree
:
The
Many
in
the
One
,
the
One
in
Many
;
All
is
not
Some
,
nor
Some
the
same
as
Any
:
Genus
holds
species
,
both
are
great
or
small
;
One
genus
highest
,
one
not
high
at
all
;
Each
species
has
its
differentia
too
,
This
is
not
That
,
and
He
was
never
You
,
Though
this
and
that
are
AYES
,
and
you
and
heAre
like
as
one
to
one
,
or
three
to
three
.