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- Джордж Элиот
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- Стр. 461/572
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"
Can
you
not
see
,
Rosamond
,
"
he
began
again
,
trying
to
be
simply
grave
and
not
bitter
,
"
that
nothing
can
be
so
fatal
as
a
want
of
openness
and
confidence
between
us
?
It
has
happened
again
and
again
that
I
have
expressed
a
decided
wish
,
and
you
have
seemed
to
assent
,
yet
after
that
you
have
secretly
disobeyed
my
wish
.
In
that
way
I
can
never
know
what
I
have
to
trust
to
.
There
would
be
some
hope
for
us
if
you
would
admit
this
.
Am
I
such
an
unreasonable
,
furious
brute
?
Why
should
you
not
be
open
with
me
?
"
Still
silence
.
"
Will
you
only
say
that
you
have
been
mistaken
,
and
that
I
may
depend
on
your
not
acting
secretly
in
future
?
"
said
Lydgate
,
urgently
,
but
with
something
of
request
in
his
tone
which
Rosamond
was
quick
to
perceive
.
She
spoke
with
coolness
.
"
I
cannot
possibly
make
admissions
or
promises
in
answer
to
such
words
as
you
have
used
towards
me
.
I
have
not
been
accustomed
to
language
of
that
kind
.
You
have
spoken
of
my
‘
secret
meddling
,
’
and
my
‘
interfering
ignorance
,
’
and
my
‘
false
assent
.
’
I
have
never
expressed
myself
in
that
way
to
you
,
and
I
think
that
you
ought
to
apologize
.
You
spoke
of
its
being
impossible
to
live
with
me
.
Certainly
you
have
not
made
my
life
pleasant
to
me
of
late
.
I
think
it
was
to
be
expected
that
I
should
try
to
avert
some
of
the
hardships
which
our
marriage
has
brought
on
me
.
"
Another
tear
fell
as
Rosamond
ceased
speaking
,
and
she
pressed
it
away
as
quietly
as
the
first
.
Lydgate
flung
himself
into
a
chair
,
feeling
checkmated
.
What
place
was
there
in
her
mind
for
a
remonstrance
to
lodge
in
?
He
laid
down
his
hat
,
flung
an
arm
over
the
back
of
his
chair
,
and
looked
down
for
some
moments
without
speaking
.
Rosamond
had
the
double
purchase
over
him
of
insensibility
to
the
point
of
justice
in
his
reproach
,
and
of
sensibility
to
the
undeniable
hardships
now
present
in
her
married
life
.
Although
her
duplicity
in
the
affair
of
the
house
had
exceeded
what
he
knew
,
and
had
really
hindered
the
Plymdales
from
knowing
of
it
,
she
had
no
consciousness
that
her
action
could
rightly
be
called
false
.
We
are
not
obliged
to
identify
our
own
acts
according
to
a
strict
classification
,
any
more
than
the
materials
of
our
grocery
and
clothes
.
Rosamond
felt
that
she
was
aggrieved
,
and
that
this
was
what
Lydgate
had
to
recognize
.
As
for
him
,
the
need
of
accommodating
himself
to
her
nature
,
which
was
inflexible
in
proportion
to
its
negations
,
held
him
as
with
pincers
.
He
had
begun
to
have
an
alarmed
foresight
of
her
irrevocable
loss
of
love
for
him
,
and
the
consequent
dreariness
of
their
life
.
The
ready
fulness
of
his
emotions
made
this
dread
alternate
quickly
with
the
first
violent
movements
of
his
anger
.
It
would
assuredly
have
been
a
vain
boast
in
him
to
say
that
he
was
her
master
.
"
You
have
not
made
my
life
pleasant
to
me
of
late
"
—
"
the
hardships
which
our
marriage
has
brought
on
me
"
—
these
words
were
stinging
his
imagination
as
a
pain
makes
an
exaggerated
dream
.
If
he
were
not
only
to
sink
from
his
highest
resolve
,
but
to
sink
into
the
hideous
fettering
of
domestic
hate
?
"
Rosamond
,
"
he
said
,
turning
his
eyes
on
her
with
a
melancholy
look
,
"
you
should
allow
for
a
man
’
s
words
when
he
is
disappointed
and
provoked
.
You
and
I
cannot
have
opposite
interests
.
I
cannot
part
my
happiness
from
yours
.
If
I
am
angry
with
you
,
it
is
that
you
seem
not
to
see
how
any
concealment
divides
us
How
could
I
wish
to
make
anything
hard
to
you
either
by
my
words
or
conduct
?
When
I
hurt
you
,
I
hurt
part
of
my
own
life
.
I
should
never
be
angry
with
you
if
you
would
be
quite
open
with
me
.
"
"
I
have
only
wished
to
prevent
you
from
hurrying
us
into
wretchedness
without
any
necessity
,
"
said
Rosamond
,
the
tears
coming
again
from
a
softened
feeling
now
that
her
husband
had
softened
.
"
It
is
so
very
hard
to
be
disgraced
here
among
all
the
people
we
know
,
and
to
live
in
such
a
miserable
way
.
I
wish
I
had
died
with
the
baby
.
"