-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Джордж Элиот
-
- Мидлмарч
-
- Стр. 494/572
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
"
Yes
.
Mr
.
Lydgate
.
Mr
.
Bulstrode
sat
up
with
him
one
night
.
He
died
the
third
morning
.
"
"
Go
on
,
Bambridge
,
"
said
Mr
.
Hawley
,
insistently
.
"
What
did
this
fellow
say
about
Bulstrode
?
"
The
group
had
already
become
larger
,
the
town
-
clerk
’
s
presence
being
a
guarantee
that
something
worth
listening
to
was
going
on
there
;
and
Mr
.
Bambridge
delivered
his
narrative
in
the
hearing
of
seven
.
It
was
mainly
what
we
know
,
including
the
fact
about
Will
Ladislaw
,
with
some
local
color
and
circumstance
added
:
it
was
what
Bulstrode
had
dreaded
the
betrayal
of
—
and
hoped
to
have
buried
forever
with
the
corpse
of
Raffles
—
it
was
that
haunting
ghost
of
his
earlier
life
which
as
he
rode
past
the
archway
of
the
Green
Dragon
he
was
trusting
that
Providence
had
delivered
him
from
.
Yes
,
Providence
.
He
had
not
confessed
to
himself
yet
that
he
had
done
anything
in
the
way
of
contrivance
to
this
end
;
he
had
accepted
what
seemed
to
have
been
offered
.
It
was
impossible
to
prove
that
he
had
done
anything
which
hastened
the
departure
of
that
man
’
s
soul
.
But
this
gossip
about
Bulstrode
spread
through
Middlemarch
like
the
smell
of
fire
.
Mr
.
Frank
Hawley
followed
up
his
information
by
sending
a
clerk
whom
he
could
trust
to
Stone
Court
on
a
pretext
of
inquiring
about
hay
,
but
really
to
gather
all
that
could
be
learned
about
Raffles
and
his
illness
from
Mrs
.
Abel
.
In
this
way
it
came
to
his
knowledge
that
Mr
.
Garth
had
carried
the
man
to
Stone
Court
in
his
gig
;
and
Mr
.
Hawley
in
consequence
took
an
opportunity
of
seeing
Caleb
,
calling
at
his
office
to
ask
whether
he
had
time
to
undertake
an
arbitration
if
it
were
required
,
and
then
asking
him
incidentally
about
Raffles
.
Caleb
was
betrayed
into
no
word
injurious
to
Bulstrode
beyond
the
fact
which
he
was
forced
to
admit
,
that
he
had
given
up
acting
for
him
within
the
last
week
.
Mr
Hawley
drew
his
inferences
,
and
feeling
convinced
that
Raffles
had
told
his
story
to
Garth
,
and
that
Garth
had
given
up
Bulstrode
’
s
affairs
in
consequence
,
said
so
a
few
hours
later
to
Mr
.
Toller
.
The
statement
was
passed
on
until
it
had
quite
lost
the
stamp
of
an
inference
,
and
was
taken
as
information
coming
straight
from
Garth
,
so
that
even
a
diligent
historian
might
have
concluded
Caleb
to
be
the
chief
publisher
of
Bulstrode
’
s
misdemeanors
.
Mr
.
Hawley
was
not
slow
to
perceive
that
there
was
no
handle
for
the
law
either
in
the
revelations
made
by
Raffles
or
in
the
circumstances
of
his
death
.
He
had
himself
ridden
to
Lowick
village
that
he
might
look
at
the
register
and
talk
over
the
whole
matter
with
Mr
.
Farebrother
,
who
was
not
more
surprised
than
the
lawyer
that
an
ugly
secret
should
have
come
to
light
about
Bulstrode
,
though
he
had
always
had
justice
enough
in
him
to
hinder
his
antipathy
from
turning
into
conclusions
.
But
while
they
were
talking
another
combination
was
silently
going
forward
in
Mr
.
Farebrother
’
s
mind
,
which
foreshadowed
what
was
soon
to
be
loudly
spoken
of
in
Middlemarch
as
a
necessary
"
putting
of
two
and
two
together
.
"
With
the
reasons
which
kept
Bulstrode
in
dread
of
Raffles
there
flashed
the
thought
that
the
dread
might
have
something
to
do
with
his
munificence
towards
his
medical
man
;
and
though
he
resisted
the
suggestion
that
it
had
been
consciously
accepted
in
any
way
as
a
bribe
,
he
had
a
foreboding
that
this
complication
of
things
might
be
of
malignant
effect
on
Lydgate
’
s
reputation
.
He
perceived
that
Mr
.
Hawley
knew
nothing
at
present
of
the
sudden
relief
from
debt
,
and
he
himself
was
careful
to
glide
away
from
all
approaches
towards
the
subject
.
"
Well
,
"
he
said
,
with
a
deep
breath
,
wanting
to
wind
up
the
illimitable
discussion
of
what
might
have
been
,
though
nothing
could
be
legally
proven
,
"
it
is
a
strange
story
.
So
our
mercurial
Ladislaw
has
a
queer
genealogy
!
A
high
-
spirited
young
lady
and
a
musical
Polish
patriot
made
a
likely
enough
stock
for
him
to
spring
from
,
but
I
should
never
have
suspected
a
grafting
of
the
Jew
pawnbroker
.
However
,
there
’
s
no
knowing
what
a
mixture
will
turn
out
beforehand
.
Some
sorts
of
dirt
serve
to
clarify
.
"
"
It
’
s
just
what
I
should
have
expected
,
"
said
Mr
.
Hawley
,
mounting
his
horse
.
"
Any
cursed
alien
blood
,
Jew
,
Corsican
,
or
Gypsy
.
"