Понятно
Понятно
Для того чтобы воспользоваться закладками, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Отмена
They
walked
through
the
garden
towards
the
churchyard
gate
,
Mr
.
Farebrother
wanting
to
go
on
to
the
parsonage
;
and
Dorothea
heard
the
whole
sad
story
.
She
listened
with
deep
interest
,
and
begged
to
hear
twice
over
the
facts
and
impressions
concerning
Lydgate
After
a
short
silence
,
pausing
at
the
churchyard
gate
,
and
addressing
Mr
.
Farebrother
,
she
said
energetically
Отключить рекламу
"
You
don
t
believe
that
Mr
.
Lydgate
is
guilty
of
anything
base
?
I
will
not
believe
it
.
Let
us
find
out
the
truth
and
clear
him
!
"
Full
souls
are
double
mirrors
,
making
stillAn
endless
vista
of
fair
things
before
,
Repeating
things
behind
.
Dorothea
s
impetuous
generosity
,
which
would
have
leaped
at
once
to
the
vindication
of
Lydgate
from
the
suspicion
of
having
accepted
money
as
a
bribe
,
underwent
a
melancholy
check
when
she
came
to
consider
all
the
circumstances
of
the
case
by
the
light
of
Mr
.
Farebrother
s
experience
.
"
It
is
a
delicate
matter
to
touch
,
"
he
said
.
"
How
can
we
begin
to
inquire
into
it
?
It
must
be
either
publicly
by
setting
the
magistrate
and
coroner
to
work
,
or
privately
by
questioning
Lydgate
.
As
to
the
first
proceeding
there
is
no
solid
ground
to
go
upon
,
else
Hawley
would
have
adopted
it
;
and
as
to
opening
the
subject
with
Lydgate
,
I
confess
I
should
shrink
from
it
.
He
would
probably
take
it
as
a
deadly
insult
.
I
have
more
than
once
experienced
the
difficulty
of
speaking
to
him
on
personal
matters
.
And
one
should
know
the
truth
about
his
conduct
beforehand
,
to
feel
very
confident
of
a
good
result
.
"
Отключить рекламу
"
I
feel
convinced
that
his
conduct
has
not
been
guilty
:
I
believe
that
people
are
almost
always
better
than
their
neighbors
think
they
are
,
"
said
Dorothea
.
Some
of
her
intensest
experience
in
the
last
two
years
had
set
her
mind
strongly
in
opposition
to
any
unfavorable
construction
of
others
;
and
for
the
first
time
she
felt
rather
discontented
with
Mr
.
Farebrother
.
She
disliked
this
cautious
weighing
of
consequences
,
instead
of
an
ardent
faith
in
efforts
of
justice
and
mercy
,
which
would
conquer
by
their
emotional
force
.
Two
days
afterwards
,
he
was
dining
at
the
Manor
with
her
uncle
and
the
Chettams
,
and
when
the
dessert
was
standing
uneaten
,
the
servants
were
out
of
the
room
,
and
Mr
.
Brooke
was
nodding
in
a
nap
,
she
returned
to
the
subject
with
renewed
vivacity
.
"
Mr
.
Lydgate
would
understand
that
if
his
friends
hear
a
calumny
about
him
their
first
wish
must
be
to
justify
him
.
What
do
we
live
for
,
if
it
is
not
to
make
life
less
difficult
to
each
other
?
I
cannot
be
indifferent
to
the
troubles
of
a
man
who
advised
me
in
MY
trouble
,
and
attended
me
in
my
illness
.
"